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

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say by Adam his eating of the forbidding fruit all men and women became sinners and not only by imputation but by propagation their natures wholly corrupted and depraved and ver 19 By the disobedience of one to wit Adam many that is to say all men and women descending of him were made sinners And 1 Cor. 15.22 In Adam all died but first finned because sinners by his fall Now for the opening of this Point we propound these questions 1. What Adams condition was before this Fall 2. The cause of his Fall 3. The fall it self 4. How his whole Posterity became wholly corrupted with sin by his fall Qu. 1. What Adams condition was before his fall Ans We are to know that Adam was created 1 Holy 2. Happy 1. Holy He did not only know God and his will perfectly as far as such a creature was capable but likewise there was in every faculty of his soul and member of his body a holy disposition a holy conformity unto God and his will And so we are to understand these places Gen. 1.26 27. And God said Let us make man in our image after our likeness So God created man in his own likeness or image in the image of God created he him And Colos 3.10 And have put on the new man which is renewed in knowledg after the image of him that created him And so Ephes 4.24 And that you put on the new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness 2. Happy The Lord did create him happy as first Being placed in the Garden of Eden Gen. 2.8 A place of singular delight and pleasure and therefore called Paradise Our Saviour alluding to heaven by it Luke 23.43 saith he to the Thief upon the Cross To day shalt thou be with me in Paradise 2. In state of Innocency he had a blessed communion and fellowship with God Gen. 2.19 And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field and every foul of the air and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them This intimates that Adam before his fall had sweet converse and communion with God 3. A kind of happiness was put upon Adams body it being created beautiful and glorious Gen. 2.25 And they were both naked the man and his wife that is to say Adam and Eve and were not ashamed Not that any uncomly thing is spoken of them but in this passage the Spirit of God would set forth the beauty and comliness of their bodies every part and member being so beautiful as they had no cause to be ashamed It was sin that brought in deformity and shame 4. Although Adam had a peculiar Calling to walk in the Garden to dress and keep Gen. 2.15 yet he was able to execute it without any pain or weariness as is evident Gen. 3.19 In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread till thou return to the ground that is with pain and weariness but intimating that before his fall it was not so Lastly He was made Lord and King over all the visible Creatures Gen. 1.28 saith the Lord to Adam Have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the foul of the air and over every living thing that moveth on the earth Thus we see what Adams condition was before his fall we come to the second Question Quest 2. What were the causes of Adams fall Answ 1. Adam himself was the principal cause of his own fall and that by the abuse of his own free will he was made mutably changeably good as we may perceive by the tenor of Gods Commandment in which he forbids him to eat of the tree of knowledg of good and evil Gen. 2.17 Of the tree of knowledge of good and evil thou shalt not eat of it for in the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely dye intimating his free will to eat or not eat of it he might have stood if he would or he might fall if he would It is true the Lord did not give him the gift of perseverance did not corroborate and confirm him with new grace neither was the Lord bound unto it Thus we see that Adams abuse of his own free will was the principal cause of his fall 2. The Divel and Eve were furthering causes of Adams fall First I say the Divel was a furthering cause of Adams fall and that by counselling and perswading He did not compel or enforce the will of Eve or of Adam for that he could not do but not long before having falne himself in hatred to God and envy to mankind he wondrous cunningly and craftily sets upon this mischief as is evident in the story Gen. 3.1 c. As first take we notice of the Instrument he makes choice of whereby to bring about this wicked Design he speaking in and by a Serpent and see we how the Spirit of God describes this Creature Gen. 3.1 Now the Serpent was more subtil then any beast of the field which the Lord God had made 2. That he begins with the woman the weaker Vessel And he said unto the woman that is to say the Divel by the Serpent Ye shall not surely dye 3. Observe how he begins by way of question as though he had been somewhat ignorant of the proceedings betwixt the Lord and our first Parents Yea hath God said Yee shall not eat of every tree of the garden and mark the ambiguity and subtilty of the question Yea hath God said Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden Eve might understand this Question two wayes 1. As though the Serpent had asked her whether she and Adam might eat of none of the trees of the Garden or secondly Whether they might not eat of every one implying thus much that if they might not eat of every one the Lord dealt hardly and strictly with them and not liberally But Eve understands the latter way as appears in her answer ver 2 3. And the woman said unto the Serpent we may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden but of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden God hath said Ye shall not eat of it neither shall ye touch it lest ye dye But in this her answer gives the Divel great advantage for the threatning being certain and absolute she makes a peradventure of it Lest ye dye Now observe how the Divel snatcheth at this ver 4. And the Serpent said unto the Woman Ye shall not surely dye As if he should say then it is not certain you shall dye if you do eat of it it may be ye shall die it may be you shall not And now not giving her the least breathing-time or respite he comes upon her very impudently ver 5 For God doth know that in the day ye do eat thereof then your eyes shall be opened that is ye shall see that ye never saw And thus he accuseth God of envying and hindering their good
the seventh and last Member thereof MEMBER VII Accomplished all things needful for the salvation of Mankind ANd this take likewise in the form of a Doctrine and let the whole Principle be it Doct. Jesus Christ the eternal Son of God being made man by his death upon the Cross and by his righteousness that is to say by his obedience passive and active hath perfectly alone by himself accomplished all things needful for the salvation of mankind This Principle as you know consists of seven Members six of which we have already handled particularly and so the last onely remains to be spoken of Now for the opening of it take onely two questions 1. Whether mankind hath no benefit by Christs Exaltation because the Catechisme ascribes all to his Humiliation his obedience passive and active 2. How we must in this passage understand mankind Quest 1. The first question is Whether man kind hath no benefit by Christs Exaltation because the Catechisme ascribes all to his humiliation his obedience passive and active An. Although Christs exaltation be no part of his satisfaction he by his obedience passive and active having fully satisfied his Fathers justice in the behalf of mankind why yet mankind hath great benefit by his exaltation and the severall degrees of it as his resurrection ascension and his sitting at his fathers right hand his exaltation being an essentiall part of his mediation Quest 2. How we must in this passage understand mankind Answ Although Christs satisfaction be onely effectuall to the Elect according to these places of Scripture Matth. 1.21 Thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his poople from their sins and John 10.15 I lay down my life for the sheep And so Ephes 5.23 He being called the Saviour of the body his body to wit the Elect why yet it cannot be denied but that his satisfaction was sufficient for all mankind for the Whole posterity of Adam according to these places following John 1.29 Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sinne of the world and John 6.51 I am the living bread which came down from heaven if any man eat of this bread he shall live for ever And the bread that I will give is my flesh which I will give for the life of the world And so 1 John 4.14 We have seen and doe testifie that the Eather sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world and 1 Tim. 2.6 Who gave himselfe a ransome for all Hence it is that Christ is to be offered to all unto whom the Gospel comes As Mark 16.15 And he said unto them to wit Christ unto his Apostles goe ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature that is make a tender of Christ to every creature every reasonable creature not only Jewes but Gentiles and hence it is that the Gospel commands every man and woman to repent and beleeve in Christ as Mark 1.15 Repent ye and beleeve the Gospel that is as though our Saviour should say beleeve that you shall be saved by my merits and hence is also the universall promise of salvation made to every one that shall beleeve in Christ as John 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Sonne that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And the truth of it is there is no defect in the remedie but in regard of the merit of Christ every man and woman becomes saveable and yet we must not think that every particular man and woman shall be saved for this is directly contrary to many places of Scripture As do but see Matth. 25.46 our Saviour having laid forth what should be the manner of his proceeding at the last day These saith he shall goe away into everlasting punishment but Matth. 7.13 14. Enter ye in at the strait gate saith Christ for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leadeth to destruction and many there be which goe in thereat because strait is the gate and narrow is the way which leadeth unto life and few there be that find it Nay not every one that liveth in the visible Church shall be saved Matth. 20.16 Many be called to wit outwardly by the word but few chosen that is to say called effectually and so their elections manifested but Matth. 7.22 23. Many will say to me in that day to wit the day of judgment Lord Lord have not we prophesied in thy name and in thy name have cast out divels and in thy name have done many wonderful works And then I will professe unto them I never knew you depart from me ye that work iniquity And the truth of it is there is a world of people unto whom Christ never intended to apply his merits effectually as we may observe by that passage in his prayer John 17.9 I pray for them I pray not for the world to wit the world of the reprobate and Luke 2.34 And Simeon blessed them and said unto Mary his Mother Behold this child is set for the fall and rising again of many in Israel observe the phrase Is set that is to say appointed of God by an unchangeable decree as to be the rising of some so to be the fall of others and so 1 Pet. 2.8 And a stone of stumbling speaking of Christ and a rock of offence though not a cause yet an occasion of their utter ruine and perdition And as we must not think that every particular man and woman shall be saved so likewise we must not think that every particular man and woman may be saved if they will And amongst other reasons this is one justifying faith is not in mans power it being a supernaturall gift and without it no man can have any saving benefit by Christ now that justifying faith is not in mans power see John 6.44 No man can come to me saith our Saviour except the Father which hath sent me draw him No man can come to me that is no man can beleeve in me except it be given him of my Father And further because we say that Christs satisfaction was sufficient for all mankind yet only effectual to the Elect we must not think any part of it to be superfluous because the merit of Christs satisfaction is not to be applyed by parts but the whole merit is to be applyed to each particular person that shall be saved We proceed to the Uses Vse 1 For Trial and Examination whether we be of that number that can assure our selves upon good grounds that Christ is our Saviour seeing his merits are only effectual unto some to wit the Elect. Signes this way First Have we been schooled by the Law Gal. 3.24 Hath the Law brought us to a sight and sense of our natural misery Til then we cannot hunger and thirst after Christ til then we are like to the Laodiceans who thought themselves rich and wanted nothing when indeed they were poor and miserable and wretched and
onely pretend our selves to have faith but make sure it be as a justifying so a sanctifying faith for so a justifying faith ever is To rise in soul we must make sure that is to say from the death of sin to the life of grace Rev. 20.6 Rom. 8.11 5. And lastly we should earnestly endeayour to live as the children of the Resurrection Luke 20.36 as those that believe a glorious Resurrection heavenly harmlesly and fruitfully 1. Heavenly Philippians 3.20 21. 2. Harmlesly Acts 24.16 17. 3. Fruitfully 1 Cor. 15.58 Thus we have done with the second Member of this Principle as we reckon Of the day of judgement THe second Common-place being finished we come now to the third which we lay forth in this Doctrine Doct. 3. Immediately after the general Resurrection shall be the last Judgement Or thus It is a most certain truth that there shall be a day of judgement The Scriptures are very clear and abundant in proof of this point Begin we with that antient testimony alledged in the Apostle Jude Jude 14.15 See Dan. 7.9 10 Eccl. 12. v. last Matth. 12.36 Acts 17.31 Rom. 14.10 2 Cor. 5.10 The Reasons of the Point Reas 1. Gods Decree Heb. 9.27 As the Lord hath appointed the former so the latter Reas 2. The particular judgements the Lord inflicts in this life upon persons and places as the burning of Sodom and Gomorrah the drowning of the old world the plaguing of Aegypt and the desolation of Jerusalem did not all these typifie the general judgement Luke 17.26 c. Reas 3. The consciences of men and women even the least inlightned and awakened tremble at this great truth and so prove it Acts 24.25 Reas 4. The justice and goodness of God The justice of God requires that it should go absolutely ill with the wicked the goodness of God requires that it should go absolutely well with the godly but neither of these come to pass in this life and therefore there must be a day of judgement that both these may be effected Reas 5. The fifth and last Reason This is the end of the general Resurrection to wit the general Judgement Men and women must be raised again that they may be judged But here we meet with an objection Object May some man say The whole world consists of Believers and Unbelievers But as touching Believers it is said John 5.24 that they shall not come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in judicium to judgement Answ The meaning is not to the judgement of condemnation and so indeed the last translation renders it Object And then as touching Unbelievers so remaining it is said of them John 3.18 that they are condemned already Answ It is true so they are 1. In Gods Decree 2. In Gods word 3. In their own consciences But yet the manifestation and finishing of this judgement is reserved unto the last day But for the opening of so weighty a Doctrine we intend to answer the questions following 1. How this judgement is distinguished from other judicial proceedings 2. When the day of judgement shall be 3. Who shall be the Judge 4. And lastly What shal be the manner of proceeding at that day Quest 1. The first question is How this judgement is distinguished from other judicial proceedings Answ This we may let you see in divers Epithets given to this judgement as 1. It is called the last judgement so the Catechisme entitles it And so it is for after it there shall be no other the sentence passed then can never be reverst there can be no appeal from that Judge and judgement 2. It is called the general judgement God judgeth men and women in this world and that both in life and death He judgeth them whilst they are living by correcting his people for their scapes and infirmities by punishing the wicked for their transgressions and rebellions He judgeth every man and woman at death But then shall be a general judgement of all 2 Cor. 5.10 3. It is called a manifest and open judgement And so it shall be for the proceedings then shall be in the eye and view of all the world 4. It is called a sudden judgement And so it shall be in regard of the wicked Even as the flood came upon the Old World when they were wantonizing and deriding that preacher of righteousness 5. And lastly It is called an eternal judgement Not that the Judge shall sit for ever sifting matters and debating causes but it is so called from the effect for the issue will be this The eternal weal and happiness of the godly and the eternal woe and misery of the wicked Quest 2. The second question When the day of judgement shall be Answ In likelihood it is not far off if we compare some Texts and our times as Luke 18.8 Matth. 24.37 c. 2 Tim. 3.1 c. The truth of it is were but Rome ruinated and the Jew called what should hinder that great day And in how little time can the Lord effect these two great works But touching the precise day see Mat. 24.36 But why doth the Lord conceal this day Answ 1. That he might hereby bridle our curiosity Acts 1.7 2. That the wicked might not defer their repentance Psalm 95.7 8. 3. That the godly might be occasioned to continual watchfulness Mark 13.33 c. Quest 3. The third question Who shall be the Judge Answ God All the Persons in the Godhead Father Son and Holy Ghost All the three Persons shall judge as touching their consent and Authority but the particular execution of this judgment is committed to the Son it is he that shall execute this vengeance and as he is the Son of man John 5.22 27. 2 Tim. 4.1 Acts 10.42 and 17.31 Object 1. But the Apostles shall judge the twelve Tribes of Israel Mat. 19.28 Answ It is true the Apostles shall judge the twelve tribes but how to wit by their Faith and Doctrine the example whereof wil take away all excuse from the Israelites 2. They shal be as Justices on the Bench and consent to Christs judgements Object 2. The Saints shal judge the world 1 Cor. 6.2 Answ It is true 1. As sitting with the Judge and approving of his sentence as the Apostles before 2. As they are Members of Christ the Judge and 3. As their example shall be alledged to condemn the wicked Quest 4. The 4th and last question What shal be the manner of proceeding at that day Answ That we may the better resolve this question we are to consider 1. The Preparation to this judgement 2. The judgement it self The Preparation is twofold 1. Of the Judge 2. Of them to be judged The Preparation of the Judge consists in four things 1. In the Commission he hath from his Father John 5.27 which then shal be manifested to all the world 2. In the cloathing of his Humane Nature with a wonderful Majesty and glory Matth. 25.31 Matth. 16.28 compared with Mat. 17.1 c. 3. In his
David saith Psal 19.1 The Heavens declare the glory of God and the Firmament sheweth his handy-work There is not the least Creature but thou mayest read God in it but especially be thou exercised in the book of the Scriptures in reading and hearing them they do the most plainly and evidently set forth God 3. If thou hast not a Justifying faith be earnest with the Lord for it because without this supernatural faith thou canst not believe this Principle savingly 4. Converse much with those that are godly They that converse with the worldly-minded shall observe them much to be ascribing the event of things to natural and second causes but the godly the event of things to God Then further The godly have an experimental knowledg of God and so speaking of God they many times speak emphatically and movingly much to the strengthning of the faith of others A Reverend Light in this age one Junius doth acknowledg that the first thing that turned him from his Atheism was his talking with a Countrey-man of his and his manner of expressing himself Vse 3. For Information 1. Is there a God why then the Scriptures are true because they declare that he is and what he is 2. Is there a God why then the soul is immortal for as the immortal soul is the image of God and so doth demonstrate a God so they that do most firmly believe there is a God do likewise firmly believe the immortality of the soul And upon that ground cast for it accordingly for the beautifying and well being of it 3. If there be a God why then there is a Heaven and a Hell a place of Bliss for the godly after this life and a place of Torment for the wicked otherwise God should not be just and then not God We read of a Pope that when he was on his death-bed said He should ere long be resolved of three things which all his life long he had doubted of 1. Whether there be a God or no 2. Whether the soul be immortal or no 3. Whether there be a heaven and a hell or no He being not satisfied of the first might well doubt of the two last And thus we have absolved the first Member of the first Principle MEMBER II. That there is but one God THat there is but one God the Scriptures are very evident this way Deuter. 6.4 Hear O Israel the Lord our God is one Lord. Deut. 32.39 See now that I even I am he and there is no God with me Psal 16.31 Who is God save the Lord save Jehovah And so Isai 44.6 I am the first and I am the last and besides me there is no God And Isai 45.5 I am the Lord and there is none else there is no God besides me Ephes 4.6 One God and Father of all And lastly 1 Corin. 8.4 5 6. We know that an Idol is nothing in the world that is nothing in nature subsisting or nothing in respect of the Divinity ascribed to it and that there is none other God but one that is to say properly and by nature For though there be that be called gods to wit improperly as there be Gods many and Lords many improperly so called But to us there is but one God that is to say the Church doth know and acknowledg but one God properly and by nature Magistrates are called gods because they are Gods Deputies or Vice-gerents upon earth as Psal 82.6 I have said yee are Gods Idols are called gods because some ignorant and fond people think them to be so Jer. 10.11 The Gods that have not made the heavens and the earth even they shall perish from the earth and from under these heavens Nay the Divel is called god The God of this world 2 Cor. 4.4 because of the willing subjection that the wicked yeild unto him not that any of these are gods by nature or properly but improperly Reas 1. There is but one only chief good and therefore but one God Reas 2. There is but one first cause of all things and therefore but one God Reas 3. To be more Infinites then one is impossible there is but one Infinite and therefore but one God R. 4. If there be more Gods then one why not three as well as two and why not five as wel as three and why not ten as well as five nay why not thirty thousand as it is observed by some of the Fathers the ancient Heathen had Vse 1. For Reprehension First to reprove the Papists Secondly the carnal Protestant 1. The Papists set up divers gods besides the true God As first The Pope They say he is to judg all but to be judged of none that he hath power to forgive sins and that properly that he hath power to make Lawes to bind consciences as well as Gods Lawes 2. The Virgin Mary they make her a goddess preferring her before Christ trusting in her for salvation and in their Prayers intreating her to command her Son by the might of a mother Nay 3. They make all the departed Saints gods by praying unto them as though they knew the secrets of mens hearts as though they were present every where which are things proper to God alone 2. Reproof to the carnal Protestant Such as principally affect the Creature or put their confidence in the Creature those set up to themselves more gods then one Some make worldly Riches their god and so the Covetous some carnal Pleasures and so the Voluptuous some earthly Honor and so the Ambitious some make this and that man their god and so trusting in him The truth is the most make the Divel theirgod by a willing subjection to his suggestions And thus the carnal Protestant although he seem to confess one God with his mouth why yet in affection and practiee he sets up more What a man loves most delights in most trusts in most that he makes his god whatsoever he professeth with his tongue but let those Idolaters know how the Apostle James stiles them Jam. 4.4 Ye Adulterers and Adulteresses that is to say Spiritual Adulterers and Adulteresses and how the Lord threatens by the generous and truly noble Prophet Isaiah 42.8 That he will not give his glory to another and therefore they giving that to the Creature which is due unto him let them be assured that he wil be revenged upon them Psal 16.4 Vse 2. For Inquisition or Inquiry Seeing there is a God and but one God it shall be very necessary to enquire concerning him to inform our selves what this one God is What God is strictly to enquire as a wise Logician saith he being primum ens is beyond Logick and therefore that we may define God perfectly we have need of Gods own Logick And the Reasons are 1. Because he is Incomprehensible 2. Because he is in great part unknown unto us while we are in the mortal body Whilst we are in this world as the Apostle tels us 1 Cor. 15.12 we see through a
day and so the woman Gen. 1.27.31 2. If you ask of what was man made Ans His body was of the dust of the earth the womans body of one of the mans ribs Gen. 2.7 and 2.22 both their souls of nothing inspired of God Gen. 2.7 In man we have an Epitome or compendium of all Creatures he being partly visible and partly invisible Visible in regard of his body Invisible in regard of his soul And touching the excellency of man as he was created this is implyed in that the Trinity hold a consultation about him Gen. 1.26 And God said Let us make man c. Now mans excellency as he was created did especially consist in three things 1. In that he was made according to Gods image Gen. 1.27 So God created man in his own Image in the Image of God created he him Now by the Image of God according unto which Adam was created we are to understand 1. His Immaterial Invisible and Immortal soul for so every man is the Image of God in regard of the substance of his soul Gen. 9.6 Whoso sheddeth mans bloud by man shall his blood be shed for in the Image of God made he man By the Image of God in this place we only understand the substance of the soul 2. Adam was created according to Gods Image in regard of Holiness and Righteousness he is said to be created according to Gods Image because he was created a holy and righteous Creature Ephes 4.24 And that ye put on that new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness The second thing wherein mans excellency did consist as he was created was in this That he had sweet communion and fellowship with God This may be gathered from Gen. 2.19 And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field and every foul of the aire and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them The third thing wherein mans excellency did consist as he was created was he was made Lord of all visible Creatures Gen. 1.26 And God said Let us make man in our own image after our likeness and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the foul of the aire and over the cattel and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth And so ver 28. God said to Adam and Eve Have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the foul of the aire and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth And thus far touching the work of Creation We come in the next place to the work of Preservation MEMBER IV. Preserver and Governor of all things Doct. THe one true God the Lord is the Preserver and Governor of all things For so we must understand the Catechism when it saith the Lord is Governor of all things the former to be implied to wit that he is the Preserver as wel as the Governor of all things And so we come from the work of Creation unto the work of Gods Providence which consists of these two parts Preservation and Gubernation or governing And what is Preservation but Creation continued or the upholding of all creatures in their kinds beings motions and operations And what is Gubernation but the moving ordering and directing of all the Creatures and their actions to their decreed ends Now that the Lord is the Preserver and Governor of all things the Scripture is very copious this way but we wil only produce three or four places Eph. 1.11 the Apostle describes the Lord to be such a one as worketh all things according to the counsel of his own wil and the Psalmist Ps 36.6 O Lord thou preservest man and beast Act. 17.28 In him we live move and have our being And do but see Nehem. 9.6 Thou preservest them all to wit all the Creatures and the Host of Heaven worshipeth thee that is to say is governed by thee is at thy command and appointment And further to argue the point in hand That the Lord doth preserve and uphold all the Creatures in their kinds beings motions and operations is evident and plain Arg. 1 Otherwise they would not continue but would return to their first nothing to that nothing of which they were at first made The Lord is called Jehovah not only because he gave being to every thing but likewise because he maintained it in every thing And that the Lord is Governor of all things to wit moveth directeth and disposeth of all the Creatures and their actions to their decreed ends this we demonstrate two wayes 1. By instancing particular Creatures 2. Particular Actions Arg. 2 As first The good Angels 1 Chr. 21.15 And God sent an Angel unto Jerusalem to destroy it and as he was destroying he said to the Angel that destroyed It is enough stay now thy hand And so Luke 1.26 And in the sixth month the Angel Gabriel was sent from God unto a City of Galilee named Nazareth 2. The evil angels The Divels are governed by God and act his command 1 King 22.22 The Lord saith unto the lying spirit go forth and in ver 23. Michajah saith to Ahab Behold the Lord hath put a lying spirit in the mouth of all these thy Prophets And so in Mark 9.26 And the spirit cryed and rent him sore and came out of him but in the verse next foregoing God-man layes a command upon this wicked spirit Thou dumb and deaf spirit I charge thee come out of him and enter no more into him 3. Men and Women the Lord governeth and disposeth of them as he pleaseth Prov. 21.1 The Kings heart is in the hand of the Lord as the rivers of water he turneth it whithersoever he will And so Prov. 29.26 Many seek the Rulers favor but every mans judgment cometh from the Lord. And if those superior creatures Job 12.17 to 22. be at Gods command and governed by him why then sure all the inferior creatures also Obj. But may some men say If the Lord so command and govern the reasonable Creatures is not the freedom of their wils by this altogether taken away An. No because the Lord doth not compel the reasonable Creatures to do this or that but only bends and inclines them The necessity of Gods will doth not overthrow the freedom of their wills This or that action if it be referred to Gods will may be said to be necessary if to their wills it may be said to be voluntary Arg. 3. The second way whereby we demonstrate that the Lord is the governor of all things is by instancing particular actions If the providence of God doth extend 1. Even to the least actions to actions of the smallest nature 2. To actions that are the most casual 3. To actions that are the most sinful why then the Lord is governor of all things But that the providence of God doth extend to actions of all these kinds the Scriptures do plainly demonstrate 1. That
thundring and powerful Ministry Vse 2. A call to repentance unto all such as are in the estate of nature as ignorant persons Swearers Cursers Profaners of the Sabbath Whoremasters Drunkards Oppressors Usurers Greedy Earth-worms Contemners of the Gospel Despisers of Gods Ministers who all proclaim themselves to be in the estate of nature O that such would consider the woful case they are in To be under the Curse as the unregenerate person is is no little misery To be subject to all outward calamities in this life nay to have many Spiritual plagues upon them as blindness of mind hardness of heart and many times terrors of conscience even the flashes of hell fire in their consciences and when by temporal death the soul goeth out of the body the wrath of God to press it down to the pit of hell and there to be in unspeakable nay unconceivable torment until the day of Judgment and then when the soul and body shall be again conjoined to appear and stand before 1. Such a Judge as cannot be deceived through ignorance 2. Such a Judge as cannot be forestalled by favour 3. Such a Judg as cannot be overswayed with power 4. Such a Judg as cannot be moved with pity for then the time of pity is past to such 5. Such a Judge as cannot be corrupted with gifts Lastly Such a Judg as cannot be overcome with Arguments and so the Sentence to be passed upon them Mat. 25.41 Go ye Cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Divel and his Angels And then to be for ever separated from Gods comfortable presence to be for ever restrained and enforced to the society of the Divel and his Angels both soul and body to be in unspeakable and unconceivable torment and that for ever every faculty of soul and member of body to be in this torment and that for evermore O consider this ye that forget God lest he tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver Psal 50.22 2 Cor. 5.11 Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord we perswade men saith the Apostle So we perswade you to see and to be sensible of your condition that in the use of all good means you would labour to get out of your present estate as it is Ephes 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and stand up from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Take heed of fore-slowing the time If death seize upon thee before thy Repentance and Regeneration ah wo be unto thee that ever thou wast born And know thou hast no lease of thy life remember that secure fool Luke 12.20 Thou fool this night shall thy soul be required of thee This day hear Gods voice and do not harden thy heart for to morrow thou art uncertain of it Thus far touching mans misery by nature We proceed to the third Principle PRINC III. Quest What means is there for thee to escape this damnable estate Answ Jesus Christ the eternal Son of God being made man by his death upon the Crosse and by his Righteousnesse hath perfectly alone by himselfe accomplished all things that are needful for the salvation of mankind MEMB 1. Jesus Christ the eternal Son of God HErein we have the Redeemer of mankind described by three of his Titles 1. Jesus 2. Christ 3. The Son of God this last illustrated by this Epithete eternal The eternal Son of God Of these three Titles in order and first of the Title Jesus This Title is a Title of benefits it signifying an Author of safety our Saviour as we may observe the Angel to interpret speaking to Joseph Matth. 1.21 Thov shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people from their sins Obj. But may some men say There was others called by this name besides the Redeemer of mankind Ans It is true but take notice of the difference betwixt him and them 1. They had his name imposed on them by the will of men but he had his name given him by an Angel from God 2. They were but typical Saviours he the Saviour indeed 3. They were but temporal and outward Saviours he a Spiritual Saviour 4. They were but Instrumental Saviours he the Author of all good things Temporal Spiritual and Eternal Obj. But the Father and the Holy Ghost are Saviours also Ans It is true but the difference is in their manner of saving The Father saveth by the Son the Son saveth by paying the Ransome and price of salvation the Holy Ghost saveth by a particular applying of this Ransome Two Questions following to be answered and then we come to Application 1. Whom this Jesus saves 2. From what Quest 1. Whom Ans The Angel tells us whom in the place forecited Matth. 1.21 Thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people And the Apostle Paul Ephes 5.23 calls him The Saviour of his body to wit of all the Elect. Quest 2. From what Ans The Angel tells us that too in the former place He shall save his people from their sins to wit all their sins the guilt and dominion of them Vse The Application may be to inform us two wayes 1. Touching our miserable lost estate by nature for so much a Saviour implies And the truth of it is we can never rightly and comfortably acknowledg this Saviour until we be sensible this way Many speak of this Saviour as their Saviour but when were they dejected and cast down with a sight and sense of their own misery by nature The Son of man is come saith our Saviour himself Matth. 18.11 to save that which was lost that is to say those that were sensible of their lost estate and condition but divers very ignorant and insensible this way wil yet cal him their Saviour 2. To inform us touching the great mercy of God to mankind Satan and his Angels fell but have no Saviour man falls and the Lord deviseth and affordeth a Saviour Now to this Saviour seeing and feeling our misery let us fly saying and praying with the Disciples Matth. 8.25 Lord save us we perish and with David Psal 35.3 Say unto our souls Thou art our salvation Considering that comfortable Text he himself preach'd upon the truth of which he came into the world to make good Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath annointed me to preach the Gospel to the poor he hath sent me to heal the broken hearted to preach deliverance to the Captives and recovering of sight to the blind to set at liberty them that are bruised And in ver 21. He began to say unto them This day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears Now we come to the second Title Christ which is a Title of Office and signifies Annointed There were three sorts of persons annointed in the time of the Old Testament Prophets Priests and Kings who were all types of this Annointed of this Prophet Priest and King That we may the better understand this Title we intend to answer the Questions
may lose his inward peace and comfort for a time but this righteousness of his is in a sure hand and cannot be lost And thus the true Believer is in better case then Adam in his innocency he might and did lose his Righteousnesse but the Believer cannot lose his it being not in his own keeping but in the keeping of the Lord Jesus Vse 3. To exhort and that divers wayes 1. That in the case of Justification we would altogether deny our selves go out of our selves Alas look we upon our natures and upon our lives and how impure are both and therefore David Psalm 143.2 humbly prayes Enter not into judgment with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified If we be justified at all it must be by the righteousness of another by a righteousness without us the righteousness of Christ imputed unto us as the Apostle tells us 2 Corinth 5.21 He hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the Righteousness of God in him Secondly To exhort every man and woman that they would labour for a distinct knowledge of CHRIST seeing the Righteousnesse whereby we must be justified is onely in him as to know what hee suffered for us so likewise to know what hee was and did for us Thirdly To exhort every one of us that upon a sight and sense of our own defilement and impurity we would hunger and thirst after the Sanctifie of Christs humane nature and life I mean the merit of his Active obedience as our cover and righteousnesse in the sight of God These are they our Saviour pronounceth blessed Mat. 5.6 Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousnesse And take notice of the Apostle his earnest desire Phil. 39. And found in him speaking of Christ not having mine own righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousness which is of God by faith Let our faith be frequently employed as in putting our sins upon him so likewise in putting his righteousnesse upon our selves 4. To exhort every man and woman that profess themselves to be justified by the righteousnesse of Christ that they would manifest as much by a holy life Justification and Sanctification being alwaies inseparable 1 Cor. 6.11 Rom. 8.1.9 Gal. 5.24 MEMBER V. Hath perfectly ANd this also take in the forme of a Doctrine Doct. The Lord Jesus is a perfect Saviour See Heb. 7.25 He is able speaking of Christ to save them to the utermost that come unto God by him But this Member and Doctrine we shall not much insist upon and yet to demonstrate it in a word or two First He saves not only some of the Elect but all the Elect Secondly He saves not only their bodies but likewise their souls Thirdly He not only saves them from some of their sins but from all their sins be they never so many or so hainous Fourthly He saves them not only from some of the evill consequents of sin but from all the evill consequents of sin as the wrath of God the curse of the Law the venome of all outward crosses the tyranny of Satan the sting of death the power of the grave and the torments of hell Fifthly He not only saves the Elect privatively but positively he hath not only merited for them remission of sins and freedome from punishment but likewise perfect righteousnesse and eternal life as lately we have heard The Ground or reason is this Reas Not only his holinesse and puritie as he was man but likewise the excellencie of his person he being God as wel as man We come to the Uses Vse 1. To confute the Doctrine of the Papists which to Christs perfect satisfaction add humane satisfactions as we must satisfie Gods justice by our temporal punishment and we must partly merit salvation our selves or the merits of other men must be made over unto us that we may be saved but we are to know a fifth wheel helpeth nothing nay troubleth not a little and so it fareth with all additions of righteousnesse joyned with Christs in matter of Justification That which is absolutely perfect is marred by adding any thing unto it Vse 2 For comfort and consolation to every wounded and penitent soul Suppose thy sins have been many and grievous the Lord Jesus is a perfect Saviour his bloud is a sufficient medicine for the curing of thy wounded conscience his righteousnesse is a perfect cover to hide thee from Gods wrath and therefore although thou seest nothing in thy self but to damn thee why yet see sufficient in the Lord Jesus to save thee rest thy soul upon this perfect Saviour and his merits nay labour with the Virgin Mary to rejoyce in him Luke 1.47 My spirit hath rejoyced in God my Saviour And thus much touching the fifth Member of the third Principle MEMBER VI. Alone by himself WHich we commend unto you in the Doctrine following Doct. The Lord Jesus is the alone Saviour So the Prophet Isaiah foretels in his person Isay 63.3 I have troden the wine-presse alone and Heb. 1.3 Who being the brightnesse of his glory and the expresse Image of his person and upholding all things by the word of his power when he had by himself purged our sins sat down on the right hand of the majestie on high Most expresse is that in Acts 4.12 Neither is there salvation in any other for there is no other name under heaven given among men whereby we must be saved And hence it is that old Simeon calls Christ Salvation it self Luke 2.30 Mine eyes have seen thy Salvation Reas 1. There is none so able he being not only Man but God Reas 2. There is none so fit he being not only God but Man Yet when we affirme the Lord Jesus Christ to be the alone Saviour we do not exclude the Father and the Holy Ghost but the creature any other creature Vse 1 To inform us touching the folly and madnesse of the Papists who trust to other Saviours All the Angels in heaven and all whom at any time their Popes have canonized for Saints which are many thousands are made Saviours by them but especially the Virgin Mary whom they call the Queen of heaven and the mother of mercie these by their intercession must merit for them Thus they joyne other saviours to this alone Saviour and so make him but half a Saviour Jer. 2.12 13. Vse 2 Is the Lord Jesus the alone Saviour this cals upon us that we would labour more and more to be accquainted with him his natures his offices his merits his benefits and upon a sight and sense of our own great misery to trust unto him and rely on him only for Justification and Salvation Thus in rejecting all but Christ this way we shall honour Christ and further this is the only way of our own happinesse And so much touching the sixth Member of the third Principle Now we come to
all his merits unto himself is justified before God and sanctified MEMB. I. A man of a contrite and humble spirit NOW we come to the fourth Principle which requireth of us how a man or a woman may be made partakers of Christ and his Benefits In the first place saith the Catechism they must have contrite and humble spirits A man of a contrite and humble spirit We commend the Point unto you in the form of a Doctrine thus Doct. That a man may be partaker of Christ and his Benefits he must have a contrite and humble spirit See Isai 55.1 Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters to wit to Christ and he that hath no money that is sees nothing in himselfe to trust unto and so consequently is of a humble and contrite spirit And Jerem. 50.4 In those dayes and in that time saith the Lord the children of Israel shall come they and the children of Judah together going and weeping they shall go and seek the Lord their God observe I pray you going and weeping shall seek the Lord their God as though that were the way and the onely way to find God in Christ to partake of Christ and his benefits And doth not our Saviour tell us this Matth 9.13 I am not come to call the righteous that is such as think themselves righteous but sinners to repentance to wit contrite and humble sinners to call them to a new life to partake of me and my benefits And Mat. 11.28 Come unto me saith he all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest And hence it is that the Lord is described 2 Corinth 7.6 to be the Comforter of such as are cast down And this Doctrine the Apostle James informes us of Jam. 4.6 God resisteth the proud but giveth grace to the humble that is assures such of his favour and therefore ver 10. of the same Chapter Humble your selves saith he in the sight of the Lord and he shall lift you up And do but see that place for all Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath annointed me to preach the Gospel to the poor he hath sent me to heal the broken hearted and to set at liberty them that are bruised Now we come to the Reasons Reas 1. Such and only such have an appetite to Christ hunger and thirst after him and his benefits Till we be sick of sin we can find no need of this Physician neither care much for him according to that Mat. 9.12 They that be whole need not a Physician but they that are sick When the fiery Serpent Numb 21.9 had bitten and stung an Israelite then he would run and make use of the Brazen Serpent but never till then Reas 2. Such and only such do prize Christ at his full value are willing to part with any thing to purchase him See what the Apostle Paul saith Philip. 3.8 9. He esteemed all things but dung in comparison of Christ and his Benefits but to make way for this observe the deep sense and feeling he had of his owne unworthinesse 1 Timoth. 1.15 This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom saith he I am chief Reas 3. Such and only such are made fit to receive Christ by faith and to make him their own Mark 1.15 Repent and believe the Gospel the unhumbled and unbroken-hearted sinner is altogether unfit to receive Christ and his benefits Reas 4. Such and only such truly rejoice and take comfort in Christ account him their chief Treasure and happiness Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should glory in any thing save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ that is save in the Passion and Sufferings of our Lord Jesus Christ But who was this that did thus rejoice in Christ and his Sufferings Surely it was one that had such a low opinion of himself as that Ephes 3.8 he stiles himself less then the least of all Saints But that you may further see into this weighty Doctrine we intend to answer the Questions following 1. What that contrition and humiliation is which truly and sufficiently prepares a man or a woman to be made partakers of Christ and his benefits 2. Whether every man and woman that hath this contrite and humble spirit shall certainly be made partakers of Christ and his benefits 3. Whether this contrition and humiliation be wrought in the like measure in all that are made partakers of Christ and his benefits Quest 1 What that contrition and humiliation is which truly and sufficiently prepares a man or a woman to be made partakers of Christ and his benefits Answ This contrition and humiliation contains the particulars following 1. A true and distinct sight of sin and not onely as punishment doth attend it but as it is vile and lothsome in its own nature as Ezek. 36.31 Then shall ye remember your own evil wayes and your doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your iniquities and for your abominations 2. Unfained and sound sorrow and as for the consequent so for the cause as for punishment so for sin Acts 2.37 Now when they heard this they were pricked in the is hearts to wit that they were guilty of the death of the Lord of Life 3. A being weary of sin finding it a load and burden upon the conscience Matth. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest Our Saviour means here all that have contrite and humble spirits 4. Humble and hearty confession of sin as Luke 15.21 Father saith the Prodigal I have sinned against heaven and in thy sight and am no more worthy to be called thy son Lu. 23.40 41. 5. Earnest suit to the God of heaven for mercy as the Publicane Luke 18.13 God be merciful to me a sinner And Saul afterwards called Paul Acts 9.11 Behold he prayeth surely the three dayes he was without sight he sent up many a loud cry to heaven for mercy 6. The sixth particular This Contrition and Humiliation contains a distaste and dislike of sin as Isaiah 30.22 Ye shall defile also the covering of the graven Images of silver and the ornament of thy molten Images of gold thou shalt cast them away as a mensturous cloth to wit in the day of thy repentance thou shalt say unto it get thee hence And Luke 19.8 Zacheus stood and said unto the Lord Behold Lord the half of my goods I give to the poor and if I have taken any thing from any man by false accusation I restore him four fold Thus we see now what Contrition and Humiliation is which truly and sufficiently prepares a man or a woman to be made partakers of Christ and his benefits But yet we must not think this preparatory work in the particulars aforesaid to be the same that is in the soul after
poor soul then of an earthly Kingdome to be bestowed upon thee 3. If thou thinkest those that have true Peace of conscience and Joy in the Holy Ghost to be the happiest people under the sun 4. If thou tremble at the Word and honour the very feet of those Instruments that bring glad tydings of peace to such as thy self to wit to wounded consciences 5. If thou send up strong and uncessant cryes to God for the assurance of his favour in and through Christ 6. If thou dost pity and compassionate all such as have broken and bruised hearts Vse 3. To exhort all such as for the present have not contrite and humble spirits to labour and endeavour for that disposition Motives 1. The contrary disposition to wit hardness of heart and impenitency is a great sin and a grievous judgement A great sin Rom. 2.5 But thou after thy hard and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath A grievous judgement Exod. 9.12 And the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh See John 12.40 Now there be two kinds of hardness of heart 1. Sensible that which is perceived and felt and this may be in the godly as Isa 63.17 Oh Lord why hast thou made us to erre from thy wayes and heardened our hearts from thy fear 2. Insensible that which is not perceived and felt and this indeed is a great sin and plague 2. The second Motive The sooner we labour after this disposition the more easily in likelyhood we shall attain unto it when a heart hath been long hardened with the deceitfulness of sin it will not easily become a contrite and humble heart and therefore Psalm 95.7.8 To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts So Joel 2.12 13. Besides it may be hereafter we shall not enjoy the like means this way we do for the present 3. Without this contrite and humble spirit according to the Doctrine we cannot partake of Christ and his benefits this is the Messenger that Christ ever sends before him unto those of years for we do not now speak of Infants and wo be unto us if we do not partake of Christ and his benefits it had been good for us we had never been born 4. Whosoever hath this contrite and humble spirit shall certainly partake of Christ and his benefits Now this may greatly induce us to labour for this disposition when the issue undoubtedly shall be so good and so happy Suppose this business be difficult and tedious why yet such an issue must needs put us on in it These are the Motives Now we proceed to the Means of a contrite and humble spirit Means 1. Prayer to God in the best manner we can it is he that must bruise our hard and stony hearts Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh to wit a contrite and humble heart 2. Because the Lord doth many times make use of afflictions and judgements for the bruising of mens hearts when he sends any great affliction upon us let us not stand out against him but joyn with him when he goes a bout to humble us let us labour to humble our selves as Saul afterwards called Paul Acts 9.6 trembling and astonished said Lord what wilt thou have me to do When the hand of God is upon us let us not stand murmuring and repining but fall to examination of our Spiritual estates and cases as the Wise-man adviseth us Eccles 7.14 In the day of adversity consider 3. Constant dependance upon the Ministry of the Word Jer. 23.29 Is not my word like as a fire saith the Lord and like a hammer that breaketh the Rocks in pieces Now we are to know that the Law hath a stroke in this work and so the Gospel 1. The Law by revealing of sin and the woful consequents of it and so the Spirit of God co-operating there is caused a servile fear and trembling a kind of contrition and humiliation which the Apostle Rom. 8.15 cals the spirit of bondage causing fear when the Spirit of God puts an edge upon the Law puts a sword into the hand of the Law to prick and wound the heart and to restrain it in the wayes of sin for fear of punishment Many a man and woman hears the Law opened and the threatnings of it thundringly denounced but stir not are little moved but when once the Lord by his Spirit puts an edge upon the Law then the stoutest heart trembles and quakes Now that the Law may have a kindly work upon us 1. By the Law let us labour for a distinct knowledge of sin 2. Rightly to understand what the Curse is which the Law threatneth unto sin and sinners 3. Examine our selves how guilty we are of that which the Law threatens the Curse unto to wit sin 4. Finding our selves guilty to labour our hearts to a deep contrition and humiliation Now as we have heard before as the Law hath a stroke in this work why so the Gospel more and more melting the heart by discovering Christ whom the sinner hath pierced by his sins and by supporting the heart by a secret hope of mercy and possibility of help in and through Christ even as Jonah Chap. 2. verse 4. Then I said I am cast out of thy sight yet I will look again toward thy holy Temple Or as the Prodigal Son Luke 15.17 18. And when he came to himself he said How many hired servants of my fathers house have bread enough and to spare and I perish with hunger I will arise and go to my father and will say unto him father I have sinned against heaven and before thee c. Now after the Law hath humbled us and the Gospel conveyed this glimpse of hope into our hearts it must be nourished and cherished 1. By considering of the Lords Infinite and Almighty Power how he is able more and more to bruise our souls to make us more and more capable of Christ and so to bring Christ nearer unto us that we may partake of him and his benefits Luke 1.37 With God nothing shall be unpossible And Matth. 3.9 God is able of stones to raise up children unto Abraham 2. The freeness of Gods mercy must be considered of he requires nothing of thee to procure this mercy but shewes mercy because he will shew mercy Suppose thou hast never so many exceptions to thy self why yet thou belonging unto him and his mercy being a free mercy he will proceed with thee until he hath made thee capable of Christ and bestowed Christ upon thee and his benefits Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh And Isaiah 43.25 I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake 3. For supporting of this hope consider we of the riches of Gods mercy unto the proper objects of mercy Contrite and Humble men
our souls resting upon him for pardon and justification and not onely hold forth our faith to the promise of pardon and forgiveness in and through Christ but extend it unto all the precious promises made of God in Christ Jesus unto Believers as we may have occasion whether they concern this life or the life to come be they general or particular absolute or conditional express or implicite This should be the wisdome of the Believer as to acquaint himself with the whole word of God and to be affected with it alwayes as it applyes it self unto him for this faith doth not onely extend it self to the promises but to the whole word of God as the Precepts Threatnings c. so especially to acquaint himself with the precious promises dispersed here and there in the Sacred Scriptures Then 2. To have them in memory by frequent mediation 3. Often to urge them upon God in Prayer And 4. Ever to rest upon them as he hath occasion This is to live by our faith and this is that which is ever injoyned us in holy writ to wit the act and exercise of our faith the habit of faith being the Covenant on Gods part and the act and exercise of faith the Covenant on our part not but that men and women must use all holy means for the habit and not that the habit can act without the effectual concurrence of Gods Spirit exciting and co-working Now touching this life of faith we will not think much for your better proceeding therein to give instance in some particular cases 1. As first Art thou at any time oppressed with the weight and burden of thy sins call to mind the promises of pardon and forgiveness made unto such a soul as Isaiah 1.18 Come now and let us reason together saith the Lord though your sins be as Scarlet they shall be as white as Snow though they be red like Crimson they shall be as Wool And the 55 of the same Prophesie verse 7. Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon And so Mat. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest In the case aforesaid such promises as these must be reviewed meditated on urged upon God in Prayer and then rested on 2. The second instance Dost thou at any time find corruption strong and grace weak in thee call to mind the promises of Sanctification or of help these wayes as Matth. 1.21 Thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people from their sins that is not onely from the guilt but likewise from the power of sin And Rom. 6.14 Sin shall not have dominion over you And so Jer. 31.33 This shall be the Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel After those dayes saith the Lord I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts And Isaiah 44.2 I will pour water upon him that is thirsty and floods upon the dry ground I will pour my Spirit upon thy Seed and my blessing upon thy Off-spring And so Ezek. 36.27 I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my Statutes and ye shall keep my judgements and do them These and such like Promises thou must review meditate on urge upon God in Prayer and rest on them 3. The third instance Dost thou doubt thy perseverance and holding out to the end see John 4.14 Whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst that is shall never after be altogether destitute of grace but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a Well of water springing up into everlasting life And the fifth Chapter of the same Gospel verse 24. Verily verily I say unto you He that believeth my word and believeth on him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death unto life And so the tenth Chapter verses 27 28 29. My sheep hear my voyce and I know them and they follow me and I give unto them eternal life and they shall never perish neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand My Father which gave them me is greater then all and no man is able to pluck them out of my Fathers hand These Promises and such like in the case aforesaid must be called to mind meditated on urged upon God in Prayer so rested on 4. The fourth instance Dost thou at any time fear the supply of Temporal things see Psal 34.10 The yong Lions do lack and suffer hunger but they that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing And Ps 84.11 He will give grace and glory and no good thing wil he withhold from them that walk uprightly And so Mat. 6.33 Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you And Heb. 13.5 Let your conversation be without covetousness and be content with such things as ye have for he hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee These Promises and the like in the case aforesaid must be thought of urged upon God in Prayer and rested on The last instance I lay forth at this time The times being evil Dost thou fear greater afflictions to befal thee then thou shalt be enabled patiently to bear see Psal 91.10 There shall no evil befal thee And Rom. 8.28 We know that all things even afflictions themselves work together for good unto them that love God These places promise that no affliction hurtful shall befal thee nay that no affliction shall befal thee but for thy good And see further Psalm 34.19 Many are the afflictions of the righteous but the Lord delivereth them out of them all This place and such places as this promise unto thee a good issue unto thy afflictions nay to answer thy fear See Isaiah 43.2 When thou passest through the waters I will be with thee to wit supporting and sustaining thee And 1 Corinthians 10.13 God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able These Promises and such like in the case aforesaid must be reviewed meditated on urged upon God in Prayer and then rested on And so in all other cases as thou mayest have occasion thou shalt find promises in holy Writ to fit thee acquaint thy self with them meditate on them urge them upon God in Prayer rest on them serve Gods Providence in the use of all lawful means sutable and often consider of Gods Attributes the props of faith as his Wisdome Power Mercy and Truth and this is to make use of faith to live by our faith And so farre touching the third Member of the fourth Principle Now we come to the fourth Memmer thereof MEMBER IV. Is justified before God IN which Member and the
Another parable spake he unto them The Kingdome of heaven is like unto leaven which a woman took and hid in three measures of meal till the whole was leavened And so Psal 92.12 13 14. The righteous shall flourish like a Palme tree he shall grow like a Cedar in Lebanon Those that be planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the courts of our God They shall still bring forth fruit in old age they shall be fat and flourishing Motive 3. If we do not grow we go back and a declining condition is very uncomfortable what with the dolours inward and the afflictions outward which attend such an estate These be the Motives Now the Means of growth that is to say some inward helps this way for as touching outward means the next Principle intreates Means 1. We must often by our faith apply Christ to Justification The more we apprehend Gods mercy in Christ unto us this way the more our hearts turn towards him in love and obedience 1 John 4.19 We love him because he first loved us And 2 Cor. 5.14 15. The love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge that if one died for all then were all dead And that he died for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which died for them and rose again The more clearly we apprehend Christ our Justifyer the more we find in him to be our Sanctifyer See Eph 3.16 17 18 19. Means 2 We must often by our faith have recourse to Gods Promises in this kind The Lord hath made many gracious Promises to further us in the way of Sanctification as Hos 14.4 I will heal their backslidings And Rom 6.14 Sin shall not have dominion over you And so Mal. 4.2 Vnto you that fear my name shall the Sun of Righteousness arise with healing in his wings And ye shall go forth and grow up as calves of the stall Jer. 32.39 40. And Mat. 25.29 Vnto every one that hath shall be given and he shall have abundance Such Promises as these we must call to mind and be earnest with the Lord in Prayer to make them good unto us Branch 2. To exhort all such as are not sanctified to labor for Sanctification Motives Means Motive 1 No Sanctification no Salvation Heb. 12.14 Without holiness no man shall see the Lord And Mat. 5.20 Except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees yee shall in no case enter into the kingdome of heaven and the Scribes and Pharisees were men very civil 2 By Sanctification we shall conforme to the holy God have his special image upon us which we had and lost in Adam Ephes 4.24 3 Sanctification is the end of our Election Redemption and Vocation The end of our Election Ephes 1.4 According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy The end of our Redemption Tit. 2.14 Who gave himself for us that he should redeem us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works The end of our Vocation 1 Cor 1.2 Vnto the Church of God which is at Corinth to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus called to be Saints 4 Sanctification is not the least part of glory and eternal felicity 2 Cor. 3.18 But we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory that is from one degree of grace to another even as by the Spirit of the Lord. 5 Where there is not Sanctification there can be no true faith and if no true faith why then no Justification nor Adoption These the Motives to Sanctification Now the Means or inward helps for as touching the outward means the next Principle acquaints Sanctification we know consists of Mortification and Vivification 1 Touching Mortification 1 Weigh and perpend that either sin must die or the sinner must die eternally Rom. 8.13 If ye live after the flesh that is if sin be not mortified in you ye shall die that is to say eternally 2 Weigh and consider the great love of God in giving his Son to dye for sinners John 3.16 and wilt not thou shew love to him again by fighting against sin which he hates 3 Weigh and perpend the great love of Christ who willingly underwent that accursed death of the Cross for thy sins Now wilt thou nourish that which cost him his life Then as touching Vivification the other part of Sanctification weigh and perpend Christs Resurrection 1 The efficient cause of it to wit the Spirit of God And thus think with thy self If the same Spirit which raised up Christ from the dead dwell in me he shall raise up my soul from the death of sin to the life of grace as Rom. 8.11 If the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by the Spirit that dwelleth in you and as their mortal bodies at the last day why so their souls in this world 2 Meditate upon the end of Christs Resurrection which was that death might no more have dominion over him but that he might for ever live to God which should be thy study and endeavour even to live to God in a life of holiness and Righteousnesse See Rom. 6.9 10 11. Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him for in that he died he died unto sin once but in that he liveth he liveth unto God Likewise reckon ye also your selves to be dead indeed unto sin but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. 3 Meditate upon the consequents of Christs Resurrection to wit his Ascension into heaven and his sitting at the Fathers right hand So shouldst thou labour to have thy affections above and thy conversation in heaven Colos 3.1 2. If ye then he risen with Christ seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God Set your affections on things above not on things on the earth And so the Apostle professeth of himselfe Philippians 3.20 Our Conversation is in heaven from whence also we look for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ And thus much touching the fourth Principle PRINC V. Quest What are the ordinary or usual means for obtaining of faith Answ Faith cometh only by the preaching of the Word and increaseth daily by it as also by the administration of the Sacraments and Prayer MEMB. 1. Faith cometh only by the preaching of the Word and increaseth daily by it THE fifth Principle acquaints us with the ordinary outward Means whereby faith is obtained and encreased And first the Catechisme makes known unto us the ordinary outward Means whereby faith is obtained Faith cometh only by the preaching of the word And this passage of the first Member we commend to your consideration
parts or Sacramental union what it is 6. How the Sacraments of the Old and New Testament agree and how they differ 7. The number of Sacraments now in the time of the New Testament These questions being plainly answered we shall the better understand the Doctrine of Sacraments Quest 1. How Sacraments agree with the word and how they differ from it Answ 1. They agree in their Author the Lord being as the Author of the word so likewise of all true Sacraments Gen. 17.10 Exod. 12.3 .11 Luke 3.1 2 3. Matth. 26.26 1 Cor. 11.23 2. The word and Sacraments agree in this that the one as well as the other is to be dispensed by lawful Ministers Mat. 28.19 3. In that they both offer and reach forth one and the same thing to wit Christ Thus we see in what the word and Sacraments agree Now they differ as followeth 1. The word declareth Gods Will unto us by speech the Sacraments by visible signes and gestures Sacraments being a visible word 2. The word is as a Charter or Letter-Patent promising all good things in Christ unto all true Believers The Sacraments are as seals annexed to this Charter confirming what the word promiseth 3. By the word faith is begun and confirmed by the Sacraments it is only confirmed 4. The word pertaineth to all the Sacraments onely to such as make a profession of the faith Quest 2. What Sacraments are Answ They are sacred signes and seales of the new Covenant I call them sacred 1. Because they are ordained of God he being the Author of all true Sacraments as we have heard 2. Because they are ordained to holy use as we may observe in this brief definition then we say They are sacred sig●es and seals do but see Rom. 4.11 Now what the Apostle saith of Circumcision is true of all Sacraments the Lord in them as it were by Oath confirming unto true Believers that he will be their God and they again as it were by Oath binding themselves to be his people which indeed is the sum of the new Covenant the Lord promising unto true Believers that he will be their God and they re-promising unto him to be his people Quest 3 What are the ends of Sacraments Answ 1. That they might be a means to preserve and spread abroad the Doctrine of the Gospel Sacraments themselves being a visible word and yet no Sacraments I mean the outward signes without the word to wit the word of institution and then they occasioning the Preaching of the word 2. That so the true Church might be outwardly distinguished from all other Sects and Companies she having Rites Ceremonies and Worship of Gods devising and appointing and not of mans 3. That they might be bonds of mutual love betwixt the faithful 4 That so true Believers might swear Allegeance unto God bind themselves to continue faithful and obedient unto him 5. And especially that they might serve to confirm the faith of Gods people in Gods promises Quest 4. What are the parts of a Sacrament Answ Two 1. The sign 2. The thing signified The sign is the Element or Elements as Water Bread Wine and the whole external action conversant about the same The thing signified is Christ and his benefits or the participation and communion of Christ and his benefits Quest 5. The union of the parts or Sacramental union what it is Answ This union is a real union Christ and the Elements are truly and really united Hence it is that our Saviour saith of the Sacramental Bread this is my body and of the Wine this is my blood Mat. 26.26 28. But this union is not a Physical or natural union as the Papists hold as though the sign were changed or altered in o the thing signified Neither is it a local union as the Lutherans dream as though the thing signified were locally present as well as the sign but it is a mystical and Spiritual union and consists in the things following 1. A natural aptness in the sign to resemble and express the thing signified As doth not water naturally represent and express a cleansing and bread and wine a nourishing and comforting 2. The Lords appointing and applying of such and such Elements unto Sacramental use as Water to resemble Christ in his washing and cleansing quality Bread and Wine to resemble Christ in his nourishing and comforting property This being that to wit the word of Ordinance that carries the soul of the Believer from earth to heaven from the sign unto the thing signified 3. The Lord ordaining and appointing the outward sign not onely to represent and resemble Christ and his benefits but likewise as an Instrument and Channel to convey him and his benefits really to the soul of the true Believer the true Believer at one and the same time receiving the sign and the thing signified the one Corporally the other Spiritually And thus we see the union betwixt the sign and thing signified is real but Spiritual and wherein it consists Now from the union aforesaid it is usual in the Scrptures by an improper but Sacramental speech 1. To call the sign by the name of the thing signified and contrarily 2. To ascribe that to the sign which is proper to the thing signified and contrarily Quest 6. How the Sacraments of the old and new Testament agree how they differ Answ 1. They agree in the Author they all being ordained and instituted by God 2. They agree in the thing signified to wit Christ and his benefits the Believers of the Old Testament being as well saved by Christ as the Believers of the New Romans 4.11 1 Cor. 10.4 Now they differ divers wayes 1. In Rites and Ceremonies 2. In clearness The Covenant of grace was more hidden and obscure in the time of the Old Testament Christ the Foundation of it being not then come then in the time of the New and so the seals of the Covenant sutably the Sacraments of the Old Testament pointing at Christ to come but the Sacraments of the New shewing that Christ is come 3. In efficacy The Sacraments of the New Testament in the ordinary course being more effectual then the Sacraments of the Old a greater power of the Spirit in the ordinary course going with ours then did with theirs our souls being more perswasive and impressive then theirs 4. They differ in number there was divers Sacraments in the time of the Old Testament not onely Circumcision and the Passeover Sacraments ordinary but likewise extraordinary Sacraments or as some call them resemblances as the Red Sea the Cloud Manna and the water of the Rock It is true there was no more ordinary Sacraments in the time of the Old Testament no more Sacraments for being and standing then in the time of the New Quest 7. The last question What 's the number of Sacramens in the time of the New Testament Answ Onely two Baptism and the Lords Supper the former succeeding Circumoision the latter the Passeover
And both these as durable as the Church to continue as long as a Church upon earth These questions of Sacraments in general being answered we shall come more clearly to speak of either Sacrament particularly But before that we intend some Application of what hath been delivered Vse 1. For Repnehension To reprove the Papists 1. For corrupting and adulterating the true Sacraments as Baptism with their Cream Spittle and divers other inventions And the Sacrament of the Supper they turning it into a Sacrifice Propitiatory for the quick and the dead 2. To reprove them for their false Coin they having devised five Sacraments of their own as Orders Marriagid Confirmation Vnction Penance And thus in the case of Sacraments they adde and adulterate a woful Religion they must needs erre much as touching the Covenant when they are so left to themselves in regard of the Seales Vse 2. For information 1. To inform us touching the great goodness and bounty of G d towards his Church and people not onely to afford them his Word but likewise his Sacraments all means for their Spiritual good all means for their being and wee being in grace 2. To inform us touching the necessity of faith If so be we would receive any good by Sacraments it being that and that onely which discerns and laies hold upon the thing signified It is not the eye and hand of the body that can see and apply Christ they can but extend to the sign that which is Spiritual must be Spiritually received Alas the wicked and unbelievers do but receive the outward Elements and to their further condemnations Vse 3. For examination In Sacraments as the Lord swears to us so we to him he to be our God for all good unto us and we unto him to be his dutiful and obedient people But how is the Covenant kept on our part Where is our living by faith our growing in mortification in self-denial Where is our courage for Gods truth our zeal for his glory our love to his Saints Try we try we how far we have broken our Covenant be we ashamed of it bewail we it and labour we amendment Alas the most they rest in the thing done in a bare formality little stir up themselves to make good their promise ratified by solemn oath nay are not earnest with the Lord to enable them this way Thus much touching Sacraments in general We come now to speak of the two Sacraments particularly And first of Baptism and going along with the Catechism in this form of Doctrine Doct. The Sacrament of Baptism is a good outward means for the increase of faith The Point is proved by these Scriptures Matth. 28.19 Mark 16.16 Acts 8.37 10.47 and Acts 18.8 Reas 1. Taken from the nature of Sacraments in general they are not onely signes but seales the Lords greatest means for the confirmation and increase of his peoples faith he in them as it were taking oath for their full security Heb. 6.17 18. So the Lord is pleased to condescend to our weakness and our belief as for the support and encrease of our faith he doth not onely afford us his Promise but Oath not onely his Covenant but Seales Reas 2. Taken from the Sacrament that Baptism succeeds to wit Circumcision Circumcision was a good outward means to confirm and encrease faith Rom. 4.11 and then can Baptism be of less use and efficacy Before we come to the use of the Doctrine we intend to answer divers questions concerning Baptism 1. What Baptism is 2. The ends of it 3. The parts of it 4. The necessity of it And 5. The efficacy of it Quest 1. What Baptism is Answ It is the first Sacrament of the Gospel whereby we are washed with water in the Name of the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost to signifie and seal our ingrafting into Christ our communion with Christ our new obedience and admission into the visible Church Somewhat to open this description 1. We say It is the first Sacrament of the Gospel because it is to precede the Lords Supper The sons and daughters of men are first to be baptized before they approach or should be admitted to the Lords Supper that is no unbaptized person should adventure or ought to be admitted to the Lords Table 2. We say Whereby we are washed with water for so the word Baptism signifies a dipping in water or sprinkling with water 3. We say In the Name of the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost this being the very form of Baptism that must be observed And for the meaning of these words In the Name of the Father of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost it is as much as to say as that the Party baptized is consecrated to the worship and service of the Trinity 4. We say To signifie and seal our ingrafting into Christ Gal. 3.27 5. To signifie and seal our communion with Christ That is to say to signifie and seal that we are made partakers of Christ and his benefits Acts 2.38 Rom. 6.3 6. To signifie and seal our new obedience Mat. 3.7 8. 1 Pet. 3.21 7. Lastly we say to signifie and seal our admission into the visible Church As this was one end of Circumcision so likewise it is of Baptism which succeeds Circumcision Thus Saul was admitted into the visible Church Acts 9.18 The Jailor and his Family Acts 16.33 Quest 2. What are the ends of Baptism Answ There be divers ends of Baptism 1. That this and that Party might be admitted Members of the visible Church John 4.1 as though Baptism were an outward mark of a Disciple and a means of admitting into the visible Church 2. That it might be a pledge unto us of our ingrafting into Christ the remission of our sinnes and Regeneration Galatians 3.27 Acts 22.16 and Titus 3.5 3. That it might be a testification of our duty towards God and a binding of us to perform obedience unto him and therefore Mark 1.4 it is called the Baptism of repentance or of amendment of life And Luke 3.7 8 12. 4. That so we might be put in mind of afflictions our supportation in them and deliverance out of them we being dipped in the water or sprinkled with water but not drowned afflictions as we may see Matth. 20.22 are sometimes termed by the name of Baptism 5. That it might signifie the unity of the Church and might be a means of the same 1 Cor. 12. ●3 Ephe● 4.5 ●uest 3. What are the parts of Baptism Answ They are either outward or inward The outward is the sign and the word The sign is the element of Water and the Sacramental action on the Ministers part and on the Receivers part the Sacramentall action on the Ministers part is not only his washing of the Party with water but likewise his putting the Party into the water or towards the water his continuing the Party in the water or towards the water and his taking the Party out of the water
and theirs 4 By rejoicing to see the livery of Christ put upon their child their child so honoured 5. By educating their children accordingly Ephes 6.4 2 To exhort all Baptized persons First Such as are unregenerate and in the estate of nature manifesting no lesse by their way and course First That they would consider what they are doing even acting the parts of treacherous and foresworne persons proceed just contrary to their Vow and Oath in Baptism Secondly To consider what a deal of ingratitude they manifest to God thus abusing his Livery he that prevented them with this Sign and Seal of the new Covenant before they had any ability to conceive of it that was found of them before they sought him that put a pledge into their bosomes concerning his gracious meaning towards them did they not shew themselves careless of it nay he that by his Sacrament so provoked them to embrace the Covenant 3 To exhort them that they would never rest until such time as they have a feeling of that renewing power signified in Baptism to wit the power of Christs death mortifying sin in them and the vertue of his Resurrection raising them up to newness of life To this purpo●e let them be earnest with the Lord in praye● as well as they can follow hard after the p●werful preaching of the Word that so they may attain to Regeneration whereof Baptism is the Seal It is true if they take this course they shall be called Puritans and Precisians But let them remember their solemn Vow and Oath in Baptism and not regard the malice of Satan and the reproaches of men 2 To exhort such as have true grace are regenerate often to meditate upon their Baptism for the helping of their faith Is any temptation violent any corruption strong any grace weak nay hath Satan and corruption given the foile prevailed in particulars Why then call to mind thy Baptism Gods Covenant with thee signified and sealed in it this is an excellent way to get up thy faith and so to get thee up being fallen and to keep thee up being in the fight and combat For we are to know that the signification force use and fruit of this Ordinance doth not continue only for a moment of time but for the whole course of a mans life Thus much for Baptism Now we come to the Sacrament of the Supper and commend the Doctrine of it unto you in the point following Doctr. As the Sacrament of Baptism is a good outward means to encrease faith why so especially the Sacrament of the Supper But having spoken of Baptism take the Doctrine more briefly The Sacrament of the Lords Supper is an excellent outward means to encrease faith Do but see 1 Cor. 10.16 As though the Apostle should say The participating of the Supper is it not an excellent Signe Pledge and Meanes of our growth in Christ to encrease our faith And 1 Corinth 11.26 Yee do shew the Lords death to wit as to others so to your owne faith for the encrease and confirmation of it Reason 1. The Sacrament unto which this succeeds to wit the Passeover was an excellent meanes this way that is to say for the encrease and confirmation of faith Reason 2. In the Sacrament of the Supper there is such a lively picture and representation of Christ and his benefits Galat. 3.1 Crucified among you As by the preaching of the word so by the administration of the Sacraments especially by the administration of this Sacrament Reas 3. This was one principall end why Christ instituted and ordained this Sacrament to wit that his peoples faith unto the worlds end in the conscionable celebration of it might be encreased and confirmed Now for the opening of this Doctrine we intend to answer divers questions 1. What this Sacrament is 2. The difference betwixt it and Baptism 3. The parts of it 4. What is to be done of us that in the use of this ordinance our faith may be encreased Quest First What the Lords Supper is Answ It is the second or latter Sacrament of the Gospel wherein by bread and wine duely administred and received the true beleever is fed and nourished unto eternall life A little to open this description It is the second or latter Sacrament of the Gospel because in order baptism is to precede and go before it wherein by bread and wine elements first not very hard to be come by Secondly Very apt unto the purpose appointed to wit to signifie and seal spiritual food nay very apt wine being appointed and afforded as well as bread to signifie and seal a compleat feast to the soul full and perfect nourishment by the Lord Jesus the thing signified Duely administred and received that is when the persons administring and receiving are rightly qualified and the same rites and actions punctually observed which the word of God prescribes and enjoynes the true beleever he being the party only that is capable of this feast and unto whom it belongs is fed and nourished unto eternal life The bread and wine not only representing the body and blood of Christ but exhibiting and conveying them to the soul of the beleever for his spirituall nourishment Quest 2. How the Lords Supper differs from baptism Answ First We will shew briefly wherein they agree Secondly wherin they differ They agree in these things First they both represent whole Christ to the soul Secondly they both seal up whole Christ to the soul we mean by whole Christ as Christ for justification so for sanctification 1 Now these Sacraments differ divers waies First in order baptism goes before and the supper follows as being goes before growing Secondly In frequency Baptism is but once to be received the Supper often We are but once born but after we are borne we have need of frequent nourishment Thirdly they differ in the elements and external rites Fourthly in their particular ends Baptism being properly the seal of regeneration but the Supper properly the seal of growth and confirmation The former the seal of Christian being the latter the seal of Christian well being Quest 3. What are the parts of this Sacrament Answ They are either outward or inward The outward as the signe and the word By the signe we mean the elements of bread and wine and the sacramentall action on the Ministers part and on the receivers part The The other outward thing is the word the word added to the element or elements makes a Sacrament Now by the word here we are to understand First the word of institution or command do this Secondly the word of promise this is my body which is given for you this is my blood which is she d for you The inward thing or thing signified is the body aad bloud of Christ given and shed for our sins and our spiritual eating and drinking of them for our nourishment unto eternal life Quest 4 What is to be done of us that in the use of this
is they have no call unto it but in coming they partake unworthily in a high degree If such as are true believers may partake unworthily as is very evident in the example of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11.17 c. How unworthily do they partake alas what do all such when they receive but exceedingly prophane this holy ordinance And that this is no little sin do but see 1 Cor. 11.27 that is guilty of the death of Christ Now it is a great sin to be guilty of the death of any man but to be guilty of the death of an innocent man of the death of the innocent Lamb of God of his death who was God as well as man how foul and horrible a crime is this If the death of Abel did lie so heavily upon the conscience of Cain Gen. 4.13 How should the death of the Son of God lie heavy upon their consciences that are guilty thereof And the Apostle tels us to receive unworthily as they must needs do in a high degree that have no measure of saving faith is to be guilty of the death of Christ His meaning is that all such as receive unworthily doe upon the matter consent unto the horrible fact of Judas and the Jewes in their crucifying of Christ But this is the misery that men and women will not beleeve the word of God but their own thoughts and conceits what they will say or at least think Are we not baptized persons Do we not profess the Gospel Do we not come to the Church And do we not come in our intents and meanings to receive good at the Lords Table And will you make us guilty of the same sin that Judas and the Jewes were in their crucifying of Christ and to consent to that bloodie and horrible fact of theirs I answer the Apostle affirms no lesse of all unworthy receivers And it is an undoubted truth which you have heard that all who are not qualified with some measure of saving faith receive unworthily in a high degree 1. Oh then first we see all persons grosly ignorant coming to the Lords Supper to be in a woful case there can be no saving faith in such this faith ever presupposing some measure of knowledg in the mysteries of religion Alas how many approach to this Sacrament and cannot tell what a Sacrament is what this Sacrament is what are the ends why this Sacrament was ordained neither how it should be received 2. See we all p●ophane persons coming to this Sacrament to be in a lamentable case I mean swearers drunkards whoremasters prophaners of the Sabbath c. It being plain that such have no measure of the grace aforesaid saving faith ever purifying the heart Act. 15.9 And if the heart be in some measure clean it will appear in the life 3. See we many others partaking at the Lords Table to be in a wofull case such as have some measure of knowledg and it may be are of civil conversation But they are inward opposers of sincere preaching and so of sincere professors they would either have no preaching at all or else especially approve of that which doth the most tickle the ear And so for professors of religion that are forward they have no mind no affection unto them think they are but half witted people factious and turbulent have no delight in their company Now such persons are far from the grace aforesaid And this one thing I would have you to take notice of many we have that are very forward after the Sacrament in their kind needs they must receive at Easter however and yet have no desire after the powerfull preaching of the Word care not much whether they ever hear a powerfull Sermon or no. That that we would give you to understand of such persons is this that their desire after the Sacrament is not a kindly desire and from Gods Spirit but a popish preposterous and corrupt desire Thus we have reproved the unregenerate and unbeleevers adventuring to the Lords Table and as you have seen their sin 1 Cor. 11.27 so you may the punishment attending them for the same ver 29. that is Judgment temporall eternall if they do not truly and seriously repent for it The second branch of this use of reproofe extends it self to divers who are qualified with some measure of saving faith First the Lords Supper being such an excellent means to encrease and confirme faith that they do no more frequent it when as they might often partake conscionably and comfortably no impediment being in the way but their ignorance sloth or this needlesse fear or that 1. Their ignorance not throughly receiving information what an excellent help this would be to their faith and other graces and how the Lord commands them to receive often 1 Cor. 11.6 As for other ends so to sh●w forth Christs death untill his coming to judgment Or 2. Their sloth they being unwilling to set upon that preparation which is required of those that receive worthily as though this were so difficult a thing to those that use a daily examination and upon occasion inure themselves to courses of humiliation Or 3 This or that needlesse fear As haply because their faith is so little and therfore that they should not receive worthily Whereas this should greatly induce them to hasten to this feast of fulness for the strengthening and encrease of that they complain to be so little the Sacrament being the proper portion of such especially belonging unto those truely sensible of their wants If we look at the first celebration of this ordinance we shall upon examination find that our Saviour did administer to those that were far from perfection nay full of infirmities And thus we reprove divers true beleevers 1. for not coming oft enough to the Lords Supper no just impediment lying in their way 2. To reprove divers true believers who come and it may be frequently to the Sacrament but it is in a customary way a sleepy carelesse way do not reexamine their faith do not by extraordinary prayer so stir up their graces as befits them in the act of receiving do not earnestly labour spirituall consideration summon their outward senses and inward affections to attend the whole businesse in hand And after they have received little observe the fruit of their receiving Now such are to know that partaking in this manner at the Lords Table they partake unworthily in a degree And hence it comes to passe that they are so far from gaining spiritual strength by this ordinance as they occasion the Lord to bring divers temporall judgments upon them as we may see in the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11.30 Oh therefore let all such know they have great cause to mourn for what is past and better to look to the matter for time to come And thus we have done with the use of reproof Vse 3 For Exhortation 1. To exhort all such as have not some measure of saving faith earnestly to labour after
we use to pray then in Prayer are we earnest after faith for an encrease of this grace Many in prayer are more for temporal things then Spiritual but this is to pray in a carnal manner And divers in prayer that beg spiritual Blessings and yet sue for them but in a carnal way not seeing any beauty and excellency in them neither finding any taste or rellish in them but only because they are convinced they cannot be saved without them So then the Question is Whether in Prayer we be more earnest for faith and the other Graces of Gods Spirit then for Temporal Blessings And then in suing for spiritual Blessings whether the beauty we see in them and rellish we find in them do much induce and move us to be earnest at the Throne of Grace for them 3. Do we use Prayer and in prayer are we earnest for faith in the manner aforesaid observe we then the fruit of our praying Psal 85.8 He will speak peace to his Saints to wit by stirring up and encreasing their faith Surely suing for faith as aforesaid we shall upon examination find an encrease of it And this is the great wheel in the Clock come on in this grace and come on in every sanctifying and saving grace Vse 2. For Inquisition Seeing Prayer is one good means to encrease faith to enquire into the Doctrine of Prayer As first What Prayer is and the parts of it 2. The necessity of prayer and the Motives to it 3. The Objections against Prayer and the Answers of them 4. The Qualifications of true and acceptable prayer First What prayer is and the parts of it Answ We are not now speaking of the requests and suits we make one to another in our civil converse here in the world which may be called civil prayer But of Religious Praier which we thus describe It is an opening of the desire of the heart or a pouring out of the foul to the Lord. 1. I say It is an opening of the desire of the heart or a pouring out of the soul See Psal 62.8 1 Sam. 1.15 2. I say It is a pouring out of the soul to the Lord he only being the object of religious praier it is he and he only that sees and knows the heart he and he only which is present in all places to hear the praiers of all his people he and he only which is Almighty to help Now the Parts of praier In Scripture we find divers divisions of prayer but in 1 Tim. 2.1 we have the parts of praier punctually laid down 1. Supplication 2. Precation or petition 3. Intercession 4. Thanksgiving By supplication we understand humble suit to the Lord for his favour and pardon of sin and in this part of praier we have the confession of sin implied By precation or petition the second part of praier we understand a begging of all other things needful for soul and body By Intercession the third part of praier we do not understand an entreating for others as divers interpretors doe for not only this part of praier but all the parts of praier are here injoyned to be performed as in the behalf of our selves why so in the behalf of others But we understand by it a contending with God for the prevention and removall of judgment By Thanksgiving the last part of praier we understand a rendring praise to God for his blessings and mercies Thus then we see that prayer consists of 4 parts Supplication Precation Intercession and Thanksgiving Now we come to the second thing concerning prayer to wit What necessity of it and the motives unto it I answer It is an excellent part of Gods worship Psal 95.6 where by bowing down and calling upon God is meant to worship him Hence the place of Gods worship by way of excellencie was called the house of prayer Isa 56.7 2. By the duty of prayer the Lord is much glorified for hereby all his attributes are acknowledged Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity confessed The puritie and holinesse of his Law subscribed unto His promises in the Gospel professed to be believed the accomplishment of them to be hoped for and expected and he blessed and praised for his mercies 3. Gods command The Lord commands us to pray Psal 105.4 1 Thes 5.17 4. The example of Christ and all the worthies mentioned in Scripture Luke 3.21 and 9.18 28 29. and 6 12. And so all Gods people mentioned in holy writ they all were adicted to prayer 5. The misery that attends those that neglect this duty Jerem. 10.25 Matth. 26.41 Ezek. 22.30 31. Dan. 9.13.14 6. This is a good means to easie our hearts This Hannah knew wel 1 Sam. 1 15. And Job Job 16.20 And so all practial Christians 7. Our continual and innumerable necessities inward and outward 8. The promise of supply and help Psal 50.15 and 91.15 Matth. 7.7 9. The dignitie of this duty hereby a mortal worm hath conference and converse with the greatest majesty 10. The power and efficacie of praier compare Gen. 32.11 and 33.4 And 2 Sam. 15.31 and 17.23 See Exod. 14.15 and 15.25 Matth. 17.21 Remember Hezekiahs and Isaiahs praier and so Esters and Mordecai's In the primitive Church Anno 175 the army of Christians was called the thundering legion because upon their praiers God scattered their enemies with thunder And the very heathen in those times could observe that the Christians were able to obtain any thing by prayer And what man or woman of religious observation in these our times but may speak of the efficacie and power of prayer Now we come to the third particular the objections against prayer Object 1 May some ignorant men and women say the Lord knows our wants before we pray and then to what purpose should we pray Answ We do not pray because the Lord knows not our wants But 1. Because it is his comand that we pray Phil. 4.6 2. That we may demonstrate our selves sensible of our wants which the Lord will have us to be Psal 34.18 3. Hereby we acknowledg the Lord to be the fountain of all good 4. This is the condition the Lord ties us unto if so be we would have him to impart his blessings unto us Prov. 2.3 5. Jer. 33.2 3. Matth. 7.7 Object 2 But the Lord in his eternall counsell hath decreed what blessings we shall have and what blessings we shall not have and his decree cannot be altered Answ All this is true but yet as the Lord hath decreed the end why so the means and in the ordinary course by the means works to the end The Lord had decreed to give the Gentiles to Christ but yet see what he saith unto him Psal 2.8 Ask of me c. And so he had decreed as he was pleased to make known the return of the Jewes out of the captivitie Yet see what he saith Ezek. 36.37 I will yet for this be enquired of by the house of Israel Nay Daniel knowing the very time