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A60361 The compleat Christian, and compleat armour and armoury of a Christian, fitting him with all necessary furniture for that his holy profession, or, The doctrine of salvation delivered in a plain and familiar explication of the common catechisme, for the benefit of the younger sort, and others : wherein summarily comprehended is generally represented the truly orthodox and constant doctrine of the Church of England, especially in all points necessary to salvation / by W.S., D.D. Slatyer, William, 1587-1647. 1643 (1643) Wing S3983; ESTC R38256 385,949 1,566

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glory though their confusion that oppose it as seene in Pharaoh Herod Sennacherib and all Tyrants and who art thou in his hand that art so hellishly disposed that thou carest not to despite and despise God and blaspheme though thou goe to hell with shame and confusion 56. What the commination That they shall not be held guiltlesse but so guilty and beare the insupportable burthen of their sinnes that will presse their soules to hell as the most fearfull estate curse and punishment so signified and so too plainly seene in such blasphemies who commonly are as it were 1. Given over to a reprobate sense in lying filthy talke drinking and prophanenesse and vanity with this abuse of Gods name 2. Insensible of their sinnes by Gods just judgement in neglect of all holy duties of prayer and Gods honour with scorning and mocking at his Sabbaths or any reproofe though most just 3. Set downe in Gods booke for damned persons even condemned already bearing that palpable marke of prophanenesse like Cains marke in their foreheads that he that hath an eye to see may see them stand guilty and the sentence that they may reade in their conscience of heavy condemnation even written in their foreheads that every one may read it to their shame who shamed not to dishonour Gods holy name 57. Whence this so fearfull commination More fully to manifest the Lords fierce anger and jealousie as against idolaters and those that prophane his worship accounted to hate him in the second Commandement so here against all other prophane wretches that shall abuse his most holy name and any other way derogate from his glory which hee is most jealous of and will not give away or part with to any other much lesse lose it with contempt he chiefly standing on and above all things highly prizing his honour 58. But what followeth The fourth Commandement in a fourth respect also in regard of the due celebration of his Sabbaths aiming at the setting forth of his honour SECT 6. The fourth Commandement The Analysis of the 4. Commanaement shewing the parts and duties therein commanded and abuses opposite so prohibited whether intimated or more fully expressed where first the duty of sanctification of that day of rest called the Sabbath and of thh Christian Sabbath or Lords day with the reasons of the difference and alteration thereof but perpetuall necessity of the substance and duties of the same and our Christians Sabbath or Lords day proved to be established by many reasons and arguments as by the Lords owe● doings the Apostles preaching and doctrine or constitutions as received from the Lord himselfe to be understood as well as the practice of the Church directed by his Spirit according to his promise and who oppose it but troublesome and unquiet spirits or fanatick and fantasticke Schismaticks too commonly to be sound So of the rest and right use and observation thereof on the Lords day in holy duties and workes of piety and charity or of necessity on truly urgent not every frivolous occasion The factious schismaticks overnicenesse here as well as others loose prophanenesse deserving worthily to be taxed that on both sides disturbe the peace good order and peace of the Church the one of them prophanely with negligence contempt the other sedititiously with malice and disdaine to avoid both which extrenes and keepes an even and equall course betweene them we are carefully to distinguish betweene the morality and ceremony in this Commandment how far forth in the substance of it for the morall duty to God-ward perpetually to be observed and how for the ceremony and legall observances many of them interwoven with the said duty with which to the Iowes-ward in that Churches nonage as it were before Christs appearance in the flesh It was burdened but as now freed of them it ought to be discharged and so in that particular for the time among many others with them respecting the creation the greatest benefit ever till then manifested to be remembred by and in it now altered and the duty yet unchanged to the remembrance of a greater our redemption in that change of the ceremony not duty by us now principally respected and thus as we see by the Churches authority and power with sufficient warrant from holy Scriptures ordered and established whose power in that point to change it and wisdome in so well ordering it guided by Gods own president and direction of his blessed Spirit is here amply demonstrated and to be justified against the malevolent oblatrations or detractations and calumnies of any factious humorist and separatist whatsoever and thus the substance of the duty in the morality of the Commandement remaining entire to all holy intents and purposes the onely the illegall shadow removed is by them into a more divine respect and better for us Christians as more suting with our Church altered or changed and divers objections against it of no great moment the truth well weighed are hereby and withall answered as especially the Iudaizing faction and fancies confuted and so next for the due observing and sanctification of it we are to take notice of the rest and holy exercises commanded and others permitted for recreation and comfort of our weaknesse nature not to make a riotous revell or drunken Bacchanalia of that day as neither otherwise to prophane it by ordinary worldly labours or other Iewish superstitions or vain unlawfull and wicked exercises of any sort spending that so set apart and sanctified time to remember that rest and sit our selves to the same by removing the impediments using the helps studious to fit our selves to both private and publiqus duties of the day as well Minister as people the opposite which is here farther deciphered and in divers points particularized or especially the more common and enormous offences The use and reason of other Sabbath or holy dayes ordained and appointed by the Church as well in the times of the Old as New Testament as in particular many both feasting and fasting dayes set apart for divine worship the farther explication of the Commandement in the permission command of the six dayes for labour and works of our vocations whereby the Sabbath may be the better sanctified which as most necessary is sostrictly urged for the honour of God the generall good and besides other reasons even the very example of God himselfe so resting on it and blessing and sanctifying it 1. VVHat is the fourth Commandement Remember that thou keepe holy the Sabbath day six dayes shalt thou labour c. 2. What contained herein The Commandement in these words Remember c. The explication and illustration of the duty Six dayes c. The reasons of the duty and Commandment taken both from the Creators own example actions as well as the creatures profit necessity and duty But the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy Lord c. 3. What is the order of this Commandement to the rest A fourth duty as fourth in
place appointing and establishing the time allotted to his publique service and worship his honour being the maine scope of the first Table And as it is to be set up in our hearts the intent of the first Commandement And as his outward worship rightly performed the intent of the second The glorifying of his name in all things the intent of the third The rightly observing of his Sabbaths the appointed times of his worship the intent of this fourth Commandement 4. What manner of Commandement An affirmative inferring and enforcing his opposite negative viz. to remember to sanctifie the Lords Sabbath and not negligently to let it passe or prophane the same 5. What the affirmative part 1. Our duty to sanctifie the Sabbath by setting a rest apart sanctifying the rest by holy exercises 2. Our duty to be mindfull and carefull of it so to remember to sanctifie it by preparing our selves using all good meanes removing impediments 6. What the negative part The forbidding of the prophanation of it by not setting apart a rest misspending it in any superstition idlenesse vanities sin c. The passing it over in forgetfulnesse by unpreparednesse neglect or contempt 7. How the parts and duties opposite seene opposed The sanctifying opposite to the prophanation of the Sabbath and holy exercises to the mis-spending it in ill actions The minding it opposite to forgetfulnesse and drowsinesse therein as the preparing the soule to that holy and fit celebration thereof opposite to neglect contempt or unpreparednesse 8. What is the duty of sanctification of the Sabbath The setting apart a day of rest and exercising our selves therein in such holy duties as the Lord requireth 9. What day is so to be set apart The seventh day so he appointeth and alloweth the six dayes for our labour whereby we with more chearfulnesse and readinesse may sanctifie his Sabbath the seventh 11. How is it that our Sabbath differeth from the Jewes Sabbath For divers reasons as to shew that the old Law hath given place to the new and so the Jews Sabbath to this of Christians That the ceremonies are vanished and what was ceremoniall in this vanished as the time altered though the morality remaine That the Sonne of Man indeed is Lord of the Sabbath and so hath power to alter it 11. How prove you this Commandement to be merall and perpetuall For that it is ranked there among the rest of the Commandements that are morall and to endure as well as from the necessity of it no lesse to us and to the worlds end for Gods honour then it was to the Jewes and all the holy Patriarkes and Fathers from the beginning and therefore vaine and impious is their assertion that as a ceremony would have it passed and vanished or account it needlesse or a burthen whereas it is indeed to all good Christians comfort and the especiall honour of God 12. What necessity of a Sabbath For divers and weighty reasons such as these 1. That the faith and obedience of men may hereby be exercised more particularly in setting themselves apart from worldly businesse what haste soever and dedicate themselves and this time holy to the Lord. 2. That concord and unity Doctrine and Gods service may be maintained which without this meanes would hardly be effected but confusion would follow every one let loose to his own will or fantasie as commonly so many heads so many opinions 3. That love and charity and all graces were encreased by publicke teaching the duties required and reproving the vices as it is done by Gods word preached then whereby the good and vertuous encouraged the vitious shamed 4. That Gods service and publicke worship may be thus upheld that else were like to decay if men left to private devotions had not such publicke meetings some forgetting others nelecting all duty and most that did not ignorantly or superstitiously performing the same 5. That more acceptable service to God performed when prayer and holy duties so publickely exercised by all as many brands making a great flame so the prayers of many with greater fervency ascending up to God and every good servant of his more enflamed by joyning with others in these holy duties 6. That it may be for rest to the very servants and cattle that else groning under their yoake may be too much grieved by unmercifull minded masters without relaxation 7. That it may be a difference between Gods servants and the heathen that know not God by such sanctifying the Sabbath and so be a signe to us of that eternall Sabbath and rest in Heaven wherein as we are taught we may meditate how with Saints and Angels we all doe enjoy Sabbath dayes recreations of singing hymnes and Hallelujahs as we shall the prayses of God for evermore 13. But is not a Christians Sabbath every day Yes in spirituall rest from sinne and private satisfaction of the soule in practising of holy duties sitting a godly life not to forget thereby or neglect the publicke service of God on his appointed Sabbath whichevere to dishonour God most of all and bringing in confusion and i● religion 14. But since the Jewes Sabbath altered may not any Christian make or set out what day he please for Sabbath Nothing lesse for it were not onely temerity and presumption to break the Lord and his Churches institution as may be shewed but the high way to Atheisme and Irreligion when if every one might set out what Sabbath he pleased one setting out one day and another another there would be no day in effect kept holy and so not onely no order and uniformity but even no unity or charity and likely much uncharity jangling and dissention and consequently irreligion 15. How then is our Sabbath to be shewed or proved or established instead of the Jewes Sabbath Most firmly against all obstreper●as clamors of gainsayers 1. By the Lords owne approving and sanctifying it who is the Lord of the Sabbath 2. By the Apostles doctrine and continuall practice and keeping the same 3. By the whole Churches and all holy mens uniforme practice and consent ever since 16. How by the Lords owne doings Most plainly by his 1. Naming or giving his name to it in holy Scripture as Apocal. 1. 10. called the Lords day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that as the Lords supper the Lords people and his Church or the like so his day 2. Sanctifying it by and with his First resurrection thereon and finishing the worke of our redemption and resting on the new Sabbath as God the Father the creation on the former Secondly presence and divers appearances to the Apostles on the same day at their holiest and Sabbath dayes exercises as I. To the women and the Disciples and Mary Magdalen at the first II. In the morning John 20. and to Simon III. And to the Disciples in the way to Emaus Luke 24. 34. IV. And to the Disciples and Thomas with them John 20. V. And at other times and to Saint Iohn in
Pathmos inspiring him this day c. 3. Resting the Jewes Sabbath as it were finishing it by his Resurrection and other appearings and as it were hereby appointing and approving this new Sabbath to his honour as Lord of the Sabbath 17. How by the Apostles doctrine and practice Most evidently 1. By their meetings that first day of the week when Christ arose and appeared to Simon and Mary Magdalen and the Disciples and after Thomas and others with them Luke 24. and Iohn 20. c. 2. Continuall practice of it and preaching and ministring the Sacraments that day Act. 20. 7. 1 Cor. 16. 1. 3. Constitution of it in the Churches as 1 Cor. 16. 1. is set downe where both First the day first day of the weeke named and appointed Secondly every first day so appointed Thirdly instituted both there and in the Churches of Galatia Fourthly instituted and there taught for the Churches instruction generally as we see at Troas and other places also Fiftly the duties of the Sabbath or Lords day plainly exercised then gathering together the congregation and gathering for the poore 4. Constant observation continued forty years after performed by Saint John in Pathmos in holy meditations as sitting especially that day had his illumination and holy inspiration from God to the instruction of the Church by propheticall revelation when Christs farther presence apparition and blessed illumination of him and the Church by him seemes further confirmation of that holy institution and Sabbaths sanctification as Estote imitatores mei sicut ego Christi 18. How farther confirmed By the continuall and continued practice of it ever since proved by all Ecclesiasticall histories ever since without any interruption to these daies and so by The primitive times and Church Holy men that lived and succeeded next to the Apostles times the learnedst and wisest ever since and so consequently as from thence both at and to this day and none found to oppose unlesse some idle turbulent and fanaticke spirits wanting learning judgement and discretion that who seeth not this must be wilfully blinde 19. The Sabbath then is certaine and fixed The seventh day at the consummation of the worke of the Creation the Jewes Sabbath till Christ and his consummation of the ceremony of it a new Sabbath now by him consecrated at the consummation of the worke of redemption so to remaine to the worlds finall consummation as the first to Christ from the creation so this from Christ to the end and finall consummation of all things to continue after with a new and third Sabbath perpetuall in the new Jerusalem in the Heavens 20. What use or end of these renewed Sabbaths To consider and magnifie the name and glory of God more and more expressed and made knowne to men 1. As in the first Sabbath remembred his works of creation mighty acts and glory 2. In the second Sabbath or Lords day both all that and further the workes of his mercy and redemption in the worlds restauration 3. In the third Sabbath both all them and further his excellent justice and glory most amply more then ever demonstrated to all creatures over all the world and for evermore 21. How summe you up these collections For full illustration or confirmation of the doctrine of the Christian Sabbath or Lords day may be considered 1. How estote imitatores mei sicut ego Christi implies a command from Christ of what the Apostles teach and practise 2. How Christ promised the Comforter who should instruct them in all truth and bring all things to their remembrance c. 3. How Christs example and apparitions evincing the same or shew the ground for the following doctrine and practice 4. How the Apostles doctrine and establishing the Lords day by power delegate from him 5. How dies Dominicus Rev. 1. 1. sheweth that prime and primitive appellation as well as doctrine and practice more to confirme it his and not only Domini as Mal. 3. 1. or Amos 5. 18. or Jo. 8. 56. but Dominicus also all which besides the authority of primitive times Fathers and Councells though the Churches instruction might be enough to any devout Christian doe more dignifie the Lords day as raising it to the highest degree of sacred and Apostolicall or divine institution and what was then so ordained hath beene since by continuall and constant practice of all succeeding ages and all good Lawes Ecclesiasticall and Civill confirmed never by any unlesse such as were publickly noted or branded for schisme spoken against or oppugned also further if not this instituted so primarily it may seeme that there was no Sabbath or Lords day for a while in the Church or but the Jewes Sabbath which were to leave the Church too naked of so holy and necessary a point of Christianity 22. But the Apostles sometimes used the Jews Sabbath Yes and for divers good reasons both to instruct them in the same To draw them to Christ and his Church To confesse a Sabbath and the like and so they refused not the Heathen Temples or their assemblies as at Ephesus Athens or Feasts or Schools as in the Schoole of Tyrannus but tooke all good occasions to instruct them and of this it came to passe that both the Lords day and Jewes Sabbath were by many kept and observed from their use and example a good while after in primitive times 23. What other arguments or reasons of convenience are brought for our Christian Sabbath or Lords day As upon this day many excellent things were and greatest benefits that ever happened to mankinde or the people of God so in his new Sabbath to remember them and praise him for the same as on this day 1. The worlds creation began Elements framed Angells created 2. This day Christs resurrection the worlds new creation or restauration 3. This day manna first fell and the Israelites passed through the red sea 4. This day Christ baptised turned water into wine and fed five thousand miraculously 5. This day Araon and his sons consecrated c. 6. This day Christ often appeared to his Disciples and others after his resurrection 7. This day the holy Ghost descended and Saint John in Pathmos enlightned 8. This day Christ we hope at last shall come to judgement to begin the perpetuall Sabbath after the night of this Sabbath ended 24. What course then to be used and held for the due sanctification of the Sabbath and rightly to understand or interpret the fourth Commandement Rightly and duly to remember and consider how the Christians Sabbath or Lords day though not literally commanded for the whole ceremony and circumstance or punctually in all things to be observed yet is virtually intimated and for the morality and substance of it exemplarily propounded to us there in the fourth Commandement without which heed taking and observation or right understanding moderation any may be apt and ready to fall into Thomas Brabornes and others judaizing errors concerning the same however otherwise we cannot
things to come and expected A shadow and show or signification of good things present and enjoyed relate also to the Messias and promise of him and rest and deliverance by him Paedagogy of the Jewes and to them a signe of distinction from others Temple and service there in their rest in Canaan Or shewing also the nonage of the law looking towards grace and subjection of that Church as the heyre under age so in the servitude of that Church over-rated with ceremonies and teaching them to bow their stiffe necks to the service of God inuring them to it by legal strict observances And lastly shadowing the rest of Christians and of the law under the Gospell made easie by grace So here begunne in grace and perfected in glory Eternall with God in the heavens So whereas ceremonies are either Chiefly shadowing things to come as here principally the Messias or For signification of some present duty and holy memoriall For order and decency reconciling gravity and authority as well as attention to the divine celebrations and actions Though some of the later may reflect on us Christians with the morality of the Commandement yet all the chiefe respects in the ceremony serving the Jewish Church and Synagogue and shadowing Christ to come hee being come they with that Church are vanished 30. Shew it more particularly This Commandment and their Sabbath though morall in the substance was as many other things in the morall worship of God over-rated with many legall and strict observances to the very letter inducing a ceremoniall respect and shadowing good things to come whiles it and the Jewes Church lasted which the Jewes could hardly beare yet made more hard in many respects by their owne traditions as seene in the Talmude and witnessed by our Saviours words who doing good deeds on it disliked by them reproved their blindnesse and intimating the alteration if not then beginning it shewed hee came to do good and dissolve those hard knots and burdens and make the Sabbath more profitable and pleasant as convenient both to Gods honour and mans comfort and that the pedagogy servitude and nonage of their Law Temple Sabbath and other such legall ceremonies vanished hee would ordain a new Testament Church law Sabbath and Sacraments of Christians and hee the Lord of the Sabbath thus ordering it and as it were beginning first by himselfe she wing and honouring the day by his glorious resurrection and other apparitions as Saint Augustine speaketh after by his holy Spirit perfected it in his holy Apostles and Churches doctrine and ordinances as we see it established where is conserved the morality of it in the worship of God and time destined to his service even according to that in the Commandement determined with the resting and sanctifying that rest though not so literally legally and burdensomly as then to them ceremonially enjoined yet as religiously and with respect to the morality of the rest as it concerned both them and us both the rest of the ox cattell servant for their comfort and refreshing and our rest for our fitter dedication of our selves to such holy action as the service of God then to be performed and attending it with more alacrity that are all by us observed as by the Lord and his Church or by the Lord in his Church ordained he himselfe so declaring and demonstrating the day also as Saint Augustine speaks Epist. ad Januar. 119. 9 13. by his glorious resurrection and honouring it by his many apparitions in Pathmos and else to his servant John that calleth it his day as well as his other Disciples or having finished the Iewes Sabbath by that his rest in his grave on that day and withall their Passeover and Sacraments by his glorious resurrection designing our new Sabbath and day of it by it as the same Father speakes Serm. 15. de verbis Ap. consecrating as it were the Lords day to us and promising us there with an everlasting day in the heavens and so continuing as we may collect or commending to us in it such convenient ceremonies as respect that his joyfull remembrance our deliverance by him our rest begun here in grace and to bee perfected in glory with him in the heavens or the like fitting us Christians for decency order and the beauty of holinesse though all ceremoniall shadowes of him to come and legall pedagoy and servitude ended and thus ensued the change of the day not the law of the ceremony and shadow not the substance or morality of the strictnesse servitude and unpleasantnesse not the duty or profitablenesse of the Commandement by him that was Lord even of the Sabbath and of the Commandement 31. But how say you by him changed for that is still by some controverted 1. As he finished the ceremony and by his appearance actions and presence tooke away the shadowes and unprofitable rudiments that were no longer to endure then to the revealing of the Messias expected and by them shadowed so the substance come they unusefull and vanish and Secondly as by his power his Apostles and Church so ordered and ordained and by his holy Spirit instructed practised it and that even whiles the solemne funerals as one well speakes of the Jewish Church Sabbath and ceremonies were in performing that is betweene our Saviours resurrection and the destruction of the Temple as well as afterward to all succeeding ages which may suffice us whereas else indeed the summe of all may be for that point of the change if that neither I. Christs 1. precept granted since not expresly to be found Though we have as much in effect by his former teaching hee was Lord of the Sabbath and so his example and 2. Practice of sanctifying it in his resurrection and other apparitions on that day and such election and declaration of it with motives and instructions thence arising to his Church and Disciples 3. Denomination of it the Lords day by his servant John as aforesaid may serve II. Nor the Apostles precept so expresly to be found for the sanctifying it in all points as required though we have their First observation of it by the Lords example Second selecting it for pious actions Third so ordaining it in divers Churches Fourth practice and therein tacite precept Fifth Tradition having so left it to the Sixt Church and constitution in some Fathers and Doctors opinions Seventh denomination of it the Lords day III. Nor Churches and primitive times Ancientest 1. Practice without controll from thence derived 2. Tradition received for Apostolicall 3. Constitutions very ancient even as those first times 4. Canons thence successively ensuing consent of all Ecclesiasticall Histories Writers and fathers that all confesse it so delivered received can prevaile to satisfie contentious spirits which doe abundantly satisfie all moderate men they should yet be perswaded the Churches power so granted by the Lord with the assistance of his Spirit promised to guide them into all truth and direct them might suffice to
ordaine whatsoever necessary for Gods honour as this is and setting things in order as they cannot but confesse done in all other things 32. Such as doe question this make as little scruple to question the Churches power and disobey it Which they should not doe especially if they well consider that spoken to the Apostles by Christ and in them to the Church Who receiveth you receiveth me and who despiseth you despiseth me and not so onely but him that sent me and as reverent Hooker to this point hath it is it a small offence to despise the Church of God or disobey the Lawes and Ordinances of the Church saith Salomon My sonne keepe thy fathers commandement and forget not thy mothers instruction binde them alwaies about thy heart it doth notstand with the duty we owe the heavenly Father to disobey the Ordinance of the Church our mother and let us not say or thinke we keepe the Commandements of the one when we break the Law of the other for unlesse we observe both we obey neither and which is more the Laws thus made and ordained by the Church God himselfe doth in such sort authorise that to despise them is to despise him in them so then for the power Christ giving them such power and his Spirit and promising assistance to the worlds end and they executing his will and exercising that power as we see the Apostles did and used to doe ordered and gave rules for it saying let all things be done decently and in order with the like instructions as they also promised by themselves to see done the Apostle saying Other things will I set in order when I come as most likely by the consequent practice of it this was then done and that power never dying but that Spirit continuing and directing them in all truth to the worlds end they and their successors had full power to ordaine as no doubt they did these and the like things and this by all good Christians to bee obeyed 33. How farre then is the Churches order to bee obeyed As we heard before and however by divers minced and controverted limited curtalled and contracted yet God and Christ binding us to it and the decree in things so primarily pertaining to the honour of God as this is without contradiction to be accounted of Apostolicke and sacred authority and as we heare simply and absolutely in spiritualibus so in ordine ad spiritualia no doubt but deservedly to be reverenced and obeyed by all good Christians in all necessary circumstances and all reasonable and indifferent things and this day and manner of sanctifying it in every respect primarily and directly subject to the Churches authority nor need they question this since the Jewes Church had power in such things and circumstances of the divine worship not particularly determined by God himselfe or his servant Moses in the Law as seen in sundry very materiall rites and observances as the appointment of hours for the daily sacrifice building of their Synagogues throughout the land to hear Gods word and pray in divers feasts as of Purim dedication and the like which Christs Church no way inferiour to theirs rather superiour in the measure of grace and presence of his Spirit should not be abridged of in all reason or to prescribe and ordaine lawes for things tending to her better edification and in things undetermined as this is in that circumstance and the rather to be granted for this determination of the time as well at least as of the place manner of prayer and formes of it and celebrating the Sacraments and divers other as prime and remarkable circumstances of the divine worship and the place assuredly as materiall as the time to be determined or assigned nor should our brethren that are gone from us in place and no lesse in opinion as farre as the breadth of the Atlantique ocean or that staying at home yet hold a wood perhaps or barn or parlour for places good enough for their divine worship since Christ not assigned Churches particularly they should I say not complain of the time not set out by Christ since neither was the place set out by him nor of the time assigned by the Church if Christ not assigned it since so well ordered and they will arrogate more liberty in many things and authority to themselves but rather as the Temple so fitly translate to our Churches which they cannot well deny though they hug that poor device of their new meeting places be as well content with the Sabbath translate to our Sunday by the same authority 34. If this be granted in the Churches power why may they not now alter it or then have appointed any other day then the seventh It is well and sufficiently answered by the greatest and learnedst of our Divines as well as those of the Church of Rome That absolute or absolutâ authoritate the Church had power from God and his Christ they might or may doe it That congruè or congruâ dispensatione conveniently now they may not for many ill consequents that would thence ensue or that might follow as we know how odious and dangerous such innovations are in meaner places and matters so especially in Kingdoms and great Estates or Religion which too much affected would make the government ridiculous and whereby all matters by giddy heads shall quickly so be questioned as we see the strange presumption of some men that on such grounds uncertaine ones are too ready to innovate and readier to despise and deprave all things they fancy not and arrogate authority to themselves to chop and change all things whatsoever their fancy serves them to call into question and would be glad to have fellowes so to go blamelesse as they would thinke especially if they could but tax the Church or times of such inconstancy that might well be wished by them more to countenance their lenity and in the end nothing shall be left out of their inconstant queres and that shall not by their fancy or fury be disturbed or perverted and in this point in such inconstancy and diversity we may well expect divers appointing or approving divers dayes as their fancy serveth them shall in effect no day be duly as it ought observed therefore when the Church hath once pitched on the day and decreed it moved by so many great and good reasons as aforesaid and more on the seventh day in seconding Gods owne appointment in a holy imitation of his precept and admiring his wisdome as many other things of the like nature were likewise done not presuming to be above him or wiser then their Maker or Master in their choise as to picke out any other number nor to settle on any other number or day then that in imitation of the former by our blessed Lord and Saviour himselfe so picked out and sanctified so many wayes acknowledged being thus that seventh day our Christian Sabbath now so long and quietly setled in the Church it remaineth
no more now safe to alter it and shew such lenity nor well indifferent having been already so solemnly chosen concluded on and decreed on though absolutâ potestate they may or with more shew of reason they might have done it yet thus limitatâ dispensatione and congruè they may not with which we may well stop the mouth of inconstant curiosity and hold our selves relgiously and christianly resolved 35. This is then your resolution It is and of all the gravest Divines moderne or ancient keeping the morality of the Commandement and letting the ceremony passe or so much of it as not concerneth us and had a rollish of the legall pedagogie and servitude so whereas the morall law was written in the tables of our hearts in more plaine characters at the creation but by the fall was so defaced that we now want discipline in most things or divine revelation to instruct us yet thus farre even depraved nature straight sees the morality of this Commandement that as God is to be worshipped so a time as well as place is due unto it but then that it should be on the seventh day onely divine revelation or Gods instruction can shew us wherefore as not else knowne God addes that reason from the creation which now by his will revealed is the secondarily morall and positive part of the Commandement with the sanctification of it and the rest so far as serves to the sanctification of it the rest of it involved in ceremony with the particularity of that seventh examplar'd by the creation the greatest benefit then to be remembred and God praised for it though a greater our restauration by Christ in expectation and promised and now chiefly to be remembred on it and the no small cause or reason of the change which thus followes on the former reasons for that when God had so portion'd it nature enformed by grace cannot but acknowledge God the wisest and his wisdom best so follow his choise of the seventh rather then any other number and Christs honouring and so demonstrating this seventh by his blessed actions performance of that our restauration resurrection preaching and apparitions on it even shewed his election and confirmed the change which his Church by such directions of him and his holy Spirit stedfastly embraced so the first seventh with the strictnesse pedagogie and servitude under legall ceremonies as the ceremoniall part of it expiring the morall part remaining that second seventh our Christian Sabbath was so chosen and decreed in imitation of the former as many things else corresponding in the Christians and Jewes pollicy conveniently enough acknowledging Gods instruction by patterne where expresse precept not found or plaine and punctually existent which so now decreed many offences in the breach of it for Gods precept is wrapt up in the precept of the Church which if broken both Gods fourth Commandement and his precept to obey the Church and i withall the Churches precept and power are with t in breach of the Sunday despised broken and contemned 36. It seems then as strict if not stricter and heavier then the Jewes Sabbath In the offence as heavie at least though in the performance easier as the burthen of ceremonies vanished with which it was overrated and that strictly to the letter that even no workes might be done as they interpreted it and the rest as scrupulously burdened by their traditions whereas now the rest is fitted to the service and sanctification of the day more then to the ceremony and the workes more spirituall in prayses that then in sacrifices and for the scrupulosity of other works even good workes by them as they by our Saviour reproved we are so allowed works of 1. Necessity of our selves 2. Charity or mercy for the necessity of our poore brother 3. Piety in the sanctification of it for God or workes of Necessity for our selves though not of our callings but fitting us to the better sanctification of the day Mercy and charity for the necessity of our poor brethren fitting the day and our devotion as honouring God with our substance Piety proper to the day for God and sanctification of it to God as honouring him with our selves and soules and with all such laudable recreations allowed by the Church and Christian Magistrates as may make it a joyfull feast not sorrowfull fast which is not the nature of it or a festivall of rejoycing before the Lord wherein to be seene a Christian liberty from the legall servitude and burden of the ceremonies as well as the threats and curse laid on it and other traditions like those of Touch not taste not handle not not to kindle fires dresse meat and many more like cumbring it but now removed besides allowance of more comfort in gracious manner to celebrate it as a joyfull and solemne festivall to the Lord and so a liberty of grace to more alacrity in piety not out of licentiousnesse to prophanenesse though moderate recreations approved in the eye and judgement of the Church and State to avoid some else worse inconveniences are allowed that yet shall not hinder the duties of the day required of which more hereafter And whereas some object why then is the Epiphona or prayer for enclining our hearts to the keeping of it added to the end of it as well as of the other Commandements if it be not punctually in all respects as they to bee understood The answer is plaine from that before taught that it is so added for that part of it that it agreeth in with them for the morality of it so far as that extends which is as it is now by the Church enjoyned it being as we see in all points so fully by the Church delivered demonstrated and explained how farre it is morall and how and in what manner it is in force and by us to be observed Nor boots it them to say Why was the time so punctually commanded and determined more then the place both circumstances being equally materiall to the worship if not wholly morall in the Commandement and so precisely and punctually to be observed for that it appeares the time was present and in their power to observe it and so determined besides that that it was a signe to difference them from other nations then appointed whereas the place that was to be appointed was not yet attained unto as appeares by that so often repeated in the Law When you shall come to the place which the Lord your God shall chuse to put his name there viz. the Temple at Jerusalem in Canaan they being then in the wildernesse or at most the plaines of Moab but had the Temple as well as the Sabbath beene there expresly mentioned and determined yet both Temple and Sabbath being in effect for that particular but types and shadowes of better things to come with other ceremonies of servitude and legall observances then and there to be performed were to expire in the Messias so farre as they were types
and shadowes and so have already had their solemne funerals and obsequies as dead and buried and new in their roomes substituted but as the appointing other feasts and Sabbaths both by God himselfe as well as the Iewes Church besides this seventh the Lords Sabbath and other houses of prayer their Synagogues besides the Temple even whiles the Temple stood as well as since were held no breach of the Commandements concerning them rather inlargement and illustration of either in making the worship and duties more publique and generall or for satisfaction and recompence of the neglects in the due observation visiting and sanctification of them that was required so the Christian Sabbath and Churches thus substituted and succeeding the former and in place of them might well bee accounted no breach but enlargement of the Commandements with the dispensation and illustration of Gods graces in more ample manner and measure shewed and bestowed on the whole world the duties made more publique and illustrations and the morality more illustrated by it 37. How shew you this Cleerly and plainly enough both in the Temple where for a particular one or a few Synagogues besides now so great a multitude of Christian Churches over the whole world are seene with Gods solemne worship in them most religiously promoted and in this particular of the Sabbath where the creation and onely temporall deliverances were by it remembred though spirituall ones that were hoped shadowed in it now the spirituall ones that are performed in it and by it remembred and that great worke of redemption so graciously promised and performed on this day the new and Christan Sabbath consummate and shewn to the world in the glorious resurrection of our blessed Saviour and the comming of the holy Ghost and thereby as demonstrated and honoured as it were universally published and both duty and morality of it more illustriously declared And thus we see how the strict observances servitude and legall types doe not concerne us or our Sabbath nor in all respects and circumstances to bee pressed on us as some prone to Judaizing have done yet though not the ceremony the morality to us fully extended and the Commandement though not literally and punctually in all points by us to be observed nor our Christians Sabbath so in it expressed yet expresly included for the substance and all due observance virtually intended whence what is done is so done and on so good grounds by the Church that were it to doe again the order and change of what is therein changed the Church could well doe no other then as is therein already established so little reason have our Novellists in their clamours raised against it and study of contradiction and thus much of the scruples cast in the way concerning the same it followes how wee Christianly ought to celebrate it and conceive of it in the rest and true sanctification of it 38. How is it ordained a Sabbath or rest Not onely for the servants and cattell though for their sakes also ordained but much more for the rest of the soule to be thereby fitted for spirituall exercises of the day 39. How the rest 1. From sinne the best Sabbath and spirituall rest of the soule else in vaine to rest with the body and the soule busied in sinne or vanity 2. From perturbations of minde better to attend the Lords businesse and that dayes duties 3. From ordinary workes both we our selves and all that are ours Whether of Speciall times as sowing reaping c. Or speciall callings c. Or generall import for the Commonwealth that may be done other times 4. And from all disturbance of this as Fayres Markets Courts c. 5. From worldly speeches words and works better to attend heavenly things and Gods service 40. How the sanctification of this rest By holy duties such as besit the Lords day to be exercised and our duties thereon imployed 41. What duties are they The chiefest best and holiest that can bee done on earth so best beseeming that day viz. pertaining to I. Gods honour immediately 1. Prayer or speaking to God c. All such holy and common service 2. Reading and preaching and hearing it which is Gods speaking to us 3. Singing Psalmes and thanksgiving 4. Administration and receiving the Sacraments 5. Holy meditations conference c. II. Men and so Gods honour secondarily workes of 1. Mercy to releeve the poore 2. Peace charity and love to visit the sick comfort the distressed and to make peace c. 3. Necessity as of wars or in First helping the oxe or asse from perishing much more a soule or Christian in any deepe necessity or Secondly casualty as of fire and helping out of danger a woman in travaile and the Lord healing the sicke c. which are accounted sit Sabbath dayes workes and duties and not onely permitted but even commanded to be done and so as the Priests must labour in sacrifice the Ministers greatest taske this dayes exercise 42. Are there not other workes of necessity Yes but permitted onely for avoiding inconveniences as necessary workes that cannot bee shunned for natures necessity as dressing food setting things in order and such houshold businesse which not to doe with decency were to offend in the Jewes or Iewish superstition not considering the Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath 43. How are they then permitted For the better and more carefull celebration of the Sabbath with more decency and conveniency and so a Sabbath dayes journey 44. How is that Not for any worldly occasion at all allowed but for the performing of any the foresaid duties so to goe to Church or about any such godly workes and without disturbance of the greatest or best duties or as may best further them and the service and honour of God 45. May not the poore then be suffered to worke for necessity Nothing lesse for all are bound and they also must as labour the 6. dayes in the seventh rest in obedience expecting his blessing on their honest labours which shall thereby bee either sufficient for their content or his mercy will stirre up charity for their farther reliefe 46. Js the whole Sabbath to bee spent in such holy exercises Yes to our weake ability the best wee may especially the principall times allotted to Gods publique service and duties by the Church enjoyned not to be neglected and for the resting in godly sort as may beseeme Christians and the Lords day so in godly meditations singing Psalmes and other good exercises 47. But this may seeme burdensome and make the Lords day grievous It may be to the raw and unexercised Christian but to the best it will be most comfort the holiest and best spending of that day and most glad will they be of ability to performe both the best exercises and most of them as comming nearest Saints and Angels doing Gods will and the best things with willingnesse and alacrity 48. But is no relaxation of such exercises
the prohibition of all worke in amplification of the command 78. Wherein the amplification chiefly 1. In that the six dayes are allotted commanded and by Gods example also established for labour and workes that the seventh may be a Sabbath a holy and festivall day of rest 2. In that all worke is thereon forbidden not onely to the Master or Magistrate but even 1. To the son and daughter and servant 2. To the cattell Oxe Asse c. 3. Nay the very stranger whatsoever with us in company 79. Why so That it may be the better sanctified by all That the cattell and servant may rest with us That the stranger draw us not away by evill example from God nor we accessory to others offences 80. Why this so strictly urged 1. Because Parents and Masters being in Gods stead are to see inferiours trained up in godlinesse 2. As the head receiveth comfort in the good of the other members so should the superiours from these 3. It is a sin and shame for Parents to bring up children not servants of God but vassalls of the Divell and firebrands of hell or masters of such servants 4. What blessing can be expected from their labours if they sanctifie not the Sabbath with us 5. What comfort can it be for Parents or Masters to see their sons or servants come to wretchednesse or misery or miscarry as they cannot chuse in neglect of Gods service and their duty nay what corrasive to their conscience by suffering it to be accessory to their wickednesse and how shall they be taught if not brought to Church to learne their duties 81. What then the end of the Sabbath 1. For the sanctification of Gods name in holy and publique duties 2. For the rest of even the servant and cattell 3. For the type of the spirituall rest both from sinne by the Messiah and perpetually in the Heavens 82. What reasons of this duty urged here Divers both 1. Interlaced and intimated by the 1. Antiquity and excellency thereof 2. Equity and justice of it 3. Propriety of it to God belonging Expressed by the 1. Reduplication of the Commandement 2. Example of God himselfe 3. His blessing annexed 83. What are the reasons intimated 1. The antiquity and excellency of that day and duty instituted by God himselfe in Paradise in time of mans innocency sanctified first with his owne example intimated in the serious remembrance and reiteration of the command as well as in the example of God Secondly the equity and justice of it that having allowed six dayes to us he may well require the 7. with our best duty and care to sanctifie it Thirdly the propriety the Lord hath to it it being his day or Sabbath not onely made by him as all the rest but the day of his rest besides 84. What reasons expressed 1. The often reduplication of the command as both the day to be remembred rested upon sanctified and no servile worke done not by any person thereon 2. The example of God not onely working the six dayes to appoint that our exercise but also resting and sanctifying this for our instruction and to perswade us 3. His blessing annexed who both rested and sanctified and for that use blessed it so the holy use of it shall procure us a blessing in the blessednesse thereof both to our labours in this to our comfort and rest hereafter to eternall happinesse What more learne you from the sanctifying the Sabbath day With it may be noted the setting apart to holy uses other things whereby the sanctification of the day may be better performed and observed and thereby as it were depending upon the sanctification of the same Which are they With the sanctification of the time may bee well understood to be inferred the sanctifying 1. Place or places for Gods service such as his Altars in the most ancient times the Tabernacle Temple and Synagogue of the Jewes afterwards and since our Churches and Christian Temples throughout the world set apart for such holy meetings and actions principally on that day 2. Persons as of the first borne and eldest of the families for Priests to attend Gods service before the Law and since by Christ appointed the Evangelicall Priests and Ministers of the Gospell who all were principally to attend that day and service 3. Maintenance of those persons and this ordinance tythe offerings and the like consecrated and set apart to this use and maintenance of them that attend his service and consequently maintenance of his honour upon earth whose morality and so perpetuity of institution may abundantly be shewed both before under and since the Law under the Gospell 4. Other things consecrate and set apart to holy uses and performance of Gods service especially on this day both which the Fathers in the Jewes Church and now since in ours abundantly to be shewed as both the sacrifices Arke Cherubins Shewbread Candlesticke and ornaments of the Temple and such things for practise of devotion ornament order or decency in our Christian Churches appointed And Lastly the very bringers offerers of the sacrifices themselves and those that joyne with the Priests in performance of the holy duty the Saints on earth and such as excell in vertue or the communion of Saints a people holy and acceptable to the Lord and no lesse with the holy actions practises and performance of those knowne duties in Gods service and worship on that day of rest such as hearing praying preaching or the like and their comming and presence at them the rites orders ceremonies used in the performance of that duty of publique sanctification of the day all of them included sanctified with it they with the day and the day the better by them But these things are not to be found perpetuall and at all times in the Church Yes the most essentiall of them and for the others as the infancy or growth of the Church did obtaine to more maturity and perfection whereby Gods appointment and for the more accomplished and orderly performance of his service in their due time left to the wise governours discretion instituted What difference between Gods sanctifying the Sabbath and ours His sanctifying it authoritative have full power to constitute and ordaine the setting apart of it to holy uses our sanctifying of it either imitative so appointed to follow him our patterne in the setting of it apart to such holy use or obedientialiter and executive in performance of those holy services and duty therein by him commanded This duty it seems of sanctifying it is vehemently and often here pressed and urged Yes as principally inforced and so five times at least therein urged in memento both of the prevention of the neglect preparation to the duty being by the neglect of it many other good duties are neglected which by it might and ought to bee learned and by the practise of it all other good duties are practised or renewed and recalled to minde by hearing the word then read and preached
fully dead he had fulfilled the law and curse 2. Later lest his Disciples faith might faile or comfort too long be deprived and their hope to be turned into despaire 6. How the Prophesies Both of Hos. 6. 2. After two dayes c. and the third day he shall rise Jonah 1. 17. and 2. 2. utged the 1 Cor. 15. 4. c. Christ himselfe Matth. the 17. 12. 23. The Son of man shall be slaine and rise againe the third day and Matth. 20. 10. Mark 10. 34 Joh. 2. 19. 7. How the type of Jonah As is declared Matth. 12. 40. as Jonah was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly so must the Son of man be in the heart of the earth 8. What more considerable in the time That it was 1. The first day of the week the Lords day our new Sabbath the Christians rest the day whereon the creationbegun and the day of the second creation so by Christ perfected our redemption 2. Morning early the first time of the day so day of grace here begun and true light arise in it and enlighten it 3. Extraordinary light of the world as before the Sun rising to shew the new Sun of righteousnesse with his preventing graces riseth so for the illustration of the new world in that true light 4. The first Month with the Jewes as a beginning of the new yeare of joy and eternall Jubilee of all Saints 5. Spring of the yeare so the spring of the new world as the day spring from on high so the worlds new birth and spring in restoring peace and redemption 6. Time of the Passeover when to fulfill the Passeover the true Pascall Lambe was offered the ceremonies so to cease all shadowes abolished the truth it selfe appearing 7. Finally he rested the Jewes Sabbath to the fulfilling but end thereof at his death that brought new life to the Christian Church and Sabbath by his Resurrection What note you in that action his Resurrection The efficiency in the power of divinity whereby according to the decree and will of God his soule reassumed the body and raised it out of the grave The effect in him his body raised from death to life the first fruits of them that beleeve The effect in us spiritually our raising from the death of sin to the new life of grace Corporeally our assurance and earnest of our resurrection at the last to the strengthning of our hope and confirming of our faith The effect in Types thereof for our farther comfort and instruction 9. What was the efficiency The great power of the divinity united to his humanity and by that to us as his members to the raising of him the first fruits and us at last that though it suffered him to sleepe that three dayes death in his passion did not leave his body in the grave nor suffered that Holy One to see corruption and in the same vertue by his merits after our sleepe of death will at last raise us out of the dust 10. How the effect In both his humanity and by him over ours in the mighty power of the divinity and raised him first and so will us at the last 11. What Types thereof Not onely Jonas by those three dayes in the Whales belly representing the time of our Saviours stay in the grave and bosome of the earth but Isaac after a sort at his birth in the deadnesse of Sarahs wombe and Abrams age received from death and more at his binding for the sacrifice on Mount Moriah restored to life and a figure of this onely Sonne of God and Sonne also of Abraham Christ here offered in sacrifice on the Crosse and thus restored to life 12. What other Types were there Both Adam himselfe Enoch Elias and divers other types of him and Emblemes herein of him and of the resurrection 13. How was Adam Though in him we all dye yet whiles he was in the state of perfection see wee in him a type of Christ the second Adam and the resurrection who in a dead sleepe had the woman taken out of his side his spouse named Eva the mother of the living as Christ in this dead sleepe had out of his side sending forth water and bloud the Church his spouse taken as it were out of those wounds by his death who is the mother indeed of the living 14. How was Enoch As one that walked with God and so taken from men was no more seene but raised so to life from state of that mortality 15. How Eliah In that manner taken away from men and mortality by the chariot of God translated to heaven to have this part in the resurrection of the just and be an evident type of Christ and embleme of the same 16. How any others The three in the Old Testament raised to life the widowes sonne of Sarepta the Shunamites son and the man raised by the Prophets body The three in the New Testament Lazarus the widowes son of Naim Jairus daughter all as it were to shew us the power of God in them and so many emblemes of Christs resurrection who was so the seventh of them that were raised or tenth of them all that were types and emblemes of him and his resurrection as a perfect number as from whom they received all the holinesse vertues and power of the resurrection which they were ordained to foreshew as figures of the same 17. What learne we hence Our duties as of mortifying our earthly members in remembrance of his death so a rising from the death of sin in the remembrance and power of his resurrection who dyed for our sinnes and rose againe for our justification who will so raise our soules in this life as both bodies and soules after death at last and also many other comforts hence arising 18. Which are they 1. Both the strengthning and confirmation of our faith in the comfortable remembrance of Christs resurrection already performed and so many other Saints of our owne nature of flesh and bloud with him or emblemes of him 4. Erection of our eye of hope to the state whereunto hee our eldest brother is entred and hath already received and invested divers in life and the resurrection of the just 3. Comfortable walking in this vaile of misery where we must one day meet with death in regard of our assurance in him of a joyfull resurrection 19. What fruit hereof Fourefold 1. heavenly minde set on heavenly not earthly things 2. Holy life new borne babes pure innocent and harmlesse 3. Joy in the graces and Spirit of God and in heavenly not corruptible things 4. Growth and increase in holinesse as branches of the true Vine Christ c. 20. What followeth In the sixt Article the second degree of his exaltation in his ascension to heaven in these words Hee ascended into heaven 21. What herein to be considered 1. The matter action ascension termini from earth to heaven 2. The manner in the presence of many witnesses with the time and
or recreation allowed Yes we have liberty to refresh and cheare our selves with those things that may comfort our weak nature and make us more able or disposed to celebrate the day as a festivall and day of joy unto the Lord for so it is and the Prophets expresse it so and as we have flesh about us as well as spirit and a body of dust the Lord who knoweth this our weaknesse appointeth the best things of the earth if we serve him for our comfort as in Paradise so on his Sabbath even to our bodily delight as the comfort of the soule so farre forth as it may helpe not hinder the hallowing of the day and expresse a holy not heathenish feast or drunken Bacchanalia on this day 49. How is that to be understood As that we may use to our comforts both the creatures by eating and drinking to make it a festivall day Musicke and godly singing or mirth to make it a joyfull day Other such like delights and recreations to refresh our spirits in honest manner whereby to be more cheerfull able to spend the allotted and best parts of the time in those holy duties appointed and so those delights to be a means to further these duties and without all excesse scurrility and prophanenesse which else may prove both an abuse of them and the Sabbath 50. What is the opposite part or vice hereunto opposed The not setting apart a rest or the pollution abuse and prophanation of that rest and day of the Sabbath 51. How not setting apart a day of rest Either in setting out none at all in effect or by not resting from sinning perturbation of the soule ordinary workes or worldly thoughts as they ought to doe or in stealing a part from God by their allotting unnecessarily 1. Early mornings workes to hinder the due observation 2. Part of the day or sometimes chiefe part of the day to other occasions 3. Latter businesses even to be set in hand before the Sabbath ended as too frequent instances may be given in worldings hying to fayres and markets before the Sabbath ended Carriers Millers Shop-keepers Alehouses Tavernes and others no necessity urging but filthy lucre stealing a part if not wholly prophaning the Lords day against which many good Lawes have by good Princes beene enacted though too often the more the shame slenderly executed 52. How to be remedied If good Lawes well enacted were by good Magistrates carefully executed as we read in some Councells decreed the goods to be forfeited as Concilio Dingulonencsis Canon 13. and by Leo and Authemius the persons to be proscribed whereby they were out of the lawes and Princes protection and the goods forfeited 53. How is the farther abuse and prophanation By abusing that rest and day of Sabbath to any evill end as superstition in Jewish abstinency from necessary things to be done for the better sanctification thereof Any Idolatrous fashion Idlenesse only and in doing no good which is worse then bodily labour and this Sabbatum Asinorum or of beasts Vanity or prophane sports which hinder holy duties and sanctification worse also then honest labour this onely Sabbatum tituli bare name of Sabbath Sinne as to gluttony exccesse drunkennesse and the like spending the best day in the worst exercises or wasting idly on the Sabbath what gotten the weeke which is Sabbatum Satanae the Divells holyday and they his slaves that use it 54. How is the heynousnesse of this sinne intimated 1. By Gods strict penall law enacted against it the offendors to dye the death Exod. 31. 15. 2. By that laws execution on him that gathered but sticks Num. 15. 32. 3. By Gods sending the people into captivity for it that the land might keepe her Sabbath that they his people had broken Jerem. 25. 4. Gods providence to have it observed that the day before only no other sent and allowed double Manna Exod. 26. 5. And lastly God and all good mens execrations of it and Prophets exclamations against it as Nehemiah also threatning the Merchants Nehemiah 13. 55. How is it then generally or commonly prophaned 1. Either by labours and journying that are not of necessity and might be avoided 2. By idle resting and sitting at home or other absence from publicke duties 3. By sinfull and vain spending the time allotted to holy duties in wicked manner 4. By suffering others especially those under the authority of Master or Magistrate to offend therein 56. What is the issue generally hereof By neglecting Gods ordinance and herein honour both good order overturned Good duties of all sorts neglected Magistrates and Superiours with God contemned Inferiours by prophanenesse come to misery Gods blessings alienated c. and his judgements assuredly appropriated to the offenders 57. What is the second part of the duty in sanctifying the Sabbath To remember it or mindefully with care and conscience to prepare for it and set about it 1. Seene in removing impediments 2. Using all good helpes 3. Convenient preparation to both the publicke and private duties to be performed by both 1. Ministers 2. People in the celebrating and being present at the celebration of divine Service and publicke worship of God in his Church performing the divine offices or officiating there with helping and assistance in the same 58. What is it to remember To take speciall note of this Commandement as begun in Paradise sanctified by God and now renewed in Christ c. To take speciall note of the duty enjoyned sanctifie the time the Sabbath ourselves to bee prepared And so remember all the dayes of the week so to labour that we may rest and sanctifie this The day before as a parasceve or halfe holyday begin to prepare ourselves to the sanctification of this The last Sabbath how we profited what wee learned and how to improve it in this 59. What impediments to be removed Of workes and labour that would importune us to neglect it worldly cares and distractions and specially sinne and vanity with sleepy drowsinesse of devotion and idlenesse perswading us to absent our selves from holy duties and stay at home 60. What helpes to be used Holy meditations of the benefit institution and command of the Sabbath and blessings attending the same as well as reading conference c. 61. What preparations else Fitting our bodies to the outward rest and presenting our selves and those that belong to us at the Church as our minds to the holy actions and present devotions in such preparation yeelding our presence both of body and minde even to all both publique and private duties of the Sabbath 62. What private duties Those preparations going before and good exercises and actions following the publique duties as also the ordinary meanes of sanctification private prayer reading and meditation Workes of charity and mercy Outward almes visiting the sicke c. peace-making Inward to the soule instruction reproofe exhortation comfort counsell c. 63. What publique The ordinary duties of the Sabbath in the publique worship
and service of God at the Church and in that great congregation 64. What of the Minister As the chiefe actor in this dayes sanctification publique prayer and calling upon God in the behalfe of the congregation Reading and preaching the word and catechising Administration of the Sacraments 65. What of the people Their yeelding their presence in the holy assembly and both Comming duly Staying to the end Behaving themselves religiously being present in hearing the word Praying and using the Sacraments Doing all other convenient workes of sanctification as in their assisting the Minister and congregation collections for the poore c. 66. What the opposite offences In generall all carelesnesse and contempt remisnesse and negligence forgetfulnesse and sloath drowsinesse and sleeping or sleepinesse in any of the persons in any of these foresaid devotions and private or publique duties arguing unpreparednesse and backwardnesse in rendring to God the honour due to his name or sanctification fitting to his Sabbath 67 How more in particular I. In the Ministers carelesnesse negligence absence or idlenesse c. II. In the People 1. Absence from Church in carelesnesse negligence contempt obstinacy or any pretence or cause whatsoever arguing unwillingnesse or unpreparednesse 2. Departure without necessary cause 3. Irreligious behaviour in the Church and worship of God 4. Other negligence or vanities before or after 68. What else may be said to offend thus I. Those who are mindfull of the Sabbath to prophane it as 1. Who provide not to be free that day 2. Who provide businesse against that day 3. Passe over extraordinary businesses or journeyes to it 4. Make bold with God to borrow part if not all to their owne use which wisedome is not from above but from the divell II. Observe it but for fashion sake III. Observe the outward rest onely IV. Are dainty Sabbath keepers or rather prophaners V. Account putting on gay cloathes costly fare or other excesse that dayes worke VI. Absent themselves from publique duties or thinke on private which may bee done every day sufficiently VII Are weary of it and wish it gone VIII Unwillingly performe the duties of it and the like as Separatists Recusants and Nonconformists 69. What say you then of other holidayes appointed To be understood as a second sort of Sabbath and even by the Lords example and institution warranted as also by holy men practised from all antiquity as is apparant in the Old Testament How were such Sabbaths The very Passeover and Penticost feast of Weekes and Tabernacles by God himselfe besides his ordinary Sabbaths and so likewise the feast of Purim and Dedication and like deliverances and blessings with peculiar Festivals as on other great occasions solemne Feasts also and holy assemblies which were in effect extraordinary Sabbaths of the which some holy and festivall with joy as the other holy but fasting daies 70. What use of these our holy dayes For the honour of God and remembrance of some extraordinary and great blessings on that time conferred on his Church as in those feasts remembring our blessed Saviour whether his Nativity Circumcision Incarnation or some holy mystery and likewise the Saints dayes those vessels of grace Gods especiall and extraordinary instruments for the illustration of his Church whom we so remember and praise him for the same 71. But how doth this agree with the Commandement that appointeth the six dayes for labour Very well for if part of the seventh upon necessity may be taken to our use as aforesaid much more part of the six for his honour who is to bee honoured all our dayes in some convenient sort as Daniel three times a day praying and David seven times a day to teach us some weeke dayes exercise which commonly can never countervaile our negligence on the Sabbath if no other duty did binde us to this daily sacrifice 72. What rules for weekly or daily devotion Such as any good man may propose to himselfe remembring Gods blessings and benefits bestowed on him as especially to use 1. Prayer morning and evening 2. Blessings and thanksgivings before and after meat and receiving the creatures 3. To give thankes at all times for benefits blessings or deliverances received 4. To pray often and more instantly as our necessities may require 5. Tolet no day passe without some reading or divine meditation 6. To take benefit of weeke day Sermons if opportunity be fitly offered and may bee without palpable wandring Pharisaicall pride and shew of hypocrisie or neglect of our calling 73. What further warrant have wee for holy dayes or fasting dayes As that example of God himselfe and holy men in the Old Testament so since 1. Primitive times institution and practice most of them 2. Authority of the Church commanding and constituting 3. The benefits themselves and mercies of God therein requiring a thankfull remembrance 4. All the former reasons and authorities together with our owne necessities and sometimes urgent and extraordinary occasions as before enforcing some ordinary fasting dayes sometimes also extraordinary fasting and festivall dayes 74. Are these to be observed as strictly as the Sabbath There is no reason for that for though sometimes celebrated with extraordinary joy or solemnity yet as secondary Sabbaths assuredly in a second degree and also among them degrees may be observed yet all of them in some measure for holy and festivall dayes and to the honour of God as the mystery or memoriall doe require and so these may be Sabbaths dedicated to the Lord in memory of his blessings but this peculiarly the Sabbath of the Lord. 75. What was that farther explication of this Commandement In the permission or injunction of labour the six dayes In the duplication of the Commandement and 1. Naming the Sabbath the seventh day and againe enjoyning it 2. Amplifying it by forbidding all servile work both of ones selfe and all that pertaine to us 76. How is the permission of the six dayes to labour Not onely a bare permission but even an injunction to worke in the same commanding moode that the Commandement it selfe is and that both to avoide idlenesse hatefull to God and nurse of vices and also thereby the better to sanctifie the Sabbath As 1. rest after labour is sweeter 2. We better prepared by vicissitude and change may 3. More cheerfully entertaine it 4. More sensible of it and thankefull for it 5. Better abled for it and fitter to rest Provision being made for the rest and sanctification by the weekes labour and Gods blessing and so the Commandement againe repeated 77. Why is the Commandement then doubled 1. For ratification of the stability of it as first not onely commanded but to be remembred and here againe redoubled 2. For specification of the very day the seventh and so determined and by no humane ordinance but only by divine to be altered and so in the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek the seventh day not only a seventh the Sabbath ordained and in it farther
their truest honour from this that fathers of the Countrey and Common-wealth and for God though King of Kings Lord of Lords God of Sabbath Judge of the world and such his names seem of more honour yet full of terrour as Majesty and we poore creatures more need comfort and he most honoured in his mercy and how can those names be such comfort as Father since he a 1. King of Kings we dust and ashes 2. Lord of Lords we poore slaves 3. God of Sabbath we poore wormes 4. Judge of all we poore and miserable sinners So what doe these great titles but strike a terror into us that have need of mercy to comfort us in our deep necessity and of a Father not a severe Judge our great Warriour of Prince to looke upon our misery 11. How are we then comforted in the name Father In that it is a name of love and mercy and as there is mercy with him he shall be feared and so also honourable to him and to us most comfortable according to which name shewing mercy to all his creatures and most particularly to us in Christ so we may consider his fatherly love and affection I. As he is a Father that 1. can deny us his sons nothing that is requisite 2. Is ready to forgive and receive the penitent sinner and sonne as in the parable of the prodigall 3. Is full of compassion in the bowells of his mercy to his creatures and sons II. As we in Christ in whom he is well pleased III. As we either 1. aske or pray asking him blessing 2. Returne or are penitent aske forgivenesse 3. Desire his love favour or mercy 4. Aske his grace 12. What else learne we hence As Sons to be like him to have his image in us Eph. 5. 1. To be holy as he is holy To be mercifull as our heavenly Father is mercifull Luke 6. 36. To be perfect as he is perfect Matth. 5. 48. To be humble and shew all filiall duty towards him our Father 13. Why say we our Father 1. In regard of God who is all our Father 2. In regard of Christ in whom he is so particularly made our Father 3. In regard of the Holy Ghost by charity speaking in our hearts Abba and shewing him all our Father 4. In regard of the Church in whose words as in generall we are taught to pray being many but one body 5. In regard of our faith in that Church in Christ whereby we have all one Father 6. In regard of our charity as we are to pray for and to remember all and so say our Father 14. But why may we not as well say my Father Though my Father and my God or Lord in particular confidence in any distresse may be well said of us as Eli Eli c. yet for a generall form of prayer to be used by all nothing so fit as our Father in regard of his mercy love and compassion ready to receive forgive and releeve us and our Father especially 1. As in Christ in whose name and words we speake for whose sake are not else accepted 2. As in faith and confidence of this in him and by his Spirit 3. As in charity with all men so in body the Church and taught to pray for others as well as our selves and that our prayers can never be effectuall for our selves farther then as in charity earnest for others 15. Of what doth it then chiefly minde us 1. Of our Brother Saviour Redeemer Judge also Christ in whom God is made ours and we his 2. Of the strict union with God by Christ whereby he being ours whom have we to flie unto but him 3. Of the communion of Saints the family of God of which we are made a part and so to pray for our brethren 16. What learne we farther hence To take heed of all contempt of our brethren for without that charity to pray for them our prayers can never be effectuall for our selves no not holy neither nor prayers but rather a cursing and no way comfortable nor a blessing since God is not our Father if we be not in charity for God is love 17. Whom are we then to pray for Generally for all men of all estates and conditions whatsoever even our enemies persecutors and slanderers that God may turne their hearts and for Turkes Jewes Infidells and Hereticks that they may be converted to the faith 1. Especially for Princes that under God may be the meanes of his glory by good government 2. All good people and benefactors to us or the poore Saints on earth 3. All those to whom in any particular respect we are bound as Fathers c. 4. All those in any necessity need danger distresse or sicknesse 5. Our selves and all our brethren the elect whom God in his predestinate counsell hath appointed to salvation 18. Are there not some then we ought not to pray for Yes first the Divell our and Gods enemies against whom we are to pray 2. All knowne enemies of God so David against his enemies viz. as enemies of God and whiles so And so did the Church against Julian and such as he and Samuel forbidden to pray and mourne for Saul 1 Sam. 16. viz. as enemies of God or whiles s. 3. The dead not to be prayed for neither as whose estate is unchangeable of paines or glory 19. Why added which art in heaven 1. To remember us of his excellent Majesty and power and glory as who dwelleth in the heavens 2. To elevate our mindes to his Throne of glory 3. To minde us where we are and so of our meannesse and to teach us humility 20. Why to remember us of his Majesty Power and Glory For our comfort and that as he is our Father and so willing to doe us good so also 1. In Majesty honourable wherein our honour to be his Sons 2. In Power able to doe what ever we desire or he thinke fit or please 3. In Glory and of the same will impart to us and doe us good and advance us for his glory 21. Why to clevate our minds I. That we may alienate our minds from earthly things to be fitter to pray II. That we may not be glewed to the earth for then we can have no desire or power to pray III. That we may looke towards our Fathers house and our native home heaven IV. That we may consider 1. who it is and where he is that we pray unto 2. What things we ought especially to pray for heavenly and spirituall things 3. Whence those best blessings and indeed all good gifts else descend from above from the Father of lights 22. How to minde us where we are To make us in humility to consider our meane estate and so 1. How we are in a vale of misery this earth in a place of necessity 2. How far from our home and thence long for heaven our native soile and fathers house 3. How much we want of perfection so to desire
immaculate Lambe even the Son of God to cure that malady and no other meanes found sufficient whence he the expectatation of both Iew and Gentile so in the law and her many types showne or shadowed and by the Prophets foretold and diversly named As here Christ the Saviour which in a manner all the rest The Saviour Emanuel God and man the Christ anointed to his office of King Priest and Prophet for the good of his Church and right administration of the same being Gods onely Son and in all respects our Lord. I. VVHat learne you in this second part of the Creed What we are to beleeve and confesse concerning the second person in Trinity the Son of God 2. What concerning him Two things His nature wherein his Essence Person His office of mediatorship wherein his Humiliation Exaltation 3. Where the first is his nature described In the second Article And in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord where we finde his nature Son of God and therein his Essence and person whereby he is also Christ the Saviour and our Lord 4. VVhere his office of meditatorship In the same second and the following five Articles where he is named Jesus the Saviour and Christ so anointed to that office declared in his humiliation for us by incarnation passion and descent even to death and hell for us and our sins as also his exaltation by his resurrection ascension and constitution in glory to advance us to heaven in the adoption of Sonnes to the inheritance of Saints 5. VVhat then of him is declared in the second Article What 1. His name is and therein intimated and described 1. His nature Jesus signifying a Saviour which ought to be Emanuel so named by the Angel from God 2. His office Christ the Messias anointed and appointed thereunto by God 2. He is in nature person in respect of 1. God his only Son 2. Us our Lord so we say Expresly And in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord. 6. VVhat is your confession concerning his Essence and office in generall That he is Jesus the Saviour and so Emanuel that is God with us consequently Christ the Messias anointed of the Lord and appointed from everlasting to that office by the Father being his only Son in nature by eternall generation God of God Light of light very God of very God and of one substance with the Father by whom all things were made and so our Lord who came downe from heaven for us and was incarnate and made man and performed the office of a Redeemer paying the price of our redemption and so brought us to this blessed estate of salvation 7. VVhat of his Essence in particular In respect of his divinity that he is very God the only Son of God the eternall Son of the Father equall to the Father as touching his Godhead in respect of his humanity very Man of the substance of his mother borne in the world and inferiour to the Father as touching his Manhood 8. VVhat of his person That he is perfect God and perfect Man both natures combined in the unity of his person 9. How can that be As the reasonable soule and body two different natures make one Man so God and Man one Christ. 10. Are the two natures then consounded No they remaine perfect without confusion of substance that God should be made Man or Man God but joyned in the unity of the person that assumed the Manhood into God 11. But it was said in Scripture God was made Man It is true and the Word was made flesh by assuming the Manhood to it selfe not by turning the Godhead into Manhood or any third nature or Essence but by that most neer union of assuming it into one person 12. VVas there not such a union spoken of before in the persons of the Godhead No for there the three persons were united by an essentiall union in the nature of the Godhead only distinguished by personall propriety and manner of existence here the two natures in this person are essentially distinguished in their being and no way confounded but remaining perfect only joyned and most neerely combined in the person of the Mediator which is Christ. 13. VVhat need was it that the Mediator or Christ should be God and Man 1. That in his humanity he might suffer and bear the weight of our guilt and punishment to make satisfaction to the offended Majesty of God in exact justice man sinning by man expiation to be made 2. Divinity sustaining the humanity that it might be most able to performe it and acceptable in the performance and so outweighing the sins of the whole world in the worth and merit thereof and consequently able to advance all to his glory 14 Why was it thus To shew the great glory and goodnesse of God and how he is most just and yet mercifull 15. How appeareth that In that being so holy and pure and so hating sin that he punisht it in the Angels and just that he cannot but punish sin in whomsoever he findeth it his holinesse requiring it since his purity and goodnesse as he is holy cannot behold or abide it much lesse approve it yet so mercifull that hee sendeth his owne Son out of the bosome of his love and mercy to beare the burthen of that guilt which in justice must be punished but the delinquents not able to beare the heft thereof or satisfie so the same 16. But doth God so hate sin As nothing more it being most necessary to his holy nature and most to his dishonour by disobedience and as it were a denying or despising of his Majesty 17. Are there not yet degrees in sin No doubt and the most haynous sin against the Holy Ghost as a perverse obstinate and continued deniall of the truth of God even to his face and in despite of the Spirit of grace leading to desperation or finall impenitency 18. But Adams sin was not so No not in regard of the intention or malice of the act or extention of infidelity to finall impenitency or deficiency of grace and despaire yet in other spects if not greater yet large and exceeding great 19. How was Adams sin so great Though onely a taste of the forbidden fruit yet in that a fearfull disobedience and transgression both in the great Intention of the guilt Extention to all mankinde 20. Jt seemes a small offence the taste onely of an Apple forbidden But in that very sense as so small a matter and many other wayes the guilt and offence so much more horrible and deformed and whereby Adam grew presently most wofully ashamed and confounded as appeared by his hiding and flying from the presence of God 21. How appeareth this greatnesse of his sin These many wayes as generally in all sin and sinnes 1. By the greatnesse of the Majesty forbidding it infinite so an infinite offence 2. His great authority Lord and giver of all good so heynous the offence to neglect his authoritie and
some gifts taken from them Joh. 6. 37. but from the reprobate even that they seemed to have concerning faith and regeneration is taken away utterly Matth. 13. 12. and 29. Luke 8. 18. 31. How may we be assured of the presence of Gods Spirit dwelling in us By the good and holy effects of the same in our soule life and conversation as 1. Our knowledge faith hope charity and other graces 2. Carefull study of godlinesse and innocency 3. Love of God and hatred of sin 4. Comfort in holy actions and delight in Gods house and children 5. Separating our selves and affections from the world and placing them on God 32. How is Gods Spirit said to be quenched in us 1. By neglect and carelesnesse in holy duties and exercises 2. Contempt of the graces and good motions offered which is a despite to that Spirit of grace 3. Ungodly and wicked actions 33. What is the sin against the holy Ghost In generall as he is God all sins against the majesty of God in particular and properly in regard of his person and office as hee is the sanctifier and illuminating Spirit so those haynous and stubborne sins against the open and plaine truth and testimony of conscience of purposed malice wittingly and willingly against and in despite of that good and milde Spirit 34. How said to be unpardonable As commonly hardnesse of heart and finall impenitency is joyned with them and even so it is as a judgement laid on those sins said that we should not even pray for them 35. What learne we hence Many good duties concerning our sanctification and his graces as to Beleeve the holy Scriptures even by his inspiration as the way to God and take heed of neglect Keepe our bodies and soules holy and pure as Temples of the holy Ghost and not to defile them Use all our gifts to the honour of God for of him we have received them the graces of his Spirit and not abuse them to vanity Submit our selves to the government of Gods Spirit and not be proud or stubborne and so despise that Spirit of grace Seeke encrease in graces daily and confirmation and not to quench the Spirit or fall away 36. What profit hereof The joy and comfort of our Spirit called joy in the holy Ghost by his blessed operation making application of all Christs merits and mercies to our soules adorned with his graces giving us assurance thereof by his power in holinesse and newnesse of life or sanctification the earnest peny of glorification 36. What followeth The fourth and last part of the Creed in those foure last Articles concerning the Church of God and his graces bestowed on the same in these words The holy Catholique Church the Communion of Saints forgivenesse of sins resurrection of the body and life everlasting Amen SECT 11. The 9. Article concerning the Catholique Church The analysis of the 9. and following and here first of the Catholique Church and how we professe our beleefe concerning the same so how here is a Church or company of the faithfull separated from the world and vnited in God and Christ their head and so gathered or called thence named Ecclesia being but one universall or Catholique one though consisting of many particular branches so comprehending all times places and persons whence our Church one with that of the Iewes and our faith the same with Abrahams being all one in Christ the head and substance of the covenant how said to be visible or invisible militant or triumphant how also Catholique and holy and the notes of the true Church described whereby from all other companies or not so rightly named Churches distinguished by the true preaching of the word and right and due administration of the Sacraments and for the Notes of universality autiquity visibility succession consent and the like if without holinesse no perfect marks since so to be found in many false Synagogues and so what may be said of the Church of Rome and her holinesse and Religion and some other opposites or enemies to the same And of the promise of the holy Spirits presence in the Church to the end Of the world Of the communion of Saints what it is and between whom both between Saints themselves and them and Christ and so with God whence all happinesse peace and unity influence of grace and effects or fruits of holinesse all Saints in heaven and earth by their union in Christ to God combined so in the Comfort and fruition of this faith enjoying that glorious 〈◊〉 name and calling and happy assurance and priviledge of the Saints being many good uses to be made of the same three last Articles containing three great priviledges of the Church 1. VVHat doth the last part of the Creed concerne The Church of God and therein considered either the body of it called the holy Catholique Church and united in the communion of Saints Or the priviledges and graces indulged on the same 1. The forgivenesse of sins 2. The resurrection of body 3. The life everlasting 2. What herein to be then considered The Action as how we beleeve Object as aforesaid the Church her priviledges 3. What of the action That here we say not beleeve in that is put trust and confidence therein but onely beleeve the same that is that there is a holy Catholique Church of God so elected called and sanctified where of Christ the Lord and head that it is united into that communion of Saints his members united among themselves and to their head Christ and that in the same and no where else to bee fought or found salvation and so those priviledges consequently that there is truly forgivenesse of sins the blessed hope of resurrection and assurance of life everlasting 4. What difference to be noted herein That to beleeve in God or on him as the highest degree of faith is onely proper to God and so we can put our trust or confidence in him and no other but to beleeve the holy Catholique Church and the other points of faith is in a second degree and though with the same certainty and assent to the truth yet not with that confidence or trust in them for their power or any thing else which were to make idols of them and set them up in the place of God 5. What of the object the Church For the body and substance of the same these positions 1. That there is a Church 2. What that Church is and the Name Nature Parts Proprieties and Notes of the same 3. What union is in it viz. a communion of Saints 6. How shew you that there is a Church It is evident to the eye of Nature and Reason as well as Faith even to naturall men that see the Church and company of the faithfull separated from them and their prophane conversation and reason even testifying to the sense the causes of this separation the honour and service of God the supreme good with expectation of reward which faith most cleerly
setteth forth the glory of God and salvation of soules in the same 7. How doth faith see it so cleerly In all the Scriptures even from the time of Adam in Paradise and Noah in the Ark Abraham the father of the faithfull to these dayes though in narrow bounds of one House Arke or family in the flourishing estate of the Jews in one people or Common-wealth yet still a true Church and company of faithfull beleevers and servants of God but now since by Gods mercies in Christ most flourishing spred over the face of the whole earth as we both see at this day and reade in the histories of the Old and New Testament 8. What Church or Churches One and the same though distinguished in times 1. In the Old Testament in Adam Noah and Abrahams housholds and chiefe of their families in Israel and all his sons the state of the Jewes 2. In the New Testament among The Nations of the Jewes Many 1. Apostles 2. Disciples 3. Beleevers All Nations else the Churches to the very ends of the earth and so far as as we are dispersed As those of Corinth Ephesus Rome c. Achaia Macedonia Antioch c. Asia the 7. Churches in Rev. 1. Which all together make up the Catholique Church 9. What signifies or whence this name Church Ecclesia Of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the calling together as out of the world into the Lords house and company so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying in Greeke the Lords house whence name of our Church and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his congregation 10. What is the Church then That company of Saints elected of God to eternall life called and gathered together out of all mankinde by the preaching of the word saved by the Messiah Christ and in his faith preserved defended and sanctified here to be glorified in heaven and out of the Church there is no salvation 11. Js there but one Church But one true Church whereof Christ Jesus is the head yet of which Catholique Church all particular Churches professing the true faith are parts and all faithfull persons members and all Synagogues though they call themselves Churches if they want that head or the true faith doe falsly chalenge that title as the harlot may of an honest woman but are indeed but Synagogues of Satan 12. How heare we then of many Churches even in the Scriptures and Apostles writings As the particular Churches in several Countries part or members of this one universall Church in that and many other respects so distinguished and divided 13. In what respects Most usually in regard of the 1. Time the Church of the 1. Jewes and 2. Christans 2. Extent universall Church Catholicke Particular Church c. 3. Apparant to men visible on earth in the professors Invisible to men 4. Places Heaven among the Saints and Angels Earth among men 5. Exercises in it Militant in grace Triumphant in glory As other distinctions also in regard of the circumstances may be of this one and the same Church 14. How could the Iewes Church and the Christians be one As both were united in Christ the head profession of the true faith and so elected called and ordained of God 15. How could Christ be the head or his faith in the Church of the Jewes As the Fathers and Patriarkes and all holy men before Christ trusted in the Messias Christ that was to come and in that faith walked with God and attained heaven as all Saints since in the faith of the Messias already come so all of one faith and under one head 16. Is our faith then the same with Abrahams The very same in substance onely diversified by the distinction of time and respect of the same Messias onely exhibitum or exhibendum as already showne or to be exhibited their faith farther off and in hope our more plainly and fully informed all shadowes and vailes removed the substance presented 17. But faith is of things not seene And so are the mysteries of this faith even in the very Messiah though seene with mortall eye yet much more unseene not onely for his divinity but divine actions office and doctrine also onely apprehensible by the eye of faith 18. What are the particular Churches Members of the Univerall Church of which Christ is the head planted by the ministry of good men in the power of God and his word in all parts of the world and in all times preserved by his grace in one part or other so all those famous Churches of Asia Phrygia and Pamphilia of Rome Ephesus Corinth Greece and generally in Europe Asia Africa and now America also and that were in all times as well of the Fathers and Patriarkes even Adam Noah Abraham Moses the Jewes and to our times make up this one Catholicke Church of God or to goe further even all men and Angels elected and saved 19. How expresse you the Church visible or invisible The invisible company of Saints elected of God to eternall life onely knowne to God and not to be discerned of men therefore called invisible whereas all professors of the faith living in the Church and seene in that society charity bindes us to acknowledge as the outward signes and profession shew to be the Church and which we call the visible Church 20. Is the visible Church perfect Nothing lesse for as shee is in the uncleane world she must needs be corrupted with that aire and in her are vessels of honour and dishonour and so as in regard of both shee is called a Net Mat. 13. 47. yet in regard of the better part also called the Kingdome of Heaven 21. How those other distinctions of the Church As in respect of place Heaven where Saints and Angels and earth where men are members of it so in regard of their exercises on earth the Church militant yet in her spirituall warfare and under the crosse but aspiring towards heaven the triumphant part thither already aspired having past the troubles of the world in joy and felicity both together when complete and united make up the Catholique Church 22. How said Catholique In regard of universality of times places and persons as well as Catholique doctrine of truth therein propounded 23. How holy In regard of the holinesse there to be found in the Head Christ the Lord imparting holinesse to the members Holy Father electing it Holy Ghost sanctifying it Holy Faith professed in it Holy Scriptures taught in it Sacraments and Ceremonies Prayers and actions used and exercised in it Life and conversation of the Members in comparison of the rest of the world 24. What are notes of the true Church The true preaching of the word of God and right use and administration of the Sacraments which cannot be well exercised but under a godly discipline and joyned with holy life and conversation 25. How is this proved For that thereby the Church is called together and distinguisht from all other companies whatsoever the word being the meanes the Sacraments
the signes and seales of the covenant of grace 26. How the word and preaching of it For that by it is the Calling together Building up Badge or cognizance of Gods true Prophets and servants to know them of the Church Testimony of the truth most sure and firme so as no other doctrine whatsoever 27. How shew you this For that by this the faithfull are called to bee Saints so Rom. 1. 7. and the Church is built upon the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles Christ being the head corner stone and by this the Lord addeth to the Church those that should be saved Acts 2. 47. so of the contrary if not this it is not the Church 28. How appeares that Because if it be not by Gods word called it is not Ecclesia Dei but rather the Synagogue of Satan as appeares by any company assembled by any other meanes as if assembled by the Talmude a Synagogue of Christs enemies the Jewes Alcaron an assembly of Turkes his enemies Very Word if corrupted with false Interpreters or Glosses a sect of Heretiques and so all heretiques enemies of him and unity but the word truly preached and set forth the only cognizance of his true Prophets and Servants as testified in holy Scriptures 29. How testified in them In the prophet Esay 8. and 20. If they speake not according to this word it is because the truth is not in them So Saint Matthew 15. 7. O hypocrites Jsaiah prophesied well of you In vaine doe they worship me teaching for doctrines traditions of men And John 2. 10. If any come to you and bring not this doctrine receive him not as if hee should say This is the note or token to know him by And Gal. 1. 8. Though we or an Angell from heaven preach otherwise then this doctrine let him be accursed So this firme and true testimony as no doctrine else whatsoever 30. How the Sacraments As instituted for seales of grace so also in their right use and administration the cognizance of the Church and badge of all true beleevers as was spoken 1. To the Fathes This shall bee a signe Exod. 12. 2. 5. 2. Of the Fathers They all eate of the same spirituall meat and drink of the same spirituall drink the Rocke that followed them And all baptized in the cloud and in the sea to Moses 1 Cor. 10. 2. 3. Of the Church since and to the Disciples Goe teach all Nations and baptize c. and Doe this in remembrance of me So it is most apparant they are the true notes and signes as most essentiall of the true Church 31. What say you by those markes of universality antiquity visibility succession consent and the like Though these are not to be neglected as insisted on by Vincentius Lyrinensis and many holy and good men yet we must know that the former are more essentiall and sure these by themselves alone more uncertaine extraneous and as may be found failing and accidentall 32. What use of these If joyned with the former they serve for the better illustration of the truth without them no assurance so we thereby may see the worth of the former and the weaknesse of these as may easily be demonstrated 33. How demonstrated For that without contradiction The true Church hath existed without them The Synagogue of Satan even defections from God and his Church may enjoy them And that not onely in singular but in generall all of them if exempted from holinesse or the former notes 34. How make you that to appeare First that the true Church may be without them is cleere 1. In primitive times without that universality or antiquity 2. Adams sons and Noahs family most of them worst and Christ times and the Apostles fewest good and scarce any visibility much lesse universality or antiquity 3. All first times all such successions troubled by the persecution of Saints both by the Gyants and sons of men in the first ages of the world against the sons of God and the Jewes Church as well as by the tyrants in the first times of the Christians Church and when more consenting against the truth then with or striving for the same 35. How found in the false Synagogues Where ever God had his Church the divell his chappell by instituted by Adams disobedience in Paradise so what more ancient then defection from God In Angels first the companies that fell Ecclesia malignantium in Adam then and all Adams sons that perish what more universall then that contagion what more constant succession then that of sin in mankinde and the divell a most vigilant Bishop in his Diocesse and as ready substitutes his wicked agents and instruments what more visibility then of his kingdome and Church and what more evident consent then of Simeon and Levi brethren in evill and of Herod and Pilate against Christ as of all wicked ones against the Church of God 36. How more particularly The Temples of Idols and Heathen religion we may see what antiquity universality visibility succession and consent even from the first times and Adams disobedience they can shew when Gyants sons of men before the Flood builders of Babell after and all Heathens then and still the greatest part of the world in blindnesse and idolatry bondslaves of Satan and for all sects and heresies as of Mahumetans Nestorians Arrians and such dens of wilde beasts and nests of uncleane birds we may see how great a pretence they may make to these notes without holinesse or the former 37. What shall we say then of these Notes That if they be joyned with holinesse and the former then we may make very good use of them to distinguish and know the Church more plainly for alone they may faile us 38. What say you of the Church of Rome As of a particular Church and by these markes to be examined how a member of the universall Church 39. But is not there holinesse without antiquity If there were it were not to be denied but that it were a true and sound Church of God but as it is we deny it not to be a Church a true Church or truly a Church a particular one as that it is an unsound or much corrupted one can they themselves when put closely to it scarce or hardly denie 40. But the faith and holinesse of that Church is commended in Scriptures and said to be famous throughout the world It is true of the Primitive times thereof but we now speake of the present and late bred corruptions and defections of the same 41. Where is the true Church then Where the truth and purity of Religion is restored according to Gods word and his truth and the corruptions purged and done away as in our and other the best reformed Churches 42. Have not some in pretence of this been too violent to purge or expunge things necessary If any have or seeke to doe so they stand or fall to their owne Judge we as private men must not be their
Judges or Judges of these things we are to leave them to their superiours whom God appoi eth 43. Can the Church of Rome then or any particular Church fall from God It is apparent for that the Lords Spirit is not tyed to any place for then not only Jerusalem his City but the famous Churches of Asia long since collapsed had yet stood and flourished and many others now under Mahumetan and Turkish servitude or quite decayed 44. How then did God promise his Spirit to his Church to be with it to the end of the world To be present to lead it into all truth wheresoever it is even in all places of the world but as the winde bloweth where it listeth so his Spirit to the faithfull every where ●ut for their infidelity sometimes pulleth one downe and setteth up another even casteth off the naturall branches for unbeleefe and grafteth in others all according to his good will and pleasure 45 What learne you else concerning this Church That as it is the Church of God a holy Church and Catholicke in regard of all times places and persons of all sexes and degrees peoples and nations whatsoever whereof it consists consenting in the truth of the Catholicke doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles so it is also and in unity of Spirit in the communion of Saints 46. What in this communion of Saints considered The union in that it is a communion The persons who are Saints How is their union 1. in the unity of faith the doctrine of salvation 2. The head which is Christ. 3. The body which is his Church they members 4. The Spirit which is the bond of peace among them 2. In the participation of the Sacraments tokens of this union and communion 3. Bond of charity and love between themselves and Christ their head and by him also with God 47. What is that communion then That holy and sweet fellowship which all the members of the Church have one with another and with Christ their head and so with God whereby all good is communicated to them from above and consequently in mutuall charity one unto another 48. Between whom is this communion considered Between the Saints and Christ their head and so with God themselves one with another so the Saints both in heaven and earth 49. How with Christ and God As the excellent Meanes whereby reconciled to God and at peace with him Grace of partaking of Christs righteousnesse being one with him by faith Assurance of my hope of all good things in him and by him attained for that he so feeleth my wants heareth my prayers is ready to relieve my misery 50. What fruit and profit of this All happinesse and goodnesse thereby acquired As peace with God peace of conscience peace in the soule Influence of all graces from Christ our head Effects of holinesse and righteousnesse from him Glorious inheritance title estate and hope of all Saints and all comforts in him 51. How exemplified By the spirituall building Christ the foundation and head cornerstone and we the building By the peacefull Olive Christ and we the branches ingrafted By the Vine Christ and we the pruned branches By the head Christ and we the members By the Bridegroome Christ and we the spouse and such similies of his imparting his goodnesse righteousnesse and graces to us 52. How of the Saints among themselves As members of one body branches of that Vine and Olive stones of that spirituall building all for the good one of another bringing forth much good fruit to the honour of God 53. How between us and Saints in heaven In mutuall sympathy as branches of one vine consent in the praises of God praiers one for another though not one to another and all best duties however unknown to us now will be manifest hereafter they being our fellow servants and brethren that assuredly wish our good and happinesse and in the resurrection to be partakers with us in glory 54. How among the Saints on earth Though plainly and evidently in 1. The unity in Faith the doctrine of truth professed Hope of blessednesse Spirit and bond of peace 2. Union with the Head and participation of the Sacraments yet most essentially in the union in charity and workes of mercy By helping one another By releeving and comforting the weake By bearing one anothers infirmities and doing all good temporall to the body spirituall prayer instruction and the like to the soule to the comfort of the Saints and Church of God 55. Why called Saints Both By the generall calling of God to grace Out of charity to the Church of God in all The visible members presumed faithfull In hope of the inheritance of Saints and desire that it may be given to all For that the best part are indeed Saints of God What comfort in this faith Most heavenly to consider That 1. Christ himselfe in this sympathy feeling our wants heareth and knoweth our prayers 2. Even Saints in heaven desire our good and pray for it 3. How mean soever in worldly eyes yet if Saints of that high and holy fellowship wherewith no compare as joyned so to the King of Kings c. 4. All Saints their prayers devotions fastings are heard and made and done for us and our good as all Christs actions and merits applied 5. That hereby is more content and true riches then in all worldly possessions as all good enjoying of heavenly and earthly good comming of this communion 56. What learne we hence Many good duties and how to behave our selves in and towards the Church of God and communion of Saints As 1. To honour and reverently esteeme of this holy society 2. To desire the good of it as a faithfull member of the same 3. To bee of holy conversation as beseemeth a Saint and a Christian. 4. To come out of the world leaving Egypt and Sodome to be admitted into this Canaan the House and Church of God 5. To be in unity with my selfe God and his Saints in the bond of the peace of a good conscience love and charity 6. To seeke sit company of Saints and so to delight in Gods house the Saints on earth and such as excell in vertue 7. Conversing with Saints on earth by holy conversation and those in heaven by heavenly contemplation to aspire to a more strait union with that holy congregation 8. To doe good to all especially to those that be of the houshold of faith as having a fellow-feeling and compassion to all Gods Children 9. To exercise our selves in fit and holy actions beseeming Gods house and that holy company 10. To have comfort in all things and sufferings both in respect of the Saints and their fellow-sufferings but chiefly Christ his fellow-feeling of our infirmities to helpe and relieve us 57. What followeth The last three Articles of the Creed concerning the priviledges given and belonging to this holy Society remission of sins resurrection of the body and life everlasting SECT 12. The 10.
originall fountaine of life living of himselfe and undependently and so giving all things else their life and being 43. How doth the body live By vertue of the soule and her union with it and so by the power and operation of the same 44. What is eternity A duration and continuance or enduring without beginning or end or both 45. How explaine you this Eternity or such enduring is considered First either simply and absolutely without beginning or end and so only God absolutely eternall and inhabiting eternity 2. In part as the Schooles speake either a part ante without beginning but having end so Gods decrees from eternity either without beginning but ending in his workes or a part post having beginning but without end so the eternity of Angells and soules that by creation had beginning but by Gods grace and goodnesse continuing them shall never have end this is also called eviternity and thus all eternity is contra distinguished to time 46. In what manner As eternity absolute hath neither beginning nor end so God eternall Eviternity hath beginning but no end so Angels and Soules Time hath both beginning and end so this world and all temporall things and thus all continuance is usually distinguished 47. What is eternall life then The fulnesse of joy and comforts of life in the presence of God that shall never have end 48. How more largely The union of body and soule as the resurrection of the just to that end to be united unto God and have the fruition of the glorious God head enlightning and inhabiting those that are his for ever so making them to dwell with him in whose presence is fulnesse of joy and life for evermore 49. How is this else called Happinesse and blessednesse eternall as therein enjoying the fruits and comforts of that everlasting life 50. Js this also the life of Angels It is whose onely blessednesse and chiefe delight is in contemplation and fruition of the glory beauty and majesty of God then which there can be no greater joy or happinesse 51. How so Because in him is all goodnesse even in the fountaine all goodnesse else but a few dispersed sparkes of that eternall light or a drop of that Ocean wherein onely is plenitude to the satisfying of all desires of what goodnesse soever 52. How is eternall life else taken Sometimes in the Scripture for the meanes and beginning of this in the kingdome of Grace as it is said to Christ to whom shall we goe thou hast the words of eternall life and this is eternall life to know thee and whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ. 53. How is this eternall life As it is the union of the soule to God by grace though imperfectly yet receiving the comforts of life from him by the influence of his holy Spirit bringing joy and unspeakable blessings and peace to the same 54. How manifold is eternall life then Twofold either inchoate in this life in the kingdome of grace Or consummate as aforesaid in the kingdome of glory And this is also twofold or in two degrees 55. Which are they 1. Either in that part onely the soule as that is united to God and enjoying happinesse with him when the soules of the just depart hence in the Lord. 2. Or in body and soule most fully as shall bee after the generall resurrection and so principally here intended 56. What the parts of this life and blessednesse The divine and blessed living of the soule and body when joyned together in the presence of God and union with him enjoying the fulnesse of all that is called goodnesse as both joy and pleasure riches health liberty honour glory and all these absolute and entire not mixed with any grief or any other inconvenience as worldly things but perfect according to the perfection and excellence of the person place and giver 57. And how this estate expressed else in holy Scripture By many comfortable phrases and figures expressing the joy honour glory comforts or blessings there as said to be and remaine With God and in God in the Lord. In the hand of God in his presence In heaven in eternall rest and peace In Paradise in Abrahams bosome In joy blessednes as here in life everlasting 57. But is not life everlasting to the wicked No for their estate is not properly a life as wanting all joy comforts and fruits of life but a death or continuall dying in paine and torments and so if at any time said to live it is with addition of everlasting torments or to live in everlasting chaines of darknesse with the Divell and his Angels or the like whereby signifying an eternall dying life or living death and in that respect most properly termed everlasting death 58. Why is not this their estate expressed also in the Creed Because this is here intended as a symboll of their faith so penned for the comfort of the just and to remember them of their hope and happinesse and stirre them up to godlinesse leaving the others to the hand of God whose estate yet may hence be plainly gathered and also is in St. Athanasius Creed some others more fully expressed 59. What learne we hence Many good duties as in our Christian calling so to order our lives and conversation as alwayes having an eye to this blessed hope Remembring this end without end Breaking off sinne betimes since no uncleane thing may enter here Striving to enter the strait gate of vertue leadign to eternity leaving the broad way of the world Taking joy in things that shall yeeld everlasting joy Desiring praying longing for it c. 60. Why is Amen added To shew the certainty assurance and confidence we have as well as our owne consent to this faith 61. VVhat signifieth it Verily certainly or undoubtedly or as it is else usually rendred So be it 62. What meane you then by it That we doe beleeve and confesse Not onely in word professing but from the very heart Not wavering but certainly without doubting Not as though it were in our owne power but craving helpe and strengthning of our faith from the hand of God 63. But how should Amen bee added since it is no prayer 1. Either as the last Article signifies those priviledges of the Church whereunto all faithfull soules aspire and so in that aspiration say Amen 2. Or as we generally confesse the certainty of it and our submission of soule to this faith and the will and truth of God 3. Or in particular we intimate our prayers for this or some other thing for our owne good and the Church of God 64. For what things For faith as Lord give us true faith For encrease of our faith as Lord encrease our faith For helpe and comfort Lord helpe our unbeleefe For defence Lord defend us and all professors of this faith Or the like holy aspiration to heaven and heavenly things in the meditation and confession of this faith 65. But doe not they abuse it
shalt have no other Gods but me SECT 3. The first Commandement The division of the two Tables and how many Commandements comprised in the first Table and divers opinions concerning the same and foure Commandements proved properly to be in the first Table the first Commandement and full Analysis of it amply expounding the duties and opposite abuses therein literally or else intimated or expressed what it is to have the Lord for our God and the opposite Atheisme or having no God what also to have him alone and the opposite Polytheisme and Idolatry of divers sorts both among the Heathens and other carnall professors and false Christians making Religion but a cloake for their villany or maske for their sin and folly what it is to love know and honour God with the opposite thereof ignorance errors and prophanenes of all sorts springing from ignorance nothing rightly stiled the mother of devotion other malignant sins bordering on prophanenes And the love of God if with all the minde heart soule and strength seen in divers good Christians vertues and duties that with their opposites are here described as in knowledge beleeving 〈◊〉 and 〈…〉 feare and rejoycing in him humility and mecknesse patience and constancy with perseverance and without murmuring obedience and thankefulfulnesse with a zeale of his glory and holy and godly life the branches and fruits of his love the very ground-worke of all the rest of the Commandements 1. VVHat is contained in the first Table By all confessed our duty towards God as in the second our duty towards our neighbour 2. How many Commandements are there in the first Table Though by some controverted yet as may most plainly appeare both by the words of command as well as the substance of the matter foure Commandements 3. What difference then is there of opinions Some distinguishing the first Table into three the second into seven Commandements as Saint Augustine sometimes did the Lutherans and Church of Rome doe others as we and generally all the Fathers the Jews themselves and the matter it self shewes properly dividing the first Table into foure the second into six Commandements 4. What reasons had they for the first Saint Augustine as it seems in holy and reverend respect to the Trinity and that sacred number three so in that comprising the Commandements pertaining to the honour of the Trinity as in that other sacred number seven the rest of the Commandements comprehending the duties to men in this septimana or weeke of the world the others insisting in his steps and for private reasons of their owne and in defence or at least respect of Images 5. What pretence for leaving out a Commandment As in the first Commandement including the second and proposing the second but an exposition of the first so by the first Commandement understanding all Atheisme Idolatry both internall and externall forbidden and true worship commanded and the second Commandement an explication of the former concerning that part chiefly externall Idolatry and worship and so are faine to divide concupisence in the last Commandement according to the severall objects of lust or covetousnesse and make two Commandements out of one so to supply the defect of this second Commandement thus lost or imbezled 6. How prove you rather foure Commandements in the first Table 1. By the foure words of absolute command set downe as in the 1. Commandement Thou shalt have none c. 2. Thou shalt not make c. 3. Thou shalt not take c. 4. Remember that thou sanctifie c. 2. By the things therein commanded viz. Who is to be worshipped the Lord Jehovah in the first Commandement How his solemne worship his owne prescript not Idolatrously second Commandement How far in our lives to honour him to glorifie his name third Commandement When to worship him solemnly on his Sabbath fourth Commandement 7. What the first Commandement Thou shalt have no other Gods but me 8. What Commandement is it A negative Commandement under it according to the first rule comprehending an affirmative so to have no other or strange gods but Jehovah for our God and him alone 9. What the negative part In the prohibition of these five things as forbidding 1. All Atheisme having no God 2. All Polytheisme having many gods 3. All Idolatry having strange gods or idols 4. All Ignorance no knowledge of the true God in the mind 5. All Prophanenesse no honour or expression of it in the life 10. What the affirmative part In these three things commanded 1. To have Jehovah for our God 2. To have him alone for our Lord and God 3. To honour and love him by all meanes in soule and mind as we ought or as agreeable to our duty and his Majesty or in these five parts 1. To have Jehovah and 2. Him alone 3. To Abhorre Idolls 4. Seek to know him faith 5. Seeke to honour him love and duty 11. How are the positive and opposite parts seene or opposed To 1. To have Jehovah for our God 2. Have him alone 3. Honour and love him opposite to 1. Atheisme having no God 2. both 1. Polytheisme many gods 2. Idolatry idols and strange gods 3. both 1. Ignorāce not knowing or loving him 2. Prophanenesse not honouring him 12 How is this further demonstrated 1. As to have Jehovah opposite to having no God 2. As to have him alone so not many gods 3. As to have no other god or strange gods so no idols 4. And if we have him need must it be if in minde to know and love him 5. And so as internall love externall honour opposite to Ignorance and Prophanenesse 13. What is it to have the Lord for our God 1. To set him up in our hearts who is Jehovah the Lord. 2. To set our hearts on him to honour love and feare him as the Lord. 3. To set and apply our whole selves to his worship 14. What the opposite of this Atheisme the not having the Lord and in effect having no God 15. How many sorts of Atheisme 1. Either open Atheisme as of ungratious reprobates 2. Or secret heart Atheisme in any 1. Doubting and questioning the divine Majejesty and his truth by whom they are and subsist 2. Conceiving otherwise of God then wee ought either of his Essence or Persons as Infidels or Hereticks 3. Denying him by prophane life 16. What is it to have him alone Setting him onely and him alone in our hearts and his honour before our eyes denying both our selves and all other things that shall offer to put him out of our hearts or obscure his honour 17. What opposite to this 1. Both Polytheisme having many or any other gods with him or besides him to his dishonour 2. Idolatry setting up other gods Idols or vanities in our hearts to worship them in his stead 18. What Polytheisme With God to joyne any other as those that 1. Either made two Gods one the beginning of all good the other of all ill 2. With God
Fast preparing us to true 〈◊〉 humiliation penitence and contrition The 〈◊〉 holy Feasts preparing us to sing praise to God in voice of joy and thanksgiving opposite to which is irreligious fasting or feesting of prophane and vaine persons 50. To whom 〈…〉 worship do●cted To God an● him alone as that inward honour expressed in the first Commandement so all outward worship set forth in this opposite to which is to direct is to idols or idolatrize in it not doing it carefully and religiously 51. How is it then to be done In all uprightnesse and singlenesse of heart as done to him that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and tryer of the reynes and inward parts and without all hypocrisie which hee seeth and hateth and so consequently in spirit and truth inwardly in the soule so in spirit as he is a spirit and seeth our spirits after a spirituall manner the best So in truth as he is true and the truth his word the truth teacheth us and outwardly in all good order decent manner and convenient rites and ceremonies fitting his worship 52. How is that best seene If all things be done in 1. Order not confufedly for God is the author of order and not confusion 2. Decency that is well pleasing to the eyes of God and men and springing from good order 3. Humility and reverence for that is best beseeming his Saints and congregation 4. Uniformity for that betokeneth unity and God is the author of all peace and unity as who maketh brethren to be of one minde in a house and by these it will shew it selfe to all to be done 1. In the feare of God 2. For the honour of his name 3. Tending to the edification of his people as it is 1. accompanied with 1. Love to our neighbour 2. Zeale of Gods glory 2. Performed without show of 1. Hypocrisie vainglory 2. Affecting singularity or 3. Idolatry or appearance of evill opposite to all which is disorder confusion unreverence uncharity pharisaicall pride hypocrisie and singularity inclining all to will-worship superstition and idolatry 53. Whence are the reasons of this Commandement Drawne from Gods 1. Justice jealousie Punishing the delinquents Hating their delinquency 2. Mercy and truth Prospering the faithfull and their service Loving them and their fidelity 53. How this punishment set forth In visiting the sinnes of the fathers upon the children to the third and fourth generation 54. Shall the children beare the fathers iniquity No but the soule onely that sinneth shall dye but here it is meant of wicked children treading in the steps of the fathers as commonly they doe because they were no better taught so it is a double punishment to have wicked children and to be punished in and with their children as their children with them 55. How are they said to hate God As they continue or neglect this honour then which if they did their worst in hate they could doe no more to displease him as hee is jealous of his honour which hee onely requireth for all his blessings and will not give it or part with it to any other and for which he hateth them and their doings 56. Why is the Lord said to hate them or jealous Because as adultery is a most hainous sin causing jealousie and the adulterer and murderer most worthy hate of God and men the Lord in detestation of that unnaturall sinne of idolatry expresseth it as a kinde of adultery to goe a whoring after idols and consequently his hate by their punishments that so hate and contemne him by adulterating his worship and committing spirituall fornication with idols and divels 57. How are his blessings to the faithfull described By his shewing mercy unto thousands in them that love him and keepe his Commandements extended to the bodies and soules of his service 58. Why said to thousands To shew the abundance of his mercy and goodnesse who though his jealousie burne like fire and justice punish to the third and fourth generation yet his mercy is greater his goodnesse is above it yea his mercy is over all his workes reaching to thousands and endureth for ever 59. But we see the righteous often troubled Yea but it may be in mercy too as a chastisement of the childe he loveth so the crosse bringeth forth patience and other graces yea sometimes more profitable farre then prosperity and God knoweth what is best for his for Removing of worldly confidence Confirming them to himselfe Renewing and perfecting grace in them 60. How are they said to love him In opposition to those haters and contemners of God whom God so also hateth and abhorreth these shewing their love by their fidelity and obedience to his Commandements whom God also therefore loveth shewing them mercies to them and their seed and giving them his graces and plentifully rewarding their love and obedience 61. To what end these reasons That since thou canst give him no more for all his blessings then thy love and obedience and thou oughtest to give him no lesse for else thou givest him nothing that his judgements and jealousie may terrifie thee or love and mercy may allure thee and so bring thee to this duty for thy good and his honour 62. What followeth The third Commandement concerning the honouring of Gods most holy name SECT 5. The third Commandement The Analysis of the third Commandement declaring the severall parts duties and opposite abuses therein forbidden or commanded with the reasons of the same What Gods name and how diversly to be understood and how honored or dishonored in his name or tytles attributes holy word and religion aswell as workes of creation gubernation povidence bl●ssings an● judgements 〈◊〉 thelike in g●nerall and in pa●ticular his dishonour by blasphemy against God in any sort whatsoever as well as all fro● of evill and prophanenes also cursing and banning swearing vainely and lewdly in presumptuous and execrable impiety the false prophets in that matter not so wicked but as it were with us acknowledge it to belong to God or the Church to denounce or send cursing or blessing or we only to blesse God and men in his name The Abuses of swearing and vaine or rash oaths in common swearers and the heinousnesse thereof with the folly and vanity or rather blasphemy and impiety of such hel-hounds or hellish and damned swearers and swearing worse then the Heathen or Pagans and more like Atheists then Christians and so such also the odiousnesse of perjury the opposite whereof the true and lawfull use of oathes and swearing for just and godly ends whereby the way of promissory oathes or vowes and their nature sorts and holy use in the Church towards God especially and be fore him if among men the reasons of this Command ement from the Lords mighty power and majesty intimated as well the most fearfull commination and judgement so expresly there threatned 1. VVHich is the third Commandement Thou shalt not take the name of c. What contained in these words The
the enemies of God to blaspheme 23. How is this to be understood As that all manner of evill examples prophanenesse shew of evill and idolatry may be occasion of blasphemy to the enemies of God and so all evill Christians accessory to the blasphemy of others and causers of it so in effect blasphemers 24. What opposite duty The glorifying of him and honoring of his holy name and his word by all means possible so yeelding him the honour due unto his name 25. What abuse by cursing and banning A malicious sinne the fruit of a heart full of gall and bitternesse and so compared to an arrow shot upright that shall fall downe upon the cursers head as he well deserveth 26. May we not curse then No not at all unlesse God bid ourse as he said Curse ye Meroz and so utterly to take heed of cursing maliciously as many will with desperate speeches and acclamations shewing a heart fraught with gall Cursing vainly as many doe on sleight or no cause calling for vengeance and plague murren and pestilence Cursing customarily as too many also will doe by swearing and cursing bewraying their folly and execrable impiety 27. Why should we not curse 1. Because it is the assured note of a wicked person as in the Psalmes Their throat is an open sepulchre the poison of aspes is under their lips their mouth is full of cursing and bitternesse 2. Because it is noted the fruit gal and bitternes as Rom. 3. 11. water of a corrupt fountain Ja. 3. 3. Because it is forbidden to all Gods people blesse and curse not blesse your persecutors blesse I say and curse not Rom. 12. 14. 4. Because it is a presumptuous sinne to wrest the office out of Gods hand and to whose justice belong plagues and punishments and so to enter upon Gods tribunall 5. It is here forbidden as all prophanation of Gods name and honour and we never read of any good man without Gods command durst enter upon it or doe it nay Michael when he strove with the divell durst not curse him Jud. 9. Nor Balaam though hired by Balaac durst curse without Gods commission Num. 23. and lastly curses are threatned with the curse of God that it shal not depart from the house where the curser or swearer dwelleth so it is an arrow shot upward that will hit him that shot it falling downe heavy with Gods curse on his head and we see not only Gods Law and Commandements all good men and Angells as Michael but even false Prophets as Balaam shall stand up in judgement to condemne this cursing and cursed generation 28. How is it that cursings and excommunications are found in the Scriptures and in the Church By Gods particular appointment and conclusion who is absolute Lord of both blessing and cursing and so we finde that Moses set forth the curses on mount Geresin That David cursed his and Gods enemies from God That Elisha cursed the rebellious children and the Church from God and for his glory used her excommunications and execrations by Christs peculiar commission and upon which no private person or any private authority may enter 29. What opposite duty Blessing and praysing him and his holy name yea and blessing all others even enemies and persecutors according to that blesse and curse not Rom. 12. 14. How blesse we God By praysing him for his blessings and sounding forth his goodnesse with the voice of joy and thanksgiving 30. How blesse we men From him and for his goodnesse and graces shewed in and by them and so blessing is said to be either generally required of all in gracious speech and godly salutations Gen. 47. 7. 10. Rom. 16. 16. Matth. 5. 44 47. Or particularly performed by superiours as from God and in his stead Parents Gen. 27. 27. Minister Numb 6. 23. Magistrates 2 Sam. 6. 18. 1 Kings 8. 55. 31. What abuse by swearing The prophanation of Gods name and injury to his holinesse and truth which as with falshood in our owne speech and injury and wrong to our neighbour is forbidden in the ninth Commandement as derogation to Gods truth and Majesty and prophanation of his name is here forbidden 32. How is this abuse of swearing Such vaine prophanation of Gods name used in oaths either taken falsly deceitfully rashly negligently commonly by creatures or false gods in vaine protestations and foolishly undertaken to the disparagement of truth and Gods glory 33. How many sorts of oathes be there Two sorts Ascertory commonly so understood Promissory in which are vowes What false swearing The taking of Gods name impiously in our mouthes to sweare to a thing we know to bee false or know not to be true both which are false swearing so the false witnesses against Naboth and Christ. How swearing deceitfully When sweating to what we know false or if it happen true what we thinke false and with a purpose to deceive others thereby or not to performe the same all which sorts are accounted perjury 34. What is rash swearing Swearing unadvisedly in heat and choller or any other passion without consideration of the matter circumstances manner or possibility of performance 35. What common swearing An accumulated sinne aggravating the offence of rash swearing by drawing wickednesse with cart ropes of vanity to a custome and so nothing more odious to God then the customary and common swearer who is commonly a vaine and prophane person 36. Whence the heynousnesse thereof 1. For the multitude of oaths reaching to heaven to pull downe vengeance 2. For the continuall neglect and contempt of God indignity offered to God to call him to witnesse in every lewd and trifling matter 3. For the contempt of truth as many must needs be false and lewd 4. For the small conscience of telling or facing a lye ordinarily seene in ordinary and common swearers 37. What other vaine swearing In derogation of Gods Majesty calling any creature to witnesse or using light and foolish protestations savouring of folly impiety and vanity and to the mocking of oaths and making them and the truth suspect 38. How may that be In swearing by creatures as light fire aire c. bread drinke welking c. By ridiculous toyes by laking by cocke by my fay c. By Popish Saints or the like by Saint Mary Saint Anne Saint Loyes by the Masse by the rood c. By Heathen gods or idolls as by Hercules Apollo c. Medius Fidius c. By parts of Christ body as nailes wounds blood heart and so Gods heart wounds c. many times not without cursing and raving most blasphemously 39. What the solly or vanity of them 1. In that they are childish and foolish to attribute the knowing truth to such things 2. Beastly and abominable to set up the creatures in the place of the Creator 3. Divilish and detestable to rob God of his honour and shame the truth 4. Blasphemous to teare Christ in peeces with such execrable oathes and vaine mouthes 5.
that in nature assisted by grace will suppose free will 〈…〉 of supererogation 24. What ability then may we 〈…〉 Only that which is of grace in Christ and to that measure that may be acceptable though not perfect since God is pleased so to accept of our best endeavours 25. Whence are we to expect it From God the giver of all goodnesse and so who is only able to worke in us both the thought the will and the deed 26. What meanes to obtaine it As here is prescribed continuall and earnest prayer the effectuall meanes to obtaine grace and all other blessings from the hand of God 27. Is there such necessity of prayer then Yes as the naturall life cannot be preserved without continuall food no more the spirituall life of the soule in grace without continuall accesse of Gods graces and comforts to refresh and nourish it 28. Is there such need for the faithfull also to pray Yes both I. As continually standing in need of such comfort 1. To shew they are Gods children and faithfull servants 2. To pay their vowes and duties of praise and thanksgiving 3. To performe their obedience to him 29. What manner of prayer required As is here expressed continually earnestl● and diligent prayer so said we ought at all times to call for grace by diligent prayer and to this purpose we are bid pray continually 1 Thes. 5. 17. 30. What further intimated in the question following this preface That the Lords Prayer is the most excellent platforme that we may desire of prayer and absolutely in it containing all that we need pray for and as a rule for our hearts and words to make request by so most reverently and religiously to be respected and used whence the reproofe of any that either I. Superstitiously neglect 1. It or sleight it 2. All set formes of prayer II. Ignorantly attribute too much to the bare recitall of it so religiously using it with vaine repetitions and babling III. Superstitiously use it to the expiating of sin by the only often repeating it c. 31. Why is it called the Lords Prayer As by him taught to his Disciples and in them to the whole Church so sanctified by his holy lips teaching and commanding it saying when you pray pray after this manner 32. Is it then meant in those very words No doubt after so good a Schoolmaster and in words so well couched in so holy perfect and absolute manner and for the substance comprehending all things necessary to be desired 33. What followeth The expresse requiring the recitall of the same prayer intimated so necessarily to be learned and religiously used by all good Christians SECT 2. The Lords Prayer Hypothesis of the Lords prayer here proposed the generall thesis of prayer and the nature definition excellency sorts order and rules of it come to be considered So the definition explaned and parts of prayer and order of them described as also the sorts or kinds of prayer among themselves compared and illustrated as of vocall and mentall of publick and private ejaculatory and others the difference and degrees of excelleney all of them excellent and usefull in their kindes the holy and religions use of set form of prayer in the Church of God and reasons of the same and how from all antiquity and by all godly men used whence also the Lords prayer by the Lord himselfe so propounded to be used yet none of the others in their due seasons to bee neglected but most necessary on the divers occasions of our life estate and callings to be religiously practised all of them and often as the many and continuall blessings of Almighty God are powred out upon us or presented to our eyes and remembrance the circumstances of prayer further set downe and declared of kneeling and the like gestures the order and rules and conditions of all true prayer the wings of prayer and how made so powerfull and why the prayers of the wicked prove so uneffectuall and unacceptable how we may pray or more to elevate our minds and inflame our zeale and affections to this divine duty of prayer in a due estimate of it we may consider the rare excellencie of it by the divine Elogies and other testimonies of holy scripture concerning it as likenise the exceed 〈…〉 and urgent nesessity pressing us on inciting us to this duty and lastly the admirable force or surpassing vertue and efficacie of true prayer which is of faith even to the obtaining of all our desires overcomming the greatest powers that are in the world the great dignity urgent necessity and wondrous efficacie of it here amply appearing from a survey of the reall worth right use and rare 〈◊〉 both effects of it to which may be added these further godly and profitable directions therein for the right use and practise of the same 1. REcite the Lords Prayer Our Father which art in heaven hallowed 2. What is here especially to be observed In generall what prayer is and how regulated In speciall this prayer the perfection and parts of it 3. What is prayer Oratio quasi oris ratio the calves of the lips or rather a devout pouring forth of the soule before God in our submission to his Majesty and ordinance and so honouring him 4. What in it to be considered The Nature Parts Sorts Rules of it whereby the Essence Matter Manner Order of it declared 5. What the nature or essence As expressed in the definition of it said to be the immediate worship of God by our calling on him in the name of Jesus Christ with devout pouring forth of the soule before him acknowledging his great Majesty and mercies and our owne miserie so desiring both for our selves and others supply of our wants and necessities from the fulnesse of his bounty and giving him praise for the same or more briefly thus a lifting up of the heart to God in the name of Jesus Christ according to his will in full assurance to bee heard and accepted of him 6. Why say you an immediate worship of God Because that though many other holy actions both at Church and else are his worship as preaching and hearing the word receiving the Sacraments sacrifice and obedience better then sacrifice yet none so immediately honouring him as this that primarily and totally respecteth it as tendring him in that very act our duty and so in the act honouring and worshipping him whereas preaching helpeth but our infirmity and prepareth us to this duty sacraments sacrifice and obedience and all other good duties in the service of God and his worship are promoted and made more acceptable by this and have as it were their best perfection from hence and thus this is the greatest highest and holiest duty that can be done by man and even Kings in this action though other great matters required at their hands doe the greatest matter that ever they can doe on earth and performe the holiest duty and most honourable and strongest for their
supply of grace 23. How is he said to be in heaven As in his Throne and Palace of Glory and whence he is seen especially to manifest the same both in mercy and judgements 24 How his glory seen or manifested there 1. In the inferiour heavens by whose excellent creatures sunne and hoasts there as the heavens declare the glory c. Psal. 19. 2. In the third heaven where is manifest his blessed vision and fruition to the Saints and holy Angels 3. In the heaven of his Church where manifested to his Saints on earth and those that excell in vertue 25. How else is it manifested thence 1. As his Almighty power is chiefly seene by his great works and influence of goodnesse thence 2. As his Al-presence shadowed in the alcovering heavens universall architecture 3. As his al-sufficiency to himselfe and all his creatures signified by that universall covering 4. As his Al-seeing knowledge by that universall compasse of the curtaines or canopie and light of heaven and so 5. His Omniscence Omnisufficiencie Omnipresence and Omnipotence lively shadowed and represented in the heavens and as his purity holinesse represented in the purity and brightnesse of them and his mercies and judgements also from thence 26. How his mercies and judgements manifested thence 1. In the signes and wonders shewed thence to the terrour of the inhabitants of the earth 2. In the lightning and thunder storme and tempest causing feare and amazement and often distruction 3. In the clouds and raine as in Noahs flood sometimes bringing and threatning devastation 4. In the distinguishing dayes and nights times and seasons by the lights and revolution of heaven 5. In the influence of goodnesse into inferiour things as gracious dewes from heaven 27. How is he then by us conceived to be in heaven 1. In the heaven of sanctified soules by his grace 2. In the heaven of his Church by his mercy and goodnesse 3. In the heaven of visible heavens by his power and declarations of his glory 4. In the heaven of superiour heavens his Court and Palace in excellent glory with his heavenly Courtiers Saints and Angels 5. In the heaven of highest heavens dwelling in inaccessible light and glory 28. Is he not then on earth Not to be thought that he is absent any where that filleth all places by his powerfull presence in whom we live and move and have our being and though heaven his Throne yet earth his footstoole and both heaven and earth filled with his goodnesse and glory who both here and in heaven guideth and governeth all things 29. Why say we then so particularly in heaven Because that in most eminencie the heaven is his Throne or seat and Palace of glory and for our understanding as earthly Kings his image have Palaces of State to shew their magnificence so this heavenly Emperour hath that his celestiall Palace wherein is most perspicuously above all other places manifested his glorious Majesty 30. What more learne we hence 1. The greatnesse of comfort and considence that we should have in our heavenly Father 2. The height of our godly ambition to be worthy sonnes of this our heavenly heavens Father 3. The fulnesse of joy and gladnesse from consideration of the excellencies of this our heavenly father above all earthly fathers and this our King above all other earthly Kings and Emperours 31. How is this especiall comfort confidence or joy As our heavenly Father hath heavenly blessings and inheritance to give us and doth love his above all earthly fathers love who love but blindly ignorantly and imperfectly and he eternally without end or imperfection he hath all power and all Kings but wormes in comparison of him and like the dust under his feet yea Satan and all enemies tremble before him who is able to defend his from all adversaries and this our prayer is our speech to salute this our Father who is thereby assuredly knowne our God and Father as we more familiarly admitted into his presence to speake to him and so often to salute him in that heavenly language 32. But if we be his what need we often pray So much the more 1. To shew our duty and love to his honour 2. To approve our selves thereby in his favour so often and ordinarily even here admitted into his presence 3. To pay our duties that we owe of blessing praise and thankfulnesse the tribute of our soules 4. To renew the covenant of grace and cloath us in Christs garments and justice more fully 5. To reach out the hand of faith thereby continually to receive new blessings 33. What if we neglect it We not only shew our selves unworthy of blessings but to have no faith and not to be sonnes that desire not our fathers honour nor to receive blessings from him for if we will not 1. Offer our selves in his presence 2. Speake to him by confession 3. Aske him blessing by prayer 4. Salute him in praises 5. Reach out the hand of faith to receive blessings 6. Aske or speake for cloathing or meat Medicines or help Cordialls or other comforts in our fathers hand and gift shall we not shew our selves most unworthy of any blessings and worthy to be blotted out of his favour in consideration of which we ought often thus to pray as we are taught Our Father which art in heaven 34. What farther expositions may you make hereof In consideration how this Preface is applied to the whole Trinity not only in generall as one God in essence but in particular intimated according to their persons as by 1. Father remember the first Person in Trinity both to Christ and all us a Father 2. Our representing him in whom God is made our Father Christ our Brother Mediator Judge Saviour and redeemer 3. Which art in heaven intimating the holy Ghost inhabiting the Saints or Gods presence by his holy Spirit in his holy heaven both his 1. Saints and their soules by his graces Conscience by sanctification 2. His Church on earth by his mercies and consolations 3. His Church above by his glorious visitation and continuall comfort thus understanding particularly one God in three Persons Father Son and holy Ghost by these words Our Father which art in heaven 35. What followeth After this Preface in the second place the petitions of the Lords Prayer SECT 4. The three former Petitions of c. The Analysis and generall distinction of all the six petitions with the order of them and reason of the same this prayer is so excellent as in it comprehending the substance of all prayers and all the sorts and parts of them the number of the petitions and quality thereof the 1. petition for Gods glory why fittest so first to be paced The parts of this petition what meant by the name of God expressed in the third Commandement and what also by sanctifying his name and how to be performed by us in all our thoughts words and workes respectively all of them and so to be hallowed
and so for obtaining of vertue 6. As in the sixt Petition or sixt and seventh Petition Lead us not c. we desire most expresly not only the avoiding of all sinne and wickednesse but all temptations and provocations or allurements to it as the way to it to be delivered from all evill in all the parts and members of the same and so for all virtue grace and godlinesse 16. It seemes then spirituall matters are desired in every one of the Petitions It is true as most worthy our prayer to aske and the giver to bestow and as every Petition either primarily in the full scope of it or secondarily even for our good respect the glory of God 17. And so in every of the Petitions all virtues desired to be 〈◊〉 and sins to be removed It is true also either in the full scope direct intention of most of them or of necessary consequence as in the fourth Petition as the exercise of one vertue cannot be rightly and truly had and possessed without the habit or generall inclination to all of them the vertues are so nearly united and chained together and as without planting of the same and supplanting of vice in generall wee can never truly aime at the glory of God which ought to be the scope of every Petition as we are taught also by the conclusion For thince is Kingdome power and glory for ever and ever 18. Is the conclusion therefore added Yes assuredly and even full as directly for the reason of our desire and petition as for the ground of our confidence to be heard if not more as their precedency in order seems to imply That primarily for the ground or reason of our desire That secondarily in order or the ground of our confidence we say For thine is the Kingdome power c. And for certainty of it adde Amen 19. What followeth The fifth and last part of the Catechisme concerning the doctrine of the Sacraments PART 5. Of the SACRAMENTS SECT 1. Of the SACRAMENTS in generall Quest. 14. the doctrine of the Sacraments their necessity use and utility described our Sacrament of the Gospil in the new Testament succeeding those of the Iewes under the law in the old testament and as seales of the new covenant in effect the same with them The covenant and what the substance or matter manner and circumstances of it and how under the Law and the Gospel distinguished as also what are the parts who the parties to the Covenant and the instruments or records of it The two Testaments where first considered the Author penmen and publicke Notaries of the old Testament with the signing sealing and delivery thereof the witnesses to the same and so of the new Testament likewise the Author penmen signing sealing and delivery of it and witnesses described the scales of it and the graces conferred the Sacraments the order of whose doctrine is here to be observed with number of them and how two only so primely and especially from all antiquity acknowledged the definition parts and other circumstances of the true and prime Sacraments observed and with the others compared both in generall and in particular matrimony confirmation extreme unction or avealing penance and holy orders by us acknowledged though not Sacraments for either Godly estates 〈◊〉 course of life or holy religious actions and ceremonies in the Church piously to be used and practised and so divers other holy and religious action and ceremonies may be observed though not Sacraments accounted but these two in all respects primarily by all accounted Saoraments 1. HOw many Sacraments hath Christ ordained in his Church Two onely generally necessary to salvation 2. Why say you generally necessary For their generall acceptation and use in the Church As generally appointed by the Lord himselfe for the use and benefit of all As generally received and to be received by all according to his command As generally necessary in the respect except we will run into contempt 3. How is the necessity then A necessity absolute in respect of his command of conveniencie if they may be had A necessity peremptory under paine of disobedience and contempt if they may so be had A necessity respective in regard of the utility of them profitable to salvation 4. How is the utility of them As they are a meanes of grace in the holy use of them and seals of it well used and as in that respect profitable so in that profit also necessary to salvation as aforesaid 5. How are they to be accounted of then As Conduits or comfort and graces by them conveighed to the soul. As seales of grace it selfe to the hearts of the faithfull that receive them duly As seales of the covenant of grace in generall to the Church in particular to each faithfull person and so comming in place of the old Sacraments 6. How come they to be so As the Covenant of Grace commeth in place of the old Law new Testament succeeding instead of the old and to revealing thereof and the Gospel of faith perfecting the Law of workes so these our Sacraments of the Gospel instead of the old Sacraments of the old Law and of the Jewes 7. How succeed they then Baptisme in the place of Circumcision and instead of the Paseall Lambe the Lords Supper and sorepresenting them 8. How doe they represent the former In the vertue and efficacie as wel as the intent of their action 9. How in Baptisme seene In that Baptisme is as Circumcision was for admission into the Church and as Baptisme by washing Circumcision by cutting off the foreskin both intending the purging of the filth and corruption of the flesh 10. How in the Lords Supper As the Lord himselfe is the true Paschal Lamb and that former a shadow of this later and so in The 1 Paschal lamb considered the Nourishment and feeding the body and seale of faith to the soule Memorizing their 1. Passing out of Egypt 2. Deliverance 2 Lords Supper or Paschal Lamb Passover Nourishment food of soules seal of the better covenant Memorizing our Spiritual deliverāce Passage from Egypt to Canaan Or Bondage of sin to favour and grace 11. What meane you by Scales of the Covenant Externall signes exhibited for confirmation of Gods covenant and promises made unto his people 12. What is a Covenant A promise or stipulation of parties between themselves of certaine agreements on either hand to be done or performed which as it is Agreed upon it is a covenant Confirmed or Recorded witnessed sealed or the like declared publick instrument or testament 13. What required in such covenant the Parties to such covenant or instrument The conditions and matter or agreements between them Recording publishing Ratification and signing Sealing and delivery Of it with witnesses testimony of the same 14. How are these observed in Gods covenant All of them precisely found in the covenant of God with us his people as wel in the covenant of
Prophets and holy men that had beene since the world began to whom the promise still made or confirmed 38. Who was the Mediator in that Christ one and the same for ever though Moses the type of Christ then seen in his stead to stand between God and the people and making atonement yet Christ so in Moses and to the Fathers in many types and shadowes shewed and to bee seene and Mediator for all flesh with the Father now eternally 39. Who the Authour in the new Testament God the Father also in Christ the Mediator promiser and testator of his mercies and blessings to all his people that observe his Law 40. Who the other party All the faithfull his people on their parts promising to observe his Lawes especially that royall Law of love by which knowne to be his Disciples as which is the summe and fulfilling of the whole Law 41. Who the Dictator of it God himselfe speaking in Christ and Christ himselfe dictating both that Golden rule of Prayer Royall Law of Love All other necessary ordinances to bee observed by his and confirming of the old that were to be confirmed 42. Who the Penmen Both Christ himselfe in the great letters of his most holy life and actions and bloudy characters on the crosse and of his passion blacke letters of his death and buriall as well as glorious and golden letters of his resurrection ascention and sending his Spirit to the comfort of his and writing his Lawes in the hearts of the faithfull besides other holy Penmen and publicke notaries also 43. Who were they The holy Evangelists Apostles and Apostolicall Writers recording it by the assistance of one and the same Spirit the Enditer who also testifieth the same by continuall witnesses and evidence of power unto salvation to the Elect. 44. How signed With his bloud on the crosse on Mount Calvarie 45. How delivered To his Church the Apostles for them and their successors to preach teach interpret keep the same for the use of the faithfull to the worlds end 46. What witnesses Besides a cloud of witnesses then present and eye-witnesses of it thousands else of glorious Martyrs and Confessors throughout all ages testifying the invincible truth with utmost endeavours and dearest bloud in the power and evidence of Gods Holy Spirit 47. How sealed By the same Spirit to the hearts and soules of the Elect in those visible signs or seals the Sacraments representing his graces as engraven in them and presenting or conveighing and confirming the same to their soules 48. What graces in the Sacraments Answerable to their nature the promise in the Covenant and intent of the former Sacraments In Baptisme the Washing of the soul from sin Admission into the Church New birth and life in Christ. Lords Supper the Nourishment of us in the Church Strengthening our souls in the faith Feeding on Christ the bread of life and in remembrance of his death a mortifying our earthly members by repentance and a quickning of us in the Spirit in him raised from death to life and by him living 49. What is this order of this doctrine of the Sacraments to the rest After the doctrine of faith and obedience in the Creed and the Commandements and prayer set forth the meanes of obtaining grace to obey and please God the better come these seales of grace in the last place that after such teaching of the former and apprehension of them by the intellectuall powers of the soule the goodnesse of God descending even to the comfort of sense confirmeth his graces and promise of them by the use and acceptation of visible signes and elements for tokens and pledges of the same 50. How is the number so few as two Because it pleased the Lord so to appoint it and it is also sufficient and fittest as Being Baptisme our admission into the Church The Lords Supper our strengthening and maintenance in the same 51. How is it that five more have been added Not so rightly or properly but rather against the course and consent of best authority and antiquity 52. How say you so Because onely these two are so especially in Scripture acknowledged by our Saviour appointed and generally received by all required to be received and these only properly in all respects the others but improperly and not by all required to be received or acknowledged Sacraments 53. How appeareth this For that besides Scripture the ancient Fathers and chiefe Doctors generall consent and confesse only these two properly so intended As S. Cyprian lib. 2. Epist. 2. ad Stephanum Si utroque sacramento nasc antur they may be throughly sanctified and Sons of God As Saint Augustine de doctrina Christiana lib. 3. cap 9. pauca promult is facta facilima c. the Lord and his Apostles delivered few for many easily to be done divine to be understood and pure to be observed to wit the Sacraments of Baptisme and the Lords Supper As Saint Ambrose Tertullian Justine Martyr and divers others confessing the same and the others not to be so properly Sacraments nor capable of a Sacraments true definition in the right sense 54. What is a Sacrament then An outward and visible signe of an inward and spirituall grace given unto us ordained by Christ as a meanes whereby we receive the same and a pledge to assure us thereof 55. What here to be observed 1. The matter outward sensible singe and audible forme of words accedat verbum ad elementum fit sacramentum Inward spirituall grace represented and to be understood 2. The Authour ordained by Christ for difference from the Sacraments of the old Law and those improperly so called not having his institution 3. The end of it in respect of the use and benefit twofold 1. As a meanes whereby we receive grace 2. As a pledge to assure us thereof 56. How is it found in the Sacraments In the I. True Sacraments expressely in 1. Baptisme the 1. Matter Outward signe element And forme of words Inward grace 2. Authour Christ himselfe and his institution Go teach and baptise in the name of c. 3. End meanes pledge seal of grace 2. Lords Supper the 1. Matter in the outward sign form of words grace 2. Authour Christ himselfe and his institution 3. Ends a meanes pledge and seale of grace II. Others not so 57. How shew you it particularly of them In Matrimony Neither Authour Christ but institution of God in Paradise and in and by nature not grace Matter no visible signe prescribed or forme of words especially by our Saviour appointed End Not pertaining to all but onely who have not the gift of continencie may marry Not meanes or seale or pledge of any grace thereby promised or obtained but a holy estate of life in all that godlily enter into it and necessary for some but as Durand saith to speake strictly or properly no Sacrament 58. What of confirmation As saith Alexander Hales par 4. q. 24. neither did the
consecration of it and holy Abraham comming neare Mount Morijah where he was to offer maketh such difference and distinction of the persons places and things I and the lad saith he will goe yonder the sacrificer and sacrifice to the Altar shewing the Court of the Priests but stay you here designing as it were the Court of the people and to Moses was it spoken from God Exod. 3. 5. Come not nigher put off thy shooes for the place c. as if he should say it is holy there by my presence being so neare put off ●hy shooes therefore but come not nigher though thy shooes be off it is holier here the best respects are little enough for the place where thou art and too little for the place where thus am being ignis in rubo Deus in carne Christus in virgine come now to his Church you must not tread on that ground with thy shooes on nor on this though thy shooes be off thy shoos are too uncleane for that place and thy bare feet not cleane enough for this as a learned Divine of our Church well notes on the place 56. And how since the Law was it observed In like manner such reverentiall distance and degrees as we may not thinke Gods honour lesse or his holinesse and presence more alienated from his Church since his sending his Son in the flesh then before rather more illustriously to all intents there manifested in that house and Church of his where the very Pascall Lambe was sacrificed in truth substance by himself then where onely in types and shadowes by another viz. Aaron and his sonnes in the Temple especially since we see and heare that Evangelicall Prophet among many others so triumphantly proclaiming it Esay 60 1. 3. 13. c. concerning Christ and his Church and in him and it verified Arise shine thy light is come the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee the Gentiles shall come to thy light Kings to the brightnesse o● thy rising thy gates shall be open the glory of Lebanon shall come to thee c. they shall call thee the City of the Lord the Sion of the Holy One of Israel thy wals shall be salvation and thy gates praise the Lord shall be thy everlasting light and thy God thy glory all spoken of the glory of the Church in the abundant accesse of the Gentiles and great blessing by the presence of the Messias and graces of God powred out and appearing on her as throughout all the Chapter is plentifully declar●● so the converted Ge●●iles with the Jew●s fallin ● downe in the Church shall all worship acknowledging Gods presence and the beauty of ●olinesse most effe●t●●lly powerfully there yea even to admiration in most joyfull and glorious manner or more ample m●●ner and measure then ever before shewne as now manifested in subst●nce what before by 〈◊〉 types shadowed and according to the practice of the people of God have the Gentiles received to grace and engrafted into Christ followed their steps kept their reverentiall distances and degrees not presuming with p●arisaicall arrogancy but in humil●y and lowly manner in those consecrated and holy places taught ●o tender their devo●ions for so testifie all pri●itive times before ever that sawcinesse and f●iniliarity of faith that would bring in co●fusion and ●hrust all things out of order among Schisma●ickes and factious persons grew to be fanc●d or i● fashion 57. They intend perha●s with more freedo●e and bo●●ly to come and performe those acts of divine worship there And well may they so they doe it with more humility t●ught in the Publica● where no lesse the proud deportment of the Pha●isee was withall pointed at and reproved and we may note that as well as O come let us sing unto the Lord a venite exultemus be to be found to invite us to diligence and alac●ity with boldnesse in the action so there is also a venite adoremus Let us worship and fall downe before the Lord our Maker let us bow downe yea fall downe before him and fall low on our knees before his foot-stoole to teach us ●umility and shew our duty for he that requires a diligent servant desires also a dutifull one and he that loves a du●ifull and diligent servant loa●hs a malapert and saucie one and who can be too lowly in his presence looke to Da●ia and other holy mens deportment before him and if we humble our selves so to Kings or our fellow servants here on earth as is fitting and by Gods word approved with what humility should we that are but dust and ashes appear● before him there or how can we too much expresse lowlinesse that he so loveth for he regarded the lowlinesse of his 〈◊〉 whom therefore all generations do now call blessed leaving the proud and mighty in the ●maginations of their owne hearts exalted the humble and meek yea still scorning the proud giveth grace to the hum●le and heareth their prayers when they call upon him 58. How groweth yet this distinction of holinesse and degrees of it in such manner in the holy places or things As the presence of the Lord may be understood to be there and his graces dispenced by or in the same but not in the same degree in all of them whereby though one be holy and the other yet not one so holy as the other as was in effect spoken to Moses from God to this purpose the place where thou standest and hearest me speake is holy but this ●olier from whence I speake that too cleane for thy shooes this for thy bare feet therefore come not ●igher thus where God was more then ordinary he required respects more then ordinary thy shoos are too uncleane for that place and thy bare feet though they are permitted there are not cleane enough for this so the reason of this distinction hence to be gathered not any inherent essentiall preeminence of the place or thing but relative arising from some peculiar dispensation of his presence beneficence and graces there or in them whence came the distinctions in divers degrees according to the degrees of such dispensation of graces observed and severall consecrations of holy things places and persons in or under the Law and before and of our Churches since and all parts of them and other things according to the same respects that are moral and unchangeable for the substance of them the types now vanished under the Gospel and indeed for the excellencie and eminencie of their use in divine worship worthy to bee reverenced and so distinguished as from all antiquity we have received them and thus for holy places have we the Church-yard as consecrated ground in a first degree the Church it selfe Chancell and holy Table in their order in higher and different degrees of reve●entiall respects ever acknowledged till the fu●y or frenzie of Novelists disturbed it and answerable to this in other matters observed 59. In what other matters Both times persons and things consecrate
Assyrian Babylon Grecian and Egyptian Militia and Armes had done before them but now numbred by legions whiles Saint John beheld the rude multitudes more swaying by number then by wisedom then reigning and raging in the world and afflicting the Church how appliable to all A●tichristian practices oppressions and oppositions when and wheresoever that man of sinne that first began to move in the Apostles times by Schisme and Heresie the dregges of Gentilisme the nurse of later paganisme shall get head in the power of the Beast among the beasts of the people against the Saints and Church of God to be so high advanced there to defile and prophane it by his own presence bringing in the whore of Babylon or confusion with the Cup of abominations of false strange and wil worship unreverence and prophane novelties the idols of fancy innovating whorish inventions of those that run after strange Gods Religions where rude armed impiety by barbarous force more then gracious wisedome and godlinesse by good counsell can prevaile I leave to be considered by the wisest and most judicious So retur ning from this mystery of iniquity to that divine mystery of the name of God But why said you before that Nomen Tetragrammaton was corruptly pronounced Jehovah It is most evident though it have so long escaped the most curions inquisition of so many thousands nay Myriades or millions of searching eyes and wits that have long sought after it for whether the Jewes by their superstitious silence lost the true sound or by their supercilious envie conceal'd it from us the Gentiles and so at last perhaps lost it as they did their ancient Musicke and Meeter of Davids Psalms in their captivity or propter peccatum as they confesse yet what the true sound is easily to bee discerned by them and us may thus plainly appeare for that it is truly to be pronounced Jaho or Jahu trisyllabum is thus proved by their owne writings and strangers First we may finde in ancient Greek Copies and Poems yet extant that name rendred I●● Jao wanting the letter h or aspiration whereby to write as we may Jahoh But more then this in the Bible it selfe where that name is fixed to the end of any proper names they may most plainly perceive it there as in Isaiahu Jeremiahu Eliahu and the like Thirdly where it is prefixed to proper names as in Jehoram Jehoiada Jehoshap at and the like it is plain where we know by the Grammar Rules Camets by increase of syllables is turned into Shevah which yet is not so little an e as is now sounded but rather French i Feminine sounding our less● a or broader as old Gramarian● testifie as in Solomon Rehoboam and many other like words expresly found Fourthly in the contracted name Jah it is evident the two last letters are cut off or left out as usuall with them and seene in many like words and especial●y in the Conjugations Lamed He and Lamed Aleph is most frequent where Aleph and He with their ending vowels are commonly cu● off much more might be added for confirmation but this may suffice but for the word Jehovah it is onely the vowels of Adonai used to be read for it is preposterously added to the letters of that name So ending with this Sacrament come we now to the Lords Supper SECT 3. Of the LORDS SUPPER The Lords Supper why instituted and how a memoriall of Christ and his death and that his sacrifices with the Analogy or resemblance that relation ●t hath to the same and to the Pascal Lambe and all those other legall saccrifices so often used all of them having relation to Christ being the perfection of them the benefit of whose sacri●ice and perpetuall memory thereof with thankfulnesse 〈…〉 prime reasons though other ends also proposed the institution how it differeth from baptisme many wayes and how it selfe in divers respects called by divers names the parts of it the outward signs ceremonies and actions by the Lord prescribed and observed the other circumstances to the same belonging also propounded to be considered the near resemblance and fit relation of the outward signe and inward or of our receiving the elements of bread and wine and other holy actions and ceremonies to the receiving of the body and blood of Christ by faith and our nourishing and strengthning by the same the manner of Christs presence in the blessed Sacrament as ineffable rather to be reverently admired and thankfully confessed then curiously to be disputed of or contentiously to be enquired after as the Fathers teached therein acknowled●ing a most divine Mystery yet neither transubstantiation 〈…〉 Consubstantiation thereby to be conceived but the Mystery rather more divinely to be understood and accordingly by the ancient ●tiled the figure of it and speeches of the Church and holy Scriptures concerning it and the worthy receiving thereof So the comforts and benefits in the religious receiving and using it and in the grases vertue and effects thereof come to be christianly meditated on and remembred and hereby reasons urged why kneeling at receving the holy Communion and other the like reverent gesturet and postures of the body are in the Church and at such holy actions to be used with the difference and distinction of all such religious and ceremonious as well as civill reverence from the divine worship a● also reasons for it why w● Christians doe usually worship and have our Churches so placed looking towards the East as it were thereby causing it 1. VVHy was the Sacrament of the Lords Supper ordained For a continuall remembrance of the sacrifice of the death of Christ and the benefits we receive thereby 2. What is hereby intimated T●e end wherefore it was ordained viz. First The memoriall of the I. Thing it selfe 1. The Pasehall Lambe now offered indeed Christ. The death of the Lambe of God The sacrifice by his death immolate II. The benefits we receive thereby Secondly The perpetuity of this memoriall to be continued in the Church till his comming a-again at the end of the world as in the institution Do this in remembrance c. and To remember the Lords death till he come 1 Cor. 11. ●6 3. How is it a memoriall of Christ In that as bread and wine are prepared by many strokes of affliction and labour for the comfort of the body so was the bread of life and living water or wine of his bloud for comforting the heart prepared for us and our soules 4. How seene in this bread of life Christ As bread is prepared by 1. Threshing 2. Grinding 3. Baking 4. Breaking 5. Dividing to be eaten So Christ was 1. Threshed with many strokes of anguish and affliction of body and soule 2. Ground in the mill of much sorrows 3. Baked in the fiery oven of Gods anger against sin Mal. 4. 4. Broken for our sakes that we might be made whole and fed with this bread of life 5. How in this wine of his bloud As
wine is prepared by 1. Cutting downe 2. Casting into the 3. Wine-presse 4. Troden with the 5. Feet 6. Powred to be drunk used So Christ was Cut down for us Cast into and troden in The wine-presse of his Fathers wrath for us Troden under the feet of the contumelious Jewes and others Powred out his soule and bloud for our sakes like water shed on the earth that we might receive the comfort 6. How receive we the comfort As in the creatures of bread and wine though we have them in abundance the comfort onely is by Gods blessing so in this bread and wine though the signes or symboles of it be had it is the grace of God that giveth the true comfort sanctifying them and applying them indeed in the nourishment of the soule to whom we must looke up for a blessing in the use of the Sacrament 7. How was he the Paschall Lambe As by whose bloud on our door-posts the destroyer cannot hurt us and hereby we delivered have power to passe out of the Aegypt of this world into the land of Canaan in heaven 8. How or why minde we his death As he was threshed and troden downe to death for us that deserved it his body broken and bloud shed and soule powred out for ours that ought to have beene so eternally the punishment of our sins was so heavy on him that he was bowed downe to the grave whereby in his stripes we are healed and so with thankfulnesse are to remember his death 9. How was there in his death a sacrifice As his body and soule was made an offering for sin propitiatory by the worth of it for the sins of the whole world as more worthy then the whole world and all creatures being in the Person of the Son and Creatour God and man and so in this one sacrifice of which all other sacrifices were but shadows and types they all had their end and this was the end and substance of all both the Lambe slaine every morning and evening for a dayly and continuall Oblation the Paschall Lambe the Scape-goat the many other sacrifices and bloud shed for propitiation figuring Christs bloud that was to be shed the price and redemption of all our bloud herein and hereby in the Sacrament remembred 10. What was the use of those often sacrifices 1. To expiate and do away sin and so commanded 2. To sanctifie those that were uncleane or infected with leprosie defiled by any other uncleannesse Legall or Ceremoniall 3. To prosper weighty attempts as Saul when he was to fight with the Philistines 1 Sam. 13. 8. 11. Is Christs sacrifice effectuall to this Yes more fully and abundantly in every respect For By it sin is fully expiated his bloud cleanseth from all sin 1 Joh. 1. 6. By it we are sanctified thorowout both in soules and bodies prayers and all our actions and other things sanctified to us in him By it all things made prosperous and a blessing to both soule and body in life and death through him 12. But how was he a sacrifice As his crosse was the Altar whereon offered suffered As himselfe the Priest that made the Oblation As his humane nature the Creature offered of that infinite worth as united to his Divine Nature As his precious bloud the bloud shed in the offering that ought to have purifying power in bloud As the fat fuming up the sweet perfume of his merits by which sacrifice thus offered he obtained eternall Redemption for us Heb. 7. 27. and 9. 12. 13. What the benefits we remember herein The sealing and confirmation of his Covenant and graces The strengthening of our faith The c●mfort and nourishing of our soules The union with Christ and God The communion with all Saints the whole Church Of which more hereafter 14. How said you the perpetuity of memoriall noted As it is the continuall remembrance of his death so in the institution commanded and worthy by all good Christians to be used and remembred as the most beneficiall action that ever was done for mankinde worthy to be remembred everlastingly that maketh him live to eternity 15. But doth not Baptisme represent this also Yes but not so fully and powerfully as this Sacrament it being in that a secondary end to shew that by our washing remembring it on the by but in this Sacrament the full end scope and intention of it 16. What prescribe you then for the end of this Sacrament The 1. chiefe end the confirmation and seale of faith and graces unto us whereby the testification of the union with God and Christ communion with the Saints 2. Other ends also to be con●esired 1. As testification of our obedience and saith used 2. As solemne thanksgiving and praising God therein so called an encharisticall sacrifice 3. As confession and celebration of the memoriall of Christs sacrifice 4. As bond of love among the visible members of Christs Church so called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or festum charitatis 5. As meanes of more solemne celebrating the publicke meetings and drawing them together so called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 6. As publick note of distinction to the Church and faithfull from all others as also the other Sacrament 7. As recordation of the many benefits of Christs sacrifice called to minde and continually renued in our remembrance 17. How is it then said before the end only a memoriall Because in the memoriall of Christs death and sacrifice all the rest both chiefe and other ends for which it is either instituted or so often so used may seem after a sort to be included 18. How doth it agree with baptisme In the chiefe end the sealing of grace and of the Covenant in generall and divers other particular ends as the testifying our faith obedience thankfulnesse the note of distinguishing between the faithfull and others as well as after a sort also remembrance of Christs death by our being washed in his bloud 19. How differeth it from Baptisme Very much in many things as in 1. The ceremony and externall rites action and elements 2. The signification of them and manner of it in Baptisme a washing in Christs bloud the other a feeding on him and so a communion and participation of Christ and his merits 3. The proper ends baptisme to admit us regenerate renue us The Lords Supper to nourish strengthen conserve us in the Church 4. The order of them Baptisme first the Supper after and not otherwise 5. The person using baptisme all regenerate even children the Lords Supper only those that can acknowledge and remember the benefits and reason of it 6 The manner of use of baptisme with faith and repentance the Lords Supper besides them with confession also commemoration thanksgiving had so only of those in yeares 7. The usurpation of them baptisme but once as once admitted into the Covenant though often renewed by repentance never iterated the Lords Supper the oftner used the better for continuall nourishing of us and commemorations