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

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just and unjust but the beams thereof have happy influence onely on the Heirs of Grace melting the hearts of such into Faith and Repentance whilest they harden the cley-hearts of carnal Worldlings into stupidity and searedness of Conscience whose Mindes the god of this World hath blinded 2 Cor. 4.4 yet the express Command for Dispensation thereof is as Catholick as Christ or words could make it when being Risen from the Dead he accosted his Disciples saying Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature Mark 16.15 So that if the Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost 2 Cor. 4.3 In the next place stands the Ministerial Function the highest imployment that ever the Lord of Heaven vouchsafed the Sons of men If the Ministers of the Word would sit down satisfied with the Stiles and Titles given them in Scripture they needed no other Herald to blazon the Nobleness of their Calling nor any Stellicidiaries to invite the Hosanna's of the People Are they not called The Salt of the Earth the Builders of Christs Body Gods Fellow-workmen Christs Embassadors the Steward 's of the House the Fathers of the Church Fishers of men Ministers of the Spirit Builders of the Temple Shepherds of the Sheep Planters and Waterers of the Garden the Lords Harvest men his Vine-dressers Watchmen of the City Trumpeters of the Host yea Stars of the Firmament Rev. 1.10 It were worth a National Fast that all such as are thus highly dignified were or might be responsibly qualified Attribute we therefore none of these Titles to any such as are unfaithful in their Embassie not to unsavory Salt not to the Ignorant or Idle not to the Scandalous nor the Mercenary not to the Contentious nor the Covetous not to the Proud nor to the Superstitious into whose Mindes the subtile Sophister of all Ages hath specially in this foisted such specious Qualifications and such self-deceiving Equivocations to palliate those sins as if in order to Life and Doctrine he would feign perswade the World to spight the POPE the CLERGY could not erre Next follows the Hearing of the Word by this cometh Faith without this posteth Atheism yet take heed what ye hear Mark 2.24 yea and how ye hear Luke 8.18 Away therefore with itching ears with prejudicate thoughts with an impreparatory heart with presumptuous self-conceits Away with distracted Cogitations unsanctified Affections turbulent Passions sublunar Cares careless and extravagant Attention Away with carnal Security with vain Dissention of Opinions touching the Truths delivered Away with overchargings of Nature with drowsie Faculties with Unbelief Hardness of Heart Pride and uncharitable Thoughts ever Remembring that it is or should be the Word of God and not of man 1 Thess 2.13 not a tittle whereof shall go unfulfilled Matth. 5.18 till it become the savor of life unto life or of death unto deeper condemnation 2 Cor. 2.16 Take heed therefore how ye hear Luke ibid. After the Word in order follows the Sacraments which though they confer no Grace ex opere operato yet are effectual Signs and Witnesses of Gods incomprehensible Benevolence to man-wards For of Baptism saith our Savior He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved Mark 16.16 And of his Supper he saith This is my Body which is given Luke 22.19 and broken for you 1 Cor. 11.24 This is my Blood of the New Testament that is shed for many for the remission of sins Luke 22.20 Indeed a Sacrament is a Covenant of Gods free Favor to us confirmed by some outward Sign or Seal instituted by himself Thus was the Tree of Life a Sacrament to Adam Gen. 2.9 The Rainbow to Noah Gen. 9.9 13. The smoaking Furnace to Abraham Gen. 15.17 18. The Fleece of Wooll to Gideon Judg. 6.37 The Dyal to Hezekiah 2 Kings 20.7 11. The Sacrifices Circumcision and the Paschal Lamb to the Jews Baptism and the Lords Supper to the Faithful under the Gospel Mat. 28.19 Luke 22.19 In the next place stands Prayer the Souls Incense whereby she is wing'd for Heaven Wonderful are the Works wrought by Prayer not as a Cause but onely as an Instrument sanctified by God and effectual to the Righteous if it be fervent Jam. 5.16 This Fervency is that Magnetick Vertue in Prayer which attracts Heaven to Earth but the fervent Prayer of an unrighteous man availeth little save to betray his sinister dexterity in vanifying so excellent a Gift which in such the Lord knows too often comes within a breaths bredth of Blasphemy But let the Faithful be exceeding cautious whom they censure in this case lest they chance to touch the Apple of Gods eye and let him that prayeth pray fervently for Faith is full of vigor full of life and God loveth a sprightly Faith yea the Promise made to the Prayer of a Righteous man is not otherwise annex'd then on the condition of Fervency which we may not dream is confin'd to the activity of external gestures or volubility of a never-stammering tongue but chiefly consists in the sincerity of the Supplicant in the extent of his Faith and cordiality of his Desires Next follows the Lords Prayer if we have not forgot that there is such a thing in rerum natura Spiritualium It 's worth a Catechism to ask the Worlds Favorites Which of them that do so highly adore this Prayer can truly say Our Father Most can say but few can pray it Others disuse it under the notion of a set Form of Prayer but set Forms of Prayer quatenus such are not prohibited This is indeed a set Form of words for Prayer but no set Prayer as is generally mis-thought for it is a Prayer to none but such as can pray it in Faith Nor can there properly be said to be any such thing as a set Prayer for in submission to better judgements I conceive the motion of the Spirit in Prayer is that which denominates Prayer to be Prayer which Spirit is not confineable by this or any set Form of words as may appear 1 Sam. 1.15 For the motion of the Spirit in one praying the same words of another may be more extensively Spiritual in that one then in the other which could not be if the very words set in that Form Method and Order could confine the Spirit And hence it is that all that can say the Lords Prayer cannot pray Our Father for my voyce may be articulate enough without Faith but without Faith and the Spirit that articulate sound cannot properly be called a Prayer though articulated by the form of words in the Lords Prayer Thus though many say the same form of words for Prayer yet they may not be said to pray the same Prayer yea one and the same person at sundry times praying the same form of words may not infallibly be said to pray the same Prayer for it varies according to the measure of the Spirit in the person praying which may not be one the same in the same
it Must we never pray it because it may not always be absolutely necessary may it therefore be never expedient Hence then never let any sober Christian more undervalue this Form for Prayer for the reason onely of others thinking too highly of it nor admire it for the reason of others vain undervaluing it but pray it in Knowledge Faith and Fervency without which the words are as a dead letter This Form is compleatly Comprehensive of all things petitionable whether Spiritual Temporal or Eternal an exact Epitomy of what God hath promised to give or man hath leave to ask It is that Form of words for Prayer which our Savior taught his Disciples commanding them when they pray to say Our Father which c. Next follows that Creed which vulgarly is stiled Apostolical whereby we make Confession of that Faith which believes in one God even the true God one in Essence Deut. 6.4 Three in Persons 1 Joh. 5.7 The Father the Creator Psal 134.3 the Son the Redeemer Rom. 5.18 the Holy Ghost the Sanctifier 1 Pet. 1.2 which Believes that the Holy Eph. 1.3 4. and Catholick Church Isa 54.2 consists of the Faithful people of God which Believes that there is a Communion of Saints Eph. 4.15 16. Pardoned of all sins Isa 44.22 Appointed to Rise from Death and to enjoy Eternal Life both in Body and Soul Joh. 6.39 40. In the next a word of the Decalogue in general How in the Table of mans Heart it stood engraven before it was repeated in stone Also how and in what maner the Law was given How many ways the Decalogue's divided with Rules concerning the substance and meaning thereof in general Various and voluminous are the Expositions on the Commandments but here as in a Map quasi uno intuita thou mayest descry the whole Region of the Law of God The same may be said of the whole Work as it stands in relation to the subject it treats of Now because we are not under the Law but under Grace some have dream'd That the Enacting of the Gospel hath Repealed the Statutes made when Moses was Speaker the Lord awaken them Do we now make void the Law through Faith God forbid yea we establish the Law Rom. 3.31 David a man in request with God a man after his own heart took the Testimonies of God for his Heritage for ever made them the joy of his heart and resolved to keep the Commandments of his God Psal 119.112 115. and in ver 126. he saith It is time for thee O Lord to work for they have made void thy Law and in the next Verse most passionately declares his affection saying I love thy Commandments above gold yea above fine gold A plain Discovery why others reject them But if thou wilt live keep the Commandments Prov. 7.2 keep them exactly universally constantly chearfully and sincerely Have no Gods but One and that the onely true God Worship no Created thing In vain do not take Gods Name in thy thoughts actions or otherwise Consecrate the Seventh day Reverence thy Superiors but not with Religious Worship Commit no Adultery by the eye or otherwise Do not play the Thief in thy Calling or otherwise Give no false Testimony and endeavor after that excellent gift of Contentation Thus with holy David have thou respect to all the Lords Commandments and that continually Psal 119.117 for the Lord sheweth Mercy unto Thousands of them that love him and keep his Commandments Exod. 20.6 The next is touching the Infinite Love of God to Man The Decree of Election according to the good will and pleasure of God from all Eternity The Creation of all things out of nothing without any Instruments Means Assistance or Motion onely by the Word of God alone The Redemption of Man by the Imputation of the sufferings of the punishment due for sin in the person of our Mediator Vocation whereby we are called from Darkness to Light from a state of Nature to a state of Grace from out of the World to the Kingdom of Heaven from being Limbs of Satan to be Members of Christ from Children of Wrath to become the Heirs of Heaven Justification whereby God absolveth true Believers from the guilt of sin by the Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ Sanctisication or the inward changing of a justified man purged from all the corruption of Nature and endued with inward Righteousness whereby the Image of God is restored in him Adoption whereby the justified through the Union they have with Christ are accounted of God as his own Children Regeneration or the repairing of the decayed estates of our souls the Holy Ghost actuating the hearts of Gods Elect to a free constant and faithful exercise of a holy life Conversion or mutation of a corrupt Minde Life and Will into a good stirred up in the Chosen by the Holy Ghost through the Preaching of the Gospel Repentance that inward and continual sorrowing and mourning for the Commission of sin joyned with Faith Humiliation and a constant turning from all sin unto God with a hatred and loathing thereof thus accompanied with both inward and outward amendment and New Obedience whereby a man is renewed unto that whereunto he was enabled by Creation whereby being endued with Faith and Repentance he doth according to the measure of Grace received endeavor to yield Obedience to all Gods Commandments with the whole man for which end even the Revelation of the Mystery which was kept secret since the World began was made known to all Nations Rom. 16.26 The next speaks of Fasting that holy and extraordinary Abstinence from the commodities of this life for our better humiliation and preparation to Prayer when any Judgement on our selves or Brethren is either threatned feared begun or executed How this part of Divine Worship hath been of late years prophaned in this Land may to this day be read in the Euroclydons of Gods fearful Judgements Insomuch as it s now necessary that we Fast for our Fasts For did we not Fast to Wrath to Revenge to Strife to Envy to Debate Did we not Feast our Lusts when nought but the posture of a Bulrush could denote our Fasting Did we not Fast at Noon to surfet at Night Did we not even then afflict our Brethren in stead of our Souls Did we not finde pleasure in the day of our Fasts and exact all our Labors Did we not draw Iniquity with cords of Vanity even then when we should have loosed the Bands of Wickedness Did we not even then load on weights grievous to be born in stead of undoing the heavy Burthens Did we not even then also receive the gain of Oppression in stead of letting the oppressed go free Did we not then likewise take the staff of Life from such as were half famished before in stead of dealing our bread to the hungry Did we not then also cast the poor out of their own Dwellings in stead of bringing them that were cast out into our own
laying hold on those things which were not instituted for them but for the Disciples of Christ 2. Because they prophane the Covenant and Testament of God by taking to themselves the Signs and Tokens of the Covenant and so would make him the Father of the wicked 3. Because they tread under foot the blood of Christ by not receiving his benefits by faith when as they profess they do and so mock God 4. Because they condemn themselves by their own judgement for they accept of this Doctrine yet are conscious to themselves that they are hypocrites and so condemn themselves All deadness and hardness of heart must not keep us from the Lords Table for it is twofold viz. 1. Sensible which is in Gods children which they bewail this may not discourage the Communicant from approaching the Table 2. Insensible which is a great and dangerous Judgement and one proper to the Reprobate They onely are to be admitted to the Supper of the Lord who by their confession and life profess faith and repentance and the Reason is 1. Because the Church should prophane Gods Covenant if it should admit unbelievers and men impenitent for he that doth a thing and he that consenteth to it are both guilty 2. Because if such should be admitted the Church should stir up the anger of God against her self as of whom wittingly and willingly this should be committed The Supper of the Lord is often to be celebrated for these Reasons viz. 1. Because of the words of institution 2. Because in respect of the end and purpose of the institution for it must be done in remembrance of Christ The Sacrament of the Lords Supper is not to be omitted when it is administred in the Congregation whereof we are members for they were to be cut off from the people who neglected the Passover but this Sacrament is greater then it in two respects viz. 1. This Sacrament is more clear because it doth more lively represent Christ exhibited in the flesh but the Passover onely represented Christ which was to come 2. Because the mercy we are now to remember is greater then that of the Passover the one being our Redemption from Sin and Hell the other our deliverance out of Egypt though that was not all The resemblances between the Passover and the Supper of the Lord viz. 1. As one is called the Lords Passover Exod. 12.12 so this is called the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11.20 2. God calleth the Lamb the Paschal Lamb because the Angel in the common destruction passed over the houses of the Israelites so Christ calleth the Bread by the name of his body that was broken for us Luke 22.19 3. In the Passover the Lord saith This shall be for a memorial Exod. 12.14 so Christ saith Do this in remembrance of me Luke 22.19 4. God saith of the Lamb Take ye Exod. 12.5 Christ saith of the Bread Take ye Mat. 26.26 5. God saith of the Paschal Lamb Eat ye Exod. 12.11 Christ saith of the Bread Eat ye of the Wine Drink ye c. Christ would at the last Supper of the Passover institute this his Supper for these Reasons 1. That now an end was made of all the old Sacrifices and he did substitute a new Sacrament which should succeed and be observed that Paschal Sacrament being abolished 2. That the same thing might be signified difference of time onely excepted the one signifying Christ to come and to be sacrificed the other come and sacrificed 3. That he might stir up in his Disciples and in us greater attention and marking of the cause for which he did institute it doing nothing before his death but what was of most weight and moment The absurdities following upon and Reasons against Popish Transubstantiation of the bread into the body of Christ in the Supper of the Lord some wherof are also against Consubstantiation 1. If the bread and wine be turned into the very body and blood of Christ then shall be no Signs in the holy Supper and then no Sacrament for Sacraments cannot be without visible Signs Thus it overthroweth the Sacrament consisting of two parts a visible Sign and an invisible Grace signified but if bread were really the body of Christ then there could be no outward Sign to represent the inward Grace 2. Christs blood should be seperated from his body which can never be 3. The body of Christ should be infinite and therefore he should not be a very man nor truly ascended for by making the body of Christ to be in more places then one at the same time the nature of a true body is destroyed 4. That then the wicked and hypocrites as well as the godly coming to the Supper should then receive Christ and be indeed partakers of the body and blood of Christ yea irrational creatures which is horrible Blasphemy to imagine and determine 5. It maketh two Christs one that giveth another that is given one at the Table another in the mouthes and stomacks of the Disciples 6. The Apostle calleth it Bread oftentimes even after consecration 1 Cor. 10.16 11.26 27 28. and Christ instituted this Supper before he was crucified 7. If the body and blood of Christ had been really in the bread and wine Christ should have eaten himself even his own body and drank his own blood and have given his dead body with his living hands 8. This communion is common to the Fathers and us but the Fathers could not communicate any otherwise with Christ then by faith in the Word and Old Sacraments 9. Christ is ascended really with his body into heaven which must contain him until his coming again Acts 3.21 1.11 John 16.28 Matth. 26.11 The great wide difference between the Lords Supper and the Popish blasphemous idolatrous Mass 1. The Supper of the Lord testifies to us that we have perfect forgiveness of all our sins for that onely Sacrifice of Christ which himself once fully wrought on the cross Heb. 7.27 But in the Mass it is denyed that the quick and the dead have remission of sins for the onely Passion of Christ except also Christ be daily offered for them by their Sacrificers 2. The Supper of the Lord testifies also that we by the Holy Ghost are grafted into Christ who now according to his humane Nature is onely in heaven at the right hand of his Father Heb. 1.3 and there will be worshipped of us John 4.21 22 23. But the Mass teacheth that Christ is bodily under the forms of bread and wine and therefore say they is to be worshipped in them So that the very foundation of the Mass is nothing else then an utter denyal of that onely Sacrifice and Passion of Christ Jesus and an accursed Idolatry 3. The Popish Mass changeth or rather abolished the Rite instituted by Christ for it taketh away the cup from the people and most presumptuously addeth many toys 4. The Mass transformeth the Sign into the thing signified for it denyeth that there
is any bread or wine remaining 5. In the Mass the Papists make other gifts to be then which are found in the Word and Sacrament or in the Promise annexed unto them as Merit even by the work it self wrought Remission of sins for the dead and healing of Men Oxen Swine and Cattel diseased 6. The Mass is repugnant to Christs Priesthood because he is onely the High Priest who hath power to offer himself yet his Unholiness the Pope with his companions most impudently pulleth this honor to himself 7. The Mass is repugnant to the Doctrine of Grace and Justification which teacheth That in this life onely is the time of obtaining favor by faith alone for the onely Merit of Christ but the Papists neglecting faith and rejecting Christs Merit have substituted in place thereof this Idolatrous Mass 8. The Mass most ridiculously imagineth that Christs body doth descend into our bodies and there remaineth so long as the forms of bread and wine remain but the Supper teacheth us That we are made members of Christ by the Holy Ghost and ingrafted into him Bread is called the Lords body and wine his blood for these Reasons 1. That all the faithful may acknowledge the dignity of this Sacrament 2. That we remain not in the outward bread and wine but be intent upon the thing signified 3. That we may come with the greater devotion to this Sacrament 4. That we may be most firmly assured That as outwardly we are partakers of bread and wine so inwardly we are partakers of Christ and his benefits Rules to be observed that we may in receiving the bread wine rightly discern the Lords body 1. Take every thing in its own nature and kinde do not with Papists take the Sign for the thing signified nor the earthly thing for the heavenly 2. Use every one of them in the maner appointed by Christ and with such reverence as is due unto them 3. Use them to their right ends as 1. A commemoration of Christs death 2. For a nearer communion with Christ The difference between the Lords Supper and Baptism 1. In Ceremonies and Rites 2. In the circumstances of the institution and use or in the signification of the Ceremonies for Baptism is a Sign of the Covenant entred and made between God and the faithful the Supper is a Sign of the continuing of that Covenant The same thing that is washing away of sins by the blood of Christ is sealed both in Baptism and the Supper but the maner of sealing is diverse and the one is but once the other often 3. In Baptism is required confession of faith and repentance in the elder sort newly converted in Infants it is sufficient if they be born in the Church but in the Supper is added a further condition of examining himself and of remembring the Lords death It is not absolutely necessary as some superstitiously suppose to come fasting to this Sacrament and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the Paschal Lamb was not so eaten 2. Because Christ did it after Supper 3. Because in the Primitive Church many places observed Christs time to communicate at the evening especially at Easter and Whitsontide 4. Because some are so weak that they cannot stay so long fasting 5. Because many abstained in superstition as thinking they eat the very body and drink the very blood of Christ 6. Because our preparation standeth rather in the purifying of the heart then purging of the stomack The ends of the Lords Supper 1. That it might be a confirmation of our faith that is a most certain testification of our communion with Christ 2. That it might be a publike distinction or mark discerning the Church from all other Nations and Sects for the Lord appointed it for his Disciples and not for others 3. That it might be our testification to Christ and the whole Church which is a publike confession of our faith and a solemn binding of our selves to thankfulness and the celebration of this benefit 4. That it might be a Bond of the Churches Assemblies and Meetings 5. That it might be a Bond of mutual love and dilection for it testifieth that all are made the members of Christ under one Head Lastly remember that the right and lawful use of this holy Supper consisteth in these three things especially 1. When the Rites and Ceremonies instituted by Christ are retained and observed 2. When the Rites are observed of those persons for whom Christ did institute them not for his enemies but his Disciples which are the faithful 3. When the Supper is received for the right end which chiefly is the commemoration of the Lords death History tells us That Victor the Third Bishop of Rome was poysoned by his Sub-deacon when he took the Cup and Henry the Seventh Emperor of Luxelburge was also poysoned in receiving the Bread at the hands of a Monk I hope the blasphemous Idolaters of Rome will not presume to say That that Wine which Pope Victor drank and that Bread which the Emperor did eat was the very Body and the very Blood of Christ Again they who eat Christ in the Lords Supper as the Fathers before his Incarnation did eat him in Manna and the Paschal Lamb cannot be said to eat Christ corporally for at that time he was not born now all the faithful eat Christ in the Lords Supper as the Fathers before his Incarnation did eat him in Manna and the Paschal Lamb 1 Cor. 20.3 4. therefore the faithful can no way be said to eat Christ corporally yet we hold that the faithful in the Supper do truly receive and eat but by the Spirit and by Faith the very true Body of Christ the which was crucified for us and so far forth as it was delivered up for us and that they drink his Blood which was shed for us for the Remission of sins and that indeed the Body is present and the Blood is present but unto the Spirit and unto the inward man for unto the Spirit all things which he receiveth by faith are in truth present according to that That Christ dwelleth in our hearts by faith And no distance of place can effect that the things we receive by faith should be absent from us even as the Sun cannot properly be said to be absent from the eyes of which it is perceived This is the Bread of life this is the way Our blessed Savior doth himself convey Into our hungry Souls when he combines His Grace unto the Elemental Signs Make room then purge thy Soul of every sin That so the King of Glory may come in With Angels food Alas they when they fell Fell without it to our just portion Hell Feed but with faith remember what it cost Without thy wedding garment thou art lost CHAP. III. §. 1. Prayer TRue Prayer may briefly be decribed to be that which is poured out from the heart the Holy Ghost stirring it unto God with this confidence upon the true perswasion of
adversity because it cometh unto us by the will of God 5. That God would turn the hearts of all men from sin and bring them every where to the obedience of his will 6. That Events such as are not contrary to Gods will that is that such things may come to pass which so please him 7. That God would bless and prosper our actions and counsels that no other Events may follow them but such as himself knoweth may most serve for his glory and our salvation 8. That God would hasten that time and state unto us wherein we shall perfectly do the will of God that is our state of glory Rules of obeying Gods will 1. Obey Gods will absolutely and for himself obey man onely in God and for God 2. Obey God in the maner as well as in the matter which he commandeth 3. In doing the works of piety let them give place if unfaigned necessity require and calleth to a work of Charity 4. Let the works of thy private Calling give place to works of the publike calling and general as if thou be laboring on the six days the Lord calling to his House by his worship there thou must attend it Lev. 23. 5. The works of a general common calling must give place to the works of a special undoubted calling being contrary if a man at any time hath such That all our obedience to Gods will may be the better accepted of him it must have these three properties 1. Chearfulness and readiness God loveth the chearful giver 2. Sincerity which is heartily and from the Spirit approving our selves to God and not affecting the applause and praise of men 3. Universality which is in all and every particular thing thus Job is approved obediently professing his subjection to God though he should aggravate his misery and kill him The way how to become chearful doers of the will of God or the duties required by this petition to be practised by us that Gods will may be done 1. We must prove what is the good and acceptable will of God Rom. 12.2 that is we must by often tryal of our actions by the Word of God become expert in Gods will and esteem highly of it be it never so contrary to carnal Reason Thus Abraham did Gen. 22.3 2. We must lay aside our own wills and be possessed with a base conceit thereof not leaning thereon 3. We must labor for a true perswasion of Gods mercy in the pardon of our sins and for the salvation of our souls whereby we may shew our selves thankful to God for so great a mercy 4. We must consider that we are the Temples of the Holy Ghost which is a wonderful dignity to sinful men and in regard hereof we must stir up our selves so to live that we make not sad the Spirit of God which dwelleth in us 5. We must consider the blessings of God bestowed on us both in soul and body one by one and this will move us to love God which love we shall shew in doing his will 1 Joh. 5.3 6. Let us consider the threatnings of God against sin and his Judgements upon them that live in sin and these will help to restrain our corruptions that they break not forth into action 7. We must be strict in the matter of sin making conscience of every evil way yea even of the first motions unto sin that never come to consent for this Petition for obedience respects not onely our words and deeds but also our secret thoughts for even they must be brought to obedience unto God 2 Cor. 10.5 8. We must seek to cut off all things that hinder us from doing Gods will we must use Spiritual means and pray for the Spirit to mortifie and crucifie the lusts of the flesh Rom. 8.13 which makes us rebels against God in transgressing his will Now the ground of this work is the death of our Saviour Christ applyed by true Faith to our corrupt hearts 9. We must not live inordinately but in that sort which God hath enjoyned Christians in his word every one godly in the general calling of a Christian and faithfully and conscionably in his particular calling whether of Church State or Family 10. We must endeavor to subject our selves patiently to the will of God in all afflictions whatsoever for it is the will of God that through manifold afflictions we should enter into his Kingdom This Petition teacheth us to bewail 1. Our natural disposition whereby we are prone to rebel against the will of God 2. Our natural hypocrisie even that which remaineth in us after grace received 3. Though we have never so much grace yet to lament and bewail our want of obedience in all good duties because the best of us all fail in the maner of doing them 4. Our impatience that when God layeth any crosses upon us we cannot as we ought endure them patiently and thankfully 5. Our slack and imperfect obedience yea privy pride proud presumption deadness of Spirit secret hypocrisie and other weaknesses incident to us even in our best services 6. The sins of others whereby they disobey the will of God and so rebel against him whereby he is dishonored and therefore must we be passionately grieved for the sins of others and labor to reclaim them In the supplication of this petition we pray 1. For grace to deny our own wills and ways 2. For understanding of the will of God which without it we cannot perform 3. For faith whereby to believe that the will of God revealed unto us is the will of God 4. For power to obey the holy whole will of God which is both active in doing and passive in suffering In the deprecation of this Petition we pray against 1. Rebellion or an obstinate offending against the known will of God 2. Prophaneness which is an undervaluing estimation of holy duties 3. Hypocrisie which is a drawing near to God with the lips but estranging the heart from him 4. Natural Corruption which draweth away to disobedience enticing to evil 5. Wea riness in well-doing a refusing to go forward and a turning back again 6. Impatience murmuring at crosses and discontent at Gods Providence The thanksgiving of this Petition is 1. For disobedience and sin in any measure mortified 2. For the knowledge of Gods will for faith and desires in truth to obey the will of God in all things all the days of our life In this Petition we are taught to frame our lives to an holy imitation of the blessed Angels which will not stand with their humor who account zeal in Religion affected preciseness But such as call God Father in sincerity must set before them the obedience of the holy Angels as a patern for their imitation to a like resemblance although not to a like equality of perfection Now in them we may observe these things for us to follow 1. They desired before Christs Incarnation to look into the mystery of our Redemption wrought by Christ 1
our discharge in this life that we be not tormented in the life to come The Reasons why sin is called a Debt to man 1. Because we owe love which is thereby broken Rom. 13.8 2. Because we owe punishment for doing wrong Judg. 1.8 3. Because we owe satisfaction for the wrong done Lev. 6.4 These words As we forgive our debtors are added for these Reasons 1. That we may rightly desire remission of sins that is with faith and repentance a sign and token whereof is the love of our Neighbor 2. That when we finde in our selves true faith and repentance we may so have a certain argument and comfort in us that we are of the number of them to whom remission of sins is promised and that therefore we shall doubtless obtain the same All offences that are done to us of others may be reduced to these three Heads 1. Such as do onely displease us but bring no loss or hurt to us 2. Small injuries such as do not onely displease us but withal bring some little hurt to us either in our life goods or good-name 3. Greater injuries such as are not onely offensive to our persons but withal do prejudice our life and bring a ruine upon our estates both in goods and good-name The forgiveness between man and man is fourfold viz. 1. Of Revenge that is when we requite not evil for evil either by thought word or deed This belongeth to all men 2. Of private Punishments when men return not punishments for injuries done by way of requital though we cannot forgive wholly and perfectly yet we may truly and sincerely 3. Of Judgement when we judge not an injury done to be an injury 4. Of Satisfaction when it is due for some hurt done Now man is said to forgive man when he doth pardon either the wrong done Gen. 50.21 or the punishment appointed for the wrong 2 Sam. 19.23 or the satisfaction which the offender is bound to make Luke 7.4 or all of them as occasion is offered Mat. 18.32 The conditional words of this Petition are useful to us many ways viz. 1. To inform us that asking of pardon and testimony of Repentance go together he that receives the one must express the other for where God gives pardon there also he gives grace to repent and mercy is not granted but on condition of repentance Acts 2.37 38. 2. To teach us to forgive our brethren every day to renew our repentance and to humble our selves and to let us know That we are bound to forgive all persons Gol. 3.12 all sins Prov. 10. and at all times Mat. 17.22 when men offend us and that fully 3. To afford us a notable sign of pardon of sin namely our forgiving of and mercy to our brethren 4. To admonish us to beware of the common sin of this Age which is desire of revenge spite and grudging for if we forgive not we pray in effect that God would not forgive us yea we curse our selves 5. To discover unto us the gross hypocrisie of our Nature for so oft as we make this Petition we make profession of reformation of life in new obedience for this one branch of brotherly Reconciliation here professed doth presuppose our Conversion from all sin since true Repentance for one sin cannot stand with a purpose to live in any other 6. To stir us up to hunger after love mercy gentleness meekness and to endeavor to practice the same continually living in peace 2 Cor. 13.11 laboring to make peace Mat. 5.9 and shewing all tokens of love to our adversaries that they may assure themselves we have wholly forgiven them 7. To shew us the way how to keep true peace of conscience for ever for when we are at one with God and man we have a blessed peace and this is by calling upon God for the pardon of our sins every day and by following after peace with men in the practice of forgiveness and reconciliation which is never sincere without repentance 8. To acquaint us That no man living in malice can say the Lords Prayer as he ought to do Mat. 5.24 and that is a sign of grace to forgive Mat. 17.32 9. To exclude from pardon all such as persecute the Saints of God till they repent and practice as they pray in this Petition By this Petition we are taught 1. To bewail our carnal security going on from day to day in sin without thought of the debt thereby 2. To relye and settle our hearts in all estates in affliction temptation and death it self on the meer mercy of God in Christ by faith in his Blood for the pardon of our sins 3. Not to lie down in the sins we daily commit but renew our estate by true humiliation and repentance which consists in daily examination confession contrition supplication and conversion 4. To use this Petition as a remedy against despair which must not embolden any to sin presumptuously for the Lord hath said he will not be merciful to that man Deut. 29.19 5. That no man possibly can fulfil the Law for the Apostles themselves were commanded to ask pardon for sin every day whereby it is plain they could not fulfil the Law much less can we 6. In all godly maner to endeavor after what we pray for for it is gross also hypocrisie daily to ask the pardon of sin and still to continue in the daily practice thereof 7. Not onely to pray for the pardon of our own sins but of our brethrens also whereby we are taught that the good estate of their souls should be dear and precious to us In the Supplication of this Petition we pray for what soever tendeth to the forgiveness of our sins as 1. The knowledge of our sins without which the tongue may pray for pardon but the heart cannot Thus many poor and miserable souls ignorantly deceive themselves 2. Grace to acknowledge our sins for he that hides them shall not prosper Prov. 28.13 and all that know them do not confess them or else some way justifie themselves 3. Grace to be truly humbled for sin and that in the sense of Gods curse due for it else we are still in our sins and cannot pray to speed 4. Justification through the death and blood-shedding of Christ Rom. 4.25 That Christs righteousness may be made ours and our sins laid upon him for his mercies sake 5. Love and charity towards our brethren that God would give us a heart to be reconciled to them pardoning their offences against us The Deprecation of this Petition is against all things that may shut up Gods mercy and goodness from us as 1. Blindeness of minde and ignorance of our inward estate which is through ignorance of the Law 2. Hardness of heart which keepeth from repentance 3. Despair of Gods mercy and goodness which driveth from God to the Devil 4. Presumption which is the promising of happiness to ones self on false ground 5. Continuance in sin and the least opinion of
and Traditions are ordinarily better observed and more regarded then this Commandment of God The people indeed would rather go to Church then to work but to carnal Delights and Recreations rather then either forgetting the Memento wherewith the Lord more specially commands as well due preparation before as unsophisticate performance in the actual celebration of this holiest of days Such as make no conscience to take the Lords day from him are Spiritual Thieves and meddle with that which is not their own never considering the wrong and injury that they offer unto the Almighty God rested on the Seventh day that is he ceased to create any New parts of the World as being now perfect and such as he would have it to be Good Reason therefore had the Lord of this day on pain of Eternal death of Body and Soul in Hell the place of the Damned strictly to charge and command that every Soul keep this whole day holy to his glory How dares then any creature-Man think his own thoughts speak his own words or do his own works on this glorious day Isa 58.13 the Lords own holy day He that walks away this day in vain Discourse idle Pastimes and sinful Recreations steps every step he thus prophanely steps one step forward to Eternal Death He that gathered but Sticks thereon was stoned to death because he had not kept that Statute which God had enacted as by solemn Proclamation That all sorts that profess themselves his Servants should wait upon him on the Sabbath It was Christs own custom to preach the Gospel in the Synagogues on this day so also the Disciples Acts 20.17 17.1 2. 1 Cor. 16.11 The Doors of the Temple were shut the six days but opened from morning until the evening upon the Seventh day Ezek. 46.1 2. And this sanctifying of the Lords day is a Moral Duty and bindes perpetually otherwise we should have but Nine Commandments whereas they are often called the Ten Words Exod. 34.28 Deut. 14.13 10.4 And Christ came not to destroy but to fulfil and keep the Law Mat. 5.17 Know then we may not make this day a day of vain pleasures and carnal delights a day of Sports and Recreations thinking it sufficient if we follow not the works of our Calling neither may we on this day go or ride about our worldly matters to buy bargain sell and talk with others robbing God of his day to spare one of our own neither is it sufficient to observe onely so much of this day as is enjoyned by Laws and Injunctions of men and prophane the rest of it thereby dividing the Lords day between God and our selves And every sin is so much the greater by how much less the thing is for which men sin I say the less the thing is for which a man will sin and transgress the Law of God the greater always is his sin because the greater is his contempt of God Thus was it with him that gathered Sticks on the Sabbath day and was stoned to death for his pains And thus it is with such as recreate away the Sabbath by walking the Fields who offend God more therein then he that worketh thereon in his Calling for his Necessity Yet here by the way we are to beware of a Jewish Superstition which Christ often refutes in the Gospel that is to think it unlawful to perform on the Sabbath day whatsoever works belonging to the necessity either of his own life or of others for by the end of the Commandment it appears That such works onely are forbidden as hinder the Exercise of the Ministery of Gods Word The parts of this Commandment are two viz. 1. The Commandment That the Sabbath be sanctified that is that it self viz. the Seventh day be allotted for Gods Service Gen. 2.3 Exod. 20.11 16.26 20.10 2. The Reason of the Commandment drawn from Gods Rest on the Seventh day after the Creation and his hallowing thereof Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day that is with great care and Religion and that for these Reasons 1. Because the breach and violating of the Sabbath is the breach and violating of the whole Worship of God for the neglect of the Ministery soon corrupts the whole Doctrine and Worship of God 2. Because by the exacting of this Typical Sabbath God would signifie the greatness and necessity of the Spiritual Sabbath 3. Because God will have the external Sabbath to serve for the beginning and perfecting of the Spiritual Sabbath in us In this Commandment we are commanded to keep holy the Sabbath day which is done 1. By preparing our selves by Prayer and emptying our hearts of sin 2. By assembling together to Pray unto God to Praise him to hear his holy Word and to Receive the blessed Sacraments 3. By meditating upon Gods Works and the Word which we have heard suffering it so to work in us as that we may be furthered in all holiness of life 4. By collecting and distributing to the Poor by visting the sick and reconciling dissentions among Neighbors In this Commandment is forbidden all Prophaning of the Sabbath which is 1. By doing worldly works which are not of present necessity by journeying about worldly Affairs idle resting or absenting our selves from the publike Duties of Gods Word and Worship 2. By forgetfulness of the Sabbath upon the six days by which we often bring upon our selves a necessity of prophaning the same 3. When being Parents or Governors we leave such as are under our charge to their liberty upon that day The Reasons of this Commandment are 1. Partly expressed therein and are taken 1. From the Lords Example who rested the Seventh day from all his works of Creation 2. From his Blessing inseparably linked unto the hallowing of this day 2. Partly enfolded therein are these 1. The Law of the Sabbath is Ancient and was of force in Paradice before Mans Fall 2. Because it is most Equal the Lord allowing us six days to labor in 3. Because the Seventh is the Lords peculiar day so that without Sacriledge we cannot any way prophane it God will have all our children and family to cease from their labors on this day for two causes 1. That these also may be brought up by their Parents and Masters in the service of God and may be admitted unto the Ministery of the Church 2. Because he will have especially on the Sabbath day Love and Bountifulness towards our Neighbors to be shewed and seen in the Church Strangers also are commanded to intermit their labors and that if they were converted to true Religion because they were of the houshold of the Church if they were Infidels it is commanded them not in respect of themselves but in respect of the Israelites and that especially for these two Reasons 1. Lest by their ill Example they should give offence unto the Church 2. Lest their liberty might be an occasion to the Jews to accomplish by them those labors which it was
honor of the Ministery of the Church or our obedience to the whole Ministery in life and maners and this is the Moral Sabbath The Sabbath is perpetual for these Reasons 1. Because it is placed in the number of the perpetual Commandments 2. Because it was written by the finger of God Exod. 31.18 Deut. 9.10 3. The writing of it in Tables of Stone doth argue that it is perpetual 4. Because it was before there was any use of the shadow or ceremony Forwhat Reasons the Lords day ought wholy to be spent in religious exercises 1. For Reasons drawn from the equity and liberality of God in giving us six days from the Example of Gods Rest and from the consideration of the end why it was appointed to be kept holy 2. It serveth to preserve men from Barbarism and Atheism and all irreligious Prophaneness 3. That it may be a Sign between the Lord and us throughout our generations that we may know that he is the Lord that doth sanctifie us Exod. 31.13 4. Our Savior vouchsafed to honor this day above the rest of the days of the week after his Resurrection and that by his special Appearings in it as well as by his Rising again upon it The special Appearings of our Savior after his Resurrection upon this his own day which should excite us to sanctifie it with prepared hearts and to observe it with the more care and circumspection 1. To Mary Magdalene early in the morning Joh. 20.1 14. 2. To the other Women as they were going to communicate to the Apostles the certainty of his Resurrection which the Angels had declared unto them before at the Sepulchre Mat. 28.9 3. To the two Disciples going to Emmaus Luke 24.21 4. The same day at night he appeared to his Disciples Joh. 20.19 5. On this day for the confirmation of Thomas his Faith he appeared to his Disciples Joh. 20.26 And upon this day also did the Holy Ghost descend On the Sabbath we must Rest 1. Chiefly from sin and thus our whole life should be a continual Sabbath 2. From ordinary not absolutely necessary labor Lev. 23.3 3. From works of special times as ploughing sowing reaping c. Exod. 34.21 Also from buying and selling Neh. 13.16 4. From the works of our special Callings the six days being appointed for them 5. From worldly speeches and thoughts either by making bargains or talking of worldly matters or contriving the same in our mindes The Sabbath is now called the Lords day Wherefore know That things are said to be the Lords in three respects viz. 1. In regard of Duty and service Thus all creatures are the Lords because he is their Creator and Maker to whom as to the High and Mighty Lord all things owe their homage Psal 24. 2. In regard of that Power and Authority whereby he Ruleth all things by his Providence to which Jurisdiction of his all men how wicked and perverse soever are subject Thus Cyrus King of Persia is said to perform the Lords pleasure though he knew not the Lord Isa 44.28 45.1 Psal 119.91 3. In respect of a Propriety and immediate Right that he hath in them being separate from mans use and sanctified to his and to be imployed in his service Thus is the Seventh day the Lords day if we rob him of his service in the least minute of an hour in this day we are sacrilegious and meddle with that which is not our own So that we under the New Testament are tyed to the observation of a Sabbath as well as the Jewswere of old and by as great Authority And this appeareth 1. From the time of the Institution of the Sabbath even in Paradice before Man fell when he had the substance of true Holiness and needed not any figurative ceremony for his comfort 2. From the Morality of this Commandment being placed among the rest of the Moral Laws which are to continue in force for ever Mat. 5.20 3. From the main Reason of this Commandment for the Commemoration of Creation and Redemption is more to us then that of the Creation onely was unto the Jews 4. From the Caveat given by our Savior speaking of Jerusalems destruction Mat. 24.20 In the Jewish Sabbath observe 1. The Jews were as dead men if they wrought on the Sabbath Exod. 35.2 they might not then kindle a fire throughout their habitations Exod. 35.3 2. It was also a figure of the Everlasting Rest of Gods children in the Kingdom of Heaven Isa 66.23 Heb. 4.9 3. It was observed in Remembrance of their deliverance out of Egypt which hapned on that day Deut. 5.15 4. It was tyed precisely to the Seventh day from the Creation and celebrated with sundry set Rites and Ceremonies Numb 28.9 10. Nevertheless there is a Sabbath Moral and Perpetual a time to be set apart to the end of the Worship of God to the end of the world The Reasons of the change of the Sabbath viz. 1. To put a Difference between the Jewish and the Christian Sabbath 2. To keep a Memorial of the day of our Redemption for as the Seventh day kept a Memorial of the Works of Creation so doth this First day of the week the Memorial of the Work of our Redemption which is a work so much greater then the other by how much it is more to Redeem us out of Hell being worse then nothing then it was at first to create us out of nothing Isa 66.24 3. To free the Church from the yoke of the Sacrifices and Ceremonies of the Jews Acts 15.10 for when this day was changed it was more tyed to the Jewish Sabbath which was solemnized with many ceremonies necessarily belonging unto it The Difference between the Christian observing of the Lords day and the Jewish observing of the Seventh day 1. It was not lawful for the Jews to change the Sabbath or to omit it as being a part of ceremonial Worship The Christian Church retaining still her liberty allotteth the First day unto the Ministery without adjoyning any opinion of Necessity or Worship 2. The old Ceremonial Sabbath was a Type of things to be fulfilled in the New Testament by Christ But in the New Testament that signification ceaseth and there is had regard onely of order and comeliness without which there could be either no Ministery or at least-wise no well ordered Ministery in the Church The sinal causes or ends for which the Sabbath was instituted viz. 1. The publike Worship and Service of God in the Church exercise of Prayers Confession and Obedience 2. The Maintenance and Preservation of the Ministery of the Church 3. That it might be in the Old Testament a Type signifying the Spiritual and Everlasting Sabbath Ezek. 20.12 4. For a circumstance of the Seventh day that it might advertise men of the Creation Preservation and Managing of the world 5. That on that day the works of charity bountifulness and liberality should be exercised 6. For the bodily Rest both of Men
the wealth and peace of their people like Mordecai 2. Of Ministers is to make themselves Servants unto their people not seeking their own profit but the profit of many that they may be saved as Paul 1 Cor. 9.19 10.33 3. Of Fathers is to educate their Children in the Fear of God taking heed that they give them no evil Example nor provoke them to wrath Prov. 4.3 4. 4. Of Husbands is to dwell with their wives according to knowledge giving honor to the wife as to the weaker vessel like Abraham Gen. 6.16 5. Of Masters is to do that which is just and equal to their Servants as the Centurion Luk. 7.2 for they as well as their Servants are bound to duty 1. By Gods Law for it expresly enjoyneth many Duties to Masters 2. By the Law of Nature which hath tyed as well the one as the other to do as well as receive good 3. By the Law of Nations as appears by divers particular Laws established for this purpose 4. By the Law of Equity for one good deserveth another 6. Of every one is to be of like affection one towards another by serving one another in love according to the Apoliles Rule Rom. 12.16 Gal. 5.13 7. Of our selves towards our selves is 1. To honor God in all our ways 1 Sam. 2.30 2. To keep our Bodies that they be not made the instruments of sin 1 Thess 4.4 5 The common Vertues of this Fifth Commandment viz. 1. That General Justice which is Obedience according to all Laws that appertain unto all in respect of every ones Vocation and Calling 2. The Particular Distributive Justice which keepeth a proportion in distributing of Offices and Rewards or which is a vertue giving every one his own Rom. 13.7 3. Sedulity or Diligence or Fidelity which is a vertue in a man well knowing and understanding those parts which belong properly to his own duty and office examining them and doing according to Gods Commandment those things that belong unto him constantly continually studiously willingly faithfully and chearfully 4. Gravity which is a vertue that observeth that which becometh a mans person and sheweth a constancy and squareness in words deeds and gestures that thereby we may maintain our good estimation or authority that our Calling be not reproached 5. Modesty being a vertue which hath near affinity whereby a man knowing his own imbecility and considering his place and calling wherein he is placed by God keepeth a mean and conveniency of person in opinion and in speech of himself in actions and in behavior that giving no more to our selves then becometh us we may give to others what is theirs Humility and Modesty differ onely in the end for as Modesty is towards men so Humility is towards God Gal. 6.3 6. Love or Tender Affection towards our Kindred or near Allies of Blood 7. Thankfulness which is a vertue consisting of Truth and Justice acknowledging from whom what and how great benefits we have received desiring to return mutual duties honest and possible 8. Equity which is a vertue mitigating upon good cause the rigor of strict Justice in punishing and taxing others offences patiently bearing with some such errors and defects as do not enormously harm the publike safety or the private welfare of our Neighbors and covering and correcting such vices of others or endeavoring to heal and cure them God annexeth a Promise of this Commandment for these Reasons 1. To signifie how greatly he esteemeth that Obedience and how grievously he will punish those who do against this Obedience 2. To signifie how Necessary this Obedience is and so much the more to invite us to the observing and keeping thereof This Commandment hath a Promise of Outward Temporal Prosperity annexed to the performance of it which though to the wicked does by meer consequence through the Abuse of it turn to evil yet to the godly it is a Blessing and Fruit of Gods Love as appears by these Reasons 1. It is good as it was at first made and ordained of God Gen. 1.31 2. It tends to mans good if it be rightly used 3. It was bestowed on man before he had offended Gen. 2.8 4. It is a Promise of God to them that fear him and keep his Commandments Levit. 26.4 c. 5. The Saints have prayed and been thankful for it Gen. 28.20 6. The contrary was first inflicted as a punishment of sin and is often threatned as a token of Gods wrath which accordingly hath been often inflicted on Transgressors Lev. 26.15 who meritoriously have incurred it This Promise of long life includes a Blessing of all earthly things Now there is a Right to earthly things two ways or the Right unto the Earth is twofold 1. Civil which stands good before men by their Laws and Customs Thus men are called Lords of their Land and so the Turk at this day is a mighty Lord of a great part of the whole World 2. Spiritual which is warrantable and approved with God himself Such Right and Title had Adam to all the World before his Fall which he lost by his Sin both from himself and all his Posterity but yet in Christ the same is recovered to all the Elect In regard of this Right the Meek are said to inherit the Earth Mat. 5.5 So that it is most evident the Turk and all Unbelievers and ungodly persons are but Usurpers of those things which otherwise Civilly they do lawfully possess For all our Right to the Earth was lost in Adam and is onely recovered by Christ so that till we have our part in him we cannot justly with a good Conscience possess any part of the Earth for he is Prince of the Kings of the Earth Rev. 1.5 and the High Lord of all the World Though long life be here promised as a Blessing yet may the Righteous have their days shortned for their good as in these and such like respects 1. That they may be taken from the evil to come 1 Kings 14.13 2. That they might be made an example to others 1 Kings 13.24 3. That by a temporal death eternal Condemnation might be avoided 1 Cor. 11.32 4. That their chiefest and greatest Reward might be hastned Gen. 5.24 Heb. 11.5 The Promise of long life and Prosperity is not so appropriated to this kinde of Righteousness as if it appertained to no other but in these and such like particular respects 1. Because Obedience to Parents is one of the surest evidences of our conformity to the whole Law and a good foundation for the performing of all duties to man 2. Because Performance of duties to Parents is a special means under God of prospering and living long whereas rebellious children hasten their own sad ends 3. Because Parents are a special means to procure the welfare and long life of their children partly by provident care and partly by fervent and frequent Prayer 4. Because Disobedience draweth down much mischief on the heads of children and many ways doth often
46 b. Bible the Canonical Books thereof not perishable 6 a. Blood of Christ how it saves from sin 321 a b. Body the Metaphor thereof used in Scripture what it implieth 151 a. Bondage from the which Christ hath freed us is fourfold 322 a. Bread daily Bread what is meant thereby 98b Burial of Christ the Causes thereof 37 c. C CAlling twofold 150 c. Censure the evil of it and how many ways it may be committed 305 a. Censures of the Church threefold 379 c. Ceremonies Judaical oblige not Christians 16 a. Chastity twofold 289 b. Rules to preserve it ibid. c. 290 b. Children their Duties to Parents 263 c. Christ his Natures and Properties described 127 b c. the degrees of his Humiliation 127 a. also of his Exaltation ibid. Why called the First-born ibid. why called our Head ibid. 128 a. why called our Lord 127 Messias Christ or Anointed ibid. b. why called the Word 129 a. the Lamb from the c. 322 c. the Head of the Church 151 b. how said to be Present with us 157 b c. to what ends Anointed 128 b. his Royal Prophetick and Priestly Offices 128 129 his Theanthropeity and the use thereof 131 c. Church what it is to believe in the Holy Catholick Church 149 c. why called Catholick 150 a. The Church twofold Visible and Invisible ibid. b. 152 c. its Priviledges 151 c. Marks to know the true Church by 152 a. her Titles of Honor ibid. why called Holy ibid. b. her Properties ibid. why God permits it to be persecuted ibid. c. 153 a. 198 b. why the World hates it ibid. c. How the Church before Christs coming differs from the Church since his coming 154 a. how it differs from Common-weals ibid. b. her Office and Authority touching the Scripture ibid. how the Church may be said to erre ibid. c. what she may not do ibid. The Duties of Faith in the Holy Catholick Church 155 a. Circumcision why Abolished 46 c. why Christ was Circumcised ibid. b. Communion of Saints what 155 c. 156 c. Doctrine thereof 155 to 156. How we are said to have communion with God 157 c. the Signs of true Communion with God 158 a. 159 a. the Duty of the Saints by vertue of this Communion ibid. c. Conception of Christ by the Holy Ghost what 132 c. what it signifies 133 c. why he was conceived ibid. what it is to believe in Christ conceived 134 b c. Confession the Properties thereof 79 b. Christian Confession twofold 246 b. Caveats touching private Confession 225 c. Consubstantiation Reasons against it 57 b. Conversion what 337 Doctrine thereof ibid. to 343. Conversion twofold 341 c. how wrought 342 a b. The Object Subject Parts and Causes of Conversion ibid. b c. how is differs from false Repentance 343 a. Covenant betwixt God and Man twofold 330 a. Covetous how said to be Idolaters 309 a. Covetousness what 306 c. the Evils thereof 309 b. Remedies against it ibid. a. 110 b. Creation described 124 c. 125 a. 316 why God created the World 125 the Doctrine of the Creation ibid. b c. 316 to 319 the use of that Doctrine 119 b. Creatures four kindes thereof in the world 318 b. a twofold goodness in the Creature ibid. a. Creed why vulgarly called Apostolique 117 c. and why so framed ibid. Cross fourfold 198 c. a Cordial against fainting under it 200 a. 201 b. Cruelty the Properties thereof 278 b. Curse for Sin fourfold 19 c. D DEath of Christ why so ignominious 137 c. the Benefits thereby ibid. a. Debt a threefold Debt in Sin 105 a. Decalogue how divided 170 c. the Doctrine thereof 169 to 310 Rules how to expound it 171 c. 172 a b. Deity proved 119 c. 120 a. Deliverance how many ways God works it for his people 113 a. why God sometimes defers it 200 c. Descention of Christ into Hell what 135 c. the diversity of Opinions touching it 138 b c. Despair what 222 c c. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 226 threefold 225 a. Causes thereof ibid. b. Remedies against it 111 b. 225 c. 226 a b. Discipline what Ecclesiastical Discipline is 376 b. the nature of it how and by whom to be administred ibid. why and by whom Instituted 378 a. the Method thereof ibid. the Necessities thereof ibid. c. the Difference betwixt Church-Discipline and State-Government ibid. Distress of Minde the kindes thereof 224 b c. Doctrine how true Doctrine differs from other 153 c. Drunkenness Remedies against it 111 a. Duties the kindes thereof 271 a b. E EArth a twofold Right to it 272 c. Eating to the Lord what and how 374 b. Election what 313 Doctrine thereof ibid. to 316 kindes thereof 315 b. Effects thereof ibid. c. the way to obtain Assurance thereof 316 a. Envy twofold 281 c. why to be avoided ibid. Remedies against it ibid. Essence Divine what 2 b c. 3 b. how the Essence of God differs from the Essence of the Creature 4 a. Why the Difference of Essence and Person in the Trinity is necessary to be known ibid. b. Examination before Receiving the Lords Supper 49 c. to 53 b. Examiners three sorts of Examiners 53 a. Excommunication what 376 c. its parts 381 c. the Original thereof 377 a. how to be used ibid. b. of no force against the Childe of God ibid. c. Three Judgements in Excommunication 378 b. Observations thereon 379 b. Duties to be performed by and to the Excommunicate 380 a b. The fearful condition of Excommunicated persons ibid. c. the end and use of Excomunication 381 a b. with the use to be made thereof 382,383 Eyes Rules for the governing of them to avoid Adultery 289 a. F FAith what 174 b. Doctrine thereof 379 to 194 What the most Mysterious point of Faith 1 a. how many ways we may be said to Believe 183 b. Faith fourfold ibid. Historical Faith what ibid. c. Justifying Faith wherein it consists 184 a b. its Properties 186 c. Gods order in working Faith 184 c. how many ways Faith works 187 a b. how it admits Degrees 186 a. 238 c. 239 a. Effectual Faith what 187 wherein the effectualness of it consists 188 a. the Fruits Effects and Signs of Effectual Faith 192 b c. the Causes of uneffectual Faith 188 a. Faithless Works threefold 187 c. Tryal of Faith 50 b c. 51 c. Duties of Faith in Christ Crucified 138 a. how Faith and Hope differ 189 a. wherein they agree ibid. c. how Faith differs from Presumption 191 a. how Faith differs from Moral Honesty 238 b. the Degrees of Temporary Faith 239 b. Satans Engines to destroy Faith 188 c. Titles in Scripture given to Faith 190 c. how far the sense of Faith may be lost ibid. Motives to grow in Faith 191 b. Means to attain it ibid. c. The use of Faith in Prosperity 193 c. Faithful why called Saints 157 a. Fast what a Religious Fast is 369 a. 370 c. 371 a b. the several kindes thereof ibid. c. 372 a. Rules touching the same
he Rose again ibid. what chiefly is therein considerable ibid. c. why our Resurrection is the Fruit of his 141 b. The Duties of Faith in the Resurrection of Christ ibid. Rest on the Sabbath the several kindes thereof 260 b. Restitution twofold 239 c. why required ibid. Revenge Gods Prerogative 275 c. Motives in man to avoid it 278 a b. Reverence due to Superiors the several kindes of it 266 b. the over-reverencing of Parents sinful ibid. Righteousness of Christ how ours 325 b. Rome an Enemy to the Royal Priestly and Prophetick Office of Christ 129 c. S SAbbath what it signifies 258 b. the nature and Doctrine thereof 254 to 262. Why it is to be kept holy 256 b. 257 a. 258 a. in what maner ibid. 260 b. wherefore must Beasts rest that day 257 b. the degrees of the Sabbath 258 c. the Sanctification of the Sabbath twofold 250 a b. why it is perpetual ibid. c. why now called the Lords-Day 260 b. what chiefly observable in the Jewish Sabbath 261 a. why the Day was changed ibid. wherefore instituted at first ibid. c. how many ways it is broken and prophaned 262. Sacraments what ●7b their Institution 38 b. how the signs therein differ from the things signified 38 c. how Sacraments differ from the Word 39. how they agree ibid. c. how the Sacraments of the Old and New Testament differ ibid. how they agree 40 a. The ends and right use of Sacraments ibid. b. Sacramental Vnion wherein it consisteth ibid. c. Sacrifices under the Law why instituted 21 b. Salvation how wrought by God 329 c. 330 a. not to be doubted by Gods children and why 189 c. Sanctification what 326 b. the Doctrine thereof ibid. to 333. its parts 327 b. the kindes thereof ibid. c. 328 a. and signs 332 c. Scripture Holy Scripture what meant by it 6 a b. why called the Word of God 7 b. Proved to be the Word of God 7 c. 8. The matter thereof 8 a. End ibid. Effects 8 b. 14 a. Properties ibid. Testimonies 8 c. Majesty 9 a. Subject 12 b c. The Division of Scripture 9 c. wherein the Old and New Testament agree ibid. wherein they differ 10 a. why all sorts of men are bound to the knowledge of the Scripture 11a in what respects it is difficult ibid. and the Raeson thereof ibid. b. Means whereby to finde out the true sense of Scripture ibid. c. the Graces required for the right use thereof 12 a. how to profit by the Scriptures 13 a. The several kindes of Neglecters thereof 13 b. Observations for the right interpreting of the Scriptures 13 b. how to decide the doubtful places ibid. c. the Graces obtained by the Scriptures 14 a. the Papists Error touching the Authority thereof 9 b. their twofold Scripture ibid. Seal twofold 205 c. Sects of Jews under the Law 22 b. Sin what 343. why called a Debt 105 a. the seat of sin in man threefold 345 c. the kindes and degrees of sin 346 347. In what sense sin may be said to be venial ibid. c. 348 a. the occasions of sin ibid. b. the sundry kindes of communication with sin ibid. the heinousness of Adams sin 353 a. God not the Author of sin 352 c. why God permitted the first sin 353 a. Two main Disswasives from all sin 350 c. 351. Rules whereby to see our sins 354 a. how God doth punish sin ibid. b. the sad Effects of sin ibid. c. An Antidote against sin 355 a b. Rules to be observed in forsaking of sin ibid. c. Means sanctified by God himself against it 356 a. Sin Original Sin what 343. the nature of it 350 352. Sin against the Holy Ghost what 345 b. ' Degrees thereof 349 a. how this sin is differenced from all other sins ibid. b. why God leaves this sin unpardonable Sincerity the signs and tryals thereof 239 c. Son the second Person in the Trinity 1 to 5. Sprinkling in Baptism what it signifies 43 c. Subjection twofold 270 b c. Sufferings the Doctrine thereof 135 to 139. Supper of the Lord what 48 a. the Doctrine thereof 48 to 58. the signs and things signified 48 b c. the Sacramental Rites of this Supper 49 b. the Properties of a true Communicant ibid. a right disposition in the act of Receiving 53 b c. a true discerning of the Lords Body what 54 a. 55 a. what it is to shew forth the Lords Death 54 a. our Duty after Receiving 54 b c. Resemblance betwixt the Passover and the Lords Supper 56 c. 57 a. why Christ at the last Passover instituted the Lords Supper ibid. why the Bread and Wine is called the Body and Blood of Christ 58 b. Rules whereby to discern the Lords Body in the Sacrament ibid. c. how the Lords Supper differs from Baptism ibid. it is not necessary to come Fasting to the Lords Supper and the Reasons 59 a. the true and right ends of the Lords Supper ib. b. Swearing the Causes of common and prophane Swearing 243 c. when and wherein a man may lawfully swear 250 b c. Why we ought to swear onely by God and not by the Creatures 251 b c.. T TEmptation twofold 108 b. the kindes thereof ibid. c. and degrees thereof 109 a. how God is said to lead a man into Temptation 108 a. Testimony of the Spirit how wrought 330 b. of our own Consciences how discerned 332 a. Thanksgiving the subject matter thereof 68 c. 69. Directions for Thanksgiving ibid. c. Theft the several kindes thereof 291 292 293 a. the degrees thereof 296 b c. 297 299 c. 300 a. Remedies against it 293 b. Thoughts threefold 308 b. Vnclean Thoughts twofold 309 c. how to discern such Thoughts as the Devil injects into the heart ibid. an Antidote against evil Thoughts 316 b. Toleration of false Worship exceeding dangerous 217 c. Transubstantiation Reasons against it 57 b. Trespasses and Sins why called Debts 103 a. 109 b. Trinity what 1. the Doctrine thereof 1 to 5. Trinity and Triplicity how they differ 3 b. Trinity of Persons in Vnity of Godhead why necessary to be believed and maintained 4 b. Truth fourfold 305 c. Truth in speech twofold 301 b. Types are visible Promises 17 c. U UNion taken three ways 157 a. how united to Christ ibid. b. the Saints Priviledges by their Vnion with Christ 158 b c. 159 a. Motives to Spiritual Vnion with Christ ibid. c. the effects thereof 160 a. Vocation what 322 b. threefold 323 a. the Doctrine thereof 322 323 324. Vows how far they are to be kept 242. What is required in every Vow to make it lawful 252 c. 253 a. Considerations touching Vows 253. Usury conditions and qual fications touching it 295 a. Reasons why a man may sometimes take above the Principal ibid. W WAr lawful in the godly without the guilt of Murther 282 b. the Qualifications to be observed therein ibid. c. Will Liberty of Will what 338 b. the nature of the Will ibid. 339. Liberty of Will how constituted 340 a. why called Free ibid. b. Degrees of Free-will ibid. 341 b. the difference betwixt the Liberty of Gods Will and ours ibid. c. What things in the Will are common to Angels and Men with God 341 a. the degrees of the malice of the Will 350 a. Will of God what 93 c. Doing of Gods Will what it signifies 95 a. Rules how to obey it ibid. b. Wishing Conditions required therein 310 a. Witness the heinousness of bearing False Witness 301 c. Wives duty to their Husbands 269 b c. Word of God what 6 a. not alway the same with the letter of the Scripture b c. Why to be warily observed in Scripture 10 c. how falsified by Hereticks ibid. Works of God twofold 123 c. Works Good Works what 356 c. the Doctrine thereof ibid. to 363. kindes 358 a. and ends thereof ibid. 359 b. why Good Works required since they do not justifie 326 b. Rules to be observed in doing Good Works 357 b. how many ways God accepts of Good Works in us ibid. b. the diversity of Opinions touching the Necessity of Good Works ibid. c. how the wicked do things seemingly good ibid. c. why we are bound to Good Works 359 c. Good Works cannot merit 360. See Merit Why they cannot justifie us 361 b. how the Works of the Regenerate and Vnregenerate differ ibid. c. the fruit of Good Works 362 c. Worship the kindes thereof 171 a. wherein it consists 216 a. Rules touching it 217 a. Required in the Second Commandment 230. Doctrine of true Worship ibid. to 240. the kindes of false Worship 231 c. Rules for right Worship 232 a. FINIS
viz. 1. The Father Createth but immediately by the Son and the Holy Ghost the Son from the Father and the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son 2. The Father and the Holy Ghost Redeem us but mediately by the Son but the Son immediately from the Father by the Holy Ghost 3. The Father and the Son Sanctifie us but mediately by the Holy Ghost but the Holy Ghost immediately from the Father and the Son In this deep Mystery of our Religion we must be guided wholly by Faith and endeavor to believe this Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity though we are not able to reason the truth thereof by Natural demonstrations Behold the sacred Riddle of Divinity One Godhead in a holy Trinity Of Persons or three Persons all in one Most undivided Deity alone Distinct in Persons not in Essence no The Godhead's not divided think not so For it 's not subject to division Nor admits of any Composition But distinction without seperation As is most evident by Mans Creation Gen. 1.26 §. 2. Gods Word THe Word of God is the Wisdom of God James 3.17 concerning the truth which is according to godliness being given by inspiration of God 2 Tim. 3.16 the original being from heaven not earth Joh. 3.27 and the Author thereof being God not man 1 Cor. 2.10 by which Word God alone doth onely binde the Conscience by causing it in every action to excuse for well-doing and accuse for sin Now this Word of God is the holy Scripture in which name are to be understood all and onely those Canonical Books of the Old and New Testament of whose Authority was never any doubt in the Church which we receive as Canonical not so much because that the Church doth so receive and allow them as for that the holy Spirit in our hearts doth testifie that they are from God Touching which this is a Truth must be held of us That no part of the Canonical Scripture inspired of God such as was committed as the Lords Treasure to the Church for the perpetual instruction thereof in Faith and Obedience is lost and perished nor can be lost or perish so that no one Oracle or Sentence of God can fall away Indeed these sacred Books may be despitefully abused by men many ways but they can never be finally lost and wholly extinguished for the works of God remain for ever and ever And as for any sandy Supposition contrary to this Truth let the vain Supposer answer What Error more can be convinced what Comfort more can be received what Vice more can be corrected what Truth more can be published what Grace more can be commended to the Church out of those Books which he so fondly supposeth to be lost Beware therefore of doubting of Gods Providence herein shaking thereby the Faith of the Church Whosoever thus goes about to strike at the foundation thereof the least dust that falls from the Building will crush the presumptuous Underminer into bottomless destruction The Scripture is a Doctrine inspired by God to make us wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 16. Rom. 1.16 and containeth all things necessary to be known and believed for the salvation of man Joh. 20.31 2 Tim. 3.16 17. the whole being as it were compendiously comprised in the Decalogue the sum of the Law and in the Creed the sum of the Gospel As for all the fundamental Points of Christian Religion necessary to salvation they notwithstanding the darkness of some Mysteries herein contained are clearly and plainly set down so as the humble and obedient heart may distinctly without wavering and gainsaying conceive and believe them Thus not unfitly is the Scripture compared in regard of the perspicuity thereof to a Foord over which a Lamb may wade and in regard of the difficulty thereof to a Sea wherein an Elephant may swim Now though all things necessary to be known are herein contained yet are not all literally expressed as the Baptism of Infants and Original Sin which notwithstanding are distinctly and demonstratively inferred thence and so are all things that belong to Faith and Obedience whatsoever we are to believe or to practice So that the letter of the Scripture may be alledged and yet the word of God missed as by all Hereticks and a man may swerve from the letter yet alledge the true word of God therefore it is nothing less then necessary that we be diligently familiar and well acquainted with this word of God Josephus tells us The Jews knew the Scriptures as well as their own names many of us may tell the Jews We scarce know the names of the Scriptures Most inexcuseable Ignorance sad and lamentable for we are bound to know the Scriptures themselves that by them we may come to knowledge by knowledge to faith by faith to obedience and by obedience to salvation Touching the Apocryphal Books to which the Imps of Rome as to their own Traditions give power equal to the Canonical Scriptures they were not penned by the Prophets the Lords Secretaries as the Scriptures were nor ever committed of trust to the Israelites They contain certain things disagreeing from the true Scriptures of God and no proof that they were penned by the Spirit of God therefore there is no warrant for the equalling them in Credit or Authority with the Scriptures Besides one main property of the Books of the Old Testament is That every one of them was written either by Moses or some other of the Prophets in the Hebrew tongue the native language of the Jews but the Apocryphal Books were penned by some other in the Greek tongue which was not the language of the old Prophets so that they are no part of the Law or of the Prophets And yet as the presumptuous Papists make the Apocryphal Books of equal Authority with the Canonical so others have more blasphemously long since obtruded for Canonical the fatherless brood of other Books unto these as The third and fourth of Esdras An Appendix of Job A Preface to the Lamentation The third and fourth of the Maccabees a Book called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Book of Enoch The Gospel of Thomas and of Matthias The Acts of Peter and in the year 1120 a certain new Gospel called Evangelium Aeternum was found out being full of Blasphemies All which and the like are damnable presumptions plainly forbidden by the Lord Deut. 4.2 and most fearfully threatned Rev. 22.18 19. So then to withstand the Devils suggestion against the Divine Authority of the true sacred Seriptures it is very necessary to have our judgements well informed therein to pray for the Spirit of Revelation or Inspiration which may inwardly testifie to our Spirits That God is the Author of the Scriptures which Principle we must hold undeniable and give no place to doubting about these uncontradictable Truths The Scripture is said to be the Word of God in regard of 1. The Author who is God himself 2 Tim. 3.16 2. The Matter which is Gods
Word is no sufficient note of a true Church for the Israelites had circumcision and yet the Lord saith they were not his people Hos 1.9 Again they overturn the inward power of Baptism by denying Justification by Faith alone in Jesus Christ And as for the bastard-Rites and Ceremonies invented and patched by men to Baptism as hallowing of the Water Tapers Exorcisms Chrism Salt Crosses Spittle and such like they are not of the true Church but a corruption of the Sacrament And as these men attribute too much to this Sacrament holding that it gives Grace ex opere operato so on the other side there are other giddy heads who number Baptism among things indifferent and so to be used or refused at our discretion Lastly seeing the administration of the Sacraments is a part of Ecclesiastical Discipline or rather Doctrine indeed they that are not called thereto and especially women may not in any case usurp the power and authority to Baptize Christs Herauld sent by Proclamation To enter our Initiation Sprinkled the Water and the sacred Blood Made the faithful though sinful appear good This is Bethesda 's Pool or Siloam's stream Whereof the frothy Anabaptists dream The right use to Infants daign'd may not be Though some of Abrahams Posserity Thus Christ himself they proudly Countermand Whose word when all the world 's dissolv'd shall stand §. 3. The Lords Supper THe Lords Supper is a Sacrament instituted and appointed of Christ unto the faithful for a memorial of him whereby Christ doth certainly promise and seal unto the faithful That his Body was offered and broken on the Cross and his Blood shed for them as truly as they see his Bread broken and Cup distributed to them and that he doth as certainly with his Body crucified and his Blood shed feed and nourish the Souls of the faithful unto everlasting life as certainly as their bodies are fed with the bread and the cup of the Lord is received from the hand of the Minister which are offered to them as certain Seals of the body and blood of Christ and binde them to mutual dilection and love The Evangelists shew it was instituted of Christ the same night he was betrayed after that he had supped and had eaten the Easter-Lamb according to the Law yet is it so called not so much because it was the night wherein Christ was betrayed as to shew that it is indeed a Spiritual Supper given of God unto the faithful It is indeed the Sacrament of our Redemption by Christs death insomuch as to such as worthily and with faith receive the same the bread which is broken is a partaking of the body of Christ and likewise the cup of blessing is a partaking of his blood Such therefore as declare themselves in confession and life to be Infidels and ungodly are not to be admitted to this Supper lest thereby the Covenant of God be prophaned and the wrath of God stirred up against the whole Assembly 1 Cor. 11.20 Wherefore the Church by the commandment of Christ and his Apostles using the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven ought to drive them from this Supper till they shall repent and change their life and conversation The Signs of the Lords Supper are twofold 1. Representing Signs as Bread Wine the breaking and pouring out 2. Applying Signs which do appropriate the same as the giving and receiving of bread and wine the first serves to renew our knowledge the other to confirm it As the Signs in the Lords Supper are 1. Bread broken and eaten 2. Wine distributed and taken So the things signified are 1. Christs body broken and blood shed 2. Our Union with Christ by faith The breaking and communicating of Christs body is signed by the breaking and receiving of the bread for two causes 1. Because Christ commandeth those Rites unto which we ought to give no less credit then if Christ himself did speak unto us 2. Because he annexeth a Promise That they who observe those Rites with a true faith must be assured and certain that they have communion with Christ The similitude or proportion of the Signs with the thing signified viz. 1. As the bread and wine nourish our body to temporal life so the body and blood of Christ nourish our souls unto life Spiritual and Eternal 2. As the bread and wine are received by the mouth so the body and blood are received by faith 3. As the wine is severed from the bread to signifie the violence of Christs death so his blood was sundred from his body signified also by the breaking of the bread and as the bread is eaten being broken so the body of Christ is received being sacrificed 4. As in corporal food is required an appetite unto it so in this Spiritual food is required faith 5. As of many corns is made one loaf so are we being many made one body The maner whereby Christs body blood doth nourish us is 1. The respect of his merit for us Christs body is given and his blood shed for us and for the body and blood of Christ we have eternal life given unto us 2. When we receive that merit that is when we believe with a true faith that for it we shall have eternal life 3. When the same Spirit uniteth us by faith unto Christ and worketh the like in us which is in Christ for except we be grafted into Christ we do not please God The remembrance we are to have of Christ in receiving the Lords Supper consists 1. In the memory of Christs benefits 2. In faith whereby we apply Christ and his merit to our selves 3. In thankfulness or publike confession of his benefits The Sacramental Rites of the Lords Supper are twofold 1. Respecting the Minister which are twofold 1. To take the bread and wine to break the one and to pour out the other that is that Christ suffered for our Redemption 2. To give the bread broken and to deliver the wine poured out that is that God doth offer and give Christ unto us together with all his benefits 2. Respecting him that cometh to the Lords Table it is required that he receive eat and drink the bread and wine given unto him that is that in the Supper we do truly receive Christ eat his body and drink his blood by the which we are nourished into the hope of eternal life if we do not cast him from us through unbelief The properties belonging to a fit guest at the Lords Table 1. He must be bidden Luke 14.8 2. He must be humble Luke 14.9 3. He must have knowledge of the person to whose Table he comes 4. He must bring a Spiritual appetite to eat 5. He must put on Christ his wedding garment Rom. 13.14 6. He must be ravished within himself concerning the use of these mysteries 7. He must be sober in using them 8. Chearful in receiving them 9. Loving to his fellow-guests 10. Thankful to the Master of the feast To the right use
of the Lords supper three things are required 1. A right preparation which chiefly consists in knowledge prayer self-examination contrition and repentance faith a resolution against sin for the future and charity for this Sacrament is a Communion whereby all the receivers joyntly united by love do participate of one and the same Christ 2. A right receiving wherein is specially required the renewing of our knowledge or general faith which is renewed principally by meditation in the use of the Supper and the renewing of our special faith in Christ 3. A right use of it afterward when we must give God thanks for so great a benefit 1 Cor. 11.26 and look to receive by it encrease of faith and repentance to rise from sin and to receive power against the Devil The Rule of examination must be the Law of God and the thing chiefly to be examined is sin 1. In thought and therein these especially Idle thoughts Lascivious thoughts Treacherous politick thoughts Blasphemous thoughts 2. In word and therein such as these Idle words Angry and rash words Filthy and immodest words False and untrue words Cursing and imprecating words Charming and Necromantick words Words immediately agains God as Oathes and Blasphemies 3. In deed Some whereof are of Commission Others of Omission We must also examine our Graces and therein 1. What Knowledge we have Prov. 19.2 Of God Of our selves Of the Covenant of Grace Of the nature and use of this Sacrament 2. What Faith we have Acts 8.37 3. What Repentance we have Exod. 12.8 4. What Obedience we have Psal 26.6 5. What Love we bear to our brethren Mat. 5.23 24. The examination of our knowledge is by inquiring of our hearts whether we know 1. God that is acknowledge him the true God and him alone 2. Our selves that is acknowledge our selves to be 1. Sinners and that both Originally Actually 2. Accursed sinners deserving the wrath of God 3. Burthened sinners weary and heavy loaden desiring Christ to refresh us 3. The Passion of Christ not so much to talk and discourse of it as to know and apply the vertue of it We may examine our Faith by these marks 1. Whether we can from our hearts renounce our false supposed goodness and can wholly relye upon Christ in the matter of our salvation for this Nature cannot do 2. Whether we have peace of conscience arising from the apprehension of Gods love in Christ and our reconciliation with him Again our Faith which is the wedding garment may be examined by these particulars viz. 1. Whether we believe that Jesus Christ is the Messias and Savior of the world 2. That he was crucified and shed his blood 3. That the merit of his Passion is able to save sinners 4. That this merit is conveyed unto us in the Sacrament being rightly administred and duly received In the examination of our faith we must also enquire 1. Whether we have onely a general Faith an historical temporal Faith or a legal Faith none of which alone doth save 2. Whether we have an Evangelical Faith in the Promises of the Gospel approving to our own hearts on true and sound ground that they belong to us in particular and so a Justifying Faith without which we may not dare approach the Lords Table So also we must examine whether we have these five things required in Faith viz. 1. A true understanding and knowledge of God and his will in his Word 2. A true consent and assent in the heart that it is Gods word and all of it most true 3. A profession and approbation of it 4. An application of Christ upon a sound ground to be thy Savior in particular 5. A continual declaration of our faith by the diligent and constant practice of good works Lastly we must examine whether we are not given too much to presumption or desperation either of which are main lets and hindrances unto Faith Then we must try our Faith by the marks of it 1. Towards God as 1. Peace of Conscience 2. Love towards God 3. Hope of Salvation 4. Constancy in the faith and truth of Christ 5. Boldness to come to God 6. Confession of his truth 7. Obedience to God and his Word 2. Towards our Brethren as 1. Mutual concord in Religion 2. Brotherly love that we can forgive forget do them any good and pray for them 3. Towards our selves as 1. Patience rest in God and joy in afflictions 2. A deadly hatred of sin 4. Against sin the world and the Devil conquest and victory We may know whether we have Repentance or not by enquiring of our own hearts 1. Whether we have a godly sorrow for sin whereby we are displeased with our selves because by sin we have displeased God 2. Whether there be in us a changing of the minde and a purpose to forsake sin and ever after to please God 3. Whether we do daily break off our sins and abstain from inward practice keeping under our corruptions and ungodly thoughts 4. Whether we mourn for the present corruption of our nature 5. Whether we have been grieved and craved pardon for our late sins even since we were last partakers of the Lords Table In Repentance we must examine 1. Whether it be from the heart in truth and uprightness or onely in hypocrisie 2. Whether it be from the whole heart or whether we use not double-dealing with God 3. Whether we return from all our sins or onely from some living still in our sins 4. Whether we repent as we sin every day or no or onely for a fit and return to our sins again 5. Whether we behave our selves uprightly both before God and men publikely and privately or whether we do not rather seem better then indeed we are and so commit horrible and shameful sins in secret Again in our Repentance we must examine 1. Whether we have acknowledged sin to be sin with the circumstances and punishment thereof 2. Whether we are truly humbled inwardly and outwardly for them 3. Whether we have a godly sorrow for them which bringeth forth a circumspect care a clearing of our selves just indignation filial fear earnest desire fervent zeal and a holy revenge 4. Whether we do often call to God for mercy and pardon in Christs Name 5. Whether we have fully purposed and resolved to amend our lives and turn unto God with the whole man And this resolution must be forthwith put in practice and continued to our lives end for otherwise we but mock God and deceive our own souls The truth of Faith and Repentance may be known by these notes viz. 1. If our faith be directed upon the right object which is Christ alone 2. If there be a hungring and thirsting after his body and blood 3. If we have a constant and a serious purpose not to sin 4. If there follow a change in the life The companions of Repentance are a broken and a contrite Spirit a bitter soul and oftentimes a weeping eye but the
infallible Rule to examine our Repentance and to know whether it be true or false is by observation of the subsequent course of our life Our Obedience which is an Evangelical keeping of Gods Commandments may be examined by the properties thereof which are five 1. It must be free without constraint Psal 110.3 2. Sincere without hypocrisie 2 Tim. 1.5 3. Universal not to some but to all the Commandments Psal 119.6 Jam. 2.10 4. Perpetual till the hour of death Mat. 24.13 5. Personal in regard of our personal calling 1 Pet. 5.1 The Reasons why we must examine our obedience are especially these 1. Disobedience is as the sin of Witchcraft 1 Sam. 15.23 2. Obedience is better then Sacrifice 1 Sam. 15.22 3. It is a fruit of Faith Rom. 8.1 4. By this examination we shall be moved to repent Jer. 31.19 5. Without it we cannot appear before God Jer. 7.9 Our love to our brethren may be examined by these signs 1. If we be not overcome with evil Rom. 12.21 2. If we overcome evil with goodness Rom. 12.21 3. If we can pray for him Acts 7.60 4. If we can yield to him Gen. 13.19 5. If we can conceal his infirmities Prov. 11.12 13. 6. If we can converse friendly with him Gen. 34.4 7. If we can depart sometime from our right Gen. 13.10 8. If when we may we avenge not our selves 2 Sam. 19.23 The parts of Love required of all such as come to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper 1. Gentleness and not without just cause to be moved to anger 2. Patience and long-suffering when just cause of anger is offered 3. Goodness not admitting envy or the like against any enemy but loving him and being ready to forgive him 4. Tenderness and being affected with grief at the sight of other mens miseries 5. Freedom from evil thoughts against thy Neighbor interpreting all things to the best if it may be 6. Yielding rather then contend from something of a mans own right as Abraham did to Lot 7. Humbleness of minde seeking reconciliation when offences have been 8. Care to save a Neighbor from hurt damage or hindrance in any thing appertaining to him 9. Abstinence from private revenge in speech or in deed and forgiveness whereof are three kinds 1. Of revenge when men are content to lay aside all hatred and requital of evil 2. Of Penalty when being wronged they are content to put the matter up and not proceed to punishment 3. Of Judgement when a man is willing to esteem and judge things ill done as well done and an enemy as a friend The first of these three is necessary before the receiving of the Lords Supper 10. Bountifulness towards the Poor Our charity may be examined by looking into our own souls whether we have unfainedly forgiven all the world and can chearfully without grudging or worldly applause receive into our compassion the distressed Then ought we to reflect on time past whether we have taken all advantages to exercise our charity Consider further about true examination these four things viz. 1. Who must examine viz. All every man that can 2. What must be examined viz. our selves and therein Our sins all every one of them Our graces What we have attained to How we have increased them 3. The maner how we must examine our selves viz. by the golden Rule of Gods word 4. The time when we must examine our selves and that is fourfold viz. 1. Every night and morning Psal 4. 2. In time of Gods Judgements 3. Upon our death-beds 4. Before the Sacrament There are three sorts of examiners viz. 1. Some who examine themselves by themselves following their own reason ways and humors who an hour or a day before the Sacrament or in the very time of receiving think of their sins 2. Some examine themselves by others and if they finde themselves better then any think themselves best of all at least good enough these perish by their own conceit 3. Others who impartially examine themselves by the Rule of Gods Word and onely these indeed are the true examiners Reasons to enforce examination before we receive the Lords Supper 1. Without this examination we can never repent and so be saved Rev. 2.5 2. Otherwise we eat and drink unworthily and are guilty of the body and blood of Christ 1 Cor. 11.27 28. 3. Without it we eat and drink our own damnation being not rightly prepared 4. Because otherwise we are unfit to perform any service to God as acceptable to him From this right examination enjoyned us before our approach to the Lords Table we are taught 1. That children are not capable of this Sacrament 1 Cor. 11.28 2. That ignorant persons must not approach to this Table 1 Cor. 11.24 3. That mad people are not to be admitted to this feast 1 Sam. 21.15 4. That such as intend to live in their sins must not dare to approach unto this Communion 1 Cor. 11.27 5. That such as do not try themselves cannot come 6. That such as do try themselves must come after tryal and may come with much comfort The maner how we must be disposed in the action of receiving viz. 1. When we see the Minister take bread and wine we must consider the action of God whereby he sent Christ to work our Redemption 2. When we see the bread broken and the wine poured out we must consider 1. The bitter Passion of Christ for us in suffering 2. Gods infinite love to us who sent Christ to redeem us his enemies 3. Gods wrath towards us for our sins which nothing could satisfie but the death of Christ 4. We must detest those sins of ours which caused Christ thus to suffer 3. When the Minister distributeth bread and wine we must consider that as it is truly offered unto us by man so Christ is truly offered unto us by God 4. In receiving the bread and wine we must apprehend Christ by faith 5. In eating that bread and drinking that wine we must apply Christ particularly to our selves and be perswaded that as bread and wine is made the nourishment of our body so Christs body and blood is made the nourishment of our souls Again consider these inward actions in the time of receiving the Lords Supper viz. 1. We must remember the Passion of Christ with the circumstances torments and vertue thereof This remembrance must be 1. Humble to debase us for what we had deserved 2. Effectual in us toward God our selves and our Brethren 3. Perpetual not at the present time onely 4. Thankful to magnifie the mercy of God 2. We must give thanks to God for sending Christ to work out our Redemption 1 Cor. 15.57 that is we must thank him by obeying him in keeping his commandments and not by word onely 3. There must be a discerning of the Lords body that is 1. To consider of the bread and wine not as things common as they were before but as consecrated to a holy use 2. We must
come hereunto as unto mystical meat not as to carnal 3. We must feed on Christ by faith as verily as we eat the visible Signs with our bodily mouthes 4. There must be an Annunciation of the death of Christ that is a shewing forth of the Lords death 1 Cor. 11.26 This duty of shewing forth the Lords death is twofold 1. Partly inward consisting in the inward application and godly meditation of 1. The wrath justice of God against sin 2. The greatness of sin which nothing could do away but Christs death 3. The mercy and love of Christ in dying for us 2. Partly outward in outward celebration and publike declaration Rom. 10.10 After we have received the Lords Supper we must labor 1. To feel in our selves the hatred death of sin and the entrance of grace 2. To perform that in our life following which we promised in our preparation 3. To meditate where we have and what we have done which seals a blessing or a curse 4. To think every day of the mercy of Christ and daily to render thanks and praise for it which thanksgiving must not be onely in words but in every action of our life Psalms proper for thanksgiving are the 8 23 66 103. 5. To express our charity by Alms-giving to the Poor 6. To use all care and caution not to fall into our old sins lest the latter end be worse then the beginning and that not onely for the present but ever after we renew our faith and repentance Praise and thanksgiving is required as necessary and as a special duty to God when we have tasted of his bounty and loving kindeness and especially for Spiritual blessings 1. Because it is the will and pleasure of God who is so good unto us as to require it of us who can give him nothing else and this reason the Apostle gives 1 Thess 5.17 18. 2. Because of all Sacrifices this of praise and thanksgiving is the chief and principal as well in respect of the enduring and continuance of it as in respect of the use and end of it It was in Paradice before the Fall it was before the Flood it was before the Law under the Law under the Gospel and shall continue for ever It is performed of Men and Angels in heaven and earth it shall never end no not when other exercises of our Religion shall cease Rev. 5.13 11.17 3. Because it is not onely the end of the other works of Religion but also the end of the works of God It is the end of our Election Eph. 1.5 6. of our Creation Prov. 16.4 of our Redemption Luke 1.68 74 75. Eph. 1.3 7. of our Justification 1 Cor. 1.31 It is the end of our Sanctification of our Salvation and of our Glorification to give all praise all power all honor and glory to him that sitteth upon the Throne and to the Lamb for evermore 4. The worthiness and excellency of this exercise is manifestly proved by the unwillingness and untowardness of our corrupt Nature to perform it we are ready enough to pray for the gift not so ready to praise the giver fervent in asking cold in thanksgiving The impediments to be removed and the means to be used that we may rightly discern the Lords body in receiving it are these viz. 1. Carnal and natural weakness in the minde The Remedies whereof 1. Endeavor to get out of our natural state of life 2. Earnest endeavor for the Spirit of God 3. Frequent and fervent Prayer 2. Ignorance the Remedies whereof are 1. A serious consideration of Gods Judgements against it 2 Thess 1.8 2. To search the Scriptures to be conversant therein 3. To have recourse to godly Ministers 3. Hardness of heart the Remedies whereof are 1. To avoid the occasions as custom in sin carnal security contempt of the word and the like 2. To let the word have admittance to us to enter and take place in us 3. We must pray unto Almighty God to soften our hearts 4. We must take heed of the slights of Satan and of the deceitfulness of sin betimes 4. An unregenerate Will the Remedies whereof are 1. To deny renounce our selves with all we have 2. To call often upon God with fervency to guide us by his Spirit as we may be able to resist our lusts 5. We must shake off the custom of sinning the sin of unbelief and impenitency carnal wisdom presumption of our own knowledge pride and vain-glory forgetfulness of God and his word and such like If therefore we would come worthily to the Supper of the Lord 1. We must as hath been said try our selves by the Law of God whereby cometh the knowledge of sin Rom. 3.20 7.7 2. We must labor to understand and believe the common corruption of all mankinde standing partly in Original sin and partly in the fruits thereof Rom. 3.9 3. We must feel the curse of everlasting death due to us Gal. 3.10 4. We must learn what Covenant God hath made with us touching Grace and Mercy that we may be raised up to comfort in the Son of God our Redeemer 5. We must fervently desire to be made partakers of the Lords Supper and feel how much we stand in need of it 6. We must consider the correspondent proportion between the Signs and the thing signified Unworthiness in receiving the Lords Supper is twofold viz. 1. Of an evil Conscience as when a man lives in any sin against his conscience Take heed of this for it is proper to the Reprobate 2. Of infirmity as when a man truly repents and believes and makes conscience of every good duty but yet sees and feels wants in them all and in regard whereof himself unfit for the Supper but this may not justly hinder from coming to this Sacrament So that there are two sorts of men who receive unworthily viz. 1. Those that are not yet in Christ 2. Those that are within the Covenant but yet come remissly and negligently The wicked receive in the Lords Supper 1. The bare Signs onely as bread and wine 2. Those Signs to their condemnation or they eat their own condemnation that is through incredulity and abusing of the Sacrament to be abalienated and repelled from Christ and all his benefits and so to draw upon themselves temporal and everlasting punishments except they repent The wicked in the use of the Sacrament receive nothing beside their own condemnation but the bare Signs onely and that for these Reasons 1. Because the benefits of Christ are received onely in the right use of the Sacrament 2. Unto whom nothing is promised in the word to him the Sacraments seal nothing 3. Spiritual things are received by faith which the wicked have not 4. To be wicked and to receive the Sacrament truly and intirely implieth a contradiction The causes for which the wicked are said to eat unto themselves damnation viz. 1. Because they prophane the Signs and consequently the thing signified by
taken away God is as well in the field and in the private house as in the Church and yet Churches are ordained and used in a godly policy because a Congregation may more conveniently there meet to their mutual edification in the publike exercise of the Word and Prayer otherwise private houses were as good places for Gods worship as Churches if they were decent and convenient for edification for now in all places men may lift up pure hands unto God 1 Tim. 2.8 where it plainly appears That after the coming of Christ by whom the partition wall was broken down and both made one people to God all places were sanctified for prayer so as under the Gospel no one place is more holy then another yet it being Gods will to be worshipped publikely needful it is that there should be places fit for that purpose Thus the Corinthians had one place to worship God in 1 Cor. 11.20 though certain of the Inhabitants of Philippi went out to a Rivers side to pray on the Sabbath day Acts 16.13 but that was in time of persecution The Father Son and Holy Ghost is to be prayed unto we may pray unto the whole Trinity but more properly unto the first person God the Father in the Name of God the Son by the assistance of God the Holy Ghost So we pray unto the whole Trinity yet as the first person is the Fountain of the Deity we pray the Father by the Son through the Holy Ghost nor is it strange that we pray unto Christ for whose sake onely we are heard in our prayers for we pray unto him as he is the second person we have our prayers heard through him as he is our Mediator thus distinguishing his person from his office Prayer in general is twofold 1. Publike wherein words must be always used in a plain known distinct voyce 2. Private wherein the voyce is profitable but not simply necessary Two Rules of gesture in publike Prayer 1. It must alway be comely modest decent and uniform 2. It must serve as much as may be to express the inward sincerity of the heart without hypocrisie Again there is a twofold Prayer 1. One that is the voyce of our own spirit 2. Another that is the voyce of Gods Spirit in us that is when the Holy Ghost hath so sanctified the heart when he hath put it into such a holy frame of Grace that the heart comes to speak as it is quickned acted and moved from Gods Spirit This Spirit of Adoption makes us 1. Earnest and fervent in prayer 2. Bold and confident to God as to a Father so that we may know the voyce of Gods Spirit in our prayers by our boldness to and confidence in him for wicked men come to God as to a stranger the Saints as to a friend Prayer is one part of that holy worship of God called Invocation whereof there are four parts 1. Supplication when we intreat God to remove some evil from us 2. Prayer whereby we beg at the hands of God the gift of some good thing unto us 3. Intercession when as we intreat the Lord to grant some good thing unto our brethren or to remove some evil from them 4. Thanksgiving whereby we give laud and thanks to God for blessings received either by our selves or by our brethren The distinctions of Prayer in regard of the maner thereof viz. 1. Mental which is an opening inwardly of the desires of a mans heart to God without any outward manifestation of the same by word Neh. 2.4 Exod. 14.15 1 Sam. 1.13 2. Vocal and is that which is uttered with words 1 Kings 8.23 3. Sudden when upon some sudden occasion present the heart is instantly lift up unto God whether by sighs or words they are called Ejaculations of the heart and argue a holy familiarity with God yea a heavenly minde 4. Composed when a Christian setteth himself to make some solemn prayer unto God whether it be in the Church family closet field or any other place Dan. 6.10 to this kinde of Prayer preparation before-hand is very needful Eccl. 5.2 5. Conceived being that which he who uttereth the prayer inventeth and conceiveth himself which is very expedient and needful for these Reasons 1. It manifesteth the gift and power of the Spirit who can give both matter and maner words and affections who can suggest what to pray and how to pray 2. Every day we have new wants new assaults new sins and our petitions must be made according to our present wants our supplications according to our particular assaults and our confession according to our several sins 3. As God daily continueth and reneweth old blessings so also he addeth new to them 6. Prescribed when a set constant form is laid down before-hand and either conned by heart or read This is a good help to weak Christians if they endeavor to pray with the Spirit and with understanding 7. Publike when an Assembly of Saints publikely with one joynt-consent call upon God by the mouth of the Minister Joel 2.16 17. Neh. 8.1 6. For the maner of which publike prayer two things are very requisite viz. 1. Unanimity respecting the heart and affections for which an audible and intelligible voyce is necessary 2. Uniformity respecting the outward reverent carriage and humble gesture in prayer 8. Private which is made by one alone or by some few together 2 Kings 4.33 Luke 9.28 Acts 10.30 This especially belongeth to the Master of a Family 9. Secret which is made by one alone none being present but God and he that prayeth This may be in a close chamber or closet Mat. 6.6 or on a desolate Mountain Mark 1.35 or in a secret field Gen. 24.63 or on any house top Acts 10.9 or in any other place 1 Tim. 2.8 10. Extraordinary which after an extraordinary maner even above our usual custom is poured out before God consisting partly in ardency of affection as in Christ Luke 22.44 Heb. 5.7 in Moses Exod. 32.32 and in the King of Nineveh Jonah 3.8 and partly in continuance of time as Jacob a whole night Gen. 32.24 so did David 2 Sam. 12.16 and Christ Luke 6.12 Moses a whole day Exod. 17.12 so did Joshua and the Elders of Israel Josh 7.6 We must pray 1. For the glory of God always and that without any limitation or condition 2. For our own good 1. The salvation of Soul and that without any condition 2. In this present life but with this condition so far forth as it may stand with Gods glory and be for our own good The conditions and circumstances of true prayer viz. 1. A direction of it unto the true God and him onely 2. In the mediation of Christ not without a Mediator as Pagans nor in the name of any other Mediator as Papists 3. The knowledge of Gods Commandment in requiring us to pray else we doubt of being heard 4. The knowledge of those things which are to be asked else we mock
are not spoken circumscriptively as though God were contained in the Heaven or as though if the Heavens were not God could not be as the Inhabitants of the Earth cannot be when the Earth ceaseth for God was before all Heavens and Earth and Creatures but because his glorious Presence and Attributes are most eminently visible in Heaven and also to set forth his most mighty power Psal 115.3 he is by an excellency said to be in Heaven Heav'n is thy Throne Great God how then dare we Who but the Creatures of thy Footstool be Look Heaven-wards and cast an eye aloft Or lift hands to ' gainst which we have so oft This Charter thou hast seal'd us by thy Son The Priviledge of our Adoption Heav'n thy Throne Vanish distrust carnal fear Thou canst our Prayers grant as soon as hear But teach us by thy Spirit this holy skill To ask in Faith what answers to thy will §. 5. Hallowed be thy Name BY the Name of God is meant the whole worship of God or Gods Name is any thing that may be referred unto God in which he may be considered as his Word his Sacraments his Servants and his Works So that by the Name of the Lord we are to understand That whatsoever it is whereby the Lord is made known unto us according to his most glorious Attributes as Wisdom Power Justice Mercy c. and this may be either by his Titles his Word or his Works Now we must know That Gods Name cannot be more sanctified in it self then it is but the sanctifying of it that we here pray for is That it may be sanctified in us which may be when it heareth well by our walking worthy of this holy Name which is amongst us called upon and professed for contrariwise it is said to be blasphemed Rom. 2.24 And whereas thy Name O Lord is used as unholy by prophane worldlings vindicate and deliver it from such abuses and make us to stand for thine honor against such and provide for the preservation of the same from being used as a common thing working in all thy people an holy consent to hallow it together abstaining from all common unworthy usage thereof And open our eyes that we may know thee aright and may discern thy Power Wisdom Justice and Mercy and enlarge our hearts that we may sanctifie thee in them by making thee our Fear Love Joy and Confidence and open our lips that we may bless thee for thy goodness yea open our eyes that we may see thee in thy Works and strike our hearts with reverence of thy Name appearing in them and grant that when we use any one of them we may honor thee in our sober and sanctified use thereof This Petition comes in the first place because it is the end and scope of all the other for the end of all things must be Gods glory and it is placed before Thy Kingdom come to teach us That no man can be a true Subject of Gods Kingdom unless that in his heart he maketh principal account of Gods glory Thus the first of the three first Petitions in the Lords Prayer concerning God immediately concerns Gods glory it self The other two the means whereby Gods glory is manifested and enlarged amongst men For Gods glory is then manifested and his Name hallowed among men when his Kingdom doth come and his Will is done And this order of the Petitions that the first three concern Gods glory the other three our selves teacheth us how gracious the Lords is towards us sinful men allowing us if we come with one request for the advancement of his glory to come with another for our own benefit if with three for him with three for our selves also but first in order are his three for if we seek our selves first and chiefly we ask in vain The order of placing the Petitions concerning Gods glory first and then those concerning our selves teacheth 1. That God is absolutely to be respected and for himself but Man for Gods cause 2. That the first and main thing by the Lord intended in Creating all is his own glory and whatsoever is good for man is subordinate to this and onely so far forth to be sought after as it maketh for Gods glory 3. That the glory of the Lords Name is so dear unto him as that he did not onely make it his Mark in the Creation but in every particular duty done by man he setteth it still as his Mark as here in Prayer in giving the Law in the Gospel at the very Nativity of the Blessed One the Angels are heard lauding and glorifying God The Name of God signifieth 1. God himself Psal 116.13 2. Gods Commandment and Charge his Divine Will and Authority Mat. 28.19 3. The Divine Attributes Properties and Works of God in which signification it is here principally understood Holy signifieth 1. All the Properties of God for all the vertues of God are holiness 2. That holiness which is in his Creatures that is their conformity with God which is begun in the godly and is perfect in the Angels 3. The ordaining and appointing of things to holy uses The word of Hallowing is here taken in all these three senses To hallow or sanctifie is in Scripture used three ways viz. 1. Of us 1. When we hallow or sanctifie our selves and others that is when as touching external and outward things we prepare our selves and others to glorifie God 2. When we hallow and sanctifie God that is 1. When we acknowledge God to be holy or to be such as he hath declared himself in his word and works 2. When we profess God to be holy and so magnifie him according to his will both in minde and word as also in deed and works 3. When we refer the true Doctrine knowledge and profession of Gods holiness and likewise our Prayers and actions and even our whole life unto that end whereunto we ought and whether God hath commanded it to be referred that is to the glory and worship of God himself 2. Of God when he doth sanctifie others 1. Inwardly by his holy Spirit 2. Outwardly by his word which he effectuateth 1. By seperating them from their sins 2. By reviving and quickning them by his holy Spirit 3. By the continuing of both 3. Of Christ 1. Passively because 1. The word was ordained and consecrated by the Father to the Office of the Mediatorship 2. The humane Nature of Christ was consecrated out of that whole lump or mass that is was selected from among all Creatures to the union with the Word 3. His humane Nature was preserved from sin for the performance of the Mediatorship 4. Because Christ is hallowed and sanctified of us 2. Actively because he sanctifieth 1. Himself 1. As he is the Word the Word did sanctifie with his Father that flesh which he took by preserving the same from sin and by endowing it with all gifts 2. As he is Mediator he sanctified himself by his voluntary
when the proper gifts or blessings of the faithful are augmented with perpetual encrease in the godly or converted Rev. 22.11 4. By Consummation or full accomplishment when the godly shall be glorified at the second coming of our Lord. We ought to desire that the Kingdom of God may come for these Reasons specially 1. For the glory of God or in respect of the first Petion because that we may sanctifie and hallow his Name it is required that he Rule us by his Word and Spirit 2. Because God will give his Kingdom onely to those that ask it The wants we are to bewail taught us in this Petition concern either our selves or others 1. We must lament and mourn for our own miserable estate by Nature whereby we are the servants of Sin and so in bondage and thraldom thereto Joh. 8.34 And the best of us do but weakly yield to Christs Scepter and where Sin raigneth there the Devil hath dominion 2. We must bewail the sins of all the world in the transgression of Gods Law whereby God is dishonored his Kingdom hindred and the Kingdom of Darkness furthered We must therefore bewail that there be so many hinderers of Gods Kingdom as namely the Flesh to infect the World to allure the Devil to seduce Antichrist to withdraw the Turk to withstand and the Wicked to trouble men that should be Subjects of this Kingdom Pray therefore Thy Kingdom come The helps which further Gods kingdom and are to be desired of us viz. 1. The Preaching of the Gospel and all other divine Ordinances whereby Gods Kingdom is erected and maintained that they may be where they are not and may be blessed where they are vouchsafed and herein for godly Magistrates and faithful Ministers 2. That God would enlighten the eyes of our mindes that we may see the wonders of his Law that so the Lords ordinances may be blessed unto us 3. That we may be wholly subject unto Christ and that of Conscience not onely in our outward behavior but in minde heart will and in all our affections that we may grow in grace and in the saving knowledge of Christ Jesus 4. We must desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ in the Kingdom of glory for this end that we may make an end of sinning and become more obedient Subjects unto Christ yea wholly ruled by him though for the good of others we must be content to live 5. That both by the hour of death and by the coming of Christ to Judgement this Kingdom in us and all Gods chosen may be accomplished that Satan being trodden under our feet and the power of death destroyed God may be all in all 1 Cor. 15.28 6. That Christ would come in Judgement when all things shall be subdued unto God and all his obedient Subjects shall be fully glorified This we may desire in heart though we must leave the time to Gods good will and pleasure still waiting for it by faith in his Promise 7. That God would enlarge his Sanctuary here on earth gather his elect more and more and still defend and maintain his Church in every place in the world when these desires affect our souls then do we truly say Thy Kingdom come The duties to be practised by us that Gods Kingdom may come viz. 1. We must labor for true humiliation and conversion else we cannot enter into the Kingdom Matth. 8.3 Joh. 3.5 nay otherwise we do but mock God by saying well and doing nothing 2. We must be careful to bring forth the fruits of Gods Kingdom which are Righteousness Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 3. We must hence learn to be contented in all estates of this life whatsoever the hope of this Kingdom which we here pray for must swallow up all the sorrows that earthly calamities can bring upon us Luke 12.32 4. We must all labor in our places and callings to bring one another into this kingdom one neighbor another and one friend another Ezc. 18.30 5. Hence we must learn every day to prepare our selves to dye for by death our souls enter into the glory of this Kingdom which we pray may come unto us whence appears the monstrous hypocrisie of the world whose practice flatly contradicts their prayer Of this Petition 1. The Supplication is for the continuance of Gods gracious Providence over his general kingdom and of all good means and furtherances of his special kingdom his Church 2. The Deprecation is against all impediments and lets of Gods general kingdom as Anarchy Tyranny wicked Laws c. and against all hinderances of his special kingdom as Toleration of Idolatry Heresie Ignorance Idleness Infidelity Impenitency Hardness of heart c. 3. The Thanksgiving is for the Lords exercising his kingdom in the right ordering of the world punishing the wicked rewarding the godly spreading the glorious beams of his Word enlarging his kingdom for worthy Magistrates and faithful Ministers for Faith and all Spiritual graces In this glass we read the superstitious vanity of ignorant souls The rotten hypocrisie of formal Professors The cursed Rebellion of prophane worldlings The Antichristian Tyranny of Idolatrous Papists All which as we tender the Soveraign Power of Christs Scepter the Prerogative of his Royalty and the eternal happiness of our own Souls let us carefully avoid as by making it the language of our hearts so the loyalty of our whole lives to practice Thy Kingdom come A new-hatch'd old-laid Heresie appears That here on Earth yet full One thousand years Christs Kingdom is to come and triumph shall With all his Saints in Pomp Majestical Fond Dreamers Call ye this Terrestrial Which figures that which is Spiritual Raign in our hearts O Lord Protect augment Thy Church This is thy proper Regiment Cast down thine Enemies Compleat the sum Of thine Elect So let Thy Kingdom come §. 7. Thy Will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven THis Petition in order followeth Thy Kingdom come to shew That where Gods kingdom is set up his will is endeavored after and preferred always and not our own will It depends indeed on both the former Petitions for Gods Name is hallowed when his will is done and his kingdom comes when by doing his will we testifie our selves his obedient Subjects Wherein we desire that we and all the people of God upon earth may as readily obey Gods will as the Angels and Saints in heaven So that this Petition is propounded in a Comparison the former part whereof respects the grace of Obedience which we pray for the other the right maner of performing it wherein we must note That this particle As doth not betoken the degree but the kinde of doing Gods will which is the beginning of performing Gods will with continuance and encrease thereof not the Consummation perfection and full accomplishment thereof which yet we are to desire here that at length we may obtain it which though it be impossible in this life yet are we
and Paul 6. In Pleasures as in Moses when he left Pharaohs Court 7. In case of Provision for Posterity 8. In matters of daily imployment The Titles given to true Faith viz. 1. It is called the Faith of the Elect Tit. 1.1 for none but the Elect have it and all the Elect have it at one time or another when once they have it they never utterly and totally lose it 2. It is called Saving Faith because it bringeth us to Salvation Eph. 2.8 3. It is called Justifying Faith because it is that means or Instrument which Gods Spirit worketh in us whereby we apply unto our selves Jesus Christ in and by whom we are justified Rom. 3.28 4. It is called Sanctifying Faith because by it God purifieth our hearts Acts 15.9 How far the sense of Faith may be lost in men 1. It may be so covered over and smothered as it may not be discerned they may for a time have no Assurance of it 2. All the joy and comfort of it wherewith they were formerly upheld may be clean taken away and they even faint for want of it 3. No fruits thereof may appear they may be as Trees in winter little conscience of any duty dull in hearing Gods Word cold in Prayer nothing remaining but a formal Profession if that 4. Their Consciences may prove a very Rack a grievous Torture and Torment unto them 5. They may think it is like to be recovered with a wet finger with a light sigh or a groan but they may call cry and roar again and again before they be heard 6. And when they recover it it may be they shall never attain to that measure which once they had or if to that measure of the thing it self yet not of the joy and comfort of it They may carry the grief of this their Fall to their graves The difference between Faith and Presumption viz. 1. Faith driveth a man out of himself and casts himself wholly on Christ Presumption makes him boast of himself and makes him self-conceited 2. Faith resteth on a sure ground even Gods Word Presumption relieth onely on a mans surmise and meer conjecture 3. Faith is joyned with the use of the means Presumption not onely carelesly neglecteth but arrogantly contemneth all means 4. Faith is wrought by degrees as first by Knowledge then by Grief after by desire Presumption is a sudden apprehension of the minde 5. Faith makes a man work out his Salvation with a holy jealousie yea with fear and trembling Presumption is over-bold 6. Faith makes a man depart from all iniquity and keep a clear Conscience Presumption is accompanied with much pollution 7. Faith is most sure in time of Tryal then the strength of it is most manifested Presumption maketh greatest flourish when there is least danger 8. Faith continueth unto the end and never quite falleth away Presumption is subject to decay totally and finally Motives to labor for and to grow in Faith 1. Without it whatsoever we do is sin Rom. 14.23 2. We cannot please God in any one action without Faith Heb. 11.6 3. We cannot hear Gods Word with profit except we have Faith Heb. 11.6 4. We cannot Pray without this Faith Jam. 1.6 5. We cannot Receive the Benefit of the Lords Supper without it 6. We cannot be saved without it Mark 16.16 7. We must grow in Faith because we need more strength daily and daily meet with greater Assaults 8. We shall hereby grow in joy and gain the favor and love of God the more 9. We shall the more prevail in Prayer 10. By growing in Faith we shal bring the more glory to God The means of getting Faith are twofold 1. Outward which are either such as both work and strengthen Faith as the Word of God or onely such as strengthen it as the Sacraments 2. Inward or rather the Cause which is the Sanctifying Spirit of God who softneth quickneth openeth our hearts making them to bring forth the blessed fruit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 1 Cor. 2.4 5. The way to obtain and encrease Faith viz. 1. To be vigilant Hearers and to continue Hearers of Gods Word Rom. 10.17 2. To labor for a good Conscience and to keep it when we have it 1 Tim. 1.19 3. Godly effectual and fervent Prayer to God for it Luke 17.5 4. The worthy receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper which though it doth not confer Faith ex opere operato yet it confirms and strengthens it 1 Cor. 11.25 26. 5. That to our uttermost power we use and well imploy that ability whatsoever it be that we have by nature or by special gift 6. That we resist not any motion of Gods Spirit like the rebellious Jews nor put off from us the Promises of the Gospel as if they belonged not to us and think our selves unworthy of eternal life The true desire of the heart after Christ which worketh Faith may be known 1. By the Cause which is the Gospel and nothing but it can do it because by it alone is Christ revealed and offered 2. By the Order which followeth upon grief for sin and despair of succor in our selves or others 3. By the Quality for it is an hearty and true desire an inward desire of the Soul and also a vehement and earnest desire greater then the desire of any other thing can be 4. By the Fruits as a conscionable care in using and fervent Prayer for blessing the means of Faith 5. By the Continuance of it which raiseth up and preserveth an appetite after Christ even after we have tasted him The Fruits Effects Signs of Effectual Faith 1. It purifies the heart and sanctifies the person therefore Faith and Repentance are put together a purged and sanctified heart renewed in Soul and Body Acts 15.9 2. The Spirit of Prayer 3. Peace in the heart that which passeth all understanding Peace of Conscience or Joy resting on God Rom. 5.1 4. To hold out in cleaving to Christ Constancy and perseverance in Christ unto the end Jude 20.21 5. The Concomitants of it which are Love Hope Joy Humility 6. The justifying of us before God 7. Our whole Conversion which followeth Faith and beginneth at the same time with Faith 8. The fruits of Conversion and Repentance even good works 9. Increase of Spiritual and Corporal gifts 10. Justification Regeneration and all the benefits purchased by the blood of Christ 11. It is an effect of Election none have it but the Elect Acts 13.48 Tit. 1.1 12. The continual working of it for true Faith is never idle Gal. 5.6 13. Hearing of the Word with joy and practising it Joh. 10.27 14. A striving against Doubt Distrust Despair of Gods Mercy if we have not attained a full perswasion And this is acceptable to God Isa 42.3 The principal effects of Faith whereby it may be best proved may be drawn to these two Heads 1. A quiet Conscience whence proceedeth 1. A holy Security of minde having peace with God
the pardon of our sins for no Tears of ours can give Satisfaction beside Judas the Reprobate had it but it is required as that without which we will not come to Christ Now the taking of Christ is nothing else but what we call Faith and Faith is nothing else but when these two things concur That God the Father will give his Son and freely offers Righteousness and we receive this Righteousness taking Christ for our Husband our King and our Lord. And when we are truly entred into the state of this Humiliation we shall not fail of that Humility required in this Commandment for we shall then acknowledge all those good things which are in us and done by us not to come from any worthiness or ability of our own but from the free goodness of God we shall then by the acknowledging of Gods Divine Majesty and our infirmity and unworthiness subject and submit our selves unto God to give the glory of all good things which are in us to him alone We shall then truly fear God We shall then acknowledge and bewail our own defects and vices we shall not then covet any higher place or condition we shall not then trust in our own gifts but in the help and assistance of God we shall then hold our selves contented with our own Vocation and Calling we shall not then despise others in comparison of our selves neither let or hinder them in the discharging of their duty but acknowledge that others also are and may be made profitable Instruments of Gods glory and therefore give place and honor to them we shall not then attribute to our selves things above our force and power we shall not then affect any one excellency above others neither shall we then murmure against God if we fail of our hope or if we be despised but in all things ascribe the praise of Wisdom and Justice unto God Let no man therefore presume above that which is written For who hath separated thee or what hast thou that thou hast not received 1 Cor. 4.6 God resisteth the proud but giveth grace to the humble 1 Pet. 5.5 Whosoever shall humble himself as this little childe the same is the greatest in the kingdom of Heaven Mat. 18.4 And this is that Humility required in this Commandment and him in whom it is the Lord will exalt in due time 1 Pet. 5.5 The Vices repagnant to Humility viz. 1. Pride and Arrogancy which is to ascribe our gifts not unto God but to our own ability and therefore to stand in admiration of our selves and gifts not to acknowledge our wants or bewail our defects to be ever aspiring to some higher place or calling to attribute to our selves those things which we have not to overlook our poor Brethren to be guilty indeed of all those Vices from which the humble man was even now said to be free 2. A feigned Modesty or Humility which is a double Pride and it is to hunt after the praise and commendation of Humility by denying of those things outwardly which yet a man doth in his minde attribute unto himself either truly or falsely and by refusing of that honor which he desireth above the peace of a good Conscience and covertly laboreth to compass Going to take a Survey of my Sins I heard a voyce which sadly said Who brings Help to my wounded Soul And having cry'd At least a heart-full of Tears Faith apply'd A precious Soveraign Salve but said It came from far cost dear and therefore praid He would esteem it highly Then me thought He somewhat else in dust and ashes sought What it should be I ask'd Hope who stood by And Love reply'd it was Humility §. 4. Of Patience PAtience is the knowledge and acknowledging of Gods Majesty Wisdom Justice Power and Goodness resolving through a confidence in Gods Promises and so in hope of Gods assistance and deliverance to obey God in suffering those evils and afflictions which he sendeth on us and willeth us to suffer and herein not to murmure against God or do any thing against his Commandments but by this knowledge and full perswasion of Gods good will and pleasure herein To comfort our selves in our distress and to Pray in Faith and Wait in Hope for his deliverance Humility and Patience belong unto this first Commandment not onely because they are parts of that internal obedience which God requireth immediately to be performed unto him but also because they follow and accompany the true Knowledge Confidence Love and Fear of God as necessary effects of the same For in cases of Distress of Persecution and Affliction we must not live by feeling but by Faith for Afflictions are Pledges and Tokens of our Adoption if we make the right use of them Heb. 12.7 And when God defers deliverance he doth it upon great and weighty causes and considerations best known unto himself for in his Wisdom he hath set down certain and unchangeable Times for the accomplishment and issue of all things that are And indeed there is a necessity of having this godly vertue of Patience for we need many afflictions because the corruptions of the heart are of diverse sorts and we need long afflictions because sin is very natural yet there may be good in that evil we suffer and in the worst dangers there is somewhat that makes the godly trust in God that keeps them up from sinking A sound Spirit will bear any Affliction and therein is a Christian happy for God loves us tenderly in Affliction whence the difference between the Saints and others in the same Afflictions is That though the same Afflictions befal both yet God hath respect to his in it not to the others Jer. 24. The wicked though prospering yet stand in slippery places the godly though afflicted are built on the Rock Christ To prosper in sin is the miserablest condition in the world for when the wicked are not interrupted in their course God hath a purpose to destroy them as Hophni and Phineas Prosperity hurts evil men yea and as much as Affliction doth good to the godly Evil men may prosper and good men be crossed many times not prospering in their business and that in those things which they do according to Gods Will as in the success of Pauls Ministery at Macedonia and the Disciples jeopardy on the water though they were there on Christs command Thus the Lord dealeth promiscuously with good and bad in outward things that we may not know where to have him in his ways and actions which are past finding out therefore we must not judge by Gods outward proceeding till he hath finished the work nor murmure at his Providence or prove impatient under the smart of any Affliction whatsoever For the Afflictions of the godly are not punishments and satisfaction for their sins but onely fatherly chastisements and the Cross whereby they are brought to Humility To the wicked they are indeed a punishment which is either Destruction or Torment inflicted by
of God for they are his Image differing onely in degrees The sincerity of our love to the Lord may be known these two ways 1. By our even carriage towards him not sometimes for him and sometimes for our lusts 2. By our constant carriage by our continuance and holding out in his service yet daily infirmities break not the Covenant so long as our hearts are sincere and we take not another husband that is love not any lust more then Christ Reasons or Motives perswasive to love the Lord viz. 1. The Commandment of God The Exhortations of the Prophets and Apostles Deut. 6.5 Mat. 22.37 Mark 12.30 2. The Examples of the holy men of God Prophets Apostles Martyrs c. as Abraham Gen. 12. Josh 23. Peter Joh. 21. 3. The Excellency of it for it knitteth and bindeth all other Vertues together yea he that loves is in God and God in him 4. The Profit of it for all things work together for the best to those that love God Rom. 8.28 5. The Necessity of it for without love all other Vertues and rare Perfections profit us nothing 1 Cor. 13. 6. It sets a Price on all we do be it never so small be it but a Cup of cold water given in love 7. We lose not by this love which is contrary to all other loves even in that 8. The Lord is Worthy of our love for all Excellency is in God and he is wholly delectable 9. The consideration of the Greatness of God might command our love yea seeing this great and mighty God is a suiter to us for it 10. The easie Conditions he requires of us for he might have commanded us to offer our children in Sacrifice and our bodies to be burned in being our Soveraign Creator and we his Creatures 11. God hath planted this very Affection of Love in us for this very end and doth he then call for more then his own 12. We have engaged our selves to love the Lord being Baptized in his Name nay he hath bought us too and loves us yea so as he gave even himself for us Doth not this deserve Love O consider this all ye Adulterers that divorce your selves from Heaven to be enamored with Hell and your own Damnation What lieth in the understanding between God and us that hinders Love for Love uniteth 1. Temptations to Atheism 2. Temptations to think that the Scriptures are not true 3. Temptations to think amiss of God in any thing 4. Temptations to doubt of the favor of God The two main Impediments of our love to Christ 1. Strangeness for it dissolveth Love breeding Ignorance and Fearfulness but a truly grounded holy Boldness is the Parent and Nurse of Love 2. Uncircumcision of heart or worldly-mindedness Deut. 30.6 that is worldly Lusts worldly Cares worldly Desires when they abound in the heart The Means to enable us to Love the Lord viz. 1. Labor to know him Beseech the Lord to shew himself to thee for till then thou wilt never love him 2. We must labor to know our selves We must consider our sins what we are what hearts we have what lives we have led 3. We must labor to get the Assurance of Gods special Love to us the two notes whereof are these 1. The Love of our Brethren for then we love God and then he loves us 2. Our love of God for whom God loves to them he gives his grace to love him again 4. Prayer for it is a lovely Suit and think you that if we request to love him he will deny it us surely no Jam. 1.17 5. A careful and diligent Hearing of Gods Word with continual Meditation on the same whereby we attain to Faith which inflames us with Gods love towards us and thereby stirs up again our love towards God 6. We must labor earnestly that the Spirit of God may dwell in our hearts Love is a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 7. The continual Meditation of Gods wonderful works and of his infinite benefits which by the death of his onely begotten Son he bestowed so freely on us The love of our Neighbor is said to be like unto our love to God for these Reasons 1. Because that Commandment of loving our Neighbor is opposed unto the Ceremonies 2. Because the Obedience of the First Table is the cause of the Second 3. Because the breach of the Second Table doth as well deserve eternal punishments as the breach of the First 4. Because it appertaineth to the Moral Worship which is described in the First and Second Table 5. Because of the Coherence of both for that neither can be observed without the other 6. Because one is the Author of both 7. Because both of them contain our whole Obedience The maner how we must love men viz. 1. It must be as Christ hath loved us Eph. 5.2 not in equality but resemblance and conformity 2. We must love our Neighbor as our selves Mat. 22.39 3. We must love them as the same Members of the same body love one another Rom. 12.4 5. Our love must be conformable to Christs love The maner whereof was this viz. 1. Christs love was Free without constraint not for any Merit in us 1 Joh. 4.19 2. His love was a right and True love he loved us not to profit or benefit himself but onely us 3. His love was Discreet he loved our persons not our sins 1 Cor. 13.5 6. 4. His love was Vehement he gave himself to the death for us 1 Joh. 3.16 5. His love was Fruitful shewing it self in the effects thereof Jam. 2.15 16. 6. His love was Constant Joh. 13.1 True love doth never fall away 1 Cor. 13.8 7. His love was General to the Poor as to the Rich to his Friends to his Foes Mat. 5.44 That we may know how to love our Neighbor as our selves we must know that Self-love is twofold 1. General which is Natural Love whereby every one seeketh his own good and preservation This kinde of love in it self is not evil the order thereof being rightly observed 2. Special which is 1. Carnal whereby a man preferreth the benefit of his Body and Flesh before the good of his Soul and Spirit 2 Tim. 3.2 This is a Mother-sin 2. Spiritual whereby a man preferreth the good of his Soul before all things in the world That we may know how to love our Neighbors as fellow-members we must know That 1. One Member of the Humane Body doth not envy another which hath not the same office with it 1 Cor. 12. 2. One Member doth not appropriate his Office to it self but communicateth it to the good of all 3. One Member of the Body being hurt of the other doth not revenge it self upon the other Members 4. One Member suffereth with another and rejoyceth with another Rom. 12.15 5. One Member of the Body exposeth it self to danger for the defence of another The Properties of true love to our Brethren 1. It must be in Adversity as well as
viz. 1. Of Heart-atheism whereof there are 3 sorts viz. 1. When men through a Self-conceitedness affecting to be wiser then all the world do hold this That there is a God not really but in opinion or shew to keep simple persons in awe Of this sort of Atheism David complained of Psal 14.1 2. To conceive otherwise of God then he hath revealed himself in his Word for whatsoever is there spoken of God such an one he is yea every Attribute of God is God So that the heart conceiving a God without any of these is guilty of Atheism 3. When any shall conceive otherwise then he ought of God in regard of the persons of the Godhead viz. denying either the Son or the Holy Ghost as Turks and Jews for he that hath not the Son hath not the Father 1 Joh. 2.23 And must needs therefore be an Atheist 2. Of Prophaneness which shews it self 1. By living securely in open sins being without shame or regard of God or Man Isa 3.9 2. By bruitish living without all practice of Devotion little or no Praying Reading or Meditating upon the Scriptures 3. By following and professing one Religion so as that there is a disposition if need require unto the contrary A prophane heart causeth this for where it is otherwise there is the constancy of the Apostle It is better to obey God then Man 3. Of Inward Idolatry or of the heart And this is 1. By love joy and delight of the heart without measure Thus the covetous man the Epicure and the Proud man are Idolaters so are all such as unreligiously love their own Wills more then Gods most holy Will 2. By trust and confidence whereby the Creature is so relyed upon as that with it there is total Assurance and no fear but if that be wanting then nothing but fear and mournful despair 3. By praying unto it for it must hereby be supposed to be every where or to be able to hear at the least wheresoever it is called upon But this can onely the Lord do for it is a property of the Infinite alone not of Angel or Saint 4. Of Apostacy whereof there are five Degrees viz. 1. A consenting to sin being deceived with the Temptations thereof 2. Hardness of heart upon many practises of sin 3. The heart being hardned becomes unbelieving and calls the truth of the Gospel into question 4. By unbelief it becomes evil having an unworthy conceit of the Gospel 5. This evil heart brings a man to Apostacy and falling from God which is the extinguishing of the light of the Gospel To prevent this sin we must carefully practise the Counsel of the Gospel Ignorance of the Will and Word of God is a grievous sin also in it self Levit. 4.2 5.17 Isa 1.3 5.13 which may further appear by these Reasons 1. Because all the corruption that befel us through Adams Fall is sin now Ignorance and Blindeness of minde was a principal part of that corruption 2. Ignorance is contrary to the Image of God wherein we were first created for a part of Gods Image in man was Knowledge Col. 3.10 as well as Holiness and Righteousness Eph. 4.24 3. As Knowledge is the Foundation of all Piety and Obedience So Ignorance is the Mother of all Error and Prophaneness Mat. 22.29 The four main Supporters of Ignorance against Knowledge viz. 1. Envy whereby men grieve at the knowledge and good parts which are in others 2. Ambition whereby they seek to be eminent above all others 3. Policy whereby they seek a cloak for their own Ignorance 4. Covetousness whereby they pretend a strange kinde of secret Vertue in Ignorance that thereby they may with the less prejudice to their jugling in Religion the more securely Monopolize Idolatry These men are not of Moses his minde when he wished that all the Lords people were prophets Num. 11.29 neither of Pauls minde when he wished that all that heard him were altogether as himself was Acts 26.29 though indeed with these men Priest and People are all one but not in Pauls sense unless Darkness be Light The Ignorance that is excusable is onely such as is 1. In Ideots Natural Fools through some defects in Nature 2. In Lunatick persons violently bereaved of the use of Reason 3. In Infants and Children being not of years of discretion 4. In all men as touching such things as we are not bound to know Time was when Ignorance was not amiss When Innocence lay swadled all in Bliss But Man soon ' came proud to unscale his Eyes A learned Fool in nought but Folly wise Since which curs'd Fate the Twylight he has left Serves but to mourn for what he is bereft Thus he that dares aspire to dart his sight I' th' Sun looks himself blinde with too much light Even in those Gospel-days whose dawning Minde Hath one Eye open that can see 't is blinde §. 9. Of Desperation THe Diseases of the Body are many and many grievous but the Maladies of the Minde are incomparably more and more grievous those of the Body make us sick men those of the Minde make us miserable men The Minde can judge of the Bodies Diseases but how shall it declare the Diseases of it felf when it self is diseased if the judgement be sick how shall the sickness be judged The instrument of judging is the Minde the Disease whereof is not proper and peculiar onely to such as are troubled distressed and disturbed in Conscience but Epidemical yea most raigning in all unregenerate persons wanting a right reformed judgement to judge of themselves and therefore take or rather mistake Vice for Vertue Darkness for Light and Error for Truth Now of all sores the most dangerous is the wound of the Spirit therefore is that the necessariest Doctrine which relieveth and rectifieth the Conscience And as the Word of God is mighty in operation piercing the heart and discerning the thoughts and intents thereof So is it alone available and effectual to pacifie the Minde and to give full satisfaction to the Conscience In this case of Distress of Minde it is meet and convenient there should alway be used a private confession Jam. 5.16 not of our Faith so much as of our Faults For the Physician must know the disease before he can apply the remedy and herein the grief of Minde and scruple that troubleth the Conscience must be made known for man hath but two witnesses of his Thoughts God and his own Conscience by which man knows that thing of himself which God also knows of him and none else for mans Conscience is known to none beside himself but God Now the most special and common distress of minde ariseth from a Divine Temptation which is a Combat with God himself immediately which is when the Conscience speaks some fearful things of God and withal the party distressed feels some evident Tokens of Gods wrath Yet indeed Gods Mercy is never sweet unto the palate of the Soul until it be
them Thou shalt rise up before the hoary head Lev. 19.32 2. To go to meet them when they are coming towards us Thus did Abraham Gen. 18.2 and Solomon 1 Kings 2.10 3. To bow the knee unto them as in the same place is noted of Abraham 4. To stand by them whilest they sit as the people did about Moses whilest he sate to judge them Exod. 18. 5. To give them the chief Seat and our selves to take the lowest as the Lord commandeth us even at a Feast Luke 14.10 6. To be silent before them whilest they speak Thus did Elihu one of Jobs friends Job 32.6 7. 7. To be silent in Courts and Places of Judgement until we are bidden to speak Thus did Paul Acts 24.10 8. To give every one his just Title as Hannah did to Eli 1 Sam. 1.14 and Sarah to her husband calling him Lord. 9. To uncover the head before Superiors and to stand uncovered if the quality of the person so requireth 10. To order all our speeches and gestures so as that we pass not the bounds of Reverence As this Law is broken by detracting and taking away from the Reverence of Superiors so there is a sin in over-Reverencing them as thus 1. If Obedience be Absolute without respect to Gods Will Acts 4.19 2. By ascribing too much unto them and extolling them too highly as the people did Herod Acts 12. and the Papists do the Pope 3. By making them Absolute Paterns to be followed in all things Paul speaks of himself Follow me as I follow Christ Jesus 1 Cor. 11.1 4. By preposterous Observance towards them in the Congregation which is when we rise up to great persons being in the very act of Gods Worship for if he be greatest and most worthy why do we dishonor God by such ill reverence to man 5. By the humble prostrating the body unto them as unto God This gesture where it proceedeth from religious Humiliation and Worship cometh very near the brinks of open Idolatry and cannot but incur that reprehension Take heed thou doest it not Honor in relation to Parents is used for two reasons especially 1. To shew that Parents bear Gods Image for honor is properly due to God alone to the Creature it is due onely as it stands in relation to God and carrieth his Image 2. To shew That it is an honor to Parents to have dutiful children even as it is a dishonor to them to have disobedient children From the honor here commanded to be given Parents arise these Observations for Parents viz. 1. That they also are as well bound to duty as children Eph. 6.4 their just Government being their duty 2. Parents must be so watchful over their carriage as thereby they make not their children to sin Ezek. 3.18 3. That it is not sufficient for Parents to prevent such mischiefs as children may fall into but they must also seek their good 4. That Parents ought to provide all needful things for their children Nurture and Instruction is as needful and profitable as Food and Apparel 5. Parents as they may not be too austere so neither too remiss the one makes children careless the other desperate 6. As Parents deliver good Precepts and Principles to their children so they must be careful by forcible and frequent Admonitions to fix and settle them in their minde Deut. 6.7 7. As Parents by Discipline keep their children under so by Information they must direct them in the right way Prov. 22.6 8. Parents must especially teach their children their duty towards God That we may be yet better acquainted with the duties of this Conmandment let us again consider That Superiors are all such as excol others in 1. Gifts 1. Of Nature as in Age. Sex Beauty 2. Of Exercise as in gifts either of 1. Body as 1. Strength 2. Activity 2. Minde as Wit Learning c. 2. Authority as Governors in 1. Family as Parents Husbands Masters 2. Policy as 1. Church-policy as Pastors Doctors Elders Deacons 2. Civil-Policy as Magistrates 1. Superior as King Prince And 2. Inferior as Judges Justices c. Civil honor is given to men not onely for Vertue but also for divine Representations of other good things because one man before another beareth the Image of some thing that is in God viz. 1. Of his Majesty So the King is honored above another 2. Of his Dominion So the Husband is honored of his Wife 3. Of his Paternity so the Father is honored by the Son 4. Of his Eternity So honor is given the Aged by the yong The general duty of all Parents to their children 1. To instruct them in Religion according to their capacity 2. To provide for them touching the things of this life The general duty of all children to their Parents 1. To requite their Parents care over them if they stand in need 2. To be dutiful and obedient to them in the Lord. The Vices contrary to the Duty of Parents viz. 1. Not to provide and minister necessary sustenance unto their children or to bring them up in ryot 2. Not to defend their children against in juries or to offend through a foolish over tender love for some small or no injuries done unto them 3. Not to accustom their children to patience and gentleness or to bring them up in idleness and licentiousness of sinning 4. Not to instruct them according to their ability or to corrupt them by their lewd and evil Examples 5. Not to chastise their children as necessity requireth or to be too fierce and cruel unto them beyond their duty or the degree of the fault committed The general duty of all Superiors to their Inferiors 1. To command things good and profitable for all their Inferiors 2. To recompence them that be under them according to the things done 3. To go before them by Example Conversation and Experience The general duty of all Inferiors to their Superiors 1. To Respect them according to their Graces and Gifts 2. To Profit by their Gifts Superiors in Age or in any Authority transgress against their Duty and Calling these three ways 1. Through folly and corrupt counsel 2. Through lightness in maners and by their evil Examples 3. By neglect of the yonger sort or other Inferiors whom they see to offend and might by their counsel and authority correct and amend The Inferiors sin and transgress against that Honor which they owe unto their Superiors these several ways 1. By not accounting of them as being in that place where God hath placed them 2. By yielding more unto them then may agree unto men or by loving them more then God 3. By denying Obedience to their just and lawful Commands or obeying them in shew onely or when they command things unjust and impious 4. By harming them with injuries or not ayding them in what things or by what means we may 5. By gratifying them flatteringly and unrighteously 6. By exagitating stirring up or provoking their Infirmities 7. By flattery
Revenge when a man hath carried a grudge in his heart long before 2. Without Deliberation when a man without all former malice is suddenly carried by fury and anger to slay another This kind is distinguish'd from the other by the name of Manslaughter 2. Casual killing commonly called Chance Medley when a man killeth another having no purpose to hurt him Now this Commandment is not to be understood of Casual but Voluntary killing And the Presumptions of this Casual killing may by these viz. 1. If a man kill another having no ill-will or anger towards him nor to any other for his sake neither is moved thereto by Covetousness or any Affection 2. If he be doing the lawful duties of his particular Calling 3. If he be well occupied doing some lawful work beside his Calling 4. If he be doing a thing which he ordinarily practiseth keeping his usual place and time Killing is not always Murther for God gives a man power to kill three ways viz. 1. By the written Word Thus Princes and Governors and under them Executioners are allowed to kill Malefactors that deserve death and thus Soldiers are warranted to kill in a lawful War 2. By an extraordinary Commandment and so Abraham might lawfully have killed his Son if the Angel of the Lord had not staid his hand Gen. 22. 3. By an extraordinary instinct which is answerable to a special Commandment and so Phineas slew Zimri and Cozbi without guilt of Murther Psal 106.30 31. Murther is either 1. In the Minde onely as Anger Hatred Envying Malice c. 2. By Action 1. In the Gestures onely by our outward Members 2. In the Deed it self And this may be either By the Tongue in speech By the hand or otherwise Murther is a most grievous sin for these Reasons viz. 1. Because it is the Destruction of a Little World as Man is rightly called wherein the wonderful Wildom Power Providence and Mercy of God doth as much appear 2. Because it is the Defacing of Gods Image which is in every man This Reason is rendred in the first Law against Murther Gen. 9.6 David might not build the Temple because he had shed blood 3. Because it is an Encroaching upon Gods Office to whom alone it belongeth to call men when it pleaseth him out of this world And God hath not made man with such offensive parts as he hath done other Creatures 4. Because it is the greatest breach of Love and Peace and so the greatest sin against man Joh. 8.44 Therefore the sin of Murther singularly is said to desile the Land Numb 35.37 To avoid this horrible sin of Murther let us sly these sins especially 1. Pride the very Fountain of Contention which Murther followeth for Pride will endure nothing and is so wasteful upon it self that the Poor may starve and perish without relief 2. Covetousness for he that is greedy of gain will hunt after the precious life of man Prov. 1. 3. Riotness Drunkenness and Whoredom whereon much bloodshed hath followed and Self-murther 4. Hard heartedness when we have objects of pity for we make our selves accessary of their death who perish whom our relief might have preserved Prov. 21.13 Cruelty is one main Breach of this Commandment The Properties whereof are these viz. 1. In the very look and countenance Such was Cains towards Abel Gen. 4. and Labans against Jacob Gen. 31.2 2. In the behavior when it is harsh and churlish Such was Nabals 1 Sam. 23.3 3. When any way too much severity is used by the Rich towards the Poor by Officers towards Malefactors or by Governors towards such as are under them expressing a hateful minde towards them 4. In the unmerciful usage of the dumb Creatures working them without Reason pinching them in things necessary beating or killing them without mercy or otherwise using them so as they grow diseased thereby All these shew a cruel minde Prov. 12.10 5. In revenging Injuries for we must not revenge our own wrongs but leave that to God to whom it properly belongeth Rom. 12.19 Motives to perswade us to lay aside all private Revenge viz. 1. Let us lay before us the Example of Christ the Author and Finisher of our Salvation 1 Pet. 2.21 2. Let us set before us the Example of the faithful Servants that have lived in all Ages in the time of the Law and under the Gospel 3. It is Gods proper Right Office and Royalty it belongeth to him peculiarly to take vengeance and therefore is called The Lord God the Avenger Psal 94.1 4. God hath graciously passed his Promise to us That himself will take our cases into his hands and pay them home that do oppress us Rom. 12.29 It were now a fruit of infidelity to revenge our selves and not believe him at his Word 5. The consideration of the forgiveness that our selves receive at the hands of God Col. 3.13 6. It is against all good Law Right Reason and common Sense that any one man should be both Accuser Witness Judge and Executioner but every one that taketh upon him to right his own cause and to revenge himself doth all these Murther may be committed as wel against the Soul 1 Cor. 8.11 as the body of a man even when he is an occasion of his stumbling and falling into sin As thus 1. Ministers murther or at least make themselves guilty of murthering the Souls of the people committed to their charge when as through their default any of them perish Ezek. 3. 2. Parents and Masters and all private Governors are Murtherers if by their neglect or bad example their Children Servants or Pupils perish by Ignorance Prophaneness or any other sinful course of life which they might have amended in them by teaching charging reproving requiring and by good example 3. Every one that maketh his Neighbor drunk Hab. 2.15 stirreth him up to strife inticeth him to any sin or doth countenance favor and defend it to the heartening of a man on therein to his destruction shall answer as a Soul-murtherer As the very act of murther is a most odious sin so also are the degrees thereof as Railing Anger and the like For 1. The heart and tongue is hereby set on fire of the fire of Hell Jam. 3. 2. To sin thus is to be a Murtherer before God for He that hateth his brother is a Man-slayer 1 Joh. 3.15 3. It is the proper Brand of the Wicked His throat is an open Sepulchre the poison of Asps is under his lips his mouth is full of cursing and bitterness Helps to avoid Rash Anger and all such murtherous Affections may be such as these viz. 1. To consider our own weaknesses and sins Gal. 6.1 2. Tit. 3.2 2. To consider wisely the Providence of God in all indignities that are by any man offered to us as David did when Shimei cursed him 2 Sam. 16.10 3. To avoid the company of froward and hasty persons by whom thou mightest be provoked Prov. 22.24 even as a man keepeth Gunpowder
is free or at least freed from fleshly concupiscence the Body is chaste when it putteth not into execution the concupiscences of the flesh 1 Thess 4.3 4 5. 1 Cor. 7.34 Marriage is the main help to keep our bodies chaste Now Marriage is a lawful and indissoluble conjunction of one man and one woman justified by God that we might know him to detest all impure lust That also we might therein chastely serve the Lord and that especially it might be a means whereby mankinde might be multiplied and God gather thence afterwards unto himself a Church Lastly that it might be a Society and fellowship of Labors Cares and Prayers The Breach hereof is the foul sin of Adultery which beside the fearful exclusion without Repentance from the Kingdom of Heaven occasions jealousie the frenzy of the Soul which is a grief of minde arising from hence That another is judged to enjoy that which we desire to have wholly and properly as our own and none besides us to possess any part with us Or it is an affection proceeding from fear to have that communicated to another which we challenge and covet to retain as peculiar and proper to our selves alone Beside this unhappy sin of Adultery that venomous sin is the poyson of Marriages whereby the estimation of Parents the reputation of Children and the honor of whole Families stand in hazard to be forfeited for as God is the Author of Marriage so he is the Revenger of the breach thereof But shame keeps some from those unclean practices and grosser acts of filthiness who yet inwardly boil in speculative Wantonness and Adulteries of the heart Ask thy Conscience whether thou art one of them if so remember That no Adulterer shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven and repent yea the Fornicator and every unclean person is also thence excluded all Vices contrary to Chastity or of any affinity with them being here forbidden in forbidding Adultery for by one Special the rest that are of near affinity with that are understood and and where the Cause is forbidden there also is the Effect and so the contrary Now the end and scope of this Commandment is the Preservation of Chastity and Wedlock In this Commandment are two parts viz. 1. God forbiddeth Adultery and therein not onely the too familiar company of man with woman out of marriage but also all kinde of filthiness by which man may be defiled all affections of concupiscence and whatsoever stirreth up unto lust and nourisheth it 2. He commandeth Chastity In this Commandment are prohibited 1. The lust of the heart or the evil concupiscence of the flesh Mat. 5.28 Col. 3.5 2. Burning in the flesh which is an inward fervency of lust whereby the godly motions of the heart are hindred over-whelmed and as it were with contrary fire burnt up 1 Cor. 7.9 3. Strange pleasures about generation prohibited in the Word of God the which are many viz. 1. With Beasts Lev. 18.23 2. With the Devil as Witches do by their confession for why may not a Spirit as well have society with a Witch as to eat meat 3. With one and the same Sex Lev. 18.22 This is a sin which they commit whom God hath given over to a reprobate sense Rom. 1.26 27. It was the sin of Sodom Gen. 19. where it was so common that to this day it is termed Sodomy 4. With such as be within the degrees of Consanguinity or Affinity prohibited Lev. 18.6 5. With unmarried persons This sin is called Fornication Deut. 22.28 29. 1 Cor. 10.8 6. With those whereof one is married or at least betrothed This is Adultery Deut. 22.22 3 4. 7. With man and wife They abuse their liberty if they know each other so long as the woman is in her flowers Ezek. 22.10 Lev. 18.19 Ezek. 16.8 or using Marriage-bed intemperately thereby committing Adultery even with his wife 8. Nocturnal Pollutions which arise of immoderate dyet or unchaste cogitations going before in the day Deut. 23.10 Onans sin Gen. 38.8 was not much unlike these 9. Effeminate wantonness whereby occasions are sought to stir up lust Gal. 5.19 4. To appoint some light or Sheet-punishment for Adultery such as that Romish Synagogue doth For it is nothing else but to open a gap for other lewd persons to run into the like impiety Occasions of lust prohibited in this Commandment are these viz. 1. Eyes full of Adultery 2 Pet. 2.14 2. Idleness This occasioned Davids sin with Bathsheba 2 Sam. 11.2 3. Riotous and lascivious Attire 1 Tim. 2.9 Isa 3.16 unto 23. 4. Fulness of bread and meat which provoke lust Ezek. 16.49 Luke 16.19 Rom. 13.13 5. Corrupt dishonest and unseemly talk 1 Cor. 13.33 Such are vain Love-Songs Ballads Interludes and Amorous Books 6. Lascivious Representations of Love-matters in Plays and Comedies Eph. 5.3 4. 7. Undecent and unseemly Pictures 1 Thess 5.22 Abstain from all appearance of evil 8. Lascivious Dancing of man and woman together Mark 6.22 9. Company with effeminate persons and unlawful Divorces All the sorts of lust repugnant to this Commandment may be referred to these several kindes 1. Those that are contrary to Nature and of the devil recited Rom. 1. as confounding both kindes and Sexes and unnatural abusage of Sexes 2. Those which proceed from our corrupt Nature As 1. Incest that most abominable crime of unnatural lust 2. Double Adultery when both persons are married persons 3. Simple Adultery when the one party is a married person 4. Simple Fornication when they are both unmarried 3. Corrupt Inclinations from which though good men are not wholly exempt yet do they not so yield unto them as to take delight in them but they take all occasions whereby they may withstand them and the grace of Resistance is humbly desired of them Adultery consisteth 1. In consent and minde alone As to lust after things 1. Belonging to the body as excess of Apparel Meat or Drink as may stir up to lust and idleness 2. In the minde it self 2. Beyond consent when action follows Adultery is either 1. Contrary to Nature which is either 1. Confusion of kindes as filthiness with Beasts 2. Confusion 1. Of Sexes as man with man woman with woman 2. Of Blood which is Incest 2. According to Nature and is either Fornication when both persons are single unmarried or unbetrothed Adultery when one of them is married or at least betrothed Incest is in the degrees 1. Of Consanguinity which is 1. In a Right Line as Son with Mother and so upwards 2. In a Collateral Line as Brother with Sister 3. In an Overthwart Line as Son with Aunt and so upwards 2. Of Affinity There is the same prohibition of this as of Consanguinity so it may be called an indirect confusion of Blood as for a man to marry his Wifes Sister The several kindes of Adultery viz. 1. Of the Heart Mat. 5.28 This never suffers a man to serve the Lord with a pure conscience 2. Of the Eyes
fleshliness and in case of fleshly motions to pray heartily against them 2. To abstain from the company of women in private or alone or in the dark 3. If notwithstanding those means thou canst not contain but art troubled with fleshly motions then fly to Gods Ordinance of Marriage 1 Cor. 7.1 For the word is express that No Fornicator or unclean person shall enter into the kingdom of heaven 1 Cor. 6. Special Preservatives for married persons against this sin 1. To dwell together the one not separate from the other 2. So to carry themselves towards one another as those whose bodies are not in their own power but mutually in one anothers power and to follow the Apostles Rule 1 Cor. 7.3 3. To contain at times of extraordinary devotion by mutual consent 4. When women love to be at home governing the house as the vertuous wife is described Prov. 30. 5. When the man esteemeth best of his own wife above all other women covering her infirmities by love and the wife doth likewise of her husband for such mutual fervent love is a singular preservative from the strange woman Prov. 5.18 For the government of the eyes to avoid Adultery there be two special Rules viz. 1. We must open and shut our eyes in obedience to God Prov 4.24 25. 2. We must look to Gods Glory make our eyes not the weapons of any sin but the instruments of Gods Worship and Service This we shall do if we imploy them thus viz. 1. In beholding Gods creatures in heaven and earth and in them we may see Gods Glory Wisdom Mercy Power and Providence and thence glorifie God 2. In beholding Gods Judgments very wisely and narrowly that therein we may see his Justice Wrath for sin and so be humbled and terrified from sin 3. In beholding of the Elements of Gods Sacraments especially the Bread and Wine in the Lords Supper which be visible words wherein we may see our Savior Christ as it were crucified before our eyes 4. In using them as instruments of Invocation by lifting them up to heaven to testifie the lifting up of our hearts to God This use of the eyes Nature teacheth us for whereas other creatures have but four Muscles in their eyes whereby their eyes are turned round about Man hath a fifth Muscle whereby his eye is turned upward toward heaven The Vertues of this Commandment viz. 1. Chastity which is a vertue preserving the minde and body from uncleanness agreeing with the Will of God and avoiding all lusts forbidden by God all unlawful companies and inordinate copulation and all the desires occasions causes and effects either in single life or in wedlock This is one of the chiefest vertues that makes preserves the Image of God 2. Modesty or shamefac'dness which is a vertue abhorring all filthiness joyned with a grief shame and sadness either for some former uncleanness or for fear of falling into any hereafter and having a purpose and desire to fly not onely uncleanness it self but also the occasions and tokens and signs of uncleanness This vertue is required unto chastity as a furtherance and cause and also as an effect consequent and sign thereof 3. Temperance which is a vertue observing the mean agreeable to Nature Honesty Mediocrity and order of persons places and times according to the Law of God and Rule of Nature in things concerning the body as in meat drink recreations and apparel This vertue is required unto chastity as a cause without which we cannot be chaste There is a twofold Chastity viz. 1. Of the single life which is with all carefulness and fasting and prayer to keep their mindes and affections and bodies in holiness 2. In Marriage when the pure and holy use of wedlock is observed Heb. 13.4 Rules for the Preservation of Chastity viz. 1. The minde must be filled with godly meditations and the Word of God must dwell plenteously in our hearts that there may be no room for these wicked desires to enter 2. We must often give our selves to the spiritual exercises of Faith Repentance and New Obedience as publike and private Prayer often meditating hearing and reading Gods Word and the like 3. We must use Sobriety in Recreations Company Meat Drink and Apparel for ungodly lusts are kindled fed and nourished by too much pampering of the body 4. We must alway be doing some good thing either in our general calling of a Christian or in our particular calling for Satan takes advantage by our idleness 5. Men and women must not privately converse together without warrant so to do either from their general or particular Calling for this is the main occasion of Temptations Remember what the Apostle saith Evil conversings corrupt good maners 1 Cor. 15.33 6. Reject not Marriage which was instituted by God for these Reasons viz. 1. The means of multiplying Mankinde 2. The gathering of the Church 3. The Image and Resemblance between God and the Church 4. That loose and wandring lusts might be avoided 5. That there might be a Society and Fellowship of Labors and Prayers That Marriage may be a lawful conjunction and this sin thereby avoided these things are required 1. That Matrimony be contracted by consent of both parties 2. That there be adjoyned also the consent of such others as are required 3. That honest Conditions be observed 4. That there be no Errors committed in the persons 5. That it be contracted between such persons as are not forbidden by the Law of God as between whom the degrees of Consanguinity may be no hindrance To preserve purity and chastity in Wedlock these Cautions are profitable viz. 1. Contracts must be in the Lord and with the faithful onely Mal. 2.11 2. Both parties must separate themselves in the time of the womans disease and at appointed Fasts Ezek. 18.6 1 Cor. 7.5 3. Wedlock must be used rather to suppress then to satisfie the corrupt concupiscence of the flesh and especially to enlarge the Church of God 4. It must be used with Prayer and Thanksgiving 1 Tim. 4.3 4. He breaks this Commandment 1. That thinks an unchaste thought tending to Adultery or any sin of that kinde 2. That looks on a woman to lust after her Mat. 5.28 or that useth wantonness 1 Cor. 6.9 3. That commits Incest Lev. 18.22 or Sodomy 1 Cor. 6.9 or fornication or adultery 4. That useth Marriage-bed intemperately or lieth with a menstruous woman Ezek. 18.6 5. That is given to idleness wears wanton Attire 1 Tim. 2.9 or useth provocations to lust Gal. 5.9 6. That useth light talk and reading of Love-books 1 Cor. 15.35 that frequents lascivious places Eph. 5.3 that delights in wanton Pictures 1 Thess 5.23 that useth the mixt Dancing of men and women Mark 6.22 or keeps company with light and suspected persons Prov. 7.22 7. That makes Marriages of yong children or neglects to dispose his children in marriage in convenient time 1 Cor. 7.36 or that punisheth Adultery with small punishments 8. That
fruits and effects thereof viz. 1. It converted happy and blessed Angels into cursed and damned Spirits for the Devils by Creation were good Angels as Powerful Wise Quick Speedy Invisible Immortal c. as any other Angels equal in every respect but inferior in no respect to the very best Angels Now when they fell they lost not their natural Substance and essential Properties thereof no more then man lost his when he fell For as man remained to be not onely Flesh and Blood but also a Living yea and a reasonable Creature after his Fall So the Devil remained to be a Spirit Invisible Immortal Quick Speedy c. as before onely the Quality of his Nature and Properties is altered from Good to Evil. Now the things which especially make them seem so terrible are Their Power Malice Subtilty Sedulity and Speed for where Malice is strengthned by Might Might whetted on by Malice both Malice and Power guided by Craft Craft and all stirred up by Diligence Sedulity and Speed the Enemy is prevalent Be wise therefore Watch and Pray stand fast in the Faith Yet know that the Devil is not able to do whatsoever he will for this is proper onely to God whose Power is Infinite but the Devils Power is a created Power and therefore limited within bounds of a Creature yea he is not able to do any thing simply above or directly against that course which the Lord hath ordained unto his Creatures which is commonly called The course of Nature for God hath tied all his Creatures thereunto and hath reserved onely for himself who is the sole Lord of Nature power to alter it as pleaseth him But the extraordinary power of the Devil consisteth in this That he can do any thing that is within the compass of Nature and may be effected by Natural means as the violent moving of the Air causing of Tempests and Storms Thunder and Lightning troubling the Seas the causing of Earth-quakes throwing down Buildings rooting up Trees entring into Bodies both of Men and Beasts casting them into Fire and Water grievously vexing and tormenting them inflict sore Diseases on them possess them make them Lunatick Deaf Dumb Blinde stir up Wrath Pride Covetousness Lust and the like Passions in men He knows the dispositions of men and accordingly layes baits for them he can darken their Understandings and cause much Anguish in their Soul and Conscience he can inrage Man against Man Kingdom against Kingdom Subjects against Princes Princes against Subjects and so cause whatsoever mischief can be caused which the whole World may witness by too woful Experience As touching the Nature of Devils they are Spiritual Substances they were created Spirits and Spirits they still remain to be their Fall hath not altered their Substance but the Quality of it for else could not that Nature and Substance which transgressed be punished Grosly therefore do they erre who Think and Teach That they be nothing else but bad Qualities and evil Affections which arise from our Flesh If because they are Spiritual things they should be no Substances but onely Qualities then neither should the Souls of Men nor good Angels be Substances for these are termed Spirits Eccles 12.7 Heb. 1.14 Spiritual things may be as truly and properly Substances as Bodily things And as for the Devils the Actions which they perform the Places where they are the Power wherewith they are endued and the Pains and Torments which they suffer evidently shew that they are plainly and truly Substances And we may know that in Hell there are both degrees of Torments and degrees of Devils for there is one Head of wicked Spirits called Beelzebub or The Devil who hath innumerable wicked Angels ministring unto him as may be gathered Matth. 25.41 where Hell is said to be prepared for the Devil and his Angels And it is not unlike that they are more in number then all the men upon the Earth for where can any man be in this Life but some wicked Spirit will be ready to tempt him to sin And though the Evil Motions arise from our own Corruption yet the Devils help is never wanting to bring them into Action which confutes the folly of our common people who never dread the Devil but when he appears unto them in some horrid shape they think he is never neer them but when they see him but it is far otherwise and there is more Reason to fear his Temptations then his Appearance for this is not so terrible to the Sight as his Temptations are hurtful to the Soul And this fearful Fiend this cursed Spirit this damned Devil had not been at all had it not been for Sin 2. It occasioned Adams Fall by his disobedience whereby himself and all his Posterity forfeited that Happiness wherein they were created and incurred a most fearful punishment which is Threefold viz. 1. In this Life as the painful Provision of the things of this Life proneness to Diseases shame of Nakedness pains in Childbirth trembling of Conscience in the Soul care trouble hardness of Heart and madness Deut. 28.28 Subjection to the power of Satan Damage to the Temporal estate Deut. 28.29 And the loss of that lordly Authority which man had over all the Creatures 2. Temporal death or a change like unto it Rom. 6.23 3. After this life eternal destruction from Gods exceeding glorious Presence Presume not to commit that Sin in secret which thou wouldst not before men for all secret Sins hidden to men are known to God for these Reasons viz. 1. Because it is impossible that any thing in Heaven or Earth should hide us or our works from his knowledge 't is not the darkness of the night nor the secrecy of the place nor the politique contrivance of any act can conceal us from his Knowledge and Omnipresency his All-seeing Eye Psal 139.9 10 11. 2. Because it is the Office of God and an essential Property attributed unto him to be the Searcher of hearts Gen. 6.5 1 Chron. 28.9 Jer. 17.10 Thus he saw the secret Sacriledge of Achan the Hypocrsie of Ananias and Sapphira and the Treachery of Judas In Original Sin consider 1. The Cause which is Adams Fall partly by the subtile Suggestions of the Devil partly through his own Free-will and the propagation of Adams corrupted Nature to his Seed and Posterity 2. The Subject thereof which is the Old Man with all his Powers Minde Will and Heart 1. In the Minde Ignorance of God and his Will 2. In the Will Rebellion against the Law of God 3. The Effects thereof they are 1. Actual Sins 1. Inward as ungodly Affections 2. Outward as wicked Looks prophane Speech and ungodly Actions 2. An Evil Conscience which bringeth the Wrath of God Death and Eternal Damnation To the Sin of Adams Fall there were three things concurring viz. 1. Gods Permitting not by instilling into him any evil or taking from him any ability to good but by suffering Satan to tempt him 2. By
proceed not from Faith Yet shall the common actions of our Calling be reckoned Good Works if they come from Faith and Love if they be done as to the Lord and so he will accept them and for this cause the good purposes in many are naught because they have not Faith for their ground Good Works are the Fruit of Sanctification they go not before Justification but they follow after a man is justified For first by Grace we are justified and being justified we perform Good Works for man cannot do any work that is good and godly being not yet Regenerate but when he is prevented by the Grace of Christ and the Inspiration of his Spirit by the Holy Ghost then he may do good Works and the best Works before the Grace of Christ and the Inspiration of his Spirit are not pleasing to God forasmuch as they spring not of Faith yea before Justification they have the Nature of Sin Now here we must know that good Works are in a kinde necessary to Salvation yet not as Causes thereof either efficient or helping any way but onely as an evidence whereby we may know that we are in the way to Salvation For Faith is necessary and good Works are the Tokens and Fruits of Faith and so are necessary also In a Good Work 1. The End thereof must be the glory of God which chiefly consists in Fear Obedience Thankfulness 2. The Action it self in its own Nature must be just and warrantable 3. The Circumstances honest and seasonable proportioned to the justness of the Work it self 4. The Means direct and lawful and approveable in the sight of God 5. The Fountain the Heart sincere and sanctified In the doing of every good Work acceptable to God these Rules are to be observed viz. 1. The person of the Doer must be acceptable to God by a justifying Faith 2. The Word of God must be thy warrant for the doing of the Work 3. The Actions end must be Gods glory 4. The Work must be done in Faith because in wel-doing a man must testifie his Fidelity to God we must be sure perswaded out of Gods Word that the things we do are approved of God for whatsoever is not of Faith is Sin 5. Love is necessary in every good Work we go about for Faith worketh by Love 6. Service to man is required in our good Works for the end of mans Life is in his Calling to serve man and by that to serve God Col. 3.24 7. Our good Works must be done within the compass of Callings 8. Patience is necessary in every good Work that we faint not in wel-doing In every good Work there must beatwofold Faith viz. 1. Justifying Faith whereby the person doing the Work must be reconciled to God and stand before God a true Member of Christ without which it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 and therefore is chiefly necessary 2. General Faith whereby a man believes that the Work he doth is pleasing unto God Whatsoever is not of Faith is sin Rom. 14.23 Whereunto are required both the Word of God commanding the Work and prescribing the maner of doing it and also a promise of Blessing upon the doing of it As things may be said to be good in a double respect 1. Good in themselves alone as Almsdeeds done by a wicked man 2. Good in themselves and the Doer as the Prayers of any true Believers So there are two sorts of good Works viz. 1. Those which God in his Word hath directly commanded as parts of his Worship such as are Prayer Thanksgiving receiving the Sacraments hearing the Word c. 2. Actions indifferent sanctified by the Word and Prayer and done to Gods glory being performed after the maner and to the end God hath commanded them The Ends of a good Work are manifold viz. 1. The honor and glory of God the Work being done in Humility whereby a man esteemeth himself to be but a voluntary and reasonable Instrument of God therein and also done in simplicity or singleness of Heart whereby a man in doing a good Work intendeth simply and directly to honor and please God without all by-respects to his own praise or the pleasing of men 2. The testification of our Thankfulness to God who hath redeemed us by Christ 3. To edifie our Brethren thereby and that they also may glorifie God 4. To exercise and increase our Faith and Repentance 5. To escape the destruction of the wicked and to obtain the reward of the Righteous 6. To be answerable to our Calling in doing the duties thereof 7. To pay the Debt which we owe unto God for we are his Debtors as we are his Creatures his Servants his Children and his Redeemed by Christ God accepts of good works in us divers ways 1. In that he pardons the faults thereof 2. In that he approves his own good Work in us 3. In that he doth give unto us the Doers of them a Crown of Righteousness Provided 1. That before the Work go Reconciliation of the Person to God in Christ 2. That in doing the Work the right Matter and Maner be observed 3. That after the Work is done we beg pardon for the defects thereof There be three Opinions touching the Necessity of good Works viz. 1. Of the Papists who hold them necessary as causes of our Salvation and Justification This is most false and a preposterous Opinion 2. Of some Protestants who hold them necessary though not as principal causes yet as conservant causes of our Salvation but the truth is they are no causes of Salvation neither Efficient Principal nor Conservant nor yet Material Formal or Final 3. That good Works are necessary not as causes of Salvation or Justification but as inseparable consequents of saving Faith in Christ whereby we are justified and saved or as a way is necessary to the going to a place And this Opinion is the truth for Works any way made causes of Salvation or Justification do nullifie Grace The Motives which cause wicked men sometimes to do Works fair in shew and outwardly good and to abstain from evil Actions viz. 1. Because some naturally be not given to the vices which they leave 2. Others because they be restrained by a slavish fear of Gods Justice or else for that they dream to deserve something at the hands of God 3. Others for fear of Laws or lest they should hinder thereby their prosperity 4. Because their Lusts do sometimes strive as the winds so as that which is the stronger prevaileth over the rest and bridleth them from breaking into action No man can do a work properly meritorious as the bold Papists affirm and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the doer of a Work that may be meritorious must do it by himself and not by another for the praise is his by whom he doth it and not his own but man in himself hath not power to will that which is good much less to do it least of
liberty to sin afterward or at least to suppose that we have thereby merited at Gods hands what we fasted for Take heed of this a rightly grounded assurance of Gods mercy is highly commendable but a self-opinionating conceit of merit for the Works sake done is uncreaturely presumption a flat contradiction to the very end of Fasting which should be Self-unworthiness Self-denial true Humiliation This Fasting must never be without Prayer for Prayer and Fasting were joyned together Ezra 9.5 Neh. 1.4 Dan. 9.3 Judg. 20.26 Luke 2.37 5.33 1 Cor. 7.7 True indeed it is that Prayer is available without Fasting but Fasting never without Prayer for Fasting is not the worship of God but onely a help to it and the most principal end of a Religious Fast is Supplication or extraordinary Prayer whereunto as subordinate may be added Examination Humiliation and Mortification As touching the time of a Religious Fast it is now free in regard of Conscience indeed in the Old Testament they had a set time of Fasting as the tenth day of the seventh Moneth Levit. 16.29 But in the New Testament there is no set time which bindes the Conscience onely men must Fast as just occasion is offered and as for Civil-Politick Fasts they are set for orders sake and not to binde the Conscience Fasting was once Ceremonial when the Lord commanded by Moses that every Soul once in the year should humble it self in Fasting before the Lord in one of the great Assemblies of his people Levit. 16.29 c. 23.27 c. And though the Ceremony of the day be taken away by the coming of Christ Gal. 4. yet the thing it self continueth and remaineth in force The circumstances of Moral Duties may be changed but the substance may not be abrogated for where the same causes continue there the thing it self abideth Therefore this holy Exercise is of as great and necessary use as ever it was and remaineth in as full force and strength as ever it did Joel 2.12 Luke 5.33 c. 1 Cor. 7.5 Acts 13.2 3. The seasons of Publike Fasts being the times of any general Affliction upon our selves or our Brethren whether of Sword Pestilence or Famine or any other just judgement whether threatned feared begun or executed For Private Fasts the same rule holds in private Afflictions neither is any time unseasonable when the Religious Soul sequesters it self for this Spiritual Physick of private Humiliation Holy Feasting is a time of Solemn Thanksgiving for Benefits received or Evils removed wherein the Creatures of God may be more liberally used then at any other time For this is a day of Rejoycing wherein it was once said to the people of God Eat the fat and drink the sweet Neh. 8.10 Wherein we must be very careful to preserve the fear of God within our hearts Exod. 18.12 Jobs fear was lest his sons should cast this fear of God out of their hearts in their Feasting and so offend God In every bit we eat and every drop we drink we must remember the caveat our Saviour gives Luke 21.24 Take heed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfetting and drunkenness yea in this time of Holy Feasting there is also enjoyned us a certain kinde of fear of man Prov. 23.1 2. When thou sittest to eat before a Ruler put thy Knife to thy throat that is Bridle thine Appetite have respect not to pass the limits of Sobriety Temperance and Moderation The lawfulness of these Feasts may be derived from the Primitive Church so as the poor be regarded superfluity and riot avoided and the right end intended which is the praise and glory of God expressed in Thankfulness for the abundance of his Blessings Thus after the Sacrifices and Offerings Aaron and the Elders of Israel came to Feast with Jethro before God Exod. 18.12 So Ezra the eight Go your ways eat the fat and drink the sweet and send part to them for whom none is provided for this is the day of the Lord. In the Primitive Church it was a Custom to have a Feast before the Lords Supper made by the Communicants unto which some brought Honey some Bread some Wine some Milk and every one according to their ability contributing something thereunto These were called Love Feasts because they were herein to testifie their mutual Love among themselves as also to the poor who hereby were relieved and to the Ministery it self which was by these Feasts partly sustained But in these Feasts there were many spots Jude v. 12. who were eye-sores and disgraces to these holy Feasts pampering and feeding themselves and riotously wasting the Goods of the Church in stead of taking care for the poor and the Ministery for whose this Contribution was made It were to be wished there were no such spots in our Feasts at this day that neither blemish them by Surfetting Drunkenness or Wantonness nor by excluding the poor from having an interest therein Three things required for the right observation of a Religious Fast viz. 1. That the Causes be just and weighty such as these viz. 1. When we our selves are faln into any grievous sin whereof our Conscience accuseth us and whereby we procure the wrath of God against us So did the Israelites 1 Sam. 7.6 2. When some among us fall into any grievous sin though we our selves be free from it because for the sins of others Gods judgements may justly fall upon us For this Paul blamed the Corinthians 1 Cor. 5.2 3. When the hand of God in any judgement lies upon us Thus did the Israelites Judg. 20.26 4. When the hand of God in any fearful judgement lies heavy on others among whom we live though we our selves be free So David 2 Sam. 12.16 Psal 35.13 5. When Gods judgements are imminent and as it were hang over our heads So did Jehosaphat 2 Chro. 20.2 3. 6. When we stand in need of some needful Blessing of God especially such as concerns Salvation Thus did Cornelius Acts 10.30 7. For Gods blessing and good success on the Ministery of the Gospel So did the Church for Paul and Barnabas when they sent them to Preach Acts 13.3 And so ought we to do at this day 2. That the right maner of Fasting be observed which stands in these particulars viz. 1. Abstinence from meat and drink and all maner of nourishment of the Body 2. Abstinence from all maner of sin whether in thought word or deed 3. Abstinence from sleep such as thereby the body may be the more humbled and afflicted with the want of food 2 Sam. 12.16 4. Abstinence from soft and rich apparel Exod. 33.4 6. Jon. 3.6 2 Sam. 12.20 5. Abstinence from Matrimonial benevolence 1 Cor. 7.5 Joel 2.16 6. From the ordinary Works of our Calling Levit. 16.29 31. 23.28 32. 7. Abstinence from all pleasant and delightsom things which may any way refresh Nature 2 Sam. 12.20 Dan. 10.3 8. Abstinence from all maner of Sports Pastimes and
and being exhorted will not hear being admonished will not obey being reproved will not repent As for them that are without the Lord will judge them the Church hath nothing to do with them 1 Cor. 5.12 13. For those that were never of the Church cannot be cast out of it being never of the number of the Faithful And here also know That one person may not be Excommunicated for another but onely the party offending Now if any man be truly ingrafted into Christ indued with Faith in Christ and Repentance from dead works being a Member of his Body in Deed and in Truth Excommunication shall hurt him nothing at all in regard of that Spiritual Union or Communion forasmuch as the Sentence so given is in that particular void and frustrate And though a man justly deserveth to be Excommunicated through his sin and to be separated from the Communion of Saints yet Excommunication is not the first and chief cause thereof but his own sin and the continuance in it seeing it doth not sever him from God but declareth him to be severed through his impenitency as the Priests under the Law putting out the Leprous did not defile them with the Leprosie but pronounced them to be defiled or like the sentence of the Law which is but declared onely by the Judge upon the Malefactor So it is impenitency obstinacy and perseverancy in sin that separates a sinner from the Church Excommunication is onely the Declarative sentence thereof Ecclesiastical Discipline is the Order in the Church instituted by God especially for these two ends viz. 1. That the Ministery of God may be preserved and that all things may be done in the Church decently and in order 2. That the Conversation of every one may be looked into that such as have given offences may be amended and according to the degrees prescribed by Christ The order which the Church doth use in the exercise of her power may be comprehended in these three Verses of the eighteenth Chapter of Matthew viz. 1. If thy Brother trespass go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone if he hear thee thou hast won thy Brother Matth. 18.15 2. If he hearken not unto thee let him be again privately admonished by thee taking one or two others with thee Mat. 18.16 3. If he will not vouchsafe to hear them tell it unto the Church if he refuse to hear the Church also let him be unto thee as a Heathen man and a Publican Matth. 18.17 In Excommunication there are three Judgements to be considered viz. 1. Of God when he doth hold any obstinate Sinner guilty of his offence and so guilty of condemnation 2. Of the Church after that God hath holden him guilty for the Church is onely to pronounce and to declare him so to be not absolutely but with condition of Repentance 3. Of God again whereby he ratifies that in Heaven which the Church hath done on earth The Power of Ecclesiastical Discipline is very necessary in several respects viz. 1. In respect of the Commandment of God 1 Cor. 5.5 2. In respect of Gods glory which would be much impeached if without difference the wicked and blasphemers go in the number of Gods children 3. Lest the Sacrament of the Lords Supper be prophaned by the wicked and that be given them in the Supper which is denied them in the Word 4. For the safety of the Church which shall be punished if she permit willingly the prophanation of Christs Ordinance 5. For avoiding offence in the Church that others be not corrupted 1 Cor. 5.6 6. For the safety of sinners that they being often admonished may return to Repentance and be received again into the Church 7. For avoiding of offence among those that are without and that the Name of God may not be blasphemed nor evil spoken of nor they who are not as yet Members of the Church kept from coming into it nor the Covenant of God despised nor reproached 8. That from the sinners themselves punishments may be averted because the wicked approaching to the Lords Table eat their own damnation The difference between Church-Discipline and State-Government viz. 1. The power committed unto the Church dependeth on Gods Word the Civil power is armed with the Sword 2. In the Church Judgement proceedeth according to Gods Laws in the Civil State according to Civil Laws 3. The Church punisheth the obstinate with the Word of God yet so as it pierceth unto their Consciences The Civil State punisheth the obstinate onely with corporal punishments 4. Oftentimes the Discipline of the Church hath place where there is none for Civil Judgement and the Civil Government oftentimes hath place where there is none for Church Discipline 5. The Judgement of the Church hath degrees of Admonition before it comes to punish but the Civil Judgement proceedeth to punishment without it 6. The Church does often reverse and retract her Judgement and Punishment if there come Repentance but it is otherwise with the Civil Magistrate Touching Excommunication observe these four things from Matth. 7.6 viz. 1. The Foundation thereof it is an Ordinance of God for all obstinate enemies of God by Christs Commandment must be kept from holy things A man living in the Church may be worse in practice then an open enemy and such an one was Ishmael who for mocking Isaac the Son of the Promise was cast out of Abrahams Family that is out of the Church of God Gen. 21.10 11. For Abrahams Family at that time was Gods visible Church 2. The End thereof which is to preserve the holy things of God from pollution contempt and prophanation even the Word Prayer and Sacraments which wilful Enemies would trample upon as Swine upon Pearls And herein we may see the abuse of this Ordinance when it is made for Politique and Civil Respects 3. Who must execute this Censure of the Church namely they to whom the disposing and keeping of the holy things of God is committed that is The lawful Ministers of the Word and Sacraments but without the Exercise of this Censure which God hath given unto the Church they cannot keep those holy things pure which God hath committed unto them 4. How far this Censure of the Church reacheth and extendeth against obstinate and wilful Enemies namely to the debarring of them from the use of the Saints Communion in Prayer and Sacraments Indeed if the party be excommunicated for some particular Crime and there be hope of his Repentance because he doth not maliciously persist by wilful obstinacy in his sin and contempt of the Church then although he be excluded from Communion with them in the Sacraments and Prayer yet he may be admitted to the hearing of the Word because that is a means to humble him for his sin and to bring him to Repentance which is the end of all Ecclesiastical Censures The Censures of the Church are of three sorts all of them having their proper time and place and use and
object according to the nature of the offence and party offending 1. Admonition or Exhortation to amendment which also is joyned with reprehension and denunciation of Gods judgements against the party not repenting but persisting in his evil way Gen. 3.11 4.6 7. 2. Suspension whereby the offenders for a time are barred from the Lords Supper This is not a Separation from all holy things but some onely till clearer evidence produce either farther punishment or absolution 2 Thes 3.14 15. 3. Excommunication which is a Separation from all holy things and the Priviledges of the Church and the Communion of Saints because to their sin they adde this obstinate contempt of the Admonitions given unto them Gen. 17.14 Ezra 10.8 Matth. 18.17 There is a twofold Communication or Communion from which an excommunicate person may be said to be excluded viz. 1. Inward and Spiritual which every Faithful one hath by Faith and Love first with God and then with the Saints of God 1 Joh. 1.3 7. From this Fellowship can none be excluded but by sin which is it alone can separate any man from the Grace of God and from Communion with him The Church Excommunication can bar and shut out no man from this Communion 2. Outward and Corporal which standeth in a common partaking together in the Word in Prayers and in the receiving of the Sacraments and in familiarity and friendship one with another from all which Excommunication separateth The Bands or Duties which no Excommunication doth dispence withal viz. 1. Natural if any Excommunicate person be in want or any distress we must minister unto him such things as are necessary for his preservation 2. Domestical as the duties of Wives Children and Servants may not be shaken off under any colour or pretence of Excommunication Provided that they cease not to pray for them to admonish them to hate their sins and see they defend them not in their wicked courses or joyn with them in opinion 3. Civil or Politique it is lawful to buy of him or to sell unto him yet we ought not to converse and commerce with him as with a Friend The Duties which are to be performed to Excommunicate persons viz. 1. We must love the Persons of the Excommunicate in the Lord and thirst after their souls health and for their conversion 2. We must exhort and rebuke them so that albeit we love them we must take heed that we do not flatter them and so harden them in their sins 3. We are bound to pray for those that are bound by the Church Censures we are not to pray with them but it is required of us to pray for them 4. We are to assure them that upon their Repentance we are ready to embrace them and to receive them as Brethren forasmuch as there is joy in Heaven for one sinner that is converted from the error of his ways The fearful estate and condition of Excommunicated persons viz. 1. Their Names whilest they persist in their obstinate Impenitency are cancelled out of the number of the people of God Gen. 1.7 2. The Sentence that is pronounced on Earth is ratified in Heaven Matth. 18.18 c. for Christ is the Author of it 1 Cor. 5.4 3. They are barred from the Word and Sacraments and from Prayers with the Congregation the Word prevailed not to do them good the Sacraments would do them hurt 4. They are infamous for they are to be called and accounted as the Heathens and Publicans Matth. 18.17 5. Such as thus contemn the Admonition and Reprehension of the Church lose the Communion of Saints and become the bondslaves of Satan 1 Cor. 5.3 4 5. 6. Being cast out of the Church they are banished out of all Churches the Churches of God have all cast them out whom one hath cast out And if we be not of the Church of God we are of the Synagogue of Satan 7. The sundry Decrees and Constitutions established by Humane Laws do much aggravate and set forth the hideous condition of such as are worthily cast out of the Church The ends of Excommunication are these viz. 1. The good of the person Excommunicated that if it be possible he may be won 2. The Salvation or preservation of the whole Church 1 Cor. 5.13 lest others be infected 3. That the rest may fear and be kept within the bounds of their duty 1 Tim. 5.20 4. That those Punishments which hang over the Church for sin may be kept off and avoided Josh 7.11 Numb 25.7 5. The Glory of God and if this be before their eyes that are Governors of the Church it will keep them from declining either to the right hand or the left from winking at the sins of great ones and censuring the faults and infirmities of those of low degree too sharply from winking at great beams in some and from having Eagles eyes to pry into the motes of others The use of Excommunication ought to be perpetual and universal in the Church because the causes of this power of the Church are perpetual and universal As 1. The Commandment of Christ Matth. 18.18 1 Cor. 5.5 2. That obstinate Sinners being made ashamed may be brought to Repentance 3. That no others should be infected by their evil life and corrupt example 4. Because it is the ordinary Office of the Church to judge them that are within 1 Cor. 5.12 Obstinate Sinners are to be cast out of the Church which ought not to Tolerate open Offenders for these Reasons viz. 1. Because it is a comely thing for the Saints of God to purge themselves of them that as they differ from Heathen men so they may differ from Heathen Meetings for They are a holy people Deut. 2.14 2. Because for the neglect of this Duty the Wrath of God falleth upon the Sons of men Col. 3.6 3. Because it is a cause of great Mercy and wonderful Blessing from God when such as transgress are resisted and punished Joh. 7.13 8.1 2. 4. Because it would be reproachful to God and his Son Jesus Christ if they who lead wicked and wretched lives should be admitted freely to his Table as if his people were a company or conspiracy of prophane persons whereas the Church is the Body of Christ Col. 1.24 5. By continual company of the wicked the godly are corrupted 1 Cor. 5.6 7. it is better that one Member be cut off then that the whole Body of the Church should perish 6. They are to be cut off to the end that such as are wicked livers may begin to be ashamed of themselves and their wickedness who by winking at their sin would grow the more obstinate but by this chastisement may be reclaimed and preserved 1 Cor. 5.5 We must have no company with scandalons livers that they may be ashamed 2 Thess 3.14 Excommunication described by its several parts viz. 1. It is a Sentence of the Church Mat. 18.17 2. It must be executed upon him that is a Member of the Church 1
Love Self-love twofold 213 c. Lying twofold 301 c. the Common Distinction of Lyes 302 a. the kindes and degrees of Lyes ibid. 303. Rules against Lying 302 a. Vertues opposed to it 304. M MAgistrates their Duty 268 c. 269 a b. Marriage-Duties 269 c. 270 a. Rules to maintain Concord betwixt Man and Wife ibid. c. Mass the vast difference thereof from the Lords Supper 57 c. 58 a. Meats to be Consecrated before the use thereof 373 c. 374 a. Mediator his Office 130 c. his Necessity of being true God and true Man 131 a b. The benefits of a Mediator ibid. c. Merit or Works Meritorious a meer Chymera no such thing in Rerum natura 359 a. Ministers their Duty and Properties 26 c. 31 a b. 32 a. Qualifications requisite for that Calling 30 a. 31 a. Why to be proved before Admission 30 c. The Titles given them in Scripture 30 c. the peoples Duty toward their Ministers 32 b. Ministery why instituted by God 28 b. the way to promote it 29 a. why it ought not to be despised ibid. b. The Reason of the Comparison betwixt it and Salt ibid. c. Moses how said to write of Christ 130 a. Mother of Christ why espoused to a man 134 a. Murmuring why unlawful 294 b c. Murther the kindes and degrees thereof 273 to 283. the heinousness of the sin 278. the way to avoid it ibid. c. Murther against the Soul how committed 279 a. N NAme of God what it signifies 83 b. 243 b. how said to be taken in vain 241. what that signifies 243 b. the several ways of taking Gods Name in vain 244. how it is sanctified 246. Names in Baptism to be chosen by Parents 44 b. Directions for the right choyce thereof ibid. Nativity of Christ 133 b. why born of the Virgins substance ibid. c. Nature Christs Divine Nature proved by Scripture 134 b. what the word Nature Vignifies in the Trinity 1. O OAthes the nature of an Oath 246. Oathes extorted how far binding 241 c. What is required in a lawful Oath 246 a. 247 c. 248 249. What 's to be thought on before we take an Oath ibid. c. In every lawful Oath a twofold Bond 250 a. Christians may lawfully take an Oath ibid. Why Oathes may not be used but in case of Necessity 251 a. In what cases Oathes do not binde ibid. Obedience what 367 a. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 268. The parts thereof ibid. Rules whereby to order our Obedience 367 c. 368 b. the Tryals thereof 51 c. Angelcal Obedience 97 c. Perfect Obedience possible to all men before the Fall 15 b. now not possible to the REgenerate ibid. c. Obedience to the Ministery 28 c. and the Reasons thereof 36 a. Obstinacy in sin the sinfulness of that sin 353 c. Opinion how it differs from Faith 186b P PArents their Duty 267 a. Passion of Christ 136 b c. wherein the Meditation thereon consists 137 b. Patience what 174. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 202. Signs and Properties thereof 197 a. Perfect when ibid. b c. Encouragements for and Motives to Patience 201 202. impediments thereto ibid. Perfection the several kindes thereof 20 a. 94 c. Perjury the several kindes thereof 252 b c. Persons in the Trinity proved 4 c. 5 a. what they therein signifie 1 to 4. why so called 5 a. wherein they agree 5 b. their order of working 5 c. Policy Caveats touching it 194 b. Pontius Pilate what he was 135 a. Popery why not to be tolerated 234 b. Power of God twofold 123. Prayer what 60 b. twofold 62 b. the parts of Prayer ibid. c. the kindes thereof ibid. c. 63. the qualities of true Prayer ibid. c. how we ought to pray 60 c. how he must be qualified that prayeth ibid. 61 a. the gesture time and place of Prayer 61 a. 62 a. Who alone is to be prayed unto ibid. how to conceive aright of God in prayer 64 c. how the whole Trinity works in prayer ibid. the Helps of preparation to prayer 65 a. Impediments to be removed before prayer ibid. b. Duties required in the act of prayer ibid. c. why the Creature may not be prayed unto 66 c. how God answers prayer 67 b. why God answers not some prayers ibid. why God sometimes defers answer to our prayers ibid. c. wherein Reverence in prayer consists 68 a. the necessity of the Spirit in prayer ibid. how to pray with the Spirit ibid. b. Fervency in prayer the signs thereof 71 b. the common Abuses in our prayers ibid. c. Duties required after prayer ibid. who not to be prayed for 72 b whom we ought to pray for 79 a. Motives to publike prayer ibid. c. the Necessity of Family-prayer 73 a. of Secret prayer ibid. the difference betwixt Praying and Wishing ibid. c. the Papists Error touching prayer 75 a. Prayer the Lords Prayer the use thereof 75 b c. what is comprehended therein 76. Doctrine thereof 75 to 117. Preaching what 25 c. who may preach ibid. how Humane Learning may therein be used without abuse 26 a. The order to be observed in Preaching 26 b. the whole Exercise thereof wherein it consists 27 a. Boldness in preaching how manifested 27 c. Presence of God with us 159 b. Presumption Remedies against it 111 c. Pride what 226 c. the properties of a proud man 228 a. the several kindes of Pride ibid. b. Remedies against it 110 c. Spritual Pride to be abhorred 229. Engines to pull it down ibid. b. the way to avoid inward Pride 228 c. Priests what they were under the Law 21 c. how they differed from Prophets ibid. Priest and Priesthood twofold under the Law 22 a. what things peculiar to the High Priest ibid. Promises the right way to apply them 193. Prosperity the effects thereof 200 b. Providence of God in preservation of the Scripture most admirable 6 b. Punishment for sin the degrees thereof 354 b. R REconciliation what 130 b. Recreations Rules touching the same 374 c. 375 a. Redemption what 319 c. fourfold 320 b. Doctrine thereof 319 to 322. how Christ Redeems us ibid. c. Regeneration what 334 c. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 337. how wrought 335 c. 336 b c. how it differs from Creation ibid. c. the degrees thereof 337 b. Signs thereof ibid. c. Regulation Rules thereof for all Actions 295 c. Religion what is the deepest Mystery thereof 1 a. the Pillar of Church and State 25 c. wherein the true Religion differs from all others 154 a. Repentance what 363 a. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 367. the nature kindes exercise properties effects tryals and signs of sound Repentance 364 365 51. Repentance not to be deferred 365 b. Motives to Repentance 366 b. and means to attain it ibid. c. Repetition of Sermon very requisite 28 a. Vain Repetitions what 70 c. Resurrection what 163. Doctrine of it ibid. to 166. proved 164 b. 165 b. the Duties of such as believe it ibid. c. the Types thereof 165 c. Resurrection of Christ what 139 c. how it was wrought 140 b. why
of those sins which go before 2. In the immoveable and perpetual Order of Gods Judgement an Evil Conscience 3. Temporal and Spiritual Evils as Temporal Death and indeed all the Calamities of this life 4. Eternal Death which is the Effect of all sins as they are sins Two Helps to withstand Sin 1. Labor for Spiritual Wisdom to be able to discern the Policy of Satan 2. Labor for Spiritual Strength to withstand all his Provocations Three degrees of curing the Disease of Sin in us 1. To know our Sickness the dangerous Malady of Sin 2. To know the Remedy for it which is Christ 3. To apply the Remedy as we ought by Faith Of the contagious Infection of Sin we are to make this wholesom Use as an Antidote against it viz. 1. We must labor to come to the knowledge of our sins and to be touched with a feeling of them for till then we can never pray for Mercy as we ought from the great Soul-Physitian 2. We are put in minde to confess our sins and uncleanness that so we may be washed by him that purgeth us for If we acknowledge our sins he is merciful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.9 3. We must know by what means God useth to sanctifie us it is by the Blood of his own Son for the Blood of Christ purgeth us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 Heb. 9.14 4. We must seek Mercy while it is offered unto us when our hearts are terrified for sin Let us have recourse to the Fountain of his Blood which can never be drawn dry Isaiah 55.6 7. Psal 51.1 2. 5. We must buy of Christ White Garments to clothe us and to cover our deformity Rev. 3.18 that the filthiness of our nakedness may not appear 6. We must forsake our sins and walk in the statutes of God Isa 1.16 17. Ezek. 20.18 19. if we bring not forth the fruit of obedience we wallow in our mire 7. If God hath given us Grace to stand we must pray him to give us also Grace to continue and persevere unto the end 8. We must walk circumspectly and forsake the Company of the Wicked and society with them 2 Cor. 6.16 Avoid all occasions and inducements to sin to abstain even from the appearances of evil Again to be preserv'd from Sin use these Remedies viz. 1. With thy Eyes ever behold God present and ever have his fear before thee 2. With thy Ears ever hear that terrible voyce sounding Arise ye Dead and come to Judgement 3. With thy Hands be ever exercising that which is good 4. In thy Heart ever hide the Word of God and meditate continually thereon 5. With thy Tongue and Lips ever bring some honor to God and Edification to the hearer in all that proceedeth from them knowing God hears even our Thoughts 6. With thy Feet stand in the Courts of Gods House but offer not the Sacrifice of Fools 7. With thy whole Man render thy self serviceable to thy Creator and see thou keep thy Body holy as becometh the Temple of the Holy Ghost For forsaking of Sin observe these Rules viz. 1. It must not be for a short time for a fit or a season but for ever renouncing all Right Title Interest and Propriety therein 2. We must alienate our selves for ever not onely from some but all our sins the most pleasant the most dear the most profitable sins 3. It must be a forsaking in deed and not an exchanging of one sin for another Means sanctified of God to keep us from Sin viz. 1. The Ministery of the Word Thus he sent Jonah to the Ninevites Jon. 3.4 Nathan to David 2 Sam. 12.1 And the Prophets to the Israelites continually 2 Chro. 36.14 15. Acts 2.37 38. 2. The Benefits and Blessings of God many and great daily and continual This should be an Argument prevalent to disswade us from sin and invite us to serve the Living God Prov. 10.12 3. He hath bestowed upon us his own Son the greatest Blessing in Heaven or Earth for a greater cannot be promised of God or comprehended of Man Rom. 8.31 John 3.16 If the serious Consideration of this will not move us to repent of sin nothing in the World will 4. The Corrections and Chastisements which are laid upon us Psal 89.31 32. Job 33.16 Yea upon others also which should be as so many warning pieces to call us to Repentance Isai 26.9 5. Private Admonitions and Exhortations yea Reproofs and Threatnings of Judgement when the former will not serve Levit. 19.17 Prov. 9.8 6. The inward Motions and Inspirations of the Holy Spirit which he stirreth up in our Hearts 2 Sam. 24.10 Psal 16.7 Let us make much of them lest he withdraw them and give us over to our selves The Use of the Doctrine of Sin viz. 1. That seeing sin is so great an Evil we praise the Justice of God who so severely punisheth it and not think to extenuate it but endeavor to avoid the least 2. That acknowledging the remnant of sin in us we despair not but flie to the Mediator 3. That we may discern our selves from those in whom sin reigneth and that sin against the Holy Ghost 4. That we lay not the cause and fault of our sins on God when it is and ever was in our selves 5. That seeing there are degrees of sins and punishments we take heed of adding sin to sin 6. Let us return perpetual praise to God and his Son our Lord Jesus Christ who from sin and the fearful punishment thereof hath ransomed all penitent Believers by his Spirit converting them from Sin to Good Works which follow XII A Good Work is a Duty commanded of God performed by a Regenerate person and done in Faith aiming therein at the Glory of God and the good of Men I mean not the Popish meritorious Works but such as are the Fruits and Effects of a Living and Effectual Faith so called not that they are without imperfection even the best of them but because from the true Believer God is pleased to accept of them as good yet he accepts them not seem they never so good no farther then he findes Faith in them and yet accepts he the gift be it never so small for the givers sake if he believe in him Thus Works of Justice Temperance and the like cannot be called Godliness or good Works except they rise from Faith because indeed it is not done to God for further then a man doth a thing out of Faith he doth it not to God For to do a thing out of Faith is nothing else but when out of perswasion of Gods love to me I do this thing meerly for his sake whom I have chosen to whom I give my self one that I know loves me and therefore though there were no reward for it I would serve him This is a Work of Faith insomuch as that Almsdeeds Martyrdom or the like may not be called Good Works if they
respect sake which we owe our Bodies 1 Cor. 12.23 24. Special Rules for Direction in the right adorning of the Body viz. 1. Every one must be content with their own natural Favor and Complexion that God hath given them 2. We must place the principal Ornament of our Souls and Bodies in Vertue and good Works and not in any outward thing 3. In the use of Ornaments we must be very sparing and keep our selves within the mean 4. Ornaments must be used not always alike but according to occasions as in this time of Holy Feasting we may use them more freely then at other times 5. We must adorn our Bodies to a right end viz. That thereby we may honor them and in them honor God The right and spiritual use of Apparrelling our selves viz. 1. To consider our Cloaths are but as the Plaister of our shame and thereby to humble our selves 2. When we clothe our selves to remember to gird up our loyns to prepare our selves for Christ whether by Death or by Judgement 3. By putting on of our Garments we must be admonished to put on Christ Rom. 13.14 4. By putting off of our Cloaths we are admonished to put off the old Man the Body of Corruption Sick Soul hast surfetted with Sin No doubt Thy safest Physick is to Fast it out Or is Gods hand his just Revenging hand Threatned inflicted on thee or the Land Or doest thou want some Blessing Go thy way Prepare thy self to Mourn to Fast and Pray But if God stops a Plague or sheaths his Sword Thou may'st be glad Rejoyce but in the Lord And let thy Holy Feasting never be Without Thanksgiving Fear and Charity CHAP. VIII Of Ecclesiastical Discipline ECclesiastical Discipline is that other Key of the Kingdom of Heaven which is joyned with that of the Preaching of the Gospel and doth open or shut when according to the Commandment of Christ they who in Name are Christians but in their Doctrine or Life shew themselves aliens from Christ Rom. 12.7 c. After they having sometime been admonished will not depart from their Errors and Wickedness are made known unto the Church or to them that are appointed for that matter and purpose of the Church and if neither then they obey the Admonition are of the same men by interdiction from the Sacraments shut out from the Congregation of the Church and by God himself out of the Kingdom of Heaven And again if they profess and indeed declare amendment of life are received as Members of Christ and his Church Matth. 18.17 c. 1 Cor. 5.2 c. 2 Thes 3.14 15. This Ecclesiastical Discipline is to be ministred by the Pastors of the Church whereunto are adjoyned certain Elders for this end as Necessities shall require chosen of the Church For Excommunication is an Action of the Church performed in the Name of Christ whereby a grievous Transgressor or an open ungodly and obstinate Sinner is banished from the Fellowship of the Faithful by the judgement of the Elders by the consent of the Church by the Authority of Christ and by the Holy Scriptures They who are to be Excommunicated are chiefly such as deny some Article of the Faith or shew that they will not repent nor submit themselves to the Will of God according to his Commandments neither make any scruple of persisting stubbornly in manifest Wickedness The chief and principal part in Excommunication is Denunciation whereby is denounced That he that denyeth Faith and Repentance is no Member of the Church as long as he continueth such And this Denunciation whereby one is Excommunicated is not in the Power of the Minister of the Church but in the Power of the Church and is done in the name of the Church because this Commandment was given by Christ unto the Church and not for the destruction of the Sinner which is to be Excommunicated but for his Edification or Salvation 1 Cor. 5.5 Some draw the Original of this Church Censure even from Adam whom the Lord cast out of Eden and by an Angel kept him from re-entring and suffered him not to touch or taste of that Tree which was a Sacrament of Life unto him So some observe touching Cain whom the Lord cast out and banished from his face and indeed the Face of God may be called The place of his solemn Worship where he more specially appears In the time of the Law were many Ceremonies to this purpose the unclean were kept from coming to the Tabernacle from entring into the Temple from the partaking of the Sacrifices and from eating the Passover Num. 19.13 20. 9.13 And Abraham is commanded to cast out the Bond-woman and her son out of his Family which was the Church Gen. 21.10 11. So in the New Testament Matth. 16.19 18.18 The use of the Keys to open and shut and the words of binding and loosing come directly to this purpose This was executed on Hymeneus and Alexander 1 Tim. 1.19 20. From all which it is very clear That Excommunication is a sentence of the Church whereby a Member thereof convicted of some grievous Crime and by no means brought to Repentance is driven out of the Church and cut off from the Communion and Fellowship of the Faithful that thereby he may be driven to Repentance The Church is the City of God Excommunication is the Sword That the School of Christ this is the Rod That the Temple of God this is as it were the Whip to scourge out such as abuse it and themselves That the Body of Christ this is as a Medicine to cure the sick Members thereof That the Vine and Sheepfold this serveth to keep the Foxes and Wolves from it The Mark whereat Excommunication aimeth and the end whereto it tendeth is That the Sinners being ashamed may be brought to Repentance and that such as live in the Church might not be corrupted for the cause of the Institution of Excommunication is not so much the punishment of Sin as the Salvation of a Sinner the edifying of the Church and the glory of God For the Church according to the Doctrine of Christ smiteth none with the Spiritual Sword but such as are impenitent and doth not this unto death but unto life and therefore receiveth them that repent The Censure of Excommunication must be used as an Ordinance of God not as an Invention of Man not onely knowing the nature and use of it but practising it to the glory of God and to the good of others Not like the Church of Rome that playes fast and loose with the souls of men for gain nor like their Apes of Modern Times little regarding whether the Excommunicate repented or not but more advising them to pay their Fees and discharge the Court then to repent of their Offences The persons that are liable to this Censure of the Church are onely such as have confessed Christ and called upon God the Father together with us albeit they have denied him in their deeds