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A77708 The good old way: or, Perkins improved, in a plain exposition and sound application of those depths of divinity briefly comprized in his Six principles: / by that late painful and faithful minister of the Gospel, Charles Broxolme in Darby-shire. Broxholme, Charles. 1653 (1653) Wing B5217; Thomason E1483_1; ESTC R208756 186,652 446

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and theirs 4 By rejoicing to see the livery of Christ put upon their child their child so honoured 5. By educating their children accordingly Ephes 6.4 2 To exhort all Baptized persons First Such as are unregenerate and in the estate of nature manifesting no lesse by their way and course First That they would consider what they are doing even acting the parts of treacherous and foresworne persons proceed just contrary to their Vow and Oath in Baptism Secondly To consider what a deal of ingratitude they manifest to God thus abusing his Livery he that prevented them with this Sign and Seal of the new Covenant before they had any ability to conceive of it that was found of them before they sought him that put a pledge into their bosomes concerning his gracious meaning towards them did they not shew themselves careless of it nay he that by his Sacrament so provoked them to embrace the Covenant 3 To exhort them that they would never rest until such time as they have a feeling of that renewing power signified in Baptism to wit the power of Christs death mortifying sin in them and the vertue of his Resurrection raising them up to newness of life To this purpo●e let them be earnest with the Lord in praye● as well as they can follow hard after the p●werful preaching of the Word that so they may attain to Regeneration whereof Baptism is the Seal It is true if they take this course they shall be called Puritans and Precisians But let them remember their solemn Vow and Oath in Baptism and not regard the malice of Satan and the reproaches of men 2 To exhort such as have true grace are regenerate often to meditate upon their Baptism for the helping of their faith Is any temptation violent any corruption strong any grace weak nay hath Satan and corruption given the foile prevailed in particulars Why then call to mind thy Baptism Gods Covenant with thee signified and sealed in it this is an excellent way to get up thy faith and so to get thee up being fallen and to keep thee up being in the fight and combat For we are to know that the signification force use and fruit of this Ordinance doth not continue only for a moment of time but for the whole course of a mans life Thus much for Baptism Now we come to the Sacrament of the Supper and commend the Doctrine of it unto you in the point following Doctr. As the Sacrament of Baptism is a good outward means to encrease faith why so especially the Sacrament of the Supper But having spoken of Baptism take the Doctrine more briefly The Sacrament of the Lords Supper is an excellent outward means to encrease faith Do but see 1 Cor. 10.16 As though the Apostle should say The participating of the Supper is it not an excellent Signe Pledge and Meanes of our growth in Christ to encrease our faith And 1 Corinth 11.26 Yee do shew the Lords death to wit as to others so to your owne faith for the encrease and confirmation of it Reason 1. The Sacrament unto which this succeeds to wit the Passeover was an excellent meanes this way that is to say for the encrease and confirmation of faith Reason 2. In the Sacrament of the Supper there is such a lively picture and representation of Christ and his benefits Galat. 3.1 Crucified among you As by the preaching of the word so by the administration of the Sacraments especially by the administration of this Sacrament Reas 3. This was one principall end why Christ instituted and ordained this Sacrament to wit that his peoples faith unto the worlds end in the conscionable celebration of it might be encreased and confirmed Now for the opening of this Doctrine we intend to answer divers questions 1. What this Sacrament is 2. The difference betwixt it and Baptism 3. The parts of it 4. What is to be done of us that in the use of this ordinance our faith may be encreased Quest First What the Lords Supper is Answ It is the second or latter Sacrament of the Gospel wherein by bread and wine duely administred and received the true beleever is fed and nourished unto eternall life A little to open this description It is the second or latter Sacrament of the Gospel because in order baptism is to precede and go before it wherein by bread and wine elements first not very hard to be come by Secondly Very apt unto the purpose appointed to wit to signifie and seal spiritual food nay very apt wine being appointed and afforded as well as bread to signifie and seal a compleat feast to the soul full and perfect nourishment by the Lord Jesus the thing signified Duely administred and received that is when the persons administring and receiving are rightly qualified and the same rites and actions punctually observed which the word of God prescribes and enjoynes the true beleever he being the party only that is capable of this feast and unto whom it belongs is fed and nourished unto eternal life The bread and wine not only representing the body and blood of Christ but exhibiting and conveying them to the soul of the beleever for his spirituall nourishment Quest 2. How the Lords Supper differs from baptism Answ First We will shew briefly wherein they agree Secondly wherin they differ They agree in these things First they both represent whole Christ to the soul Secondly they both seal up whole Christ to the soul we mean by whole Christ as Christ for justification so for sanctification 1 Now these Sacraments differ divers waies First in order baptism goes before and the supper follows as being goes before growing Secondly In frequency Baptism is but once to be received the Supper often We are but once born but after we are borne we have need of frequent nourishment Thirdly they differ in the elements and external rites Fourthly in their particular ends Baptism being properly the seal of regeneration but the Supper properly the seal of growth and confirmation The former the seal of Christian being the latter the seal of Christian well being Quest 3. What are the parts of this Sacrament Answ They are either outward or inward The outward as the signe and the word By the signe we mean the elements of bread and wine and the sacramentall action on the Ministers part and on the receivers part The The other outward thing is the word the word added to the element or elements makes a Sacrament Now by the word here we are to understand First the word of institution or command do this Secondly the word of promise this is my body which is given for you this is my blood which is she d for you The inward thing or thing signified is the body aad bloud of Christ given and shed for our sins and our spiritual eating and drinking of them for our nourishment unto eternal life Quest 4 What is to be done of us that in the use of this
may renew our spirituall strength and come on in the course of Christianity And one thing we would adde even to those that carry themselves the most holily and watchfully betwixt Sacraments that seeing they gather and contract so much rubbish and soil in the intermission as they stand in great need to quicken and stir up their desire to the Sacrament and all other graces fitting worthy communicants that these I say would by extraordinary praier before they come to the Sacrament quicken and stir up the graces of Gods Spirit in themselves that so they may receive the more worthily And thus much now touching what we must do before we receive if so be we would receive to the encrease of our faith The second thing is what we must do in and about the act of receiving if so be we would receive worthily and to the encrease of our faith Answ Such as have prepared themselves as aforesaid First must labour to make sure to partake of all the publick ordinances before the administration of the Sacrament they must not come dropping in when the Minister is at praier or in his Sermon but should take all the ordinances before them 2. Betwixt the Ministers going out of the pulpit and his repairing to the Lords Table stir up thy self by considering that now thou art upon a great businesse to renew thy covenant with the Lord and the Lord with thee he to continue thy gracious faithfull and all-sufficient God in and through Christ for thy good every way And thou to continue his servant in better obedience then ever hitherto thou hast performed unto him and as the Lord intends fairly and faithfully towards thee so earnestly desire and resolve the like towards him 3. When the Minister doth addresse himself to the Celebration then seriously summon thy outward senses and inward affections to attend the whole businesse in hand Let nothing done at this sacred feast fall to the ground but employ thy outward senses upon the elements and upon the sacramentall acts of Minister and people and consider with thy self for the inciting and stirring up of thy faith that they are all signifying and sealing as before thou hast heard and so whilst thou art thus employed thou shalt not only receive the bread and wine of the Lord but the bread and wine which is the Lord as the one outwardly so the other inwardly Thus we have heard what must be done in and about the act of receiving Now we come to the third thing what must be done after we have received Answ 1. We must be willing to joyn with the congregation in praise and thanksgiving and so like wise in our liberality to the poor Matth. 26.30 Heb. 13.16 1 Cor. 16.1 2. 2. After we are departed the congregation we must labour to keep up our faith verily perswading our selves that the Lord will not fail a jot of his covenant renewed with us but as he hath said and sealed so he will work in us and for us It is Satans manner with some good communicants presently after they have received to stir up in them thoughts of unbelief as though their communicating were to no purpose but had been altogether in vain But in this case let them remember that the flesh of Christ is meat indeed and his blood drink indeed and that the Lord in the Sacrament doth not mock the prepared soul but intends fairly and in faithfulnesse 3. Sometime that day in secret take a survey and review of thy receiving what inward converse there was betwixt thee and the Lord in that businesse what secret signes and passages of love how thy affections were stirred and moved and how they continue Now in this survey and review if thou find there hath been little stirring and moving but rather deadnesse and dulnesse then thou hast just cause to suspect that there was some great want in thy preparation which if upon examination thou perceivest thou must greatly humble and judg thy self that so thou mayest not be judged of the Lord. 1 Cor. 11.31 But if upon examination thou find that thou seriously endeavoredst to prepare thy self as did befit this sacred businesse although thou must be sensible of the affliction yet thou must not be too much dismaied but in the Lords means wait the Lords time for the fruit of the Sacrament remembring what the holy Ghost saith Psal 97.11 Light is sown for the righteous and gladnesse for the upright in heart Now on the contrary if in this survey and review thou dost find thou didst speed well at the Sacrament that thou hadst sweet converse with the Lord thy affections graciously stirred and moved and so continue Oh then thou hast great cause 1. To blesse and praise God 2. From this experience of his love to be confidently earnest with him that thou maiest daily find and feel the fruit of the Sacrament And 3. Upon this ground hast thou not cause to be forward to this feast another time nay at all times as thou seest a call And 4. and lastly hast thou not cause the more carefully to look to the covenant on thy part as thou hast vowed so to pay as thou hast promised new obedience better obedience so to endeavour the performance Psal 76.11 and 116.14 18. Eccles 5.4 5. And thus now we have answered the fourth question what must be done of us that in the use of this Sacrament our faith may be encreased We come to the Uses Vse 1 To inform us touching the great wrong the Popish teachers labour to do the people of God as concerning this ordinance by their altering adding detracting annihilating 1. By their altering they changing the nature of this ordinance turning this Sacrament into a propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of the living and the dead the Minister into a sacrificing Priest and the communion Table into an Altar 2. By adding a multitude and world of ceremonies to this ordinance of their own inventing and which have no footsteps in the word of God they so contrarying this businesse as though they were in hand with some masking shew or acting some stage play 3. By detracting they depriving the people of the wine as though they were unwilling they should have a full meal Nay 4. They altogether annihilating this ordinance by their cursed transubstantiation teaching upon the words of consecration that the elements cease to be in regard of their substance and that they are changed into the body and blood of Christ Thus and many other waies do the popish teachers go about to wrong Gods people in regard of this excellent ordinance a speciall means which the Lord hath appointed for the encrease and furtheranee of his peoples faith Vse 2 To reprove divers persons 1. All such as adventure to this Sacrament not being qualified with saving faith How can such persons expect an encrease of that which they are not at all possessed of nay what have such to do at the Lords Table The truth
may lose his inward peace and comfort for a time but this righteousness of his is in a sure hand and cannot be lost And thus the true Believer is in better case then Adam in his innocency he might and did lose his Righteousnesse but the Believer cannot lose his it being not in his own keeping but in the keeping of the Lord Jesus Vse 3. To exhort and that divers wayes 1. That in the case of Justification we would altogether deny our selves go out of our selves Alas look we upon our natures and upon our lives and how impure are both and therefore David Psalm 143.2 humbly prayes Enter not into judgment with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified If we be justified at all it must be by the righteousness of another by a righteousness without us the righteousness of Christ imputed unto us as the Apostle tells us 2 Corinth 5.21 He hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the Righteousness of God in him Secondly To exhort every man and woman that they would labour for a distinct knowledge of CHRIST seeing the Righteousnesse whereby we must be justified is onely in him as to know what hee suffered for us so likewise to know what hee was and did for us Thirdly To exhort every one of us that upon a sight and sense of our own defilement and impurity we would hunger and thirst after the Sanctifie of Christs humane nature and life I mean the merit of his Active obedience as our cover and righteousnesse in the sight of God These are they our Saviour pronounceth blessed Mat. 5.6 Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousnesse And take notice of the Apostle his earnest desire Phil. 39. And found in him speaking of Christ not having mine own righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousness which is of God by faith Let our faith be frequently employed as in putting our sins upon him so likewise in putting his righteousnesse upon our selves 4. To exhort every man and woman that profess themselves to be justified by the righteousnesse of Christ that they would manifest as much by a holy life Justification and Sanctification being alwaies inseparable 1 Cor. 6.11 Rom. 8.1.9 Gal. 5.24 MEMBER V. Hath perfectly ANd this also take in the forme of a Doctrine Doct. The Lord Jesus is a perfect Saviour See Heb. 7.25 He is able speaking of Christ to save them to the utermost that come unto God by him But this Member and Doctrine we shall not much insist upon and yet to demonstrate it in a word or two First He saves not only some of the Elect but all the Elect Secondly He saves not only their bodies but likewise their souls Thirdly He not only saves them from some of their sins but from all their sins be they never so many or so hainous Fourthly He saves them not only from some of the evill consequents of sin but from all the evill consequents of sin as the wrath of God the curse of the Law the venome of all outward crosses the tyranny of Satan the sting of death the power of the grave and the torments of hell Fifthly He not only saves the Elect privatively but positively he hath not only merited for them remission of sins and freedome from punishment but likewise perfect righteousnesse and eternal life as lately we have heard The Ground or reason is this Reas Not only his holinesse and puritie as he was man but likewise the excellencie of his person he being God as wel as man We come to the Uses Vse 1. To confute the Doctrine of the Papists which to Christs perfect satisfaction add humane satisfactions as we must satisfie Gods justice by our temporal punishment and we must partly merit salvation our selves or the merits of other men must be made over unto us that we may be saved but we are to know a fifth wheel helpeth nothing nay troubleth not a little and so it fareth with all additions of righteousnesse joyned with Christs in matter of Justification That which is absolutely perfect is marred by adding any thing unto it Vse 2 For comfort and consolation to every wounded and penitent soul Suppose thy sins have been many and grievous the Lord Jesus is a perfect Saviour his bloud is a sufficient medicine for the curing of thy wounded conscience his righteousnesse is a perfect cover to hide thee from Gods wrath and therefore although thou seest nothing in thy self but to damn thee why yet see sufficient in the Lord Jesus to save thee rest thy soul upon this perfect Saviour and his merits nay labour with the Virgin Mary to rejoyce in him Luke 1.47 My spirit hath rejoyced in God my Saviour And thus much touching the fifth Member of the third Principle MEMBER VI. Alone by himself WHich we commend unto you in the Doctrine following Doct. The Lord Jesus is the alone Saviour So the Prophet Isaiah foretels in his person Isay 63.3 I have troden the wine-presse alone and Heb. 1.3 Who being the brightnesse of his glory and the expresse Image of his person and upholding all things by the word of his power when he had by himself purged our sins sat down on the right hand of the majestie on high Most expresse is that in Acts 4.12 Neither is there salvation in any other for there is no other name under heaven given among men whereby we must be saved And hence it is that old Simeon calls Christ Salvation it self Luke 2.30 Mine eyes have seen thy Salvation Reas 1. There is none so able he being not only Man but God Reas 2. There is none so fit he being not only God but Man Yet when we affirme the Lord Jesus Christ to be the alone Saviour we do not exclude the Father and the Holy Ghost but the creature any other creature Vse 1 To inform us touching the folly and madnesse of the Papists who trust to other Saviours All the Angels in heaven and all whom at any time their Popes have canonized for Saints which are many thousands are made Saviours by them but especially the Virgin Mary whom they call the Queen of heaven and the mother of mercie these by their intercession must merit for them Thus they joyne other saviours to this alone Saviour and so make him but half a Saviour Jer. 2.12 13. Vse 2 Is the Lord Jesus the alone Saviour this cals upon us that we would labour more and more to be accquainted with him his natures his offices his merits his benefits and upon a sight and sense of our own great misery to trust unto him and rely on him only for Justification and Salvation Thus in rejecting all but Christ this way we shall honour Christ and further this is the only way of our own happinesse And so much touching the sixth Member of the third Principle Now we come to
we use to pray then in Prayer are we earnest after faith for an encrease of this grace Many in prayer are more for temporal things then Spiritual but this is to pray in a carnal manner And divers in prayer that beg spiritual Blessings and yet sue for them but in a carnal way not seeing any beauty and excellency in them neither finding any taste or rellish in them but only because they are convinced they cannot be saved without them So then the Question is Whether in Prayer we be more earnest for faith and the other Graces of Gods Spirit then for Temporal Blessings And then in suing for spiritual Blessings whether the beauty we see in them and rellish we find in them do much induce and move us to be earnest at the Throne of Grace for them 3. Do we use Prayer and in prayer are we earnest for faith in the manner aforesaid observe we then the fruit of our praying Psal 85.8 He will speak peace to his Saints to wit by stirring up and encreasing their faith Surely suing for faith as aforesaid we shall upon examination find an encrease of it And this is the great wheel in the Clock come on in this grace and come on in every sanctifying and saving grace Vse 2. For Inquisition Seeing Prayer is one good means to encrease faith to enquire into the Doctrine of Prayer As first What Prayer is and the parts of it 2. The necessity of prayer and the Motives to it 3. The Objections against Prayer and the Answers of them 4. The Qualifications of true and acceptable prayer First What prayer is and the parts of it Answ We are not now speaking of the requests and suits we make one to another in our civil converse here in the world which may be called civil prayer But of Religious Praier which we thus describe It is an opening of the desire of the heart or a pouring out of the foul to the Lord. 1. I say It is an opening of the desire of the heart or a pouring out of the soul See Psal 62.8 1 Sam. 1.15 2. I say It is a pouring out of the soul to the Lord he only being the object of religious praier it is he and he only that sees and knows the heart he and he only which is present in all places to hear the praiers of all his people he and he only which is Almighty to help Now the Parts of praier In Scripture we find divers divisions of prayer but in 1 Tim. 2.1 we have the parts of praier punctually laid down 1. Supplication 2. Precation or petition 3. Intercession 4. Thanksgiving By supplication we understand humble suit to the Lord for his favour and pardon of sin and in this part of praier we have the confession of sin implied By precation or petition the second part of praier we understand a begging of all other things needful for soul and body By Intercession the third part of praier we do not understand an entreating for others as divers interpretors doe for not only this part of praier but all the parts of praier are here injoyned to be performed as in the behalf of our selves why so in the behalf of others But we understand by it a contending with God for the prevention and removall of judgment By Thanksgiving the last part of praier we understand a rendring praise to God for his blessings and mercies Thus then we see that prayer consists of 4 parts Supplication Precation Intercession and Thanksgiving Now we come to the second thing concerning prayer to wit What necessity of it and the motives unto it I answer It is an excellent part of Gods worship Psal 95.6 where by bowing down and calling upon God is meant to worship him Hence the place of Gods worship by way of excellencie was called the house of prayer Isa 56.7 2. By the duty of prayer the Lord is much glorified for hereby all his attributes are acknowledged Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity confessed The puritie and holinesse of his Law subscribed unto His promises in the Gospel professed to be believed the accomplishment of them to be hoped for and expected and he blessed and praised for his mercies 3. Gods command The Lord commands us to pray Psal 105.4 1 Thes 5.17 4. The example of Christ and all the worthies mentioned in Scripture Luke 3.21 and 9.18 28 29. and 6 12. And so all Gods people mentioned in holy writ they all were adicted to prayer 5. The misery that attends those that neglect this duty Jerem. 10.25 Matth. 26.41 Ezek. 22.30 31. Dan. 9.13.14 6. This is a good means to easie our hearts This Hannah knew wel 1 Sam. 1 15. And Job Job 16.20 And so all practial Christians 7. Our continual and innumerable necessities inward and outward 8. The promise of supply and help Psal 50.15 and 91.15 Matth. 7.7 9. The dignitie of this duty hereby a mortal worm hath conference and converse with the greatest majesty 10. The power and efficacie of praier compare Gen. 32.11 and 33.4 And 2 Sam. 15.31 and 17.23 See Exod. 14.15 and 15.25 Matth. 17.21 Remember Hezekiahs and Isaiahs praier and so Esters and Mordecai's In the primitive Church Anno 175 the army of Christians was called the thundering legion because upon their praiers God scattered their enemies with thunder And the very heathen in those times could observe that the Christians were able to obtain any thing by prayer And what man or woman of religious observation in these our times but may speak of the efficacie and power of prayer Now we come to the third particular the objections against prayer Object 1 May some ignorant men and women say the Lord knows our wants before we pray and then to what purpose should we pray Answ We do not pray because the Lord knows not our wants But 1. Because it is his comand that we pray Phil. 4.6 2. That we may demonstrate our selves sensible of our wants which the Lord will have us to be Psal 34.18 3. Hereby we acknowledg the Lord to be the fountain of all good 4. This is the condition the Lord ties us unto if so be we would have him to impart his blessings unto us Prov. 2.3 5. Jer. 33.2 3. Matth. 7.7 Object 2 But the Lord in his eternall counsell hath decreed what blessings we shall have and what blessings we shall not have and his decree cannot be altered Answ All this is true but yet as the Lord hath decreed the end why so the means and in the ordinary course by the means works to the end The Lord had decreed to give the Gentiles to Christ but yet see what he saith unto him Psal 2.8 Ask of me c. And so he had decreed as he was pleased to make known the return of the Jewes out of the captivitie Yet see what he saith Ezek. 36.37 I will yet for this be enquired of by the house of Israel Nay Daniel knowing the very time
Philip. 1.21 23. And thus now we have done with the Common-place implyed in the sixth Principle to wit Death NOw we come to the second Head or Common place to wit the general Resurrection and receive it in this Doctrine Doct. It is a most certain truth that there shall be a general Resurrection That all the dead shall rise again with their own bodies at the last day The Scriptures are very clear and evident in this point See Job 19.25 26 27. Isaiah 26.19 John 5.28 29. Acts 24.15 The Grounds and Reasons of the Doctrine And first we will lay you down Reasons why the bodies of the godly must be raised again at the last day and then why the bodies of the wicked must be then raised Reasons why the bodies of the godly must be raised again at the last day Reas 1. Because the Lord is their God is in Covenant with the godly in Covenant with the whole man not onely soul but body This is our Saviours Argument to the Sadduces who denied the Resurrection Mat. 22.31 32. As touching the Resurrection of the dead have ye not read that which was spoken unto you by God saying I am the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob God is not the God of the dead but of the living Our Saviours meaning is this The God of Heaven speaking to Moses Exod. 3.9 of Abraham Isaac and Jacob who being in Covenant with God but all dead long before the Lord then spake unto Moses yet speaks of them as alive thereby intimating the Resurrection of their bodies that their dead bodies should be raised again at the last day and if their bodies why then the dead bodies of all that are in Covenant with God Reas 2 Christ himself hath undertaken this to wit to raise up the dead bodies of all his at the last day John 6.39 And is not this an easie thing with him he being not only man but God See Mat. 22.29 Phil. 3.20 21. Reas 3. Christ is risen therefore the dead bodies of all the godly shall rise again at the last day This is a true and sure consequence for 1. Christ rose again that he might raise them 2. Christ is their Head and they his Members seeing then Christ their Head is risen they also his Members doubtless shall rise for the glory of the head requires this that he have his members sutable and in like condition with himself 3. The same Spirit is in them which is in Christ raised he joyneth and uniteth them with Christ and worketh the same in them which he doth in Christ But he hath raised Christ therefore he will raise them Reas 4. To this end the bodies of the Elect were made that in them as Temples the Holy Ghost might dwell for ever therefore their bodies shall rise again at the last day and live for ever Reas 5. This great truth denied that the bodies of the godly shall be raised again at the last day overturns all Religion 1 Cor. 15.12 unto the nineteenth Thus you see the Reasons why the bodies of the godly must be raised again at the last day Now we come to lay you down the Reasons why the bodies of the wicked must be raised Reas 1. Because the Scripture delivers this in plain and express termes 3 Cor. 5.10 John 5.28 29. Acts 24.15 Reas 2. The threatnings and comminations that lie against the wicked Matth. 10.28 Mark 9.43 and so to verse 49. besides divers other places Reas 3. The Justice of God requires this The wicked do not onely sin in soul but in body therefore their bodies must be raised again at the last day that so they may be punished in both Thus you see that not only the dead bodies of the godly shall be raised again at the last day but also the dead bodies of the wicked Yet observe with a double difference 1. In regard of the efficient 2. In regard of the final cause The bodies of the godly shall rise by the power of Christ their Head the bodies of the wicked by the power of Christ their Judge The bodies of the godly shall rise to eternal glory the bodies of the wicked to eternal condemnation For the further opening of this Doctrine we intend 1. To answer some objections 2. In brief to lay before you the manner or method of the general Resurrection 3. And lastly the Uses First to answer some objections Object 1. From Eccles 3.19.20 Answ 1. Solomon doth not speak here in his own person but in the person of an Epicure or Atheist 2. Suppose Solomon do here deliver his own judgement he speaks nothing here of the estate after death but onely delivers thus much That as beasts dye so men dye the one as wel as the other Object 2. From 1 Cor. 15.50 Answ By flesh and blood here we are not to understand the body simply but as it is cloathed with sin and corruption and so indeed it shall not inherit the Kingdom of God but as it is immortal and glorious it shall Object 3. From 1 Cor. 15.44 So then it may seem our bodies at the last day shall rise Spiritual bodies and not consisting of flesh and blood Answ The Apostle doth explain himself verse 53. There shall not be a change in substance but in quality The bodies of the godly shall then be immortal incorruptible not needing means of corporal nourishment nor subject to infirmities but nimble strong and impassible void of all deformity and uncomliness of perfect stature glorious c. The bodies of the wicked then shall be immortal also and incorruptible but passible to endure the punishment inflicted upon them Object 4. That bodies resolved to dust and ashes should rise again is not this impossible Answ Luke 18.27 Gen. 18.14 Luke 1.37 The Almighty God that made all things of nothing is not he able to restore the body although turned to dust burnt to ashes or devoured by wild beasts The manner of the Resurrection The next thing we promised is to lay forth in brief the manner or method of the gen●ral Resurrection 1. In the first place when the last day of the world is come Christ on a sudden in the same visible form he went to heaven will come in the Clouds with his Angels and the souls of his Saints departed Acts 1.11 Judges 14.15 2. The Trumpet of God shall then sound the voyce of the Arch-angel shall then be heard Christ shall command and call upon the dead to rise and come to judgement 1 Thess 4.16 John 5. 28 29. 3. Immediately presently upon this the souls of all the godly deceased shall en●er into their bodies and then their bodies rise to life eternal and so the souls of all the wicked deceased shall return into their bodies and then their bodies rise to eternal condemnation John 5.28 29. 4. Such as shall then be alive shall have a change on a sudden in stead of death and Resurrection 1 Cor.
The good Old way OR PERKINS IMPROVED In a PLAIN EXPOSITION And SOUND APPLICATION OF Those Depths of Divinity briefly comprized In his SIX PRINCIPLES BY That late painful and faithful Minister of the Gospel CHARLES BROXOLME In Darby-shire Jer. 6.16 Ask for the old paths where is the good way and walk therein and ye shall find rest for your souls LONDON Printed for John Rothwel and Thomas Maney and sold at the Bear and Fountain in Cheap-side and near Baynards-Castle in Thames-street 1653. TO The Right Honourable The LADY KATHERINE BROOK Dowager to the Right Honourable Robert Lord Brook Baron of BERCHAMPS Court Right Honourable THis Exposition of famous Mr. Perkins's Catechism was the work of Master Charles Broxolm a good man who was well known to your noble Lord whose great favours conferred upon him hath engag'd me upon the account of his wisdom my dear Aunt to dedicate it unto your Ladyship The Authors Ministery was honoured by the Conversion of many souls both at Gunthwait in Yorkshire where he was Patronized by Mr. Godfery Bossevile Brother in law to your worthy Lord and also at Buxton and Belper and other places in Darby-shire who are his Epistle Commendatory and will be his glory at the day of Christ Madam This Book had sooner been brought into publick view if the Controversies of our broken times had not discomposed peoples spirits to give due entertainment unto such useful Treatises Many in these latter dayes have wofully disputed away the life of Religion and power of Godliness whence it is that their Spiritual Appetite to salubrious Truths is extremely decayed and their Sun-shine is like the Winters light altogether without holy heat It was an high commendation of the Christian Romans by Saint Paul that they were full of goodness and filled with all knowledge Rom. 15.14 and it is pity that this good couple should ever be divided As practical Profession most glorifieth God so it winneth most estimation amongst good Christians The end of this Treatise is to edifie Gods people in both therefore if I should dare to keep this piece secret which the Reverend Authour intended for Publick use I should not onely frustrate the intentions of the dead and deceive his godly friends living but also rob the Church of that which is her right Madam I shall not any longer detain your Lady-ship from reading this Book which craveth your acceptance and promiseth your soul benefit by a serious perusal That your Lady ship may long continue an encourager of godliness and a comfort to the Members of Christ till the time of your everlasting refreshing shall come when triumph shall be your recompence glory your reward Angels your company and God your glory shall be the humble prayer Madam Of Your Honours humble Servant CHARLES JACKSON To his dearly beloved friends the godly people of Buxton and Belper C. J. heartily wisheth all happiness External Internal and Eternal Christian friends MAny of you have had real impressions of love upon your hearts towards my worthy Uncle the Reverend Author of this Exposition you have fully known his Doctrine manner of life purpose faith Long suffering Charity Patience Humility That which you have heard with the Ear is now according to your desire represented to your Eye There is a great disparity betwixt a lively voyce and breathless lines the one moveth more but the other profiteth more the one soon passeth away with the sound of words but the other abideth giveth the Reader leave to pause and consider Good mens works being Printed do not onely reach them who are alive but those also who are unborn and not to them alone who are near but such likewise who are afar off It was the Authors desire that having taught you these things you might after his decease 2 Pet. 3.15 have them alwaies in remembrance and therefore this Exposition according to his order was transcribed for the Press when he dyed Now he is taken out of your sight but if you yet desire communion with him it must be by walking in that track which he hath here chalked out before you endeavouring to tread the steps of his Religious zealous conversation who herein though dead still speaketh unto you This birth was conceived and brought forth firstly for you therefore though others should despise it yet you will I hope give it good welcom because it reviveth the memory of him who whilst he lived ceased not to pray for your happiness for ever Because of mine Education amongst you and my near natural relations unto many of you I am affectionately disposed to desire your best good and therefore shall make bold to premise a few things for your direction that this Book may prove the more profitable 1. Add Prayer unto your reading that you may find the power of those Truths warming your hearts 2. Make practice your end in seeking knowledge for That servant that knoweth his Masters will and doth it not Luk. 12.47 must be beaten with many stripes This was the frequent advice of this Author and that when others had their Religion onely at their tongues end yours might appear in your lives 3. Attend constantly upon the Publick Ministry of your faithful Pastors and Teachers Deut. 12.19 Take heed to thy self that thou forsake not the Levite so long as thou livest upon the earth The first step towards Apostacy is the slighting and declining of the preaching of the Gospel 4. Confer much with Orthodox Christians who are able to instruct you in the paths of pure truth and godliness Matth. 13.36 As Christs Disciples desired him to explain obsure Parables Acts 8.30.32 So the Eunuch improved the company of Philip for the like advantage These examples doubtless are recorded for our imitation Consider what I have said and the Lord give his blessing that this Book may be abundantly beneficial unto you Now the Father of lights and God of all grace fill you with the knowledge of his Will and with the fruits of Faith that you may with comfort pray and wait for the coming of Jesus Christ I am From Selston Aug. 9. 1653. Yours in the service of the Lord CH. JACKSON To the Reader Christian Reader THe hand of Providence doth here tender unto thee a plain piece of good old Divinity The ground-work of the Book is the foundation of Christian Religion gathered into six Principles by that famous and worthy Minister of Christ in the University of Camb. Master Will. Perkins which for above 50 years have been much approved and improved in the Church of England and elswhere for the instruction of many thousands in matters necessary to salvation These needful Principles are here familiarly and faithfully both confirmed and applyed for thy spiritual advantage and doubtless there is more then ordinary need of such helps in these Apostatizing erroneous times wherein the chief Articles of faith are either impudently questioned or irreligiously slighted There is no means more promising to
as live idlely do not walk diligently in their callings Joh. 5.17 My Father worketh hitherto and I work The Lord never ceaseth from his work of Providence 3. Reproof to all such as are discontented with their outward condition and estates and so calling Gods wise Providence in question contrary to the Apostle Phil. 4.11 I have learned in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content And David Psal 39.9 I was dumb I opened not my mouth because thou didest it 4. To reprove all such as neglect the lawful means Civil or Holy the Lord in his ordinary course working by means or if the means fail they distrust the Lord as though he that tyed us to means were himself tyed to means and could not work by little means against means above means 5. To reprove all such as lay their sins on God because nothing comes to pass but by his Providence but hearken to the Apostle James 1.13 Let no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted of evil neither tempteth he any man There is no sin in God neither doth he put sin into any mans heart It is true indeed the Lord could prevent sin and would if he could not gain himself glory out of it thou canst not do this or that wicked action without Gods Providence but thy sin as it is sin is of thy self and Satan thou sinning willingly and chearfully not endeavouring to serve Gods Providence but thy own vile affections 6. To reprove the evil speech of some as they that say this or that came to pass by meer chance as though any thing came to pass without a cause or without Gods Providence and so such as say this or that we will do not putting in Saint James's condition Jam. 4.15 If the Lord will not remembring that they and their actions are in Gods disposing and not in their own Vse 2. For the great comfort and consolation of all the godly It is true they have many enemies but the Lord hath them all in a string as he saith to Sennacherib King of Assyria 2 Kin. 19.27 28. I know thy abode and thy going out and thy coming in and thy rage against me because thy rage against me and thy tumult is come up into my ears therefore I will put my hook into thy nose and my bridle in thy lips and I will turn thee back by the way by which thou camest Nay the Devils themselves the Lord hath them in Chains they cannot go a link beyond his permission as is evident in the History of Job even as he saith unto the Sea Job 38.11 Hitherto shalt thou come but no further and here shall thy proud waves be stayed And so in regard of any affliction no affliction can befal the godly but by the Providence of God and no affliction shall befal them but the Providence of God will turn it to their good insomuch as every true Believer may say with David Psal 16.8 The Lord is at my right hand I shall not be moved not moved to my hurt and as he saith Psal 23.1 The Lord is my shepherd I shall not want and verse 4. Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil for thou art with me And wondrous comfortable is that sentence 2 Chron. 16.9 The eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth to shew himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect towards him And not a little may the godly man succour his faith by his former experience of Gods Providence Psal 56.13 Thou hast delivered my soul from death wilt not thou deliver my feet from falling that I may walk before God in the light of the living And 1 Sam. 17.37 David said The Lord that delivered me out of the paw of the Lion and out of the paw of the Bear he will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine And so Psal 46.1.2 God is our refuge and strength a very present help in trouble Therefore will we not fear though the Earth be removed and though the Mountains be carryed into the midst of the Sea Vse 3. To exhort every one to serve Gods Providence in the use of all good means Civil and Holy because so the Lord works ordinarily To neglect ordinary means is to tempt God and great presumption as our Saviour replies to Satan when he would have had him cast himself down from the Pinacle of the Temple Matth. 4.7 It is written thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God And yet we must take heed of trusting in the means for that is Idolatry the truth of it is it is Gods blessing that doth mainly effect a thing as Psal 127.1 Except the Lord build the house they labour in vain that build it Except the Lord keep the City the Watchman waketh but in vain And therefore when the means fail us at any time our faith must not It was an evil saying of the Israelites Psal 78.19 Can God furnish a table in the Wilderness and therefore the Spirit of God saith of them putting forth such a question that they spake against God But it was a good saying of Abraham Gen. 22.8 God will provide and if you peruse verse 14. you shall perceive that this speech of his grew to a Proverb intimating thus much that in due time and place the Lord will supply the wants and necessities of all his people And thus far touching the description of God by his works of Creation and Preservation MEMBER V. One true God Creator and Governor of all things is distinguished into the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost THat there is a distinction of Persons and this distinction in the Divine Essence is evident if so be we look into the holy Scriptures Gen. 1.26 And God said Let us make man in our image where God the Father consults with his Son and holy Spirit The like phrase we have in Gen. 11.7 Let us go down and there confound their Language And Isa 63.9 10. The Angel of his presence saved them Of whose presence Of God the Fathers and who was this Angel but the Son the second Person in Trinity But they rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit to wit the Holy Ghost Haggai 2.5 7. According to the word that I convenanted with you when ye came out of Aegypt Who was it that did covenant with the Israelites to wit God the Father So My Spirit remaineth among you to wit the Holy Ghost And The desire of all Nations shall come to wit the Sonne But this Mysterie is more clearly revealed in the New Testament as when Christ was baptized Matthew 3.16 17. And he saw to wit John the Baptist the Spirit of God descending like a Doue and lighting upon him to wit upon Christ And lo a voyce from Heaven that is to say from God the Father saying This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased But more
thundring and powerful Ministry Vse 2. A call to repentance unto all such as are in the estate of nature as ignorant persons Swearers Cursers Profaners of the Sabbath Whoremasters Drunkards Oppressors Usurers Greedy Earth-worms Contemners of the Gospel Despisers of Gods Ministers who all proclaim themselves to be in the estate of nature O that such would consider the woful case they are in To be under the Curse as the unregenerate person is is no little misery To be subject to all outward calamities in this life nay to have many Spiritual plagues upon them as blindness of mind hardness of heart and many times terrors of conscience even the flashes of hell fire in their consciences and when by temporal death the soul goeth out of the body the wrath of God to press it down to the pit of hell and there to be in unspeakable nay unconceivable torment until the day of Judgment and then when the soul and body shall be again conjoined to appear and stand before 1. Such a Judge as cannot be deceived through ignorance 2. Such a Judge as cannot be forestalled by favour 3. Such a Judg as cannot be overswayed with power 4. Such a Judg as cannot be moved with pity for then the time of pity is past to such 5. Such a Judge as cannot be corrupted with gifts Lastly Such a Judg as cannot be overcome with Arguments and so the Sentence to be passed upon them Mat. 25.41 Go ye Cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Divel and his Angels And then to be for ever separated from Gods comfortable presence to be for ever restrained and enforced to the society of the Divel and his Angels both soul and body to be in unspeakable and unconceivable torment and that for ever every faculty of soul and member of body to be in this torment and that for evermore O consider this ye that forget God lest he tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver Psal 50.22 2 Cor. 5.11 Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord we perswade men saith the Apostle So we perswade you to see and to be sensible of your condition that in the use of all good means you would labour to get out of your present estate as it is Ephes 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and stand up from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Take heed of fore-slowing the time If death seize upon thee before thy Repentance and Regeneration ah wo be unto thee that ever thou wast born And know thou hast no lease of thy life remember that secure fool Luke 12.20 Thou fool this night shall thy soul be required of thee This day hear Gods voice and do not harden thy heart for to morrow thou art uncertain of it Thus far touching mans misery by nature We proceed to the third Principle PRINC III. Quest What means is there for thee to escape this damnable estate Answ Jesus Christ the eternal Son of God being made man by his death upon the Crosse and by his Righteousnesse hath perfectly alone by himselfe accomplished all things that are needful for the salvation of mankind MEMB 1. Jesus Christ the eternal Son of God HErein we have the Redeemer of mankind described by three of his Titles 1. Jesus 2. Christ 3. The Son of God this last illustrated by this Epithete eternal The eternal Son of God Of these three Titles in order and first of the Title Jesus This Title is a Title of benefits it signifying an Author of safety our Saviour as we may observe the Angel to interpret speaking to Joseph Matth. 1.21 Thov shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people from their sins Obj. But may some men say There was others called by this name besides the Redeemer of mankind Ans It is true but take notice of the difference betwixt him and them 1. They had his name imposed on them by the will of men but he had his name given him by an Angel from God 2. They were but typical Saviours he the Saviour indeed 3. They were but temporal and outward Saviours he a Spiritual Saviour 4. They were but Instrumental Saviours he the Author of all good things Temporal Spiritual and Eternal Obj. But the Father and the Holy Ghost are Saviours also Ans It is true but the difference is in their manner of saving The Father saveth by the Son the Son saveth by paying the Ransome and price of salvation the Holy Ghost saveth by a particular applying of this Ransome Two Questions following to be answered and then we come to Application 1. Whom this Jesus saves 2. From what Quest 1. Whom Ans The Angel tells us whom in the place forecited Matth. 1.21 Thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people And the Apostle Paul Ephes 5.23 calls him The Saviour of his body to wit of all the Elect. Quest 2. From what Ans The Angel tells us that too in the former place He shall save his people from their sins to wit all their sins the guilt and dominion of them Vse The Application may be to inform us two wayes 1. Touching our miserable lost estate by nature for so much a Saviour implies And the truth of it is we can never rightly and comfortably acknowledg this Saviour until we be sensible this way Many speak of this Saviour as their Saviour but when were they dejected and cast down with a sight and sense of their own misery by nature The Son of man is come saith our Saviour himself Matth. 18.11 to save that which was lost that is to say those that were sensible of their lost estate and condition but divers very ignorant and insensible this way wil yet cal him their Saviour 2. To inform us touching the great mercy of God to mankind Satan and his Angels fell but have no Saviour man falls and the Lord deviseth and affordeth a Saviour Now to this Saviour seeing and feeling our misery let us fly saying and praying with the Disciples Matth. 8.25 Lord save us we perish and with David Psal 35.3 Say unto our souls Thou art our salvation Considering that comfortable Text he himself preach'd upon the truth of which he came into the world to make good Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath annointed me to preach the Gospel to the poor he hath sent me to heal the broken hearted to preach deliverance to the Captives and recovering of sight to the blind to set at liberty them that are bruised And in ver 21. He began to say unto them This day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears Now we come to the second Title Christ which is a Title of Office and signifies Annointed There were three sorts of persons annointed in the time of the Old Testament Prophets Priests and Kings who were all types of this Annointed of this Prophet Priest and King That we may the better understand this Title we intend to answer the Questions
following 1. Why this Jesus is said to be annointed 2. With what 3. His Office of Mediatorship what it is in the three parts of it 4. The benefits the Elect have by it Lastly The Duties intimated The first Question is Why this Jesus is said to be anointed Answ In ancient time two things were intimated by this Anointing 1. That God did appoint such a person to such an Office 2. That he would fit and qualifie him for the same In both these respects Jesus is said to be anointed 1. He was set apart of God the Father to the Office of Mediatorship for although this be a common action of the whole Trinity yet because the Father is the first Person in order and hath the beginning of the action it is especially ascribed unto him according to that Joh. 6.27 Him hath God the Father sealed 2. He was fitted and qualified with gifts accordingly John 3.34 God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him that is to say God giveth the Spirit unto him that is unto this Jesus in an abundant measure For this we must know that although both natures were set apart to the Office of Mediatorship why yet the Humane nature only was qualified with gifts because nothing could be added to the Divine I say this qualification must be understood of the humane nature and not of the Divine for the reason aforesaid and although the humane nature was iqualified with pifts in an abundant measure why yet not in an infinite measure for that were to confound the two Natures Quest 2 With what was this Jesus annointed Ans Not with Ceremonious oyl typically as the Prophets Priests and Kings in the old Testament but with the gifts of the holy Ghost as Acts 10.38 God annointed Jesus of Nazareth with the holy Ghost and with power Quest 3 His office of mediatorship what it is in the three parts of it Prophetical Priestly and Kingly Answ First of the first his Prophetical office is that whereby he instructeth and teacheth his Church as in his own person when in our nature he lived in the world why so by his instruments before his assuming our nature and since his ascension unto the end of the world That he is the Prophet of the Church do but see Act. 3.22 23. where the Apostle Peter speaking of Christ saith For Moses truly said unto the fathers A Prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren like unto me him shall you hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you And it shall come to pass that every soul that wil not hear that prophet shall be destroyed from among the people And hence is he called the wisdome of God 1 Cor. 1.24 Nay saith the Apostle Paul Colos 2.5 In him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledg 2. His P●iestly office That he is a Priest the Psalmist declareth speaking of him Psal 110.4 Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchized●k His Priesthood contains two things First His satisfaction made to his Father for the elect by his obedience even to the death of the Cross Secondly his intercession at his Fathers right hand he ever living to present the ment of his obedience to his Father and to will an application of it to his elect Touching the former part of his Priestly office to wit his satisfaction do but see Heb. 9.26 Now once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrificing of himself and verse twenty eight Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many to wit of the Elect all the Elect Touching the other part of his Priestly office his intercession see Heb. 7.25 He is able to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him seeing he ever lives to make intercession for them Rom. 8.34 Heb. 9.24 3. We come to the Kingly office of Christ That he is a King see Psal 2.6 David there speaking of him saith yet have I set my King upon my holy hill of Zion His Kingly office is either Universall or speciall Universal and so all creatures are under his dominion Ephes 1.21 22. Special and so he effectually cals the Elect confirms the graces in them protects them from their enemies in this world as he sees the best for them glorifies them at the length and in the end confounds and destroys all his and their enemies Quest 4 What are the benefits the Elect have by this annointing Answ Hence it is the Elect become Christians and Christians indeed that they are spirituall Prophets Priests and Kings Men and women no sooner truely beleeve are no sooner effectually called but they receive of this annointing and so become Christians Spirituall Prophets Priests and Kings to this purpose see 1 John 2.27 The annointing which ye received of him abideth in you and teacheth you all things So then the regenerate are spirituall Prophets and they are likewise spiritual Priests and Kings see Rev. 1.6 who hath made us kings and priests unto God his Father The last question What are the duties intimated An. 1 Seeing this Jesus is the Christ is the annointed he should be sweet and savory unto us Cant. 13. Because of the savor of thy good ointments thy name is as ointment poured forth therefore do the virgins love thee Nothing should be so desired of us so affected by us as Christ 2. We should labour more and more for holy knowledg and so demonstrate our selves to partake of Christ propheticall office Many exhortations this way Provt 19.2 without knowledg the mind is nogood John 5.39 Search the Scriptures Colos 3.16 Let the word of Christ dwel in you richly in all wisedome And how the Apostle reproves the Hebrews for their bad proficiency this way Heb. 5.12 c. 3. We should demonstrate our selves to be spirituall Priests and so to partake of Christs Priestly office by spirituall Sacrifices as first by being frequent in prayer and praise as the Apostle exhorts Heb. 13.15 By him therefore let us offer the Sacrifice of praise to God continually 2. By resigning up our selves wholly unto God in the way of new obedience as the same Apostle exhorts Rom. 12.1 I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice holy and acceptable unto God 4. We should demonstrate our selves to be spirituall Kings and so to partake of Christs Kingly office and this by continual warring with our spiritual enemies especially labouring to subdue our own sinfull passions and affections see what Solomon saith this way Prov. 25.28 He that hath no rule over his own spirit is like a City that is broken down and without wals And Prov. 16.32 He that is slow to anger is better then the mighty and he that ruleth his spirit then he that taketh a City Thus much touching the second title Christ we come to the third The Son of God illustrate by this epethite eternall
towards us in that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for us And so 1 John 4.9 10. In this was manifested the love of God towards us because that God sent his onely begotten Son into the world that we might live through him Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be a Propitiation for our sins 3. The great love that was in Christ himself unto the Elect Gal. 2.20 I live by the faith of the Son of God saith the Apostle Paul who loved me and gave himself for me And Eph. 5.2 Walk in love as Christ also hath loved us and given himself for us And so verse 25. Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it The instrumental Causes were Satan Judas the High Priests the Jewes in general Pilate and the Roman Souldiers But these Instruments neither to be commended nor excused in this business they having their own wicked and malicious ends Quest 5 Now we come to the fifth question To what end Christ suffered Answ The principal and next to Gods glory was to merit for the Elect remission of sins and freedome from punishment Coll. 1.14 In whom we have redemption through his blood even the forgiveness of sins And Gal. 3.13 Christ hath redeemed us from the Curse of the Law We must not conceive of Christs sufferings as the sufferings of a private man but as the sufferings of a publick person he being our Pledge and Surety as he is called Heb. 7.22 And whatsoever he suffered he suffered for us as Rom. 4.25 Who was delivered for our offences that is to say to death And 1 Cor. 15.3 Christ dyed for our sinnes And 1 Pet. 2.24 very comfortably Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree And hence it is that he is said to be made sin for us 2 Cor. 5.21 and a Curse for us Galatians 3.13 Here take we notice of the difference between the sufferings of Christ and the sufferings of Martyrs 1. Christs sufferings were an acursed punishment The sufferings of Martyrs are onely Chastisements or Tryals 2. Christs sufferings were Meritorious so are not the sufferings of Martyrs but a duty and debt There be other ends of Christs Passive obedience as the mortifying of sin in the Elect Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our old man is Crucified with him that the body of sinne might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sinne And the giving of them an example of suffering patiently 1 Peter 2.21 Christ suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps Thus we have the five Questions answered Now we come to the Uses Vse 1. To inform us and that divers wayes 1. To let us see into the fierceness of Gods Wrath and wonderful Justice against sinne when nothing could expiate it but the death of his Sonne when nothing could satisfie for it but the blood of the Lord Jesus what think we then of those that make nothing of sinne do not account it to be of an horrible and accursed nature 2. See we here the great love of God the Father that rather then we should perish everlastingly his Sonne must undertake for us he must satisfie for us become sinne become a Curse for us dye the accursed death of the Cross for our sakes John 3.16 God so loved the world it cannot be expressed how much that he gave his onely begotten Sonne to dye for us In this God commendeth his love unto us as the Apostle Paul Romans 8. And in this he manifested his love unto us as the Apostle John saith 1 John 4.9 10. Herein is love indeed a miracle of love that God the Father should so love his enemies as to give his onely Sonne to dye for them Very moving is that phrase of the Apostle Paul Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his own Sonne but delivered him up for us all as though he had loved us better then his own Son As the Lord saith of Abraham Gen. 22.12 when at his command he was ready to offer up his only son Isaac Now I know that thou fearest God seeing thou hast not withheld thy sonne thy onely sonne from me So may we say of God that we know that he loved us because he hath not withheld his Son his onely Son from us but hath given him to that accursed death for our sakes 3. See we here the great love of Christ himself unto his Church that rather then she should perish he would give himself to death even the accursed death of the Cross as Gal. 1.4 Who gave himself for our sinnes which phrase intimates unto us how willingly he laid down his life for our sake Now indeed had not his death been voluntary it could not have been satisfactory But that he laid down his life willingly for us is evident by many circumstances about his death as when Peter counselled him to spare himself see what he got for his labour Matthew 16.23 Get thee behind me Satan saith Christ unto him And when Judas was ready to betray him see what our Saviour saith unto him John 13.27 That thou dost do quickly And when Judas was gone out to get company to apprehend him he went to the place he had wont to be in so as Judas might readily find him nay he met them in the mid-way that came to take him and tells them he was the Party they sought for and when they fell to the ground upon his saying I am he he would not escape from them All these particulars you may observe in the eighteenth Chapter of John Verse first c. He could have been rescued by the Angels Matth. 26.53 but would not and when by his Adversaries he was provoked to have come down from the Cross Matthew 27.42 and could have done so he would not All these circumstances let us see how willingly he laid downe his life for our sakes according to that he saith Joh. 10.18 No man taketh my life from me but I lay it downe of my selfe I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again And doth not this much commend the love of Christ to us he so willingly laying down his life for us No marvel the Apostle Paul Ephes 3.19 cals this love of his a love passing knowledg Vse 2. For the great comfort and consolation of all true beleevers and that on severall cases 1. Doth their present infirmities or their ancient grievous sins stare them in the face Doth at any time the weight and butden of sin with the wrath of God due for the same oppresse them let them weigh and perpend the price of their redemption the great ransome was given for them to wit the precious blood of the Son of God as 1 Pet. 1.18 19. Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as Silver and Gold but with the precious bloud of Christ A ransome invaluable and
Christ is received and partaked of for that flows from the Principle of grace and so works more freely and absolutely But in this the soul is onely a Patient this is a saving work but not a sanctifying work but yet alwayes sanctification followes upon the same Now we come to the second question Quest 2. Whether every man and woman that hath this Contrite and Humble spirit shall certainly be made partakers of Christ and his benefits Answ Yes because this is the lost soul which Christ came to seek and to save for of this soul we must understand our Saviour when he saith Luke 19.20 The Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost And this is the bruised reed which in no case he will break Matth. 12.20 And do but see Psal 51.17 A broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise not the broken and contrite heart aforesaid And Isaiah 57.15 Thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity whose Name is HOLY I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones And so Matth. 5.3.4 Our Saviour saith Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the Kingdome of heaven And Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted It is the contrite and humble ones which our Saviour here intends Thus we see distinctly and plainly that every man and woman that hath the contrite and humble spirit aforesaid shall certainly be made partakers of Christ and his benefits Quest 3. Whether this contrition and humiliation be wrought in the like measure in all that are made partakers of Christ and his benefits Answ No and for the Causes and Reasons following 1. Some have committed more gross and heinous sins then others and therefore have cause and need to be more terrified and humbled then others 2. The Lord intends to bestow a greater measure of grace upon some then upon others to do greater works by them then by others and therefore prepares them accordingly by contrition and humiliation 3. Some have been Religiously educated from their Child-hood whereby as they were kept from gross sins so corruption was subdued in them gently and secretly by little and little without any great measure of contrition and humiliation grace and comfort being instilled into them almost insensibly 4. Some by natural constitution and temper of body are more fearful and sensible of anguish then others 5. Some after the Wound have the Medicine sooner revealed and applyed to them then others Now we proceed to the Uses Vse 1. To acquaint us that there is but a few comparatively that partake of Christ and his benefits and this will be evident if so be we weigh the particulars which the contrition and humiliation aforesaid contains As first a true and distinct sight of sin many see their sins in a general slight and confused way but where is the man that sees sin to be the greatest evil even separating from the greatest good to wit God himself Isaiah 59.2 nay that so far as he gives way unto it so far he joynes with the Divel and fights against God that sees into the vile and loathsom nature of sin And where is the man that sees himself to be guilty of Adams fall himself to be stained and polluted universally with natural corruption himself to be guilty of such and such actual sins sins of Omission and sins of Commission that turns his sins upside down considers them in the circumstances of them Psal 119.59 2. The second particular the contrition and humiliation aforesaid contains is unfained and sound sorrow for sin Psal 94.16 17. Alas the most sin is their meat and their drink their very delight they storm and grieve because they cannot sin as they would are sorry and angry they have such a Minister as will reprove them for their sins that they may not go on in sin without any controul or if they have any sorrow in them at any time it is onely because of the punishment that attends sin Many that mourn for this and that outward cross and calamity present and imminent but do not at al mourn for sin the cause of it but a few whose hearts are rightly pricked for their sins Acts 2.37 And so for the other particulars Where is the man that finds sin a load and burden upon his conscience that doth humbly and heartily confess his sins that importunately cryes to heaven for mercy and that truly dislikes sin even to a sinful thought The particulars aforesaid being perpended it will appear that there is but a few that have contrite and humble spirits and so consequently but a few that partake of Christ and his benefits Vse 2. For the comfort and consolation of all such as have contrite and humble spirits they all they shall partake of Christ and his benefits such all such are they whom Christ came to seek and to save Psal 51.17 The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise Isa 57.15 And Matth. 11.28 Come unto me saith Christ all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest The Lord doth not deal with the burdened conscience as Satan and his Instruments Satan Revel 12.4 when the woman was ready to be delivered of her Child was ready to devour her Child and so are his Instruments Now we hope say they you have followed Preachers gone to Sermons long enough no no Psal 147.3 He healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds to wit the Lord Isaiah 61.1 And to this purpose it is a wondrous thing to observe how the Lord sustains and bears up the wounded soul by a secret hope of mercy as we may see in the King of Niniveh Jonah 3.9 9. Who can tell if God will turn and repent and turn away from his fierce anger that we perish not But for this hope the bruised heart would break and but for this hope the means of recovery and raising up would not be endeavored This hope keeps from despair and provokes to the use of holy means It is true saith the wounded soul I am in a miserable case but if there be any hope I will cry to heaven for mercy I will depend upon the Ministry of the word constantly I will creep into the company of those that make profession of Religion in a special manner who can tell but that the Lord may shew mercy to my poor soul May some man say this is very comfortable that every contrite and humble spirit shall certainly pertake of Christ and his benefits But how may I know that my heart is truly contrite and humble Signes 1. If thou judgest sin to be the greatest evil and the favour of God to be the greatest good 2. If thou hadst rather hear of mercy to thy
poor soul then of an earthly Kingdome to be bestowed upon thee 3. If thou thinkest those that have true Peace of conscience and Joy in the Holy Ghost to be the happiest people under the sun 4. If thou tremble at the Word and honour the very feet of those Instruments that bring glad tydings of peace to such as thy self to wit to wounded consciences 5. If thou send up strong and uncessant cryes to God for the assurance of his favour in and through Christ 6. If thou dost pity and compassionate all such as have broken and bruised hearts Vse 3. To exhort all such as for the present have not contrite and humble spirits to labour and endeavour for that disposition Motives 1. The contrary disposition to wit hardness of heart and impenitency is a great sin and a grievous judgement A great sin Rom. 2.5 But thou after thy hard and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath A grievous judgement Exod. 9.12 And the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh See John 12.40 Now there be two kinds of hardness of heart 1. Sensible that which is perceived and felt and this may be in the godly as Isa 63.17 Oh Lord why hast thou made us to erre from thy wayes and heardened our hearts from thy fear 2. Insensible that which is not perceived and felt and this indeed is a great sin and plague 2. The second Motive The sooner we labour after this disposition the more easily in likelyhood we shall attain unto it when a heart hath been long hardened with the deceitfulness of sin it will not easily become a contrite and humble heart and therefore Psalm 95.7.8 To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts So Joel 2.12 13. Besides it may be hereafter we shall not enjoy the like means this way we do for the present 3. Without this contrite and humble spirit according to the Doctrine we cannot partake of Christ and his benefits this is the Messenger that Christ ever sends before him unto those of years for we do not now speak of Infants and wo be unto us if we do not partake of Christ and his benefits it had been good for us we had never been born 4. Whosoever hath this contrite and humble spirit shall certainly partake of Christ and his benefits Now this may greatly induce us to labour for this disposition when the issue undoubtedly shall be so good and so happy Suppose this business be difficult and tedious why yet such an issue must needs put us on in it These are the Motives Now we proceed to the Means of a contrite and humble spirit Means 1. Prayer to God in the best manner we can it is he that must bruise our hard and stony hearts Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh to wit a contrite and humble heart 2. Because the Lord doth many times make use of afflictions and judgements for the bruising of mens hearts when he sends any great affliction upon us let us not stand out against him but joyn with him when he goes a bout to humble us let us labour to humble our selves as Saul afterwards called Paul Acts 9.6 trembling and astonished said Lord what wilt thou have me to do When the hand of God is upon us let us not stand murmuring and repining but fall to examination of our Spiritual estates and cases as the Wise-man adviseth us Eccles 7.14 In the day of adversity consider 3. Constant dependance upon the Ministry of the Word Jer. 23.29 Is not my word like as a fire saith the Lord and like a hammer that breaketh the Rocks in pieces Now we are to know that the Law hath a stroke in this work and so the Gospel 1. The Law by revealing of sin and the woful consequents of it and so the Spirit of God co-operating there is caused a servile fear and trembling a kind of contrition and humiliation which the Apostle Rom. 8.15 cals the spirit of bondage causing fear when the Spirit of God puts an edge upon the Law puts a sword into the hand of the Law to prick and wound the heart and to restrain it in the wayes of sin for fear of punishment Many a man and woman hears the Law opened and the threatnings of it thundringly denounced but stir not are little moved but when once the Lord by his Spirit puts an edge upon the Law then the stoutest heart trembles and quakes Now that the Law may have a kindly work upon us 1. By the Law let us labour for a distinct knowledge of sin 2. Rightly to understand what the Curse is which the Law threatneth unto sin and sinners 3. Examine our selves how guilty we are of that which the Law threatens the Curse unto to wit sin 4. Finding our selves guilty to labour our hearts to a deep contrition and humiliation Now as we have heard before as the Law hath a stroke in this work why so the Gospel more and more melting the heart by discovering Christ whom the sinner hath pierced by his sins and by supporting the heart by a secret hope of mercy and possibility of help in and through Christ even as Jonah Chap. 2. verse 4. Then I said I am cast out of thy sight yet I will look again toward thy holy Temple Or as the Prodigal Son Luke 15.17 18. And when he came to himself he said How many hired servants of my fathers house have bread enough and to spare and I perish with hunger I will arise and go to my father and will say unto him father I have sinned against heaven and before thee c. Now after the Law hath humbled us and the Gospel conveyed this glimpse of hope into our hearts it must be nourished and cherished 1. By considering of the Lords Infinite and Almighty Power how he is able more and more to bruise our souls to make us more and more capable of Christ and so to bring Christ nearer unto us that we may partake of him and his benefits Luke 1.37 With God nothing shall be unpossible And Matth. 3.9 God is able of stones to raise up children unto Abraham 2. The freeness of Gods mercy must be considered of he requires nothing of thee to procure this mercy but shewes mercy because he will shew mercy Suppose thou hast never so many exceptions to thy self why yet thou belonging unto him and his mercy being a free mercy he will proceed with thee until he hath made thee capable of Christ and bestowed Christ upon thee and his benefits Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh And Isaiah 43.25 I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake 3. For supporting of this hope consider we of the riches of Gods mercy unto the proper objects of mercy Contrite and Humble men
in the second place to enquire wherein the nature and Essence of this faith consisteth Answ In four acts of the soul the former two being acts of the Understanding the latter two being acts of the Will 1. The first act is this to wit a knowing of Christ aright and that which the Gospel reveals to mankind concerning him As first I must know that Christ is an All sufficient Saviour 2. I must know that he and all his merits are offered by the Lord to me as well as to any other Mark 16.15 3. I must know that Christ is so offered to me as I am commanded to believe that he and his merits belong to me Mat. 11.28 4. I must know how and upon what terms Christ is offered unto me not only as my Saviour to free me from Gods wrath and to bring me to heaven but likewise as my Lord and King to rule and govern me and I unfainedly and heartily to serve and obey him he being only a Saviour to such and unto all such as Heb. 5.9 being made perfect he became to wit Christ the Author of eternall salvation unto all them that obey him This knowledg of Christ or the Gospel is the first thing wherein the nature and essence of justifying faith consisteth it being an excellent grace and ever having knowledg concurring to the being of it and hence it is that sometimes this faith is called the knowledg of Christ as Isai 53.11 By his knowledg that is by faith in him shall my righteous servant justifie many and John 17.3 This is life eternall that they might know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent The second act of the soul wherein the nature and essence of this faith consisteth is the assent and credit that the mind giveth unto all aforesaid as to an undoubted truth to wit that Christ is indeed an all-sufficient Saviour and that God offereth him unto me commanding me to receive him and that in this gracious offer he meaneth as he saith and that he and all his merits belong to me if I will receive him upon those terms the Lord offereth him on In respect of this second propertie faith is called a beleeving of God as Rom. 4.3 Abraham beleeved God and 1 John 5.10 He that beleeveth not God hath made him a liar See Exod. 14.32 The third act of the soul wherein the nature and essence of this faith consisteth is the consent that the will giveth to this blessed offer of Christ in the Gospel not only for the undoubted truth but for the incomparable goodnesse and excellency of it as when the contrite and humble soul saith not onely this is a faithfull saying but likewise worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners And suppose the beleever through the sense he hath of his own unworthinesse find much reluctancy and doubting to hinder this act of faith why yet his soul unfainedly desireth and longeth to receive Christ upon the termes aforesaid In respect of this propertie faith is called an hungring and thirsting after Christ as Matth. 5.6 Blessed are they that do hunger and thirst after righteousness to wit after Christ and his righteousnesse And Rev. 21.6 I will give unto him that is a thirst of the fountain of the water of life freely The fourth act of the soul wherein the nature and essence of this faith consisteth is a resting and relying upon Christ and him alone for the obtaining of Gods favour and eternall life And indeed this is of all other the chief act of the soul in true faith and that wherein the being and essence of it doth briefly consist In respect of this property it is called a beleeving in or on Christ or a trusting in Christ or a receiving of Christ as John 3.16.18 Ephes 1.12 13. John 1.12 These several phrases implying one and the same thing Thus we see now wherein the nature and essence of justifying faith consisteth But the things following we must be put in mind of 1. That there are several degrees of faith the several acts aforesaid being in those that are qualified with this grace in some more distinct and strong in others more dim and weak I mean the former knowledg assent consent and receiving Yet the weakest faith being a true faith serving the turn to the purpose aforesaid 2. That in one and the same party the several acts aforesaid are sometimes more strong and sometimes more weak And 3. That some of the acts of faith may be strong and some of them weak in one and the same partie and at one and the same time Object But may some men say Is not this likewise an act of justifying faith to be assured or aussrance of Gods favour and that Christ and his benefits are mine Answ First Although this assurance be attainable and some do attain unto it in this life to wit in process of time after many Trials and Combats after many experiences of Gods love after the practice of holy duties long continued in and constantly stuck unto for otherwise ordinarily it is not attained unto why yet there be many that no question have a true and right faith that do not attain unto it in this life I mean to this assurance Secondly This assurance is not an act of justifying faith as it justifieth but an act of faith following justification or an act of experience in one already justified by faith or a fruit of faith it being not properly of the nature and essence of justifying faith The doctrine being thus opened we come to the Uses Vse 1 To inform us touching the miserable condition of divers men and women for the present all such as are not qualified with this faith no justifying faith no Christ no Christ no salvation and if no salvation what but damnation Now divers men and women may it not be concluded of them that they are altogether destitute this way As first all such as are grosly ignorant faith being a wise grace of Gods spirit and presupposing knowledg in some measure 2. All prophane persons a justifying faith being a sanctifying faith 3. All such whose hearts are not shivered and broken in some measure in the sight and sense of their naturall miserie contrition and humiliation ever in those of years being the usher to this faith And the misery of such is the greater because either they make no reckoning of this grace or presume they have it alreadie when alas there is no such matter or think it is impossible to attaine unto or if they should go about it that it would cost them too much pains or bring upon them too much damage or trouble by forgoing their sinfull pleasures and profits or exposing them to dangers and persecutions or else think it is so easie a thing to get as they may obtain it when they will and so put off the seeking of it untill their death beds well we see all such as
instrument that apprehends and applies Christ and his Merits Now we are to know that as there be very many who think they have this Grace of Faith and yet have it not why so there be some who have it and yet fear they have it not The latter of these we desire to encounter with by answering some of their Objections Obj. 1. We shall have some Christians to say That it is true indeed they make a profession of the Faith in a special manner and they dearly love Gods Word Gods Ministers and Gods People and earnestly desirous they are in every thing to please God but they do not know when or by whom they were converted and therefore they question whether they have the grace of true faith or no. Ans Although some of Gods people know and can remember the time and instrument this way why yet this is not required of all Gods people The Lord converting some even byone Sermon others by degrees and in a longer time as he best pleases May it not suffice to find this Faith by the effects of it but we must trouble our selves about unnecessary circumstances See what the man that was born blind saith in the like case Joh. 9.25 Object 2. But may some men say My faith is so little if any that I know not what to say I have many fears and doubtings Ans It is true that a great and strong faith is earnestly to be laboured for in the use of all good means 1. Because the stronger a mans faith is the more firme and close his union is with Christ 2. The clearer apprehension he hath of the pardon of his sins 3. The more boldly he goes to the Throne of Grace 4. The more patiently he endures afflictions 5. The more conscionably he walks in his particular Calling 6. The more manfully he fights with all his Spiritual enemies upon these grounds such as have but a weak and little faith must earnestly labour to have it stronger and greater but yet in the mean time these parties must not be too much discouraged First Because there may be many feares and doubtings where there is true faith Matth. 8.26 and 14.31 Secondly It is not the excellency and great measure of faith that justifies us but the Object of faith to wit Christ and his Merits Thirdly A weak faith if a true faith doth apprehend this object effectually and savingly as a little hand may hold a jewel of inestimable worth and a palsie hand a gift of great price He that did look upon the brasen serpent in the wildernesse but with one eye nay but with half an eye was as well and fully cured of the deadly sting of the fiery serpent as those which beheld it with both eyes 4. The strongest faith in this world is imperfect Abraham himselfe the father of the faithful had his doubtings as when he took Hagar and requested Sarah to say she was his Sister Object 3 I have but a little sense and feeling but a little assurance of Gods favour and of the pardon of my sins and therefore I suspect the truth of my faith Answ It is true indeed that this feeling and assurance is earnestly to be endeavored after by every godly person First Because it is a glimpse of heaven a kind of heaven upon earth Secondly Because it makes a mam nimble and chearfull in all manner of obedience active and passive as Nehem. 8.10 The joy of the Lord is your strength and Heb. 10.34 Ye took joyfully the spoiling of your goods knowing that ye have in heaven a better and enduring substance But yet we are to know that this feeling assurance is rather an effect of justifying faith then justifying faith it self and that justifying faith may be and is in many in whom this assurance is not as is plain by divers examples Psal 22.1 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Here was faith in David my God my God but where was his feeling when he saith why hast thou forsaken me and so Heman the Ezrahite Psal 88.14 Lord why castest thou off my soul why hidest thou thy face from me Here was but a little feeling a little assurance and yet faith to be found in this party as is plain in the first verse of the same Psalm O Lord God of my salvation I have cried day and night before thee And so Job 13.24 Wherefore hidest thou thy face and holdest me for thine enemy and 16.9 He teareth me in his wrath who hateth me he gnasheth upon me with his teeth mine enemy sharpneth his eyes upon me What feeling was here but of Gods anger yet take notice of the faith that was in this man chap. 13. ver 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him The truth of it is there is a double certainty the certainty of adherence and the certainty of evidence the certainiy of adherence is the certainty of faith the certainty of evidence is the certainty of assurance Now there may be the former certainty adhering and cleaving to Christ by faith where there is not the latter the certainty of evidence and assurance Answ 2. Thou that art ready to conclude thou hast no faith because thou hast so little feeling of Gods favour do but for thy faith examine it by other effects of it as love to Gods Word Gods Ministers Gods People thy earnest desire to please God in all things and thou maiest find it which if thou dost thou mayest perceive Gods speciall love to thee in so excellent a qualification Object 4. But I have waited long in the use of holy means and yet have not attained to the blessing aforesaid and therefore I question whether I have a kindly faith or no. Answ First We must not appoint God the time when to bestow his blessings upon us but must stil wait his time in the use of means sutable to the blessings propounded Secondly we do ill to conclude upon this ground that we have no faith we should rather conclude hence that the Lord for the present sees not this blessing good for us I tell you every one of Gods people at every time cannot weild the sense of his favour and the feeling of his love but through corruption are apt to grow proud or carelesse in the use of the means Thirdly The longer we have waited and do wait the more plentful wil the consolation be when it comes Fourthly It may be the Lord makes us to wait for it to kindle our affections unto it and that we might the more prize it when we have it Fifthly It may be to correct our conceit that was in us before our regeneration in the daies of peace and securitie before our consciences were awakened we thinking it an easie thing to obtain the assurance of Gods favour and sins remission for so many a natural man thinks Sixthly Did not the Lord wait long upon us for our contrition and humiliation and will we murmur at him if we
and this we may see in Hanani who is described Neh. 7.2 to fear God above many to wit that he did truly fear God And so in Job Chap. 1. verse 8. And the Lord said unto Satan hast thou considered my servant Job that there is none like him in the earth But the righteousness of justification is equally vouchsafed unto every true Believer without any difference at all every true Believer is as fully discharged from all his sins as any other is as perfectly righteous in the sight of God as any other see Rom. 3.22 Even the righteousness of God that is to say the righteousness of justification which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe for there is no difference So then all true Believers are not equally sanctified but equally justified 3. Another difference The righteousness of sanctification is wrought in us not all at once but by degrees hence it is compared Prov. 4.18 to the light that shineth more and more unto the perfect day And Ephes 4.16 to the body of a man which growes in stature and strength til it come to the full perfection But the righteousness of justification is done all at once it never groweth and increaseth at all but is as much at our first ingrafting into Christ our first ingrafting into Christ by faith as it is ever after as Romans 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus That is to say to true Believers after they do believe And Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith not a little or in part justified but justified this faith indeed whereby we do apprehend it our sense and assurance of it likewise is not perfected at once but groweth and increaseth 4. Another difference The righteousness of sanctification is never perfected in this life Prov. 20.9 Who can say I have made my heart clean I am pure from my sin But the righteousness of justification is absolutely perfect in this life Canticles 4.7 Thou art all fair my Love saith Christ to the Church in regard of her justification there is no spot in thee Though in respect of our sanctification we be not throughly cleansed from all our sinnes yet in respect of our justification we are according unto that 1 John 1.7 The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sinne the Lord accounting of the true Believer as though there were no sinne in him and as though he were perfectly righteous And hence it is that Gods people do and may do more bear themselves and rest upon their justification then upon their sanctification Thus we see the difference or differences betwixt justification and sanctification and so we have resolved the third question But before we come to the Application we are to answer some objections Object 1. If this be a truth undeniable that all true Believers are justified persons for that is the effect of the Doctrine How comes it to pass then that they daily pray for remission of sinnes What need have they to do do so remission of sinnes being the chief part of justification Answ 1 First in general That they have need to do so is plain because our Saviour commands them this Matth. 6.11 12. Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our debts that is to say our sinnes As our Saviour would have all true Believers daily to put up and renew the Petition for Temporal things why so likewise the Petition for sinnes remission Now were not this needful for them our Saviour would not have injoyned them it 2. More particularly divers Reasons may be given why it is necessary for true Believers daily to put up this suit 1. Hereby a sense of sinnes desert and of their own unworthinesse is nourished in them which is very behoofeful even for the best so long as they are in this vale of tears 2. They sinne daily and therefore must put up this request daily sinne being not every way actually pardoned until it be repented of and pardon of it intreated 3. A man may be a justified person and yet have little assurance of Gods favour and sinnes remission this is the way to gain assurance more and more assurance 4. Suppose a man have great assurance of Gods favour and sinnes remission why yet it is his duty to beg the continuance of Gods favour and that the pardon of his sinnes may be assured him with repentance We read of many of the Saints in holy Writ that prayed for that of which they were before assured and thus our Saviour himself although he was assured that none of his sheep should perish as in John Chapter 10. verse 28. I give unto them Eternal life and they shall never perish yet see how he prayeth for them in the 17th Chapter verse 11. Now I am no more in the world but these are in the world and I come to thee Holy Father keep through thine owne Name those whom thou hast given me Thus the first objection is answered Object 2. But if all true Believers be justified persons and justification doth not onely absolve from all sinne but likewise from all punishment How comes it to passe then that the Lord doth inflict so many punishments upon Believers Answ Although all the miseries and afflictions of this life be in their own nature punishments for sinne because they are all fruits of sinne sinne first bringing them into the world why yet are they not punishments to all men as is evident by the two Reasons following 1. God inflicteth no punishment upon any man but for sinne but there be many great judgements and afflictions that the Lord layes upon Believers wherein he hath no respect at all to their sinnes as to the cause of these judgements he not intending therein as a Judge in a vindicative manner to correct them for any sin and the truth of this we may see in some examples Job we know was a man that sometimes had many miseries and calamities upon him insomuch that his friends censured him guilty of some great sin or sins as the cause of these judgements But the Lord reproves them for this their censure as men not rightly understanding his servant Job neither the manner of his proceeding with his servants as we may see Job 42.7 The Lord said to Eliphaz the Temanite My wrath is kindled against thee and against thy two friends for ye have not spoken of me the thing that is right as my servant Job hath And what doth the Lord say unto Satan Job 2.3 Hast thou considered my servant Job that there is none like him in the earth a perfect and an upright man one that feareth God and escheweth evil and still he holdeth fast his integrity although thou movedst me against him to swallow him up without cause Why may you say Had not Job sin enough in him to deserve as much as he endured Yes no question Why then doth the Lord say that Satan moved him to
the Law that is to say by his holiness or inherent Righteousness but by the faith of Jesus Christ that is to say but by faith only apprehending and applying Christ the material and merit orious cause of Justification And to the same purpose Rom. 3.28 We conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the Law And see Believers up and down in Scripture renouncing their works in the way of Justification as David Psal 143.2 Enter not into judgment with thy servant O Lord for in thy sight shall no man living be justified And Isai 64 6. see what the Church saith We are all as an unclean thing and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags So John the Baptist Mat. 3.14 to Christ I have need to be baptized of thee And the Apostle Paul Philip. 3.12 Not as though I were already perfect And the Apostle James James 3.2 In many things we offend all and so 1 John 1.8 If we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and there is no truth in us The Papists so erring in this weighty doctrine know them to be in a wofull and desperate estate and especially in regard of this last errour Gal. 3.10 As many as are of the works of the Law that is look to be justified by their works and inherent righteousnesse are under the curse And Gal. 5.4 Christ is become of non● effect unto you whosoever of you are justified by the law that is to say so many of you as hope to be justified by your works have no benefit by Christ Vse 2. For the great comfort and consolation of all true beleevers they are justifyed persons and that this is no small ground of comfort is plain if we seriously consider the parts of justification As first sins remission all a mans sins to be blotted out of the book of Gods remembrance and never to be imputed unto him Let us hear what David saith in this case Psal 32.1 Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven and whose sin is covered And no marvel that this is Davids judgment sin being the greatest evil and the proper cause of all other evils and further this being an infalliable truth the cause being taken away the effect must needs cease all afflictions and judgments then being but trials or fatherly chastisements The Ministers of God must comfort the people of God Isa 40.1 Comfort ye comfort ye my people saith your God but how and upon what ground See verse 2d. Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquity is pardoned and this is the course our Saviour takes with the palsie man Mat. 9.2 Son be of good chear thy sins are forgiven thee and when he would comfort the penitent woman Luke 7.48 he said unto her thy sins are forgiven Hence indeed to wit from assurance of sins pardon and reconciliation with God ariseth that peace which passeth all understanding Phil. 4.7 no heart being able to conceive the worth of this peace but that only that hath felt and enjoyed it so then this part of justification unto the true beleever is no small ground of comfort And if we consider of the other part of justification to wit the imputation of Christs righteousnesse is not that likewise unto the true beleever a ground of comfort see Isa 61.10 where the Church speaking of this righteousnesse saith I will greatly rejoyce in the Lord my soul shall be joyfull in my God for he hath clothed me with the garments of salvation he hath covered me with the robe of righteousnesse as a bridegrom decketh himself with ornaments and as a bride adorneth her self with her jewels It is not a little comfort the Christian findeth in that inherent righteousnesse which God by his spirit hath wrought in him though it be so stained and imperfect as it is when he can find that he hath been able to poure out his soul unto the Lord to mourn for his own sins and the sins of the times or to do any other service to God with an honest and upright heart O what a comfort it is unto him 1 Chron. 29.9 Then the people rejoyced for that they offered willingly because with perfect heart they offered willingly to the Lord and David the King also rejoyced with great joy And 2 Cor. 1.12 Our rejoycing is this the testimonie of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world and more aboundantly to you wards But if this poor and imperfect righteousnesse afford such comfort how just cause of comfort and rejoycing hath every true beleever that he hath another manner of righteousnesse then this to wit the perfect righteousnesse of the Lord Jesus Job saith of his inherent righteousnesse whereby he had been so rich in good works Job 29.14 I put on righteousnesse and it clothed me And a goodly garment doubtlesse that was Grace is a goodly garment certainly but if that garment that hath so many spots and rents in in it be so goodly what is the perfect righteousness of Christ that clean and white garment Rev. 19.8 And thus the Lord deals with the true beleever nor only takes from him his filthy garments Zach. 3.4 to wit his sins but likewise cloaths him with change of raiment to wit the pure and spotless robe of Christs righteousness a garment absolutely sufficient to make the beleever beautiful in Gods eyes Thus we see the great cause of comfort the true beleever hath in that hee is a justifyed person in Gods sight Vse 3. To exhort every man and woman destitute of faith to labour for it seeing this is an undoubted truth that all true Believers are justified persons their sins remitted and they cloathed with the white robe of Christs righteousnesse and if Justified why then the adopted sons and daughters of God Joh. 1.12 And so likewise Sanctified Justification and Sanctification being ever inseparable Thus far touching the fourth Member of the fourth Principle Now we come to the fifth and last Membet of the same MEMBER V. And Sanctified HEre we have the latter benefit which the true Believer receives by Christ to wit Sanctification And for the handling of it we commend unto you this point of Doctrine Doctr. Such persons as truly apprehend and apply Christ and his merits unto themselves are not only Justified but Sanctified Or thus Justification and Sanctification are inseparable The truth of this we may observe in the coupling together of the two last Petitions in the Lords Prayer Matth. 6.12 13. Forgive us our debts or trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil The former Petition being for Justification the later for Sanctification And the Apostle Paul in the five first Chapters of the Epistle to the Romans having handled the Doctrine of Justification presently in the beginning
is very willing to hearken to the Apostle Jude ver 23. injoyning him to hate even the garment spotted by the fl●sh And to the Apostle Paul 1 Thes 5.22 abstain from all appearance of evill and would faine imitate David Psal 119.101 I have refrained my feet from every evill way that I may keep thy word It is not any known sin no not the least that he dare allow himself in the practice of These differences are betwixt the formallist and the holy person Now we come to lay down some direct signes and marks of sanctification 1. The first signe is A renewed knowledg that is to say a new light in the mind and understanding conceiving the things of the spirit of God Colos 3.10 And have put on the new man speaking of the holy Colossians which is renewed in knowledg as though all that were sanctified had a renewed knowledg This is a part of Gods covenant with his Elect Jer. 31.34 They shall all know me from the least of them unto the greatest of them saith the Lord. And hence it is that the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 4.3 If our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost And upon this ground it is that the sanctified are called the children of light 2 Thes 5.5 The unsanctified may have a great deal of literall and speculative knowledg but they have not a jot of spiritual and approving knowledg The second signe of one sanctified is a new quality in the will a readinesse to hear the voice of God in all things and to obey it John 8.47 He that is of God heareth Gods words yee therefore hear them not saith our Saviour to the rebellious Jewes because ye are not of God And Psal 27.8 saith David to God When thou saidst Seek yee my face my heart answered Thy face Lord will I seek The sanctified person hath a flexible heart to the word The third Signe new affections As especially love to God Psal 18.1 I will love thee oh Lord my strength saith David And Psal 116.1 I love the Lord. Thus we see sanctified persons described Psal 97.10 Ye that love the Lord hate evill And this love to God the sanctified person manifests divers waies 1. By an earnest desire after such means as whereby he may have converse with God as praier reading and hearing of the word c. How was David addicted to the use of those means if we look into the book of the Psalms and so all the Worthies of God we read of in the Scriptures Oh how is the sanctified man or woman crossed if they be the least restrained of their liberties these ways and however the unregenerate part be backward to the duties aforesaid yet this they mourn for and do not in the ordinary course omit them 2. They manifest their love to God by a love to his children 1 John 5.1 Every one that loveth him that begat loveth him also that is begotten of him See David Psalm 16.2.3 My goodnesse extendeth not to thee but to the Saints that are in the earth and to the excellent in whom is all my delight And Psal 119.63 I am a companion of all them that fear thee and of them that keep thy precepts The more holy the more watchful the more they observe the image of God to shine upon any the more they love them Such as love not the Saints are not sanctified 3. They manifest their love to God by an endeavour of universal obedience John 14.15 If ye love me saith our Saviour keep my commandments And verse 21. He that hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is and he only that loveth me And therefore see what David saith Psal 119.5 Oh that my waies were directed to keep thy statutes The sanctified man out of his very love to God would fain keep his commandments Fourthly They manifest their love to God by a grief and heavinesse when the Lord is at any time absent from them in their own apprehensions Psal 28.1 Vnto thee will I cry O Lord my rock be not silent to me lest if thou be silent to me I become like them that go down into the pit And Psal 88.14 Lord why castest thou off my soul Why hidest thou thy face from me Thus we see the third signe and mark of sanctification a love to God and this love manifested as you have heard The fourth signe of sanctification A continual combat betwixt the flesh and the spirit Gal. 5.17 There may be a combat in the unsanctified and is divers times but that is between two several faculties the conscience and the will the conscience terrifying from sin the will pulling and haling unto it Now this is not a combat betwixt the flesh and the spirit but a combat betwixt the flesh fearing and the flesh desiring whereas the combat that is in the sanctified is in one and the same faculty As for example the will of the sanctified person drawing two waies at one and the same time the flesh one way and the spirit another I mean corruption one way and grace another corruption the unregenerate part drawing to sin grace the regenerate part at one and the same time pulling back And so on the contrary grace the regenerate part moving to good but at one and the same time the flesh corruption pulling back as Rom. 7.19 The good that I would I do not but the evill which I would not that I do And many like passages we have in this same chapter And so Galat. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and these are contrary the one to the other so that ye cannot do the things that ye would This is an evident mark of grace for there cannot be this combat but there must needs be sanctification Vse 3. For Exhortation And there be two branches of it First to exhort all such as are sanctified to endeavour a progresse a growth in grace for as we have heard although justification hath no degrees why yet sanctification hath And therefore such as have grace must ever be labouring further degrees Now to this purpose some Motives and Means Motive 1. Gods command 2 Pet. 3.18 Grow in grace and in the knowledg of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ The Thessalonians were a very holy people and yet 1 Thes 4.10 the Apostle would have them to abound more and more Motive 2. This will be a demonstration to us that the grace we have is kindly and of the right stamp it being the nature of true grace ever to desire the encrease of it selfe See Matth. 13.31 32. The kingdome of heaven that is to say the kingdome of grace is like to a grain of mustard seed which a man took and sowed in his field which indeed is the least of all seeds but when it is growen it is the greatest among herbs and becometh a tree so that the birds of the air come and lodge in the branches thereof And verse 33.
the hopeful condition of such as do enjoy this Ordinance and constantly depend upon the same If our friends kindred live in such places where plain and powerful Preaching is and they usually partake of the same although for the present we conceive them in the estate of nature and their way and course but carnal why yet they are people of hope and there is some probability of their conversions in due time The principal end why the Lord doth send forth and imploy his Ministers is to gather his Elect. And their sending to places doth argue the Lord to have of his Elect there And why may not thy kindred and friends be of that number Vse 3. For Exhortation 1. To exhort Pastors 2. People 1. Pastors that they would Preach preach preach that they would be diligent in the duty of Preaching seeing it is the onely ordinary means for the gaining of souls and for the winning of their people to God and so they shall manifest not onely a great love and affection to their people and Congregations but likewise to themselves 1 Cor. 9.16 Dan. 12.3 Nay even to Christ himself John 21.15 c. 2. To exhort the People that they would not appoint God by what means to bestow faith upon them but would submit to his appointment and Ordinance Then may a man assure himself of a blessing when he seeketh it in the Ordinance of God in that way which God hath chalked out and appointed for that end and purpose Why doth bread nourish us rather then the grass of the field It is Gods Ordinance And if the Lord will have faith to enter by the ear as at the first sin did let us not stand reasoning with him but submit to his Ordinance Oh therefore all men and women that think they have souls and desire the good of them let them make out to this Ordinance upon the Sabbath upon the Week-day borrow some time of the particular calling hear in season and out of season suffer not the body to sterve the soul the particular calling to ingross all your time from the general Nay call upon your families friends and neighbours this way Isaiah 2.3 As Philip called Nathaniel Iohn 1.45 c. And the woman of Samaria fetch'd her Neighbours to come to Christ John 4.29 So let us excite and stir up one another to this Ordinance And thus farre touching the first part of the first Member faith cometh onely by the Preaching of the word Now in the next place the Catechisme acquaints us with the principal outward means whereby faith is increased 1. By the Preaching of the word or the hearing of the word Preached 2. By the administration of the Sacraments 3. By Prayer The first outward means the Catechisme mentions for faiths encrease is the preaching of the word in these words And encreaseth daily by it And from this passage we commend this point of Doctrine Doct. As the preaching of the word is the onely ordinary outward means for the begetting of faith why so it is a very good means for the daily increase of faith More briefly The preaching of the word or the hearing of the word preached is a very good means for the daily encrease of faith This Ordinance is like to a kind natural Mother which giveth suck to the Child which she hath brought forth it being not onely the seed of faith but likewise the daily food of it The Doctrine in hand is very evident if so be we look into the Scriptures as Ephes 4.11 12. Romans 1.11 1 Thessalonians 3.10 Acts 14.21 22. and 20.32 And 1 Pet. 2.2 If we would have the point further argued 1. Take we notice of the promise of God unto true Believers constantly and conscionably depending on this Ordinance Mark 4.24 2. Of the great hunger and thirst that is in true Believers unto this Ordinance Job 23.12 Psalm 27.4 Amos 8.12 3. Consult we with experience Such Believers as take all lawful occasions and fitting opportunities to partake of this Ordinance do they not come on in faith and the other graces of Gods Spirit Psalm 51.8 But such of them as are more careless of this Ordinance suffer sloth and every trivial impediment to hinder them from it at the least on the week day is not their faith little and languishing Object But may some man say Do you think that Sermons on the week day are to be attended and waited on Answ Yes no question by all men and women that can possibly find time and leisure from their particular callings 2 Tim. 4.2 Acts 13.42 in the space betwixt that and the Sabbath as it is in the Original And Luke 19.47 48. And when they cannot partake of this Ordinance on the week day without the overthrow of their particular callings yet surely then they ought to desire after it and to account them happy that may take that liberty themselves may not as David when he was hindred from Gods Publick Worship doth express himself Psal 84.1 2 3 4. Now we come to the Uses Vse 1. To reprove some that profess themselves to have faith but are too careless of partaking frequently of this Ordinance any little sickness pain or cold keeping them from the Publick Assembly upon the Sabbath and the least worldly occasion hindring them from it on the week day Such persons do not imitate David Psalm 27.4 nor Mary Luke 10.39 but Martha Such Professors are not like to come on in faith have little comfort of their faith do not by their profession much beautifie the Gospel And surely this neglect is one main cause why many old Professors are but mean Proficients in knowledge faith and holy conversation and why they are so outstriped by young Professors that are more diligent in the use of this means as Prov. 10.4 and 18.15 These persons may think themselves wiser then those that are more forward but when their faith comes to be soundly tryed by any great affliction they will by woful experience find the contrary Fiery tryals are to be expected and looked for of all Christians and then a great stock of faith will not stand a man in little stead Vse 2. To incite and stir up all true Believers constantly to depend on this Ordinance and if their particular callings be such as will not suffer them often on the week day to partake of it why yet let them partake in affection earnestly desire after this Manna and bless God for the liberty that others have in this kind It is true indeed those that are so forward this way shall be called Precisians fools and mad people by the worldly wise and that they will gad to Sermons until they have made all away and brought themselves to beggery but Wisdome is justified of her Children and if the like aspersions in the same case were cast upon the Head well may the Members be contented Mark 3.21 And for beggery which they object let the true Believer rather hearken to Gods
parts or Sacramental union what it is 6. How the Sacraments of the Old and New Testament agree and how they differ 7. The number of Sacraments now in the time of the New Testament These questions being plainly answered we shall the better understand the Doctrine of Sacraments Quest 1. How Sacraments agree with the word and how they differ from it Answ 1. They agree in their Author the Lord being as the Author of the word so likewise of all true Sacraments Gen. 17.10 Exod. 12.3 .11 Luke 3.1 2 3. Matth. 26.26 1 Cor. 11.23 2. The word and Sacraments agree in this that the one as well as the other is to be dispensed by lawful Ministers Mat. 28.19 3. In that they both offer and reach forth one and the same thing to wit Christ Thus we see in what the word and Sacraments agree Now they differ as followeth 1. The word declareth Gods Will unto us by speech the Sacraments by visible signes and gestures Sacraments being a visible word 2. The word is as a Charter or Letter-Patent promising all good things in Christ unto all true Believers The Sacraments are as seals annexed to this Charter confirming what the word promiseth 3. By the word faith is begun and confirmed by the Sacraments it is only confirmed 4. The word pertaineth to all the Sacraments onely to such as make a profession of the faith Quest 2. What Sacraments are Answ They are sacred signes and seales of the new Covenant I call them sacred 1. Because they are ordained of God he being the Author of all true Sacraments as we have heard 2. Because they are ordained to holy use as we may observe in this brief definition then we say They are sacred sig●es and seals do but see Rom. 4.11 Now what the Apostle saith of Circumcision is true of all Sacraments the Lord in them as it were by Oath confirming unto true Believers that he will be their God and they again as it were by Oath binding themselves to be his people which indeed is the sum of the new Covenant the Lord promising unto true Believers that he will be their God and they re-promising unto him to be his people Quest 3 What are the ends of Sacraments Answ 1. That they might be a means to preserve and spread abroad the Doctrine of the Gospel Sacraments themselves being a visible word and yet no Sacraments I mean the outward signes without the word to wit the word of institution and then they occasioning the Preaching of the word 2. That so the true Church might be outwardly distinguished from all other Sects and Companies she having Rites Ceremonies and Worship of Gods devising and appointing and not of mans 3. That they might be bonds of mutual love betwixt the faithful 4 That so true Believers might swear Allegeance unto God bind themselves to continue faithful and obedient unto him 5. And especially that they might serve to confirm the faith of Gods people in Gods promises Quest 4. What are the parts of a Sacrament Answ Two 1. The sign 2. The thing signified The sign is the Element or Elements as Water Bread Wine and the whole external action conversant about the same The thing signified is Christ and his benefits or the participation and communion of Christ and his benefits Quest 5. The union of the parts or Sacramental union what it is Answ This union is a real union Christ and the Elements are truly and really united Hence it is that our Saviour saith of the Sacramental Bread this is my body and of the Wine this is my blood Mat. 26.26 28. But this union is not a Physical or natural union as the Papists hold as though the sign were changed or altered in o the thing signified Neither is it a local union as the Lutherans dream as though the thing signified were locally present as well as the sign but it is a mystical and Spiritual union and consists in the things following 1. A natural aptness in the sign to resemble and express the thing signified As doth not water naturally represent and express a cleansing and bread and wine a nourishing and comforting 2. The Lords appointing and applying of such and such Elements unto Sacramental use as Water to resemble Christ in his washing and cleansing quality Bread and Wine to resemble Christ in his nourishing and comforting property This being that to wit the word of Ordinance that carries the soul of the Believer from earth to heaven from the sign unto the thing signified 3. The Lord ordaining and appointing the outward sign not onely to represent and resemble Christ and his benefits but likewise as an Instrument and Channel to convey him and his benefits really to the soul of the true Believer the true Believer at one and the same time receiving the sign and the thing signified the one Corporally the other Spiritually And thus we see the union betwixt the sign and thing signified is real but Spiritual and wherein it consists Now from the union aforesaid it is usual in the Scrptures by an improper but Sacramental speech 1. To call the sign by the name of the thing signified and contrarily 2. To ascribe that to the sign which is proper to the thing signified and contrarily Quest 6. How the Sacraments of the old and new Testament agree how they differ Answ 1. They agree in the Author they all being ordained and instituted by God 2. They agree in the thing signified to wit Christ and his benefits the Believers of the Old Testament being as well saved by Christ as the Believers of the New Romans 4.11 1 Cor. 10.4 Now they differ divers wayes 1. In Rites and Ceremonies 2. In clearness The Covenant of grace was more hidden and obscure in the time of the Old Testament Christ the Foundation of it being not then come then in the time of the New and so the seals of the Covenant sutably the Sacraments of the Old Testament pointing at Christ to come but the Sacraments of the New shewing that Christ is come 3. In efficacy The Sacraments of the New Testament in the ordinary course being more effectual then the Sacraments of the Old a greater power of the Spirit in the ordinary course going with ours then did with theirs our souls being more perswasive and impressive then theirs 4. They differ in number there was divers Sacraments in the time of the Old Testament not onely Circumcision and the Passeover Sacraments ordinary but likewise extraordinary Sacraments or as some call them resemblances as the Red Sea the Cloud Manna and the water of the Rock It is true there was no more ordinary Sacraments in the time of the Old Testament no more Sacraments for being and standing then in the time of the New Quest 7. The last question What 's the number of Sacramens in the time of the New Testament Answ Onely two Baptism and the Lords Supper the former succeeding Circumoision the latter the Passeover
or from towards the water The Sacramental action on the Receivers part is 1. The presenting of him or her unto the Minister to be baptized 2. The receiving of external washing by water The other outward thing is the word 1. The word of institution or the Ministers Commission in this kind Matth. 28.19 2. The word of promise Mark 16.16 3. The distinct pronouncing of this form I baptize thee in or into the Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost The inward thing or thing signified is Justification and Sanctification The water represents and shadoweth forth the blood of Christ 1 John 1.7 The Ministers washing of the Party with water signifies and seals the double washing aforesaid to wit of Justification and Sanctification 1 Cor. 6 11. The Ministers putting the Party into the water or towards the water signifies and seals the Mortification of sinne in the Party The Ministers continuing the Party in the water or towards the water signifies and seals the burial of sinne or continual encrease of Mortification in the Party and his taking the Party out of the water or from towards the water the Partyes Vivification or raising up to newness of life Romans 6.3 4 5. The Partyes presenting to Baptism and his receiving of the external washing signifies and seals how he consecrates himself to God and how he utterly renounceth the flesh the world and Divel 1 Pet. 3.21 Quest 4. What is the necessity of Baptism Answ Baptism is not simply and absolutely necessary so as there is no salvation without it for this were to make it equal with Christs blood and to send all to the pit of Hell that die unbaptized although the fault be no way in themselves or Parents But yet it is necessary in part or by consequence and in a double respect 1 In regard of Gods Ordinance the Lord having commanded it to be used it is necessary it should be used in obedience to his command He that carelesly neglecteth or wilfully contemneth any Sacrament which God doth injoyn him to use let him look unto it Gen. 17.14 2. In regard of our need thereof naturally we are dull in conceiving of things Spritual slow in believing the good things promised in the word and very doubtful to apply them to our selves and therefore we have great need of such helps and means Quest 5. What is the efficacy o● Baptism Answ It is onely effectual unto the Elect and at what time the Lord sees the fittest and the best Now we come to the Uses Vse 1. For Confutation 1. To confute the Papists and divers wayes 1. They corrupting this Sacrament by adding unto water divers inventions of their own as Cream Oyl Salt Honey Spittle Crossing and the like Thus they go from the first institution adulterating the Ordinance of God Look we at the first institution and are not those their additions confuted and to be rejected 2. To confute their absolute necessity of Baptism as though none dying unbaptized could be saved when not the want but the continued contempt of Baptism damnes see Acts 2.39 and 1 Cor. 7.14 3. To confute that Doctrine of theirs they holding that this Sacrament confers grace by the very work done and so they equal it to the blood of Christ exclude the work of the Holy Ghost and upon the matter affirm that all baptized persons shall be saved But do but see Acts 8.13 21 c. and divers other Doctrines the Papist have concerning baptism which are directly contrary to the Scriptures 2. To confute the Anabaptists who first too much derogate from baptism they making it onely a sign but not a seal a sign of Christian profession but not a seal to confirm faith and a means to encrease it contrary to what hath been delivered and unto that direct place Rom. 4.11 unto which Baptism succeeds 2. To confute the Anabaptists their denying of Baptism to the Infants of Christian Parents But 1. Why not they to be baptized as well as Jewish Infants to be circumcised 2. They being within the Covenant as the Children of Christian Parents are Gen. 17.7 Acts 2.39 must not the seal needs belong unto them as see Act. 2.38 39 3. This being typified in the time of the Old Testament which may be observed 1 Cor. 10. Children as wel passing through the red sea as elderly people 4. Christs command Mat. 28.19 the Apostles must go into all Nations teaching such as were capable and so many as did submit to the Gospel must be baptized they and their Children Children being a great part of any Nation 5. Christs example Matth. 19.13.14 And how must little Children come to Christ but in his Ordinances and what Ordinance are they capable of but this 6. The Apostles practice Acts 16.15 33. 1 Cor. 1.16 It is not said there was no little Children in those houses or if there were that they were left unbaptized but whole housholds baptized without any distinction or exception And as touching that objection of the Anabaptists Object We do not read in the new Testament of any one particular Infant that was baptized Answ I answer Neither do we read in the new Testament of any women to partake at the Lords Table But do they think no women did or that women now should not Therefore those persons are to know that to deny necessary consequence is to deny a great part of the Scriptures Object But suppose the Parents be Christians by a general profession but yet their lives dissolute may their Children be admitted to baptism Answ First We do not read of any Jewish Infant that was brought to be Circumcised which was put back for the wickednesse of his parents 2. The immediate parents are not only to be regarded but also the Ancestors Rom. 11.16 Vse 2. For Reprehension First To reprove such Ministers as take upon them to baptize and yet unqualified men altogether unable to lay forth the Doctrine of Baptism unto their people meddle with that which themselves understand not Is such a person fit to represent God who knowes neither the nature of the Covenant nor of the Seals Is it not the Minister standing in Gods stead to the people as if the Lord sealed a Covenant to his people which he knew not the meaning of no nor of the Seals Although I will not say the Baptism of such is a nullity yet I may say warrantably that such Idol Pastours have nothing to do to baptize it being an utter inverting or absolute wronging of our Saviours prescribed order Mat. 28.19 and to the same purpose the Apostle Paul 1 Corinth 1.17 He being and so all Ministers sent first and principally to preach and then to baptize 2 To reprove the great presumption of such women as do take upon them to baptize Object But did not Zipporah circumcise her child Exod. 4.24 c. Answ The Question is not what she did but ●hether she did well or no In all probability not First
it by a constant dependance upon the ministry of the Word that so in time in due time they may safely and comfortably approach to the Lords Table Alas otherwise they will be so far from receiving good by this ordinance as they will eat and drink damnation to themselves The truth of it is this ordinance is not to be carelesly neglected by any of competent years and wit for you must not think the Sacrament to be a feast for children fools or the distracted and mad I say it must not be carelesly neglected Numb 9.13 by any of competent years and wit And yet notwithstanding none must approach unto it but such as are qualified with the grace of saving faith for if they do they partake unworthily in a high degree and so become guilty of the body and blood of Christ that is upon the matter joyn with Judas and the Jewes in the death of Christ approve of that horrible fact of theirs and so eat and drink damnation to themselves And it will not serve the turn for those destitute of the grace of faith to say they have received and often received heretofore they having the more to repent of and mourne for The second branch of this Use of ex hortation To exhort all true beleevers and that divers waies 1. That they would often present themselves at the Lords Table as often as possibly they can no just impediment lying in the way especially living in places where this ordinance is often celebrated Do but see 1 Cor. 11.26 Pauls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here implies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as often as ye do it therefore do it often it being such a means not only to shew the Lords death one to another but likewise to shew it to our own faith for the encrease and strengthening of it and encrease and help on this grace and we encrease and help on all the other graces and come on in grace and corruption decaies 2. To exhort all true believers in coming to the Lords Table that they earnestly endeavour to come preparedly that so they may receive worthily that is to say acceptably to God and then no question it will prove a profitable receiving to their own souls Many true beleevers receive unworthily in some degree and fail much of the good they might receive by this ordinance for want of due preparation they are too slight in examination and for extraordinary praier to be performed sometime before the day of their receiving they are too backwward unto and too carelesse in 3. To exhort them in the act of receiving that they labour to discern the Lords body that is put a difference and distinguish betwixt the outward elements and common bread and wine although not in their substance why yet in their use and so seriously intend the whole businesse stirring up their inward affections by a serious employing of their outward senses that so Christ and his benefits may be received and welcomed into the armes of their enlarged and extended faith Many believers in the act of receiving fail much in spirituall consideration and so their affections are little moved and inflamed If 1. When the Minister sets apart the Elements thou wouldst consider that even so God the Father from all eternity did set apart Christ to be the Redeemer of mankind 2. When he consecrates the Elements by the Word and Prayer thou wouldst consider that even so in the fulness of time God sent his Son into the world to accomplish this work of Redemption 3. When thou seest the Minister to break the Bread and powr out the Wine thou wouldst meditate upon the accursed death of Christ and shedding of his bloud for all true Believers 4. When the Minister comes and gives the Bread and Wine unto thee if thou wouldst consider that even so God the Father reaches and gives his Son and all his merits unto thy faith 5. When thou takest and receivest the Elements at the Ministers hands thou wouldst stir up thy self to apprehend and receive Christ and his benefits by the hand of faith And then sixthly and lastly In eating and drinking the Elements thou wouldst earnestly endeavour more and more nearly to apply Christ and to feel thy Spiritual union with him Such consideration in the act of receiving would be the way not only to receive the Sign but at one and the same time the thing signified 4 To exhort all true Believers after they have received 1. To labour to keep up their faith assuring themselves the Lord is no deceiver but will be sure to make good his Covenant with them 2. As we have already heard sometime that day in secret take a review of thy receiving and after it proceed as thou hast been directed 3. Remember to make good thy Vows and to demonstrate both to thy self and others that thou hast got Spiritual strength by this Feast of growth thou walking more conscionably and comfortably in both Callings It s said of the fainting Egyptian 1 Sam. 30.11 12. when he had eaten and drunk that his spirit came again to him So if thou eat and drink in faith thy Spiritual life will be revived and thy strength increased And thus we have done with the second Member of the fifth Principle Now we come to the third and last Member MEMBER III. And Prayer THis Member acquaints us with another good outward meanes whereby faith is encreased to wit Prayer And hence we commend this Point of Doctrine unto you Doctr. Prayer is one good meanes for the encrease of faith See Luke 22.32 I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not So the father of the possessed child thought Mark 9.24 And the Apostles Luke 17.5 and Jude 20. Praying in the Holy Ghost that is by the help and assistance of the Holy Ghost this being an excellent meanes to confirm and bring on faith Reason 1. This is a good means to encrease any grace of Gods Spirit in us and therefore a good means to encrease our faith That it is a good means to encrease any grace of God Spirit in us see Luke 11.13 How much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask it that is the Holy Spirit in a greater measure Reas 2. Hereby faith is exercised to wit by faithful Prayer and the more faith is exercised the more it growes and encreases Ephes 6.16 18. Psal 6.8 9. see we the former part of the same Psalm and we shall observe Davids faith to get up in Prayer So Psalm 62.2 6. R. 3 The Rule of Contraries This duty omitted and neglected faith goes out of exercise slackens and decayes Now we come to the Uses Vse 1 For Tryal and Examination 1 Do we use Prayer if we pray seldom or never let us not wonder if we be poor in the grace of faith Prayer being the key that opens all Gods Treasures Such as are strangers to Prayer cannot be throughly acquainted with faith 2. But do
advised by the Apostle 1 Cor. 7.29 c. A man abuseth the world when he looks upon worldly things as things that he shall enjoy alwayes 4. To reprove all such as cannot endure to think of death to be told of death You strike them into a melancholy fit when you put them in mind of their death those persons are far from imitating those Worthies in Scripture whom we read to have made their Sepulchres in their life time as Asa 2 Chron. 16.14 Nay in their Gardens the place of their solace and delight as Joseph of Aramathea John 19.41 Nay those persons come short of some of the Heathen we read of as D●mocritus who was wont to walk among the graves that so he might the better meditate upon death And so it is reported of those Philosophers called Brachmanae that they were so much given to think upon death that they had their graves alwayes before their gates that both going out and coming in they might be put in mind of their latter end And so the antient Aegyptians in the midst of their mirth at their solemn seasts were wont to have the image of Death brought in and laid before them with these words Hoc intuens epulare Beholding this Image eat and drink that being a means they used to make them eat and drink more moderately And surely one special cause why the most are so unprepared for death is because they have no desire to think of it to be put in mind of it And thus now we have done with the use of reprehension Vse 2. For Information to inform us that although death be unavoidable why yet we must be so far from hastning our own death by neglecting the means of life or by laying violent hands upon our selves as we must use all good means for the preserving of our natural life and lengthening our dayes here upon earth and all this implyed in the sixth precept Not that we deny but that in some cases a man or a woman may desire death rather then life As 1. When they are thoroughly convinced and sufficiently resolved that the Lord shall have more glory by their dying then by their living No question this was one reason why Samson desired death he knowing that thereby he should slay more of Gods enemies then he had done in all his life time and hence it was that the holy Martyrs heretofore did so willingly dye nay did so joyfully desire death because they were perswaded that God should have so much glory by their death 2. In consideration that they cannot live here on earth but daily offend their good and gracious God to desire death in this case is not a loathing to live but a loathing to sin and so much is implyed in the Apostle Paul his exclamation Rom. 7.24 3. In consideration that they cannot live in this world but see and hear the Lord much dishonoured by the wicked this was that which did so vex the soul of righteous Lot 2 Pet. 2.8 And no question this was one special cause why Elijah desired death to wit the wickedness of the times he lived in And so Rebecka the wickedness of her Daughter in law Gen. 26.34 35.27.46 4. In consideration that until death they are absent from Christ do not so fully and perfectly enjoy him as they shall do after death 2 Cor. 5.6 7 8 Philip. 1.23 Nay so the whole Church is brought in Rev. 22.20 Now in the cases aforesaid it is lawful for a man or a woman to desire death rather then life not that they may neglect the means of life or hasten their own death this way or that way no nor impatiently wish death this was the fault of the old Israelites as Exod. 16.3 Nay Moses himself this way failed Numb 11.15 And did not Rachel Gen. 30.1 And so Jonah 4.1 2 3 8. And what more common in these times then for men and women when great calamity is upon them or imminent impatiently to wish death Thus much for this Use the Use of Information Vse 3. For Exhortation and it consists of divers parts or branches 1. To exhort every one of us seeing death is unavoidable cannot be avoided much to think and often to meditate and that seriously upon our own death and this being done of us it will be a good means to prevent much evil in our practice and much to put us on in the wayes of goodness To prevent much evil in our practice as 1. Dissoluteness or loosness of life Durst any man give himself liberty to be drunk if he seriously weighed he might be struck with death whiles he is drunk as Elah the King of Israel was 1 Kings 16.9 10. Or durst any man commit uncleanness if he could seriously think of this that God might strike him suddenly while he is in that filthy act as he did Zimri and Cosbi Numb 25.8 2. A frequent and serious meditation of our own death will be a good means to prevent our vigorous and cruel proceedings with others see Job 31.13 14. Matth. 24.48 49. Amos 6.3 3. This will be a good means to prevent our over-love and immoderate use of outward things To this purpose is that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 7.29 If we do not see death stand at the end of all our earthly profits at the end of all our worldly pleasures we shall too eagarly pursue them and having obtained them shall too much solace our selves in them 4. This will be a good means to prevent the danger of death I mean to take away the sting and terror of it death being like unto the Basilisk if it see thee before thou seest it it will be thy death but if thou see it first thou wilt be the death of it And as the frequent and serious meditation of our own death will be a good means to prevent much evil in our practice so likewise it will be a good means much to further us in the wayes of goodness as 1. Hereby we shall be minded to be more painful and profitable in our places Eccles 9.10 and 2 Pet. 1.13 c. 2. Hereby we shall be made more meek and patient in all our sufferings and afflictions Phil. 4.5 James 5.7 8. This is that which will make quiet in all provocations This'is that which will comfort in all discouragements I shall shortly be sent for I shall shortly be called from hence then I shall be righted then I shall be cleared then I shall have rest 3. Hereby we shall be made more watchful the thing being so certain and the circumstances so uncertain as time place and manner See Mark 13.35 and Luke 21.34 4. And lastly this will be a good means to work in us a care to prepare for death A man that seriously concludes he must dye will not that man go about to set his house in order his heart in order all in order And thus now we have done with the first part or branch of this Use which hath