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A07350 The English catechisme explained. Or, A commentarie on the short catechisme set forth in the Booke of common prayer Wherein diuers necessarie questions touching the Christian faith are inserted, moderne controuersies handled, doubts resolued, and many cases of conscience cleared. Profitable for ministers in their churches, for schoole masters in their schooles, and for housholders in their families. By Iohn Mayer, Bachelour of Diuinitie.; English catechisme Mayer, John, 1583-1664. 1622 (1622) STC 17733; ESTC S100659 485,672 636

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sweare to performe an vnlawfull thing is he not bound notwithstanding to performe his oath Answ In no wise for so he should adde vnto his sinne of swearing vnlawfully a further sinne of doing vnlawfully 249 Quest Which is the fourth commandement Answ Remember that thou keepe holy the Sabbath day c. 250 Quest What is the duty here commanded Ans To keepe holy the Sabbath and to bee mindfull of it 250 Quest How may this be done Answ By assembling together to pray vnto God and to praise him to heare his holy Word and receiue the blessed Sacraments 250 Quest Is this all that is required to the right keeping of the Sabbath day Answ No but we must prepare our selues by praier and emptying our hearts of sin and meditate vpon Gods works and the word which we haue heard suffering it so to work in vs as that we may be furthered in all holines of life 250 Quest Js there no duty to be done towards our neighbour for the hallowing of this day Answ Yes it is a speciall time of exercising mercy by helping against sudden dangers by collecting and distributing to the poore by visiting the sicke and reconciling dissentions amongst neighbours 254 Quest Is there any set day vnder the new Testament thus to be kept holy Answ Yes the day which is commonly called Sunday but in the Scripture the Lords day or the first day in the week is thus to be kept without alteration to the end of the world 260 Quest When doth the Lords day begin and end Answ It beginneth in the morning at the dawning of the day and endeth next morning likewise 272 Quest Are we bound to do the holy duties of Gods worship all this time without ceasing Answ No for we may refresh our selues with eating and drinking singing and musicke and with any honest delight whatsoeuer whereby the mind is cheared vp and ioy and gladnesse befitting the Lords holy day expressed 276 Quest Is this all that we are bound vnto to keepe the Sabbaths our selues in ceasing from labour and doing the duties thereof Answ No but who so hath Sonne or Daughter Man seruant or Maid-seruant Cattell or stranger within his Gates is alike bound to prouide as much as in him lyeth that they all obserue this day in their kind both man and beast 278 Quest Doth the Lord onely take care for the right spending of this day and leaue vs to our selues vpon the sixe dayes Answ No doubtlesse but it is his will and commandement also that wee should vpon the sixe dayes abstaine from idlenesse and diligently labour in the workes of our callings 279 Quest Is it not lawfull then to forbeare working to attend vpon God and his worship vpon the sixe dayes Answ Yes it is not onely lawfull but necessary for euery one to do the duties of Gods worship euery day of the week in priuate and in publike when iust occasion is offered 282 Quest How can this stand with the command of working vpan the sixe dayes Answ Yes very well because that howsoeuer God is to be serued vpon the sixe dayes yet they are for the most part to be spent in the works of our callings 286 Quest What more speciall rules are wee to follow in our weekely deuotion Answ First we must pray euery day morning and euening Secondly before and after the vse of Gods creatures Thirdly the more our necessities vrge vs pray the oftner and more instantly Fourthly let no day passe without some reading and diuine meditation Fiftly neglect not the publike preaching in the weeke dayes where opportunity is offered to come vnto it 286 Quest What is to be thought of whole dayes set apart to publike duties in the weeke as Saints dayes and dayes of thanksgiuing Answ All this may lawfully be done and is commendable by Gods word therfore we are reuerently to conforme our selues to the ordinance of authoritie herein 287 Quest What is the sin by this Commandement forbidden Answ All prophaning of the Sabbath day which is first by doing worldly works that are not of present necessity by iourneying about worldly affaires idle resting or absenting our selues from the publike duties of Gods worship secondly by forgetfulnesse of the Sabboth vpon the six dayes by which we often bring vpon our selues a necessity of prophaning the same thirdly when being parents or gouernors we leaue our children pupils or seruants to their owne libertie vpon this day 291 Quest VVhat be the reasons of this Commandement Answ They are partly infolded in the Commandement and partly expressed in these words For in six dayes the Lord made heauen and earth c. 295 Quest VVhat are the reasons infolded in this Commandement Answ Three First because the law of the Sabbath is ancient and was in force in Paradise before mans fall Secondly because it is most equall the Lord allowing vs six dayes for our worldly affaires and requiring but one of seauen for the worke of his worship thirdly because the seuenth is the Lords peculiar day so that without sacriledge wee cannot any way prophane it 296 Quest What are the reasons expressed Answ Two first from the Lords owne example who rested vpon the seuenth day from all his workes of creation secondly from his blessing inseparably linked to the hallowing of this day so that he which keepeth it holy shall find it to his comfort vnto him a blessed day 298 Quest Which is the first Commaundement of the second Table or the fifth of the Law Answ Honour thy father and thy mother that thy dayes may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giueth thee 299 Quest In which Commandements doe you learne your dutie towards your neighbour Answ In the six latter commandements which be of the second Table 299 Quest Which is the first of these Commandements Answ Honour thy father and mother c. 301 Quest What are we heere commanded Answ To honour that is to loue reuerence cherish and obey our naturall parents the parents of our countrey and our Fathers in Christ Secondly to carry our selues lowly and reuerently towards our masters being ruled by them in the Lord and toward the ancient and all our betters Thirdly if we be superiors to walk worthy the honor due vnto vs from our inferiors to vse all gentlenes toward them 303 Quest What is here forbidden Answ All irreuerence toward those that be in place and authoritie aboue vs and churlish behauiour in such towards those that be of a low degree 317 Quest VVhence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ From the promise of long life if God please not to preuent vs with the blessing of eternall life 325 Quest VVhich is the sixt Commandement or the second of the second Table Answ Thou shalt doe no murder 328 Quest VVhat is here forbidden Answ All murdering of our selues or others and all approbation hereof in others either by command counsel consent or concealment Secondly all iniurious actions tending to
this faith what obedient and godly liuing is required to haue comfort in this faith how scandalous professors heereof shall bee barred out of eternall life euen as they that neuer knew how to rehearse this confession at all They also which imagine faith to be in their owne power and therefore neglect to pray for it when the Apostles themselues prayed Lord increase our Faith So many as be faithfull indeed let vs bee otherwise minded beleeuing all these things in heart without doubting studying aboue all things to bee more and more confirmed herein by godly liuing and euer heartily praying Lord giue faith where it is wanting and where it is increase our faith more and more And thus by the grace of God haue we finished our commentary vpon the first part of the Catechisme concerning the things to be beleeued and maintained to the death that we may come to life The end of the Creed Of the Commandements Quest THou saidst that thou wert bound to keepe the Commandements of Almighty God Which be they Answ God spake these words and saide I am the Lord thy God which haue brought thee out of the land of Aegypt out of the house of bondage Thou shalt haue none other Gods but me Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image nor the likenesse of any thing that is in the heauen aboue or in the earth beneath or in the water vnder the earth Thou shalt not bow downe to them nor worship them for I the Lord thy God am a Iealous God and visit the sinnes of the fathers vpon the children vnto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me and shewe mercy vnto thousands of them that loue me and keepe my Commandements Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine for the Lord will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his name in vaine Remember that thou keepe holy the Sabbath day Sixe dayes shalt thou labour and doe all that thou hast to doe but the seuenth is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt doe no manner of worke thou nor thy sonne nor thy daughter thy man-seruant nor thy maid-seruant thy cattle nor the stranger that is within thy gates For in six dayes the Lord made heauen and earth the sea and all that in them is and rested the seuenth day wherefore the Lord blessed the seuenth day and hallowed it Honour thy Father and thy Mother that thy dayes may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giueth thee Thou shalt doe no murther Thou shalt not commit adultery Thou shalt not steale Thou shalt not beare false witnesse against thy neighbour Thou shalt not couet thy neighbors house thou shalt not couet thy neighbours wife nor his seruant nor his maide nor his Oxe nor his Asse nor any thing that is his Qu●st How many things doest thou learne out of these commandements Answ Two things My duty towards God and my duty towards my neighbour Explan Before that we come to shew in particular where these duties are set downe it will not bee amisse to speake some things in generall by way of preface or introduction to the commandements The time of the law giuing First of the time when these commandements were giuen and this was about two thousaods and fiue hundreth yeares after the Creation not that they were left all this time without a law for there was a law written in mens hearts by the pen of nature but to make that more plaine which by the corruption of nature was become very dimme and much defaced That there was a law euen before these commandements giuen the Apostle sheweth where hee saith that the Gentiles not hauing the law are a law vnto themselues which shew the effect of the law written in their hearts c. so that as long as men haue beene there hath also beene a law although not expressed in words yet written in the heart The knowledge of the law before it was written Wherefore if it be well obserued wee shall finde that euen before the giuing of the law all these precepts were knowne and acknowledged Gen 17.1 The first Commandement was knowne to Abraham when as almost in so many words the Lord said vnto him I am God al-sufficient stand before me and be vpright and there were no false Gods brought into the world before the floud Clemens Alexandrinus Clem. Alex. ●● 1. Strom. a learned Father sheweth that Bacchus a great God amongst the heathen was made a God 604 years after Moses and so most of the Gods of the Grecians hee sheweth further how the chiefest God of all Iupiter was made by one Phydias and the chiefest Goddesse Iuno by Euclides Orat. Hortat ad Gent. and that Socrates Plato Xenophon Cleanthes Pythagoras the ancientest Philosophers and that Aratus Hesiod Eurypides and Orpheus the ancientest Poets acknowledged but one God Gen 35 2. The second commandement was knowne vnto Iaacob for he purged his house from Idols when he was to build an Altar in Bethel acknowledging heereby that this was a corruption that the true God would be offended at yea heathen men themselues did see by the light of nature that it was a grosse thing to represent God by an Image Euseb de praepar Euang. lib. 9. cap 3. Jbid. as Numa an Emperour sometime in Rome who forbad the vse of any Image because hee held it a wicked thing that things so incomparable excellent should be set forth by baser matters and Plato an excellent Philosopher did so agree with Moses heerein that hee was said of Numenius a Pythagorean to be none other but Moses speaking in the Atticke tongue Gen 21.23 The third Commandement touching the right vse of Gods name both Abraham seemeth to haue knowne well when he sware by the true God vnto Abimelech to confirme his league and Iacob when he sware vnto Laban Gen. 31.53 by the feare of his father Isaacke And the very heathen Ephesians who were led only by the light of nature shewed how odious a thing they held it that the name of their gods should bee blasphemed when suspecting such a matter in Paul Acts 19.34 and in his companions they grew to such an vproare and cryed out so long the greatnesse of their goddesse Diana Gen. 2.2.3 The fourth Commandement is recorded to haue beene giuen in Paradise for the seuenth day saith Moses GOD rested so hee blessed and sanctified it because that in it hee had rested from all his workes which hee had created and made Gen. 28.2 The fifth Cōmandement Iacob shewed in his practise when he followed his parents direction in taking a wife heerein giuing an instance of his obedience vnto them and the children of Iaacob at his command going downe into Aegypt to buy food for him and being so carefull to giue him contentment in the returne of his son Beniamin and Ioseph nourishing him in Aegypt in his
these things could not better haue been couched together The first words expresse the first Commandement of hauing the Lord for our God for this is to belieue in him to loue him to feare him and to pray vnto him the second is expressed in the next words to worship him and to giue him thanks it being the duty of this Commandement purely to doe the parts of his worship the third is expressed in the words following to honour his holy name and his word it being the maine matter specially pointed at there that in all things Gods name and his Word be glorified and the fourth of keeping holy the Sabbath and then deuoutly seruing God in the duties by him appointed is expressed in the last words and to serue him truly all the dayes of my life as will appeare more plainely in the larger opening of euery of these Commandements as here followeth Quest 53. How many be the parts of euery of the Commandements of the first Table Answ Two the Commandement it selfe and the reason thereof Explan Before that wee come to the particular handling of each Commandement two things are further to bee premised first certaine rules are to be laid downe tending to the better vnderstanding of them and then is to be shewed the singularity of these Commandements concerning God aboue those that concerne our neighbour Rule 1. Rules for expounding the Commandements First for the Rules one is this Euery affirmatiue commanmandement includeth his negatiue and the negatiue the affirmatiue as for example the third commandement is negatiue Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord in vaine now it containeth also the affirmatiue thou shalt honour the name of the Lord and so of the rest and this is plaine from sundry places thus expounding them The fourth Commandement expoundeth it selfe thus when the Lord vnto the affirmatiue Keepe holy the Sabbath day addeth the negatiue Thou shalt doe no manner of worke therein The fifth is thus expounded where it is said He that curseth Father or Mother or that is disobedient vnto them shall bee brought forth and stoned to death and generally the commandements of the second Table being all negatiue but one are thus expounded of our Sauiour Christ saying the second is this Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Rule 2. The second rule is this Euery negatiue commandement doth bind alwaies and vnto all times euery affirmatiue doth onely bind alwaies but not vnto all times also as for example Thou shalt not haue no other Gods but me the affirmatiue of hauing the Lord for our God doth bind alwaies so that he sinneth whosoeuer at any time denieth the Lord in his heart or doth contrarie to the feare or loue of God but hee sinneth not that doth not actually exercise these affections at all times because that a man sometime sleepeth sometime through the violence of diseases looseth the vse of his reasonable soule many times also is possessed with vehement thoughts which employ the mind another way and lastly occasions are not at all times offered to try our hearts The fourth Commandement in the affirmatiue hath Remember that thou keepe holy the Sabbath day against this hee sinneth whosoeuer doth breake the Sabbath but he sinneth not that doth not keepe it at all times and parcels of times because the weakenesse of our natures requireth some rest and pause at what time we cannot be busied in holy exercises The like is to bee said of honouring our parents c. But come to negatiue Commandements and you shall see that whosoeuer ceaseth from obseruing them at any time is a sinner for example Thou shalt doe no murther is a negatiue command and so is Thou shalt not commit adultery if any man then shall murther at any time or be adulterous whether he be drunken or sober angry or quiet tempted or not in whatsoeuer place time or occasion hee is a transgressor and this distinction is set forth amongst Schoole-men by the termes of semper and ad semper The third Rule is this Rule 3. Euery commandement forbidding any sinne doth not onely forbid the sinne named but all sins of the same ranke also and all occasions of the same and the maine sinne onely is named to make the branches the more odious as being of the same nature before the Lord. Thus Christ himselfe interpreteth the sixth seauenth and third commandements where reprouing the Pharisees doctrine Math. 5. only forbidding murther and the act of adultery and false swearing by Gods holy name he teacheth that euen vnaduised anger is a sinne and to looke vpon a woman to lust after her is adultery and to sweare any oath at all in ordinary communication is from the Diuell by which we may gather how we are to vnderstand the other commandements also The fourth rule is this Rule 4. The Commandements of the first table are absolutely to be kept and for themselues the other of the second table are to bee kept for the first For if any man shall obserue this Thou shalt haue none other Gods but mee Thou shalt not make any grauen Image c. or thou shalt not take the name of the Lord in vaine in meere obedience to the Kings Lawes or thereby to please holy men who doe spit at the workers of such abhominations and not through an imediate reuerence of that heauenly maiesty which hath commanded that mans obedience is none obedience his keeping of these lawes is no keeping of them because the maine thing heere intended is neglected viz. the setting vp of God in our hearts aboue all and that which is most abhorred is practised viz. the feare of God taught by the preceps of men Esa 29.13 And on the other side who so shall obserue these lawes Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not steale c. without being moued herevnto through a conscience of the first table commending the loue of God vnto vs and the loue of man for Gods cause after whose Image he is made his keeping also is no keeping of the law because the praise of men is the marke at which he aymeth or else that he may be dealt friendly withall againe and thus did the very Pharisees and Publicans Math. 6. Math. 5. Hee only loueth his neighbour aright which maketh the loue of God the fountaine and beginning of his loue to his neighbour Rule 5. The fift Rule is this Howsoeuer the least commandement is not so small but the breach thereof deserueth death yet the breaches of some commandements are greater and more heynous then of others Thus to breake the commandements of the first Table is in it selfe simply more heynous and this sinne shall haue a more grieuous punishment in hell then sinnes against the second table For Sodom and Gomorrah saith Christ vnto the Iewes Math 11. shall rise vp against you and condemne you because their sinne in refusing and denying their God and Sauiour was greater then all
would rightly proceed in the taking of an oath For 1. Although it be a truth vnto which thou swearest yet if thou knowest it not to bee so thou art periured because thou swearest contrary to thy conscience 2. If thou swearest in doubtfull words hauing another meaning then thou knowest him to haue before whom thou swearest thou abusest this ordinance of God Thus the Iesuites play with oathes by their equiuocations and mentall reseruations and with them agree too many Shop keepers liuing vpon buying and selling that will sweare that their ware cost them thus much meaning the whole when the buyer is prizing the yard or the ell or that they were bidden such a price meaning of their wife or companions for a colour when as the buyer is made to beleeue that if they would haue taken that money they might haue solde it so yer that time with many other deuices to deceiue their owne soules 3 To sweare things impossible or vnlawfull is to mocke God as if a man should call his neighbour to witnesse his couenanting with a thiefe to rob his house or to cut his throat or if a Subiect should call his Prince to see him build an house in the aire to flie with the fowles or to make his horse speake which were meere mockeries 4. If it be not reuerently performed Gods name is indeed taken into the mouth but forgotten of the heart the Arke of God is carried but in such sort as when God was therefore displeased with Vzz●h Wherefore though it bee a truth sweare not vnto it vnlesse it bee weighty and thou disposest thy selfe hereunto with reuerence Quest 68. What if a man shall sweare that which is vnlawful is he not bound notwithstanding to performe his oath Answ Nay in no wise for so hee should adde vnto his sinne of swearing vnlawfully a further sinne of doing vnlawfully Psal 15.4 Explan This is plaine of it selfe to euery man of vnderstanding A man being in danger of his life is through feare constrained to sweare that hee will not discouer but maintaine a company of theeues to his power he hath offended by taking this oath but he shal much more offend if hee doth accordingly for he shall be accessary to their wickednes But the case is changed if a man by ouer-sight shall sweare any th●ng to his owne hinderance but without preiudice to the good of others for here the oath is to be performed This was the case of Israel as touching the Gibeonites vnto whom when they had sworne though they were brought vnto it by craft yet they feared to break the oath suffered them to liue Obiect If any man shall say if this bee a rule to be followed then euen vnlawfull oathes are to bee kept for it was vnlawfull for them to suffer any of the men of those countries to liue Sol. I answer That this was not simply vnlawfull but first if they should bee an occasion of temptation vnto them 2. If they could bring them into their power for some still remained to trie them withall 3. They were enioyned this for their owne good that roome might bee made for them to inhabit there Now the Gibeonites by their subtilty freed themselues from this danger so as that they had no power ouer them by reason of their oath to destroy them and it was but to their owne hinderance or rather as they turned it to their commodity Quest 69. Which is the fourth Commandement Answ Remember that thou keepe holy the Sabbath day sixe dayes shalt thou labour and doe all that thou hast to doe but the seuenth is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shal● done manner of worke thou and thy son and thy daughter thy man-seruant thy maid-seruant thy cattle and the stranger that is within thy gates for in sixe dayes the Lord made Heauen and Earth the sea and all that in them is and rested the seuenth day wherefore the Lord blessed the seuenth day and hallowed it Quest 70. What is the duty here commanded Answ To keepe holy the Sabbath day and to bee mindefull of it Quest 71. How may this be done Answ By assembling together to pray vnto God and to praise him to heare his holy Word and receiue the blessed Sacraments Quest 72. Is this all that is required to the right keeping of the Sabbath day Answ No but we must prepare our selues by prayer and emptying our hearts of sin and meditate vpon Gods workes and the Word which we haue heard suffering it so to worke in vs as that we may bee furthered in all holinesse of life Memb. 1 Explan This Commandement being affirmatiue wee begin againe with the duty for the further opening whereof we are to consider it according to the seuerall members Which are first to keepe holy a time 2. To remember and to be mindfull of it 3. To keepe holy a Sabbath 4. To keepe holy the Sabbath that day which the Lord hath appointed For the first it offereth againe two things to our consideration both what it is to keepe holy a time and wherefore it should be kept holy 1. To keepe holy any time is to separate and set it apart Quest 1 to holy duties to bee done either towards God or towards our neighbour 1. The duties to be done vnto God 3. The exercises of the Word Nehem 8.4 Verse 8. are either our speaking vnto God which is by Praier or Gods speaking vnto vs which is by reading preaching and hearing of Gods holy Word these were in vse at their holy meetings vnder the old Testament In the dayes of Nehemiah there was a pulpit made out of which both God was praised and the words of the Law read and the sense and meaning opened vnto the people that they might vnderstand And of this Iames maketh mention in the Councell held at Ierusalem saying Acts 15 21. that Moses had in old time them in euery city which did preach him seeing he was r●●d in the Synagogues euery Sabbath day Their Synagogues then being as our places of meeting for euery Congregation in euery towne and village and their reading was that before spoken of in Nehemiah with the giuing of the sense and thus is it that the doctrine of Moses was preached and made plaine And that this was still their custome vnto the Apostles times appeareth both from this speech of Iames being in the Present-tense and where it is noted that the Master of the Synagogue sent vnto Paul and his companions Acts 13.15 after the Lecture of the Law and the Proph●ts that if they had any word of exhortation for the people they should say on Which sheweth that as it is in vse amongst vs to haue a first and second Lecture and then a Sermon the people being gathered together to heare So it was in those dayes vnder the Law one Lecture was taken out of one of the fiue bookes of Moses the other out of the other parts of
That it was appointed for holy meetings to preach and heare c. 3. Not in some one Church but generally in the Churches of Christians at Troas Galatia Corinth c. 4 Not in some week only but euery weeke Arg. 2 Exod. 20.10 The second reason is taken from places of Scripture which proue the same by consequence as that in Exodus where the Commandement being giuen this is added as a reason The seuenth day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God and the Lord rested the seuenth day Math 12.8 A second place is that in Matthew The sonne of man is euen Lord of the Sabbath A third place is in Iohn All men should honour the Sonne Iohn 5.23 euen as they honor the Father The reason may be framed thus If the same reason grounded vpon Gods word be as wel for the first day of the weeke as it was once for the Sabbath of the Iewes then wee are as certainly tied to the obseruation of this day as they were for their Sabbath but there is the same reason Therefore wee are certainly tied vnto this day The first part of this argument is plaine for the same reason is of the same force the second part appeareth by the places noted in the margent The maine reason of the Sabbath of the Iewes is because it was the Sabbath of the Lord and therefore his people must necessarily do him this honour that there might be a conformitie betwixt God and his people and in like manner our Sabbath is the Sabbath of the Lord Christ when he had finished the worke of our redemption for which cause hee also giueth the same name The Sonne of man is euen Lord of the Sabbath As if in more words he should say When God the Father had once ended the making of the world he rested and published himselfe to be the Lord of that rest and dedicated it vnto himselfe giuing it the name of the Sabbath of the Lord In like manner when I shall haue finished the worke of mans redemption I will rest and will haue the day of my rest dedicated vnto my selfe for which cause I say that the Sonne of man is euen Lord of the Sabbath also it shall bee called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Lords day And thus shall the will of the Father be fulfilled which is that as they honoured the Father in keeping the Sabbath betwixt the creation and redemption so they should honour the Son in keeping the Sabbath betwixt the redemption and consummation of the world Arg. 3 Matth 28. A third reason may be drawne from the vniforme practise of the Church euen from the time of mans redemption vnto this day Christ himselfe first began it when he arose early in the morning vpon this day and thenceforth euer obserued it so long as he continued vpon the earth Iohn 20.19 When the Disciples were gathered together for feare of the Iewes the doores being shut he came and stood in the middest of them vpon that day Againe Verse 26. when incredulous Thomas was amongst them he came and shewed his hands side and feete vpon that day and immediately the Euangelist subioyneth And as for the practice of the Apostles herein it is so plaine as that it were great impudency to deny it Again for the practice of those that liued next vnto them whether Greekes or Latines they followed the same order Reade for this Ignatius in his Epistle to the Magnesians Iustie Martyr in Apologeticis Ireneus in his fourth booke chap. 19.20 Euseb Eccles hist lib. 4. chap 23. Origen Hom. 3. in Exod. Cyrill in Iohan. Tertul. de Idolat Ieronym in vita Paulae Ambros serm 62. August in Iohan. Gregor lib 11. epist 3. c Lastly for the Churches of these times since and at this present whether Protestant or Popish of what Country soeuer all consent for the obseruation of this day though in opinion there be some difference about it some grounding it vpon Gods Ordinance according to that which hath been said as Beza Iunius Piscator Bollocke Hooper Fulke and the book of Homilies yea and some Papists also as S●●tas Panormitanus Syluester Felicius and the Schoolemen some vpon tradition onely as the Rhemists Testament Tollet and Bellarmine Whence wee may reason thus That day which the Lord Christ hath sanctified by his resurrection wherein hee came together with his Disciples to instruct and to confirme them wherein all Christian Churches of all Ages haue made their Assemblies is certainlie the Sabbath of the Christians but such is the first day of the weeke Therefore certainly our Sabbath Arg. 4 A fourth argument may bee drawne from the iudgements of God most fearefully befalling such as either haue contemned the Sabbath of this day or through worldly mindednesse haue neglected it In a Councell held at Paris some holy men vrged the making of speciall decrees about the strict obseruation of the Lords day because as they alleaged partly of their owne knowledge partly by the relation of others some intending their husbandry vpon this day had been smitten with thunder and lightning to the laming of some and to the vtter destruction of others Another carrying home corne vpon this day had both corne and barne most lamentably consumed by fire Also that in Chimstat a towne in France a certaine woman being wont together with her children to peele hempe vpon the Lords day when others were at Church was first terrified with some sparkes of fire falling amongst her hempe another time with a flame of fire arising in her hempe and lastly not being warned by this there kindled a fire againe which whilst she laboured to quench both she and her children did miserably perish thereby The Centuriatours of Magdenberg do tell of a certaine Noble-man that was wont to follow his sport of hunting vpon the Lords day when others went to Church but the Lord shewed a great iudgement vpon him therefore he had a child borne vnto him with the head of a dog And that a certaine Miller intentiue about his grinding vpon this day had his house and meale burnt by a fire kindling in his mill And to come nearer home Anno 1583. whilst they were beholding the Beare-baitings in Parish-garden vpon this day the scaffold burst down suddenly and eight persons were slaine outright and many more hurt and maimed Arg. 5 A fifth argument may be drawne from such things as fell out worth the noting vpon this day August de temp serm 25● Notable ●hi●gs ●pon this day N●●●m 154. Christ arose vpon this day the elements were framed the world begun the Angels created and Manna began first to fall vpon this day the Israelites passed thorow the red sea Christ was baptized turned water into wine fed fiue thousand with a few loaues vpon this day and vpon it wee hope Wolph Cron. lib. 2. cap. 1. that hee shall come to Iudgement saith Augustine Vpon this day Christ was borne Aaron and
children vnlesse they be Iacobs or Iosephs godly and righteous which none are without the conscionable obseruation of the Sabbath Iosh 24.15 Therefore the example of Ioshua is to be followed by all masters of families doe not onely say I but I and my houshold wil serue the Lord and keepe his holy Sabbaths seeke that praise before God which was giuen vnto Abraham I know Abraham Gen 18.19 1. Sam. 1. saith the Lord that hee will command his to walke in my waies With ●lcanah and Hannah bring Samuel to the Temple whilst he is young that he may be a seruant vnto the Lord all the dayes of his life With Timothies grand-mother 1. Tim 3 15. breed in him thus knowledge of the Scriptures from a child Ezech. 3.17 Now howsoeuer the charge of inferiors lyeth vpon the superiours yet this will not excuse the inferiours if they shall neglect this holy day but as the Lord telleth Ezechiel when he had made him a watchman ouer Israel if thou admonish them not and the enemy commeth they shall die in their sinnes but their bloud will I require at thine hands so they shall die in their sinnes and feele the smart of Gods eternall wrath in the world to come Euen as it is said of all persons vncircumcised or that keepe not the Passouer they shall be cut off from amongst the people be they masters or seruants children growne vp or parents howsoeuer the Lord would haue slaine Moses because his sonne Gershom was not circumcised Wherefore let children and seruants as they loue their owne welfare Exod 4.25 be as forward to obserue the Lords holy dayes as their gouernours to command them as diligent about their priuate Christian exercises as they to performe them and as studious to satisfie them in holy indeauours as they to helpe them herein Quest 77. Doth the Lord onely take care for our right spending of this day and leaue vs to our selues vpon the sixe dayes Answ No doubtlesse but it is his will and command also that we should vpon the sixe dayes abstaine from idlenesse and diligently labour in the workes of our callings Explan Before we come to the explanation of this by cattel The charge concerning the sixe dayes whose rest is also commanded are meant their Camels their Oxen their Asses c. whose strength and labour they vsed about their carriages treading out their corne works of husbandry Now the Lord out of his mercy as he would not haue the poore seruant and bondslaue to by torne and worne out with sore labour vnder the hands of vnmercifull masters so would he not haue the poore dumbe creatures and therefore elsewhere explaining further this commandement he saith that thy seruants and cattell may rest as well as thou Moreouer the cattell could not labour but men must be in some sort assistant vnto them and so neglect the Sabbath The stranger was a people not comming of the stocke of Israel but of some other either following them out of Egypt or taken and bought out of other countries whom they had for slaues perpetually as the Gibeonites Now the Lord would not haue there to do any work vpon the Sabbath day Iosh 9.23 though borne without the couenant and liuing without circumcision without passeouer without sacrifice without God in the world partly that through being fauoured they might come to affect the true religion the fountaine of this their sweet rest and partly that being in the bosome of the Church there might be an outward vniformitie of al in the reuerencing of this holy day which sheweth that they which liue in the same Nation and vnder the same gouernment are to be compelled to an outward conformity of religion though the heart can only be turned by the Lord and whatsoeuer thy seruant be inwardly thou must cause him to be conformable to all good orders outwardly but this extendeth not to such as come strangerwise vnto thee ouer whom thou hast none authority To returne now to the proper question Some hold that the Lord doth onely remit his owne right in saying sixe daies shalt thou labour c. because all the dayes of the weeke are his otherwise the people of God had not done well in setting apart some of the sixe dayes vnto holy exercises Working vpon six daies commanded here vpon any occasion whatsoeuer But they are deceiued and their ground is too weake for in euerie commandement wee are not onely inioyned the dutie Reas 1 but the helpes and furtherances heereunto now vnto the right and free keeping of the Sabbath it helpeth not a little to spend the six dayes well about the workes of our callings partly for that our worldly businesses being done we are the freer from any intanglement hereby therefore he saith Thou shalt labour and doe all that thou hast to doe Partly for that being weary of labouring the rest of the Sabbath will be the more sweet and pleasant vnto vs according to that of the Prophet If thou call the Sabbath a delight Esa 58 13. and partly for that the Lord of his goodnes will the rather sanctifie vs and make vs fit to sanctifie a Sabbath when as we diligently doe the workes of our callings vpon the six daies according to that comfortable saying of Iohn Of his fulnesse wee haue all receiued and grace ●oh 1.16 for grace hauing the grace of faithfulnesse and diligence in the duties of our callings we receiue further grace of diligence about Sabbath day exercises which is peculiarly verefied in this very thing in that the most idle which spend their time of the six dayes in gaming sporting and least doing are least holy and most prophane vpon the Sabbath but contrariwise the honestly diligent and intentiue to their callings 2. The iniunction of working vpon sixe dayes is giuen Reas 2 in the same commanding termes in the originall that the iniunction of not working the seuenth is giuen in in the first is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt doe worke in the second is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt not doe worke 3. As there be reasons alledged of ceasing from worke vpon the seuenth day so there is reason laid downe also of working Reas 3 king the six dayes as the maine reason of the first is God rested the seuenth so the reason of the second is In six dayes the Lord made heauen and earth hee wrought If it bee said This needeth not to bee heere commaunded it rather belongeth to the second Table I answer that one and the same dutie may belong to diuers Commandements in diuers respects and in what respect this of labouring belongeth vnto this hath bin already shewed neither is mine intent otherwise to bring it in heere and for some questions which are fitly heere further to be discussed Againe I say that the ground of the former assertion is too weake for not men but God himselfe hath againe set apart since the giuing of
also doe the more priuate workes of our callings so that we obserue the times of publike meetings and giue no scandall to our brethren nor offence to our Gouernours Secondly in regard of more free recreations in which wee may now exercise our selues all waies excepting the times of publike prayer Thirdly in regard of speeches and thoughts out of the publike times we may in some conuenient sort and measure talke of our worldly affaires and deuise in our thoughts for the best for them If any doe otherwise esteeme ordinary holy daies appointed by men hee doth derogate from the dignity of the Lords day as they of the Church of Rome which make more account of some Saints dayes then of the Lords day it selfe and are more carefull then to exercise their deuotion and tyrannise in their strict censures more remisse and licentious vpon this most holy day Quest 81. What is the sinne by this commandement forbidden Answ All prophaning of the Sabbath day Which is first by doing workes that are not of present necessitie by iournying by idle resting or absenting our selues about worldly businesses from the publike duties of Gods seruice Secondly by forgetfulnesse of the Sabbath vpon the sixe dayes by which wee often bring vpon our selues a necessitie of prophaning the same Thirdly when being parents or gouernours we leaue our children pupills and seruants to their owne liberty vpon this day Labour on the Sabbath Explan The sinnes against this Commandement I referre to three heads the first whereof is a direct and the greatest prophaning of the Lords day 1. For labour vnlesse wee be necessarily called heereunto such as it is only then when it is a necessary worke of mercy as hath been already shewed it is the most direct breaking of the Sabbath and taketh away the very nature of it because the Sabbath is the rest And how great a sinne this is the Lord hath sundry waies made knowne vnto his people the Iewes Which motius though they bind not vs in the same rigor as the Iewes were of old yet they are a good inducement to vs to stirre vp our reuerence vnto Gods ordinance and our care to obserue the Christian Sabbath though not in any ceremonious degree of stricktnesse yet in conuenient decency and sequestration of our selues such as may stand with Christian liberty How close the Iewes well held by God to the precise obseruation appeareth Reas 1 1. By his seuere poenall lawes against all labour though neuer so honest Exod. 31.15 and lawfull in it selfe Whosoeuer doth any worke vpon the Sabbath shall die the death Reas 2 2. How much the Lord is displeased with working vpon this day is made knowne by his iudgements executed vpon some in their prophane working He that gathered stickes was stoned to death the Israelites were held captiue in Balon seuenty yeares for their working vpon the Sabbaths Numb 15.32 Ier. 25. that the land might enioy her Sabbaths and sundry examples tending to the same purpose haue been already brought amongst the arguments for our Sabbath which I spare to repeate referring the reader thither 3. How displeasing to the Lord it is to worke vpon this day appeareth by his prouidence for the rest heereof rather then any worke should be done euen about their daily food he sendeth the Israelites Manna enough for two dayes the day before the Sabbath Exod. 16. and whereas at other times the Manna would putrifie and be full of wormes if they kept any of it vntill the morrow after they had gathered it now they did keepe it sweet and good all the next day Reas 4 4. The working vpon the Sabbath hath been at all times condemned by all good men endued with Gods Spirit Moses is most earnest in many places against it Nehem. 13. Nehemiah threatned to punish the Merchants that came to Ierusalem to sell their wares vpon the Sabbath dayes and Esay Ieremy and the rest of the Prophets doe all of them put to their helping hands to roote out this sinne of working vpon the Sabbath day Wherefore if thou makest conscience of stealing because the Lord hath forbidden it make conscience also of doing the workes of thy calling vpon the Sabbath because God hath so strictly forbidden it so seuerely iudged it so carefully prouided against it and stirred vp so many holy men to beate downe this grosse abuse 2. For iournying I shall not need to adde any thing because it hath been specially intreated of already what iourney is allowed and what a breach of the Sabbath Only wee may take with vs this one memorandum that the Lord hath so precisely forbidden trauaile as that he hath charged Exod. 16.29 Tarrie euery man in his place and let no man goe out of his place vpon the seuenth day viz. about his worldly vnnecessary busines though it may seeme vnto thee to bee time gained so that thou shalt not bee hindred now from thy worke vpon the weeke day or though it may seeme otherwise to redound to thy benefit Let them consider this that forecast to make their iourneyes specially vpon the Lords day surely this wisdome commeth not from aboue but from the deuill whose thou art Iohn 8 44. whilest thou doest his will 3. For idle resting and sitting at home all day or most part of the day Idle resting when others assemble themselues to the worship of God or sleeping and lying longer in bed in the morning so that a man cannot prepare himselfe fitly and come in due time to the place of Gods publike worship this is also a most vnworthy vsage of a mans selfe vpon the Lords day He that doth thus like the vaine eccho resoundeth the last word of the Lords precept Thou shalt Sanctifie the Sabbath taking onely Sabbath an idle resting vnto himselfe and therefore as idle watchmen appointed ouer Gods people that see the enemy comming and danger at hand yet doe onely sit still and behold it but sound no trumpet to giue them warning shall be so farre from any reward of their office that the peoples bloud shall be required at their hands so these idle Sabbath-keepers shall be so farre from the blessing attending vpon such as sanctifie a Sabbath as that they shall bee called to account for this pretious time lost through their idlenesse and the vsurpation of that to their owne ease which they were bound to spend to Gods glory Let all therefore that would consecrate this day as glorious to the Lord flie this idlenesse and learne of Nehemiah to rise early in the morning at the least in their hearts to sanctifie the Lords day and duly repaire whilst God inableth to the place of publike meetings otherwise to keepe holy-day at home as his infirmities permit 4. For absence from the publike duties there bee many that content themselues to sit at home Absence from Church and reade some good prayers and other good bookes especially if the weather be but a little
tedious and thinke that they keepe the Sabbath as well as any other or as they need to doe and more especially if there be nothing but diuine seruice at the Church But let all such know their errour and repent of it they doe indeed sanctifie the Lords day but it is not after the Lords but their owne manner and therefore cannot be accepted of no more then a master can accept of the best indeauours of his seruant at home at that time when he appointeth him to trauell about his busines abroad For the Lord doth now appoint thee to attend him in the publike place Acts 3. hee hath now imployment for thee there Christ himself the holy Prophets and Apostles lurked not at such times in corners or in priuat houses but went vp to the Temple to pray to preach to conuerse with Gods people in publike duties Acts 2 41. Here is the place where Gods ordinance is chiefely vsed and only at the times appointed heere the Lords presence is promised here hath his glory euer shined by the conuersion of soules and sometime of thousands at once Let the proud seperatist therefore goe by himselfe now into corners as ouer-iust in his owne esteeme to come with others to Gods ordinance in publike let the idle or daintie Sabbath-keeper stay at home in his blind priuate deuotion and the ouer scrupulous absent themselues from Church in the case of no preaching at that time let those contemne publike prayer that know not Gods house the Church to be the house of Prayer But let all that feare the Lord feare thus to peruert the Lords day least in so doing sinne lye at their doores The second head Head 2. Forgetfulnes of the Sabbath vnto which I referre the prophaning of the Sabbath is all forgetfulnesse of this day vpon the sixe either in generall in any of them or in particular the day before according to our distinction when I spake of the dutie in the word Remember and it may haue reference also to the Sabbath past Remember how holy thou wert then what rules of holines thou wert then taught how thou didst then make shew of a good disciple of Christ when thou sattest to learne thy lesson of him as Saul who fell downe before the Lord and said Lord what wouldest thou haue mee to doe Acts 9. 1. Sam. 2. and as Samuel Speake Lord for thy seruant heareth Least doing contrariwise in the weeke-dayes after and as one that rather listeneth to Satan and to thine owne corrupt heart thou be condemned out of thine owne mouth for drawing neere vnto God with thy lips but hauing thine hart farre estranged from him The third head Head 3. Neglect of inferiours vnto which I referre the prophaning of the Sabbath is by leauing such as are vnder our gouernment to their owne vnbridled and licentious liberty vpon the Sabbath day which is no small fault in parents masters and gouernours For whilst euery priuate man doth thus neglect his domestick charge the minister may preach reproue admonish and teach but little wil it profit to bring them to the right obseruation of Christian duties Besides doth it not grieue any good parents or masters to see their children or seruants miscarry and come to misery but to be negligent of them at these times is the right way to bring them to all lewdnesse and consequently to smart and misery for which they may also then with heauy hearts thanke their gouernors that were too gentle and remisse towards them 1. Sam. 2. as Ely was vnto his children whose lamentable estate in his children and posteritie what hard heart can reade of without relenting Quest 83. What be the reasons of this Commandement Answ They are partly infolded in the Commandement and partly expressed in these words for in sixe dayes the Lord made heauen and earth the sea c. Quest. 84. What are the reasons infolded in the commandement Answ Three 1. Because the law of the Sabbath is ancient and was of force in Paradice before mans fall 2 Because it is most equall the Lord allowing vs sixe dayes for our worldly affaires and requiring but one of seuen for the workes of his worship 3. Because the seuenth is the Lords peculiar day so that without sacriledge we cannot any way prophane it Reasons infoulded in this Commandement Explan This commandement being of maine and speciall vse for the furthering of true godlinesse and such as vpon which the rest of the law hangeth is therefore both placed in the middest and because man naturally is most vnapt to bee moued with the reuerence hereof fortified with many reasons beyond the rest Which reasons are euery one of great force partly infolded and not distinctly placed out of the words of the commandement and partly expressed and set downe at large by themselues Reas 1 The first reason infolded is taken from the word Remember as if the Lord should haue said Howsoeuer all the rest of these lawes haue hitherto passed without such expresse mention especially when mans nature was vncorrupt in Paradise yet this law of the Sabbath was expressely giuen at that time and now I giue you warning only to remember it as most ancient and euer vsed amongst all my deuout people so that if old customs wil beare any sway with you the very remembrance of this must needs be of force to moue you to keepe holy my Sabbaths Or else Remember is a reason of force because it is a note of special charge for the duty vnto which it is prefixed For when a master commandeth his seruants diuers things and would chiefely haue some one thing done hee impresseth it with this word remember as if hee should say I would not haue that neglected or forgotten by any meanes If therefore any earnest speciall charge giuen by the Lord be of any force with thee if the old custome of Gods Church euer since the creation bee of any force doe not prophane but keepe holy the Sabbath day Reason 2 Gene. 2. The second reason infolded is taken from these wordes Sixe dayes shalt thou labour c. as if the Lord should haue said It is no vnreasonable matter or hard vnto thee that I require in bidding thee keepe holy the Sabbath day it is but one day of seauen I allow thee six for the workes of thy calling I will be content onely with the seuenth though I haue made all the dayes and could require six and leaue thee but one therefore doe thou willingly keepe this day This is a reason of great moment and oftentimes onely vsed as being alone sufficient to mooue any honest heart to obedience In Paradise it was the maine reason to Adam and Euah Ye shall eate of all the trees in the garden but of the tree in the middest ye shall not eat it was the reason vsed to mooue the Israelites to let their land rest the seuenth yeare that the poore might haue some comfort
bountifull reward euen euerlasting life They of the Church of Rome are afraid that by teaching this all good workes would be neglected and therefore make men beleeue that they may perfectly keepe the Law yea and doe workes of supererrogation also more then the Law requireth at their hands but you may easily perceiue by that which hath beene said how little cause there is of any such feare The sonnes of Belial indeede men without all grace growe secure hereupon and endeauour to doe nothing themselues because Christ hath done all for them but they are fowly deceiued as they shall finde to their cost another day The Apostle saith not simply He hath fulfilled the Law for vs Rom. 8.4 but with this addition which walke not after the flesh but after the spirit that is for vs which would faine be righteous and keepe the Law our selues but through the weaknesse of the flesh are not able hee hath done nothing therefore for these secure persons 2. Duty To rely onely vpon Christ The second duty is to cast out the anchor of our hope of eternall life onely vpon the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus and not vpon any merits of our owne no not whereunto we are inabled by the merits of Christ Iesus For as hee saide vnto Paul My grace is sufficient for thee 2. Cor. 12. so may it be said of his merits and righteousnesse His righteousnesse is sufficient for vs. Either it alone must make vs righteous or not at all that must not doe somewhat and our owne righteousnes somewhat the Lord will admit no such partnership Rom. 11.6 But if it be of grace it is no more of workes saith hee else were grace no grace if of workes it is no more of grace else were worke no more worke Our good workes are ordained of God as a way to eternall life Ephes 2.10 verse 9. that we should walke in them they merit nothing lest any man should boast Let the Roman Catholiques therefore sit at anchor here if they will let them build their hope vpon this sandy foundation but let vs sticke fast and remaine vnmoueable vpon the rocke Christ Iesus let vs looke for the sweetning of all our imperfect good workes from the perfume of his righteousnesse that thus wee may be sure to be accepted before God his Father at the last day Quest 28. In which wordes is his exaltation set downe and how many be the degrees hereof Answ In these words The third day hee rose againe from the dead and ascended into Heauen he sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty and from thence he shall come to iudge both the quicke and the dead And of this there be three degrees also Quest 29. Which is the first and in which words Answ First In that he arose againe from death to life and ascended vp into Heauen In these words The third day he arose againe from the dead and ascended vp into Heauen Two branches of the fift Article Explan As the Lord Iesus taking vpon him the worke of our redemption was greatly humbled as hath beene shewed so when this worke was finished he was againe highly exalted and looke by what steps of humiliation he descended by the like also he ascended till he came to the height of his glory beginning first to rise from the lowest in that out of the nethermost earth he goeth vp to the highest Heauens Of this Article there be two branches The third day hee arose againe from the dead is the first He ascended vp into Heauen is the second Concerning the first Being laid into the Sepulchre by Ioseph of Arimathea and a great stone rolled to the doore of the Sepulchre a watch also was set to keepe his body lest his Disciples stould come by night and steale it away and say He is risen againe being I say thus strongly guarded he is not hereby hindered but powerfully riseth and commeth forth of the Sepulchre the third day after his buriall which was the Lords day or first day of the weeke as he had foretold vnto his Disciples Proofe for the grounds of holy Scripture Math. 28. Mark 16. Ioh. 20. Luk. 24. from whence this is taken the history recorded by the foure Euangelists doth plainely declare thus much who doe all set forth his rising againe with the circumstances thereof Generally this time was the time of the Passeouer to shew that the true Paschall Lambe was now come into the world and the religious killing of all other lambs as meerely a figuratiue and shadowing ceremony should now cease the substance it selfe being now present Againe it was the first moneth about the middest of it which answereth to our March wherein in this Northern Hemisphere of the world the pleasant spring doth begin to shew that the earth did in her kind reioyce to receiue the Lord reuiued from the dead according to that of Melancthon Melancth Ecce renascentis testatur gratia mundi Omnia cum Domino dona red sse suo See how the worlds grace reuiu'd doth shew With the Lord of all all gifts return'd anew Gal 5 2. Thirdly it was early in the morning before the Sun to shew that a brighter Sun the Sun of righteousnesse was risen to the world Fourthly it was the first day of the weeke when he had lyen all the Iewes Sabboth in the graue to shewe that they are dead still vnto Christ that keepe their holy rests vpon that day as is spoken of circumcision If ye be circumcised Christ profiteth you nothing and to shew that a greater worke was now ended then the creator of the world viz. the redemption of the world and that as vnder the creation the Lords resting day from that great worke was the Sabboth of Gods people so vnder the redemption Christs resurrection day and of ending a greater worke became their Sabboth to endure to the worlds end Fiftly it was the third day after his death and buriall no sooner to shew that hee was truly dead without all deceit no later lest through his longer tarrying the faith of his Disciples should turne into despaire Now that he did rise againe indeed and that he was not taken away out of his sepulcher as the Iewes his enemies would make the world beleeue is diuersly testified and so fully as that it were shamefull impudency to deny it First he himselfe foretold thus much sometime darkely Ioh. 16.16 Yet a little while and ye shall not see me and a little while againe and yee shall see me Sometime plainely Math. 12.40 As Ionah was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly so must the Sonne of man be in the heart of the earth Sometime againe more plainely Math. 17.12 23. The Son of man shall be deliuered into the hands of sinners and be crucified and slaine and rise againe the third day Secondly as he foretold so that it came to passe the Angels doe witnesse He is
fountaine but if it be holy gracious sober peaceable exhorting and admonishing one another blessing of God and wishing good vnto our neighbour it is a fountaine of sweet water to the praise of the Lord. Right vse 2 Phil 2.10 Secondly when we speake reuerently of the name of God for many things doe vrge vs heerevnto First Gods commanmandement Thou shalt reuerence the fearefull name Iehouah and at the name of Iesus one of the titles of God euery knee shall bow both of things in heauen in earth and vnder the earth 2. The same reuerend phrase alwayes vsed in the Commandements when the Lord is named in the first I am the Lord thy God in the second I the Lord thy God in the third the name of the Lord thy God in the fourth the Sabbath of the Lord thy God and in the fifth which the Lord thy God giueth thee 3. The signification of euery name of the Lord vsed in the Scriptures being such as that it putteth vs in minde of great reuerence He is sometime called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is strong and mightie and sometime in the plurall number strengths sometime Iehouah Essence or being as in whom all thing● haue their being sometime 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 almightie sometime 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Highest and the Lord of hostes the beginning and the end which was which is and which is to come c. 4. The reuerence which was wont to be vsed by the Israelites the Lords ancient people in naming Iehouah they would not pronounce it out of the Temple nor put the letters of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into their numerals least it should bee prophaned 3. When in all things wee make conscience of speaking Right vse 3 the truth for of this Ioshua specially saith vnto Achan Ios 7.19 My sonne giue glorie vnto God and speake the truth The tongue is Index mentis The bewreyer of the mind and heart if then a man shall lie and dissemble herewith he doth peruert the nature of it 4. When an oath is rightly taken or a vow rightly made Right vse 4 for this is a speciall part of Gods seruice Deut. 6.13 Iere. 4.1 Thou shalt feare the Lord and serue him and sweare by his name And in Ieremie it is said If thou returne O Jsrael returne vnto mee and thou shalt sweare the Lord liueth in truth in iudgement and in righteousnes For as by periury and vaine swearing the name of God is highly dishonoured so by swearing reuerently and rightly it is honoured and glorified Thirdly we must glorifie God in the thoughts 3 To glorifie God in thoughts and desires of our hearts which is when euen here we are conteined with a reuerence of his holy name and doe burne with a desire of his glory aboue all things For the outward reuerence is nothing without this as may appeare by the people of Israel trembling and falling downe before the Lord with offering their obedience if Moses onely should speake vnto them Deut. 5.29 vnto whom the Lord answereth saying Oh that there were such an heart in them to feare me as who did not set by this outward reuerence vnles together with it there were the inward of the heart And for the earnest desiring of Gods glory aboue all we are put in mind of it so often as we rehearse the Lords prayer wherein we first and chiefly pray Hallowed bee thy name And where true zeale is this desire so exceedeth as that like a fire consuming all things it euen eateth vp such as are inflamed herewith it maketh them to neglect themselues so that God may haue glory Exod. 32. Rom 9. as Moses and Paul who rather than God should haue dishonour by the destruction of his people wished their owne names to be blotted out of the booke of life 4. To win men to glorifie God Math. 5.16 Fourthly we must labour to win others to the glorifying of Gods name according to that of Christ Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heauen There is no good child that doth entirely loue his father and reuerence him but hee seeketh by all meanes to bring others also to speak reuerently and well of him Wherefore if it may further Gods glory amongst others to endeauour after their conuersion and reformation he is attentiue about exhorting instructing and admonishing them if it may further Gods glory to auoid all scandal giuing euen to those that are without he wil liue purely and blamelesse among all men He is not a Cain that saith Am I my brothers keeper neither is hee a spot and blot by his scandalous life amongst Christians as the false brethren of whom Iude speaketh and the carelesse people of these times But if his endeuours may glorifie God any way he acknowledgeth that all which hee can doe is too little and therefore his care extendeth euen to others as many as he can possibly winne to the praise and glorie of God Quest. 65. Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ From the fearefull estate of such as any way abuse the name of God the Lord holdeth them as guiltie of dishonour done vnto his blessed maiestie Reasons implicitie of this command against prophaning the Lords holy name Expl. The reason of this commandement howsoeuer it may seeme to be but single yet indeed it is twofold The first implicite It is the abusing of his name who is the Lord our God so the very words of the commandement doe yeeld a weightie reason First because he is Iehouah the great God of heauen and earth whose name is abused 1. Sam. 2.25 it is great presumption man is not abused who might be dealt withall for a pacification but God for the pacifying of whom who can or dare plead as the Prophet saith 2. His name is abused who is the Lord thy God who is thy king thy soueraigne thy father and Sauiour from whom commeth euery good gift Iam. 1.17 which is grosse ingratitude The very heathen did not thus requite their kings and benefactors but did rather honour them too much euen when they were dead and their greatnesse ceased and yet thou vile swearer wretched curser and abominable blasphemer doest dayly abuse that great name which not men but Angels and the very deuils doe reuerence yea thou abusest him with thy tongue who bestoweth vpon thee the great benefit of the vse of the tongue without whom thou canst not stirre either tongue hand or foot or thy least finger 3. His name is abused whose dishonour the Deuill in hell himselfe endeuoureth in vaine for hee both can and will turne all things to his glorie How vaine was Pharaohs light reiecting of the Lords messengers Moses and Aaron Exod. 3. with the blasphemie which he added Who is God that I should let Israel goe For this was
the old Testament which were penned by the Prophets 1. Tim. 4 13. And much more are these holy exercises commended vnto vs in the new Testament S. Paul chargeth Timothy to giue attendance to reading to exhortation to doctrine and concludeth that in so doing he should saue both himselfe V●rse 16. 1. Cor. 14. and those that heard him And in comparing that excellent gift of those times of speaking with tongues with prophesying or preaching he preferreth far the preaching of the Word Therefore are such glorious things spoken hereof 1. Cor 1 18.21 2. Cor 2.15 to bee the power of God to the saluation of those that beleeue a sweet sauour vnto God in al whether they perish or be saued c. and hearers are willed 1. Pet. 2.2 As new borne babes to desire the sincere milke of the Word that they may gr●w thereby Which serueth to commend the care both of the Gouernours of the Church in former times who would not haue any Lords day passed ouer without a Sermon Iust Martyr Apolog. as witnesseth Iustin Martyr saying That the Word was read and preached for the space of an houre euery Sabbath day at one meeting Tertullian saith of his times that there was not any holy meeting wherein they were not fed with diuine Sermons and if the Pastor were sick or necessarily hindred the Deacon read an Homily In a Councell in Germany Concil Frances vnder Carolus Magnus it was ordaind that there should euer be some man to preach vpon the Lords day so also hath both the Trullan and Moguntine Councels And the like is the care of our worthy Gouernors of these times it being ordained that the Word should be preached euery Sabbath and the Catechisme explaned in the afternoone though many places alas may say hereof as of sundry good Lawes besides they are well enacted if they were well executed 2 Prayer and thanksgiuing Nehem. 8. The other kind of holy duty is Prayer and Thanksgiuing for when Ezra was ascended vp into the pulpit hee prayed vnto and praised the God of Heauen and all the people said Amen Amen And there were formes of prayer and thankesgiuing to be vsed in publique as the 92. Psalme more specially for the Sabbath the 104. 105. 106. 107. for all times of Gods publike worship This also is spoken of in the new Testament 2. Cor. 14. as vsed by the Minister in their meetings and it is prouided that it should be in a knowne tongue that the people might say Amen Prayer hath euer been so essentiall and proper to the house of the Lord that it is called for this The house of prayer Some rash spirits would haue no prayer vsed in the Congregation but conceiued prayer without any set forme which would breed such a confusiō as the like hath not bin known in the Church of God some through insufficiency of the Minister being without any prayers or too slenderly appointed in this regard Others through the variety of mens dispositions and humours so diuersly appointed one following this fashion and another that as that in the same Church which is one body no vnity or agreement almost would appeare 3. Singing of Psalmes to the praise of God 3 Singing of Psalmes Much time in their meetings was wont to be spent herein vnder the old Testament as may easily be gathered from the many Psalmes committed to the Masters of the Quiristers and speciall holy songs appointed to be sung vpon speciall occasions by Moses by Barack and Debrah c. Vnto which musicke made with playing vpon instruments and vpon triumphant occasions comely dancing was sometime added And vnto the like are we excited in the new Testament with Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall songs Ephes 5.19 Iames 5.13 to sing and make melody to the Lord in our hearts Is any man merry saith Iames let him sing Psalmes The practise of the poore persecuted Christians of the primitiue Church doth shew that this duty was wont to be vsed in their assemblies since Christs time for as he according to the ancient manner after the Passeouer sung a Psalme with his Disciples so did they at their Communions which were then euery Lords day and not hauing the liberty of any other time they came together thus before day or early in the morning for which they were called Hymni antelucani Plin. Epist Let the Papists therefore deride our seruing of God with Psalmes sung in our assemblies we know notwithstanding that if it be done from the heart it is better then al their Latine Chaunteries which the hearers vnderstand no whit at all 4. Receiuing the Sacraments Fourthly the administration and partaking of the blessed Sacraments because it is the Lords day in remembrance of whom the Communion is receiued Wherefore in describing this day this circumstance is commonly added Acts 20.7 when they were come together to breake bread for without this no Lords day was wont to be passed ouer as hath been already noted And for Baptisme this day is fittest being the time of Christian congregations and as it were a representatiue Church whereinto the baptised is to be admitted and made a member of the vniuersall Church thereby 5. Holy conferences and meditations for of old they were restrained from thinking their owne thoughts where the Lord forbiddeth the seeking of their owne will or speaking a vaine word Esay 58.13 and if hee that keepeth the Sabbath aright must be free from these things then his thoughts must bee holy his speeches and conferences holy Moreouer doth not the husbandman couer his seed with mouldes when hee hath committed it to the ground that it may grow and bring forth fruit Doe not wee chew our meat when we haue put it into our mouthes that it may turne to our nourishment and how shall we thinke that the seed of the word wil fructifie in our hearts vnlesse wee hide it there by musing and meditating thereupon how can we thinke to haue it turne to the nourishment of our soules vnlesse wee chew it by further talking and conferring about the same Dauid did thus hide the word in his heart that he might be preserued from sinne and that corruption may not grow vp in vs the Apostle willeth Psal 119.11 Col 3.16 that the Word should dwell plen●iously in our hearts So that the best keeping of the Sabbath is when as wee not onely heare pray sing and communicate in publike but priuately thinke againe and againe vpon those things wherein wee haue been instructed conferre one with another read pray and sing Psalmes in our priuate houses Quest. 73. Is there no duty to be done towards our neighbour for the hallowing of this day Answ Yes it is a speciall time of exercising mercy by helping against sudden dangers by collecting and distributing to the poore by visiting the sicke and reconciling dissentions amongst neighbours To helpe against sudden danger Explan The holy
to be done we must not as hap hazzard promise to doe this or that without any respect of the time but we must call to mind whether our intended time will not fall vpon the Lords day least we be constrained by vertue of our couenant sometime to pay a summe of money to take this or that iourney to meet vpon this or that worldly occasion vpon the Sabbath day Math. 27 62. Againe we must make a speciall remembrance hereof vpon the day going before for this was wont to be called the day of preparation vnto the Sabbath and it hath been an ancient custome amongst Christians vpon the Saterday after dinner to absteine from working and to dispose themselues towards the Sunday Exod 19. Neither was this preparation without cause if it were made aright by praier reading meditation and confession of sinnes that they might be clensed therefrom seeing that our infirmities and fleshlinesse doth make vs vnfit for these spirituall and heauenly duties we are made vnholy by the sinnes of the weeke and so full of filthy blemishes that we had need to wash and to purge before we come into the presence of so holy and glorious a God in the assembly of his people Euen as the Israelites were commaunded to wash and to sanctifie themselues before the day of the Lords comming downe amongst them vpon the mount so should we remember that to morrow is the day wherein the Lord hath appointed to come downe amongst vs in the place of his worship and therefore to purge our hearts from malice enuy anger and all wickednesse and to beseech the Lord for his grace and direction both to speaker and hearers that we may keepe holy-day to the glory of his name Esa 58. Lastly we must also remember and keepe the Sabbath in minde when it is past viz. by thinking vpon the holinesse which wee then made shew of in appearing humbling our selues before and hearkening vnto the Lord as though wee were schollers of his schoole that wee may bee ashamed to walke otherwise the dayes of the weeke following and by thinking vpon the instructions deliuered vnto vs that wee may at the least practise them in speciall more carefully then before For through the want of this remembrance it commeth to passe that euen they which are holy vpon the Sunday are wicked all the dayes of the weeke besides that our Sabbath-keeping is like the Iewes fasting or hanging of the head like a bul-rush for a day which the Lord doth greatly disdaine Memb. 3 The third member of the dutie here inioyned is that wee keepe holy a Sabbath that is a cessation a rest for this is so inseparably ioyned vnto the time which is to be kept holy as that take away rest and you take away the holy day for the holy day is a Sabbath a rest Therefore Leuit. 23. whereas there were many festiuall times appointed in the Mosaicall Law the feast of the Passeouer of Pentecost of the gathering of fruits c. they were all called by the name of Sabbaths Esa 1.16 What we must rest from vpon the Sabbath Now the Sabbath or rest which wee must keepe is first and chiefly from sinne and thus our life should be a continuall Sabbath according to that diuine rule Cease to doe euill learne to doe well seeke iudgement and releeue the oppressed but principally vpon the Lords day when hee is most to be honoured hereby But alas how foulely is this rest abused in these miserable times no day in the weeke being a day of such licentiousnes as this wherein as though hell it selfe were broken loose some spend their time and mony and wits in the alehouse drinking and swilling like drunken swine some waste that which they haue gotten with hard labour in carding and dicing Leuit. 2.3 Secondly this rest must bee from ordinary not absolutely necessarie labour which is further expressed in the wordes following In it thou shalt doe no manner of wo●ke and in another place speaking of this time he saith There shall be no worke done therein it is the Sabbath of the Lord in all your dwellings this being added as a reason why no worke might be done because it is the Sabbath of the Lord as if he should haue said ye cannot keepe a Sabbath vnlesse yee cease from working 〈◊〉 ad Elpid Thirdly wee are to cease from workes of speciall times as plowing sowing reaping c. Constantine in his Epistle to Elpidi●s willeth that all should rest vpon the Sabbath day onely hee speaketh of dangerous weather at some time yea often in the time of planting and graffing and sowing through which experience taught that their fruit perished and was lost in which case hee giueth libertie to these businesses rather then that the good gifts of God should be lost Anno 27. Hen. 6 Others long agone prouided that no Faires or Markets should be kept vpon the Sabbath day as in the time of Henry the sixt here in England and yet before that euen before the Conquest Con● VVinch in the time of Canutus it was ordained that Faires and Markets and worldly workes should cease vpon that day and Charles the great commanded his Visitors that all worldly businesses should cease whether it were sowing time or planting Conc. Dingulo-sunens Can. 13. or cutting of vines c. And in an old Councell it was decreed That if any should worke his beast vpon the Lords day it should be forfeited to the King 4. We must cease from the works of our speciall callings for the six dayes are appointed for them Sixe dayes shalt thou doe all that thou hast to doe Shop-keepers ought not therefore to follow their trades of selling Millers of grinding c. and if there bee any else of the like nature they must rest from the works of their callings at this time of rest Likewise it is fit that Bayliffes and Apparitors should on this day forbeare seruing their Processes according to the decree of Leo and Anthemius who ordeined That if they should execute these offices vpon the Lords day they should bee proscribed that is forfeit all their goods 5. We must rest from worldly speeches and thoughts either by making bargaines or talking of worldly businesse or contriuing the same in our minds when we performe these duties then is the day kept as glorious vnto the Lord as hath been already noted out of the Prophet Esa 58.13 Memb. 4 The fourth member of the dutie here inioyned is that wee sanctifie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Sabbath day which the Lord hath appointed Now it is granted of all that the Iewes were to keepe such a Sabbath vnder the old Testament indeed but much doubt is made for the time of the new Testament wherefore here ariseth another question Quest 74. Is there any set day vnder the new Testament thus to be sanctified and kept holy Answ Yes the day which is commonly called Sunday but
in the Scripture the Lords day or the first day of the weeke is thus to bee kept without alteration to the end of the world Explan We enter now vpon one of the most controuersall questions of these times wherein I will notwithstanding plainly proceed as is fittest for this Treatise making Gods Word my only rule of direction to set downe the truth herein as by his grace I shall be inabled Reasons of the Sabbath vnder the Gospel First then I say that we vnder the new Testament are tied to the obseruation of a Sabbath as well as the Iewes were of old and by as great authoritie Reason 1 Rom. 5. And this appeareth first from the time of the Institution of the Sabbath which was when man liued in Paradise immediately after his creation when hee was free from sinne when hee had the substance of true holinesse and needed no figuring Ceremonie for his comfort his present estate being all comfortable For if a Sabbath was to bee obserued in Paradise and came not first in with any ceremonies which were to haue an end at Christes comming in the flesh how can it enter into any man to thinke that this obseruation should cease as they did at this his comming And not rather after a new sort be reuiued vnder this second Adam to the likenesse of that it was in the time of the first Adam For by the second Adam who is Christ we are restored to that estate which we lost in the first Adam and why then should it differ by the cessation of the Sabbath Some thinke that the words of Moses Genes 2.3 were set downe there by way of anticipation and not to bee meant of that beginning of times but of succeeding times afterward about the giuing of the law But this lieth vpon them to proue In the meane time we are in good possession of this argument Reason 2 2. From the moralitie of this Commaundement of the Sabbath for it is heere placed amongst the rest of the morrall Lawes which are to continue in force for euer according to that saying One iot or title of the Law shall not faile Math. 5.20 though heauen and earth perish Now if this law bee morall as the ranging of it doth imply and all other morall Lawes bee of force to binde to the obedience thereof as before Christs comming what rashnesse is it in any to denie the like force vnto this law Reason 3 3. From the reasons of the Commandement which are all morall and perpetuall 1. Because it is to be remembred that of old it was kept in Paradise which doth alike bind vs as it did the Iewes 2. Because of the equity it being but one day of seauen and therefore as freely to be dedicated vnto God by vs as by the Iewes 3. Because of the ease of seruants and cattell of which there is as much need amongst vs as amongst the Iewes 4. Because they were to meditate vpon the great work of creation from which the Lord rested vnto which is now added a greater worke of redemption vnto the meditation of both which wee should much rather separate our selues then the Iewes Reason 4 4. From the caueat giuen by our Sauiour Christ speaking of the destruction of Ierusalem Pray that your flight be not in the W●nter Mat. 24.20 nor on the Sabbath day That which is here spoken hath relation to the times afterwards to ensue for the destruction of Ierusalem was thirtie six yeares after Christes suffering therefore euen then also there was a Sabbath the breach of which would bee some addition of griefe vnto the people as also if they should bee constreined to flie in the wet and cold of winter If any shall rather take these words as spoken of the Iewes sabbath the necessary breach whereof was most grieuous vnto them I will not much contend hereabout Let the former reasons then suffice 2. Our Sabbath ●ata●ne Secondly I say further that our Sabbath is not vncertaine but precisely determined and set downe as theirs was viz. the Lords day or first day of the weeke which is the day of Christ his resurrection from the dead For he arose the third day after that hee was crucified vpon the Friday which was their preparation to the Sabbath and had lien in the graue all the Sabbath day The reasons that serue to confirme this are diuers Arg. 1 1. Expresse places of Scripture wherein mention is made of this day as the set day of the Christians meetings to break bread to preach and heare and to doe other duties of holinesse In that place of the Acts where the Euangelist telleth that after their comming to Troas they abode there seuen dayes and vpon the seuenth which was the first day of the weeke the Disciples being come together to breake bread that is Act. 20.7 to the holy Communion Paul preached vnto them Which doth plainly shew that the Iewes Sabbath was now antiquated and done away and that this was the Christians Sabbath otherwise they would not haue let passe the day before as they did 1. Cor. 16.1 Another place is in the Epistle to the Corinthians where the Apostle prescribeth vnto them a rule of gathering for the poore euery first day of the weeke when they were come together which he also saith that he had established amongst the Galatians and why I pray you vpon the first day of the weeke and not vpon the Iewes Sabbath None other reason I suppose can be rendred but that this Sabbath was at an end and in stead hereof the Christians had another viz. the first day of the weeke wherein they made their meetings Reuel 1.10 A third place is in the Reuelation where it is said that Iohn was in the I le of Patmos vpon the Lords day rauished in the spirit Now what meaneth this that he calleth it the Lords day vnlesse a day appointed by the Lord For hence is the Passeouer called the Lords Passeouer the Communion the Lords Supper the bread the Lords bodie because he did appoynt all these in his Church Why is hee noted to bee rauished then in the spirit vnlesse that being in holy meditations as was the speciall manner of the Church now fortie yeares since Christ crucified hee was rewarded by the Lord with this wonderfull illumination in most hidden mysteries From whence may bee framed this vnanswerable argument That day which by the inspired Apostle is called the Lords day was appointed by the Apostle taught through reuelation to bee kept by holy meetings in the Churches of Christians not once or twice but euery time that it came is certainely the Christians Sabbath but such is the first day of euery weeke Therefore not any other but this day is the Sabbath of Christians The force of this reason standeth in the second part which is most firmely grounded according to euery branch Apoc. 1.10 Act 20.7 1. That it is called the Lords day 2.
his sons consecrated c. Vpon this day Christ appeared at sundry times after his resurrection the holy Ghost descended vpon the Disciples and Iohn was enlightned Arg. 6 1. Cor 2 14. A sixth argument may be drawne from the approbation and consent of all the best men who are spirituall and most able to discerne the things of God and the opposition of godlesse and most euill men who are led like brute beasts who are naturall and perceiue not the things of God For the best men haue euer since Christs resurrection obserued and kept this day with all due reuerence only the prophane and licentious haue cast away all conscience hereof Whence we may reason thus That which is embraced and held by all godly learned men but oppugned by the vngodly as not standing with their corruption is certainely the truth but such is this doctrine of the first day of the week to be the Sabbath Therfore most certainly true For the first part of this argument wherein the strength consisteth and first that that is the truth which is held by the godly with one consent our Sauiour telleth them To you it is giuen to know the secrets of the Kingdome of Heauen And if any man shall doe his will he shall know the doctrine Matth 13.11 Iohn 7 17. 1. Cor. 3.19 whether it be of God or no. And on the other side The wisdome of this world is foolishnesse before God and they which are after the flesh do sauour the things of the flesh with many like places from whence it followeth that the constant consent of all godly men is no small argument of the truth and contrariwise of the wicked And thus yee see vpon most firme grounds that there is not onely a Sabbath to be obserued vnder the new Testament but the Sabbath the first day of the weeke which the Lord hath appointed Which meeteth with sundry phantasticall opinions Errors touching the Sabbath Rom. 7. First of the Anabaptists in Germany and the Familists in England which hold that all dayes are now alike and none more a Sabbath then another neither doth it any whit helpe them that they alleage Wee are free from the Law euen as a woman when her husband is dead from the law of her husband for by the Law here is meant the ceremoniall Law the heauy yoke of which Christ tooke from our shoulders and if in any other place freedome from the law bee spoken of it is either meant of the Ceremoniall and Iudiciall or of the rigor of the Morall Law exacting perfect obedience in euery point or else threatning condemnation If they shall say Col 2.16 Let no man condemne you in respect of a Sabbath c. and that the Apostle saith reprehensiuely Ye obserue dayes and times and moneths and yeeres neither doth this make for them seeing that the first place speaketh of feasts abrogated Gal 4.10 and done away only the other of times vsed to be obserued by the Gentiles Secondly it appeareth to bee an error which is held by the Iewes by Ebion and Corinthus and the Sabbatary Christians viz. that the old Sabbath is still to bee kept as before Christ his comming for the abrogation of which these places are most plaine Col. 2.16 1. Cor. 16.1 Acts 20. c. Thirdly they also erre that yeeld a Sabbath now but hold it vncertaine whether it be the seuenth eighth or tenth Fourthly they which ho d this day but with all that it may bee changed vpon the consent of Churches sufficient cause concurring which I take it is suppositus impossibilium a surmise of things impossible Lastly they which hold the same day but meerely vpon the ground of tradition as the Papists to make their other fond and corrupt traditions in the more request 3 To rest vpon the Lords day 3. Thirdly I say that this day is not remisly to be kept by vs vnder the new Testament although it may rightly be said that the strict resting inioyned the Iewes doth cease viz. as figuring our Christ his resting in heauen after the worke of our redemption finished according to that Scripture He that hath entred into his rest Heb 4.10 hath rested from his owne workes as God did from his Yet considering that there is a rest also for Christians Heb. 4.9 as is contained in the same place There remaineth therefore a rest vnto the people of God it were great temeritie to deny a day of resting now from seruile worke holding that the Lords day is rightly kept by comming together to publike duties though the times of vacation be spent in following worldly affaires For as Gods resting vpon the Sabbath did prefigure Christs resting vpon his day so there is a rest to come vnto all Christs members in heauen which is figured out by our resting vpon the Lords day to the apprehending of which sweet and most ioyfull rest we are more sensibly quickened by tasting the sweet of resting here after six daies painfull labour vpon the Lords day Acts 15 ●1 Moreouer it is necessary that wee cease from worldly affaires that wee may be more profitably imployed about heauenly which without doubt was one end of resting vpon the Sabbath of old for they attended then vpon Gods publike seruice euery Sabbath day seeing it is said that Moses is read in the Synagogues euery Sabbath day They must therefore rest that they might labour rest temporally and labour spiritually men being vnfit to doe both these labours to the best aduantage the same day especially the spirituall if there bee an incombrance of the corporall wee beeing fitted vnto the one by nature but to the other not onely not fitted but most vnapt vnto it by nature so that wee had neede to bee bowed and bent by meditation and prayer before the publike meetings and to bee confirmed and made tenacious of the things which wee haue been taught by recounting them after these meetings And to doe thus wee haue plaine direction giuen vs in the holy Scriptures Eccles 4.17 Take heed vnto thy feete saith the Wise man when thou entrest into the house of the Lord and be more neare to heare then to giue a sacrifice of fooles this is for preparation before and after the publishing of the law Take heed saith Moses that yee doe Deut. 5.32 Deut. 6 6. as the Lord your God hath commanded And againe These words which I command thee this day shall be in thine heart this is for recounting of the word againe after And that royall Prophet professeth according to this direction I haue hid thy word in mine heart Psal 119 ●● that J might not sinne against thee Notable is the admonition of Chrysostome to this purpose yee ought not In Mat. cap. 1. Hom. 5. when yee goe from the congregation to bee intangled presently with businesses contrary to this studie but to goe home and there to call together your wife and children to
the rehearsing of those things which haue been spoken and when yee haue more deepely and thorowly ingraffed them in your minds afterwards to goe about the necessaries of this life For if going out of the Bath thou dost auoid publike meetings lest the benefit of bathing be turned into a greater hurt much more oughtest thou to vse this care when thou commest from publike meetings Alas most men haue so much businesse vpon the weeke dayes and are so dull in respect of heauenly learning as that vnlesse they vse great care and labour hard to attaine spirituall knowledge and grace vpon this day they are like to bee very slender proficients and trewant-like Schollers in Gods schoole yea euen such that I may vse the Apostles phrase as had need to be taught the first rudiments when by reason of the time they might haue been Doctors Heb. 5.11 If there be a Faire or a Market vpon a day will hee that hath need of stuffe or prouision the buying whereof will take vp his time all that day let any more time then he must needs from buying and prouiding to carry home his commodities or will he that is desirous to profit in the skill of Musick Dancing Writing Arithmetick c. for the learning of which he setteth apart in a weeke weekely some time will he I say loose any time when his Master commeth to teach him but apply himself hard to these exercises and how much more then should wee seeke to improue this one Market or Faire-day of our soules in the weeke this one Lords day wherein the preacher is appointed to come and teach vs in the sweetest and most delighting noble skill of diuinity vnto the greatest aduantage gaine and storing of our soules with heauenly necessaries It were needfull therefore besides the publike meetings and meditating and conferring vpon that which hath been taught that men should reade the holy Scriptures endeauouring to remember and to vnderstand them by such helpes as are now most plentifull that they may not bee strangers in Gods booke but make the histories and diuine instructions here set downe so familiar vnto them as that vpon any occasion they may be able for their comfort to turne to such places as they neede and moreouer if they would reade and study some good prayers that they might bee well furnished this way according to their seueral necessities vpon the way and in the fields as Isaac is said to goe out to meditate and to pray in the fieldes and in the night season vpon sea or vpon land what wonderfull great comfort should men haue and how much more should they grace and walke worthy their holy and Christian profession than now they doe or can do through the mispending of the Lords day in idlenesse or vanity or which is worse in running to all manner of excesse of riot Lastly it is a base thing vpon so glorious a day as the Lords day to put our hands to worldly businesses any more then necessity inforceth for so we should mingle things high and low diuine and humane earthly and heauenly and so make a more vnpleasing linsy-woolsy then was forbidden by the Lord vnder the ceremoniall Law Wee should doe like the heathen that knew not God who had their dies festi profesti and intercisi holy dayes holy day eeues and mixt holy dayes seruing partly for the worship of their Gods and partly for labour in the workes of their calling Phil. 3.8 The true God would neuer allow this in any of his holy dayes he will not be content to part stakes with vs and therfore you shall find euery of his holy dayes guarded with this clause Thou shalt doe no seruile worke therein Will a man vpon a plentifull feast day goe from dinner to seeke for scraps in the poores basket hauing had plenty of the gold of Ophir powred out into his lappe goe seeke for pinnes or nailes in the dust hauing sought pretious stones of inestimable worth and the time of this seeking still continuing will hee attend vpon the gathering vp of dung But euen thus doth hee that vpon the Lords day putteth his hand to worldly businesse for gaine seeing all these things are but as drosse and dong in regard of the excellent knowledge of Christ Psal 19. and the word of God is more pretious than fine gold sweeter also than the hony and the hony combe Did wee but consider the double occasion of meditation vnder the new Testament both of the creation and redemption of man whereas they had but a single of the creation vnder the old the bond of thankfulnes now inlarged a greater measure of the Spirit now giuen and that implacably-malicious enemy of man the deuill now more inraged knowing that his time is but short we would bee so farre from making this day a time of riot excesse and out-rage that wee would rather as farre as our weake nature will beare sequester our selues vnto godly and spirituall exercises whereby wee may be fenced against the deuill walke worthy of the rich grace of the Spirit and answere the incomparable beneficence of the Lord in Iesus Christ by due thankesgiuing Quest 1 The Sabbath beginneth when And here againe is occasion offered of diuers questions to the further opening of the doctrine of our Sabbath As first When doth the Sabbath vnder the new Testament begin and end I answer that howsoeuer some begin it in the euening and Reas 1 so make it from euening to euening yet the more probable opinion is that it beginneth in the morning and continueth till the next morning because Christ his resurrection the cause and beginning of this Sabbath was early in the morning as appeareth plainely if wee consider how the souldiours were terrified at his resurrection and went into the city to certifie the high Priests what had happened and the time of their going is noted to be when Mary was gone from the Sepulchre which was at the dawning of the day so that as the argument was good for the beginning of the old Sabbath the Lord rested when the euening and morning of the sixth day were at an end therefore then must begin the rest of that Sabbath so it is good also for the beginning of our Sabbath Christ hauing finished the work of our redemption arose againe early in the morning therefore it seemes early in the morning must wee begin the rest of our Sabbath So may we rightly hold that it hath againe been turned from euening to euening to be from morning to morning to set forth mans rising through Christ from darknesse to light by grace Iohn 19. according to that of Iohn Hee is the true light that lighteneth euery one which commeth into the world Quest 2 The Sabbath to be kept how But how is the Sabbath comprehending both day and night to be kept Answer Not as some heretikes of whom Origen writeth by remaining in that position of body wherein we are
his Law is broken Obiect Sol. If it be said the Lord will haue mercy and not sacrifice I answer this is in case of necessity not to be auoided hee meaneth not that if thou be poore he had rather thou shouldest worke vpon his Sabbaths but abstaine serue him faithfully and he will stirre thee vp mercy for thy reliefe Quest 75. Are wee bound to doe the holy duties of Gods seruice all this time without ceasing Answ No for we may refresh our selues with eating and drinking singing and musick and other honest delights whereby the mind is cheared vp and ioy and gladnesse befitting the Lords holy day expressed Hos 2.11 Explan Although we teach a strict keeping of the Sabbath vnder the new Testament yet it is not so to bee vnderstood as though wee were bound vpon this day to doe nothing but spirituall duties all the day long for in respect that we haue flesh as well as Spirit that would be wearisome to vs and would turne the Lords day which is for a delight into a heauy burthen I say therefore that wee haue liberty to refresh our selues with such things as cheare the outward man and expresse ioy befitting the Lords holy day For euery holy day of the Lord is a festiuall and ioyfull day for outward ioy and delight which is expressed by the Prophet Hosea saying I will cause all her mirth to cease her feast dayes her new Moones and her Sabbaths When hee threatneth iudgements against the land Nehem. 8.9.10 And Nehemiah inuiteth the people to eate of the fat and drinke the sweete reproouing them when they began to weepe because it was an holy day of the Lord. Whence it appeareth plainly that mirth and ioy euen externall doe well become the holy day of the Lord neither were the people of Israel euer reprooued for this but that through their couetous mindes they accompted the Sabbath a burthen and thought long to haue it gone that their seruants might goe to their labour and they themselues to their markets for in this respect they are threatned by the Prophet Amos Amos 8 5. Heare yee this that swallow vp the poore and say when will the new Moone be gone that we may sell corne and the Sabbath that we may sell wheate c. And some of them not staying the ending of the Sabbaths trod Wine presses and laded and carried out burthens against which Nehemiah prouideth being grieued hereat Nehem. 13.15 as at a great abomination Yet let no man vnderstand this so as though it were hereby tollerated to spend this day in outward and vaine bodily pastimes for for then how shall we improue it to the best aduantage of our soules as hath been already shewed wee had need and ought to doe but so farre forth we may vse bodily delight as it doth not hinder but further the hallowing of this day as it doth not expresse an heathenish feast such as were the old Bacchanalia but setteth forth a diuine feast kept in the honour of the Lord Iesus 1. Let no man therefore be eating and drinking and making merry when the publike seruice of God calleth for him Phil. 3 ●7 for that were truly to make a mans belly his God as the Apostle speaketh seeing he attendeth vpon that when he should attend vpon God in his seruice 2. Let no man so affect outward pleasure as that he should forget the chiefe pleasure and comfort of the soule by neglecting to prepare to Gods worship before or to meditate that it may sinke and take rooting in his mind after 3. Let euery man as hee is able exercise himselfe in priuate in reading and studying the holy Scriptures and praiers with other helpes to strengthen the inner man in grace and knowledge 4. Shunne and auoide all obscene and filthy pleasures which are rather corrupting then hallowing and all vnlawfull gaming or ouer laborious exercises which in the end do rather trouble and dull the Spirits then quicken and cheare thē vp Let there be no frequenting of Alehouses or Tauerns vnto riot no chambring wantonnes or in a word let there bee no mirth but what becommeth sober temperate and chaste minds fearing God and reuerencing his ordinances And that licentious persons may bee the rather restrained from their vaine pleasures vpon this day the Lord hath apparantly executed iudgement vpon diuers for contempt of this day Quest 76. Is this all that we are bound vnto to keepe the Sabbath our selues in ceasing from labour and doing the duties thereof Answ No but whosoeuer hath sonne or daughter man-seruant or maid cattell or stranger within his gates is alike bound to prouide that all as much as in him lieth obserue this day in their kind both man and beast Gen. 17. Explan The Lord the author of this commandement as in giuing other lawes he speaketh not vnto inferiours and the gouerned but vnto the gouernours as in the law of circumcision he commandeth all vnto Abraham both for the act to be done the time and manner in the law of the Passeouer he commandeth all vnto masters of families Exod. 12.21 and Moses openeth the matter vnto the elders onely so in commanding the obseruation of the Sabbath he layeth all vpon the gouernours saying Thou thy sonne thy daughter thy man-seruant thy maid thy cattell and stranger that is within thy gates Gouernours charged with children and seruants And not without iust cause because that 1. Parents and Masters of families are in Gods stead to their children and seruants and haue his titles vpon them which for what else is it but only to remember them so to bring vp those that are vnder them in all godlines and holinesse as if God himselfe did more particularly take vpon him the training vp and nurturing of them 2. Because of the neare relation betwixt gouernours and their people he is the head oeconomicall they the members of all which we know what care the head hath seeking stil to put more comlines vpon them and in these kind of members the greatest grace is holines and greatest meanes of breeding this the due obseruation of the Sabbath 3. Because of the corrupt nature wherein parents beget and bring forth their children into the world so that without grace they are fountaines of infinite misery vnto them they being by nature the children of wrath and vassals of the deuill Ephes 2.2 now what a corasiue must it needs be to the heart of any kinde-hearted father or mother to consider that they haue bred children to be fire-brands of hell and what a care then must this needs worke in them to helpe them to be deliuered here-from and the chiefest ordinary way vnto this is to bring them to the Sanctuary vpon the Sabbath to vrge them and helpe them by prayer examinations and instructions to the fruitfull obseruation hereof 4. Because they cannot looke for a blessing vpon those things about which they imploy their seruants and
this law some of these dayes for holy duties And a good construction may be made hereof and yet this stand for an vnder-commandement Six dayes shalt thou labour vnlesse the worship of God shall hinder and call thee from thy labour for we must in reason yeeld as much to the businesses of Gods seruice vpon the six daies notwithstanding the command of working as to bodily labours vpon the seuenth notwithstanding the command of resting therefore as when we are bidden to rest all the day we are not yet denied works wherunto necessitie or charitie call vs so when we are bidden to worke the six daies wee are not yet denied ceasing when religion and Gods worship call vs heereunto But for the further cleering of these things here arise certain weightie and needfull questions Quest. 78. Is it not lawfull then to forbeare working to attend vpon God in his seruice in the six dayes Answ Yes it is not onely lawfull but necessary to doe the duties of Gods seruice euery day of the weeke in priuate and in publike when iust occasion is offered 1. Thes 5.7 2 ●im 4 1. Deut. 6.7 Explan It is the corrupt maner of most men when the Sabbath is ended yea when publike seruice is done neuer more to call the Lord to minde all the weeke after or if they doe to performe their deuotion very slenderly and weakely as though they were sufficiently sanctified in two or three houres vpon the Sabbath for all the weeke after or as though they were Gods people only vpon that day and their owne only all the weeke after But this is great forgetfulnes by all meanes to be rooted out from amongst Christians for the Lord is to bee serued euery day of the weeke with the best heart and care that we can First wee haue for this his command Pray continually and in all things giue thanks and preach the word of God be instant in season and out of season and Thou shalt talke of the Lawes of God continually when thou tarriest in thy house and when thou walkest in th way as thou lyest downe and as thou risest vp So that duties of religion doe not onely tye vs semper all the dayes of our liues but ad semper also to euery day and time when good opportunitie is giuen we must expresse our deuotion by praying reading meditation hearing and conferring at fit times 2. We haue for this the example of holy men Daniel prayed dayly thrice a day and praised his God Dan. 6. ●0 and the Text sheweth that it was his manner thus to doe Dauid prayed early in the morning he wept in prayer euen in his bed Psal 5 2. Psal 6 6. Psal 22. ● Psal 34.1 so as that he made it swim with teares I call by day and by night sa●th he I will alway giue thankes vnto the Lord and his praise shall bee in my mouth continually Morning and euening and at noone-tide hee called vpon the Lord. Anna a good widdow is said to haue serued the Lord in the Temple Luc. 2.37 Acts 2.46 wi●h fasting and prayer night and day They were dayly together in the Primitiue Church with one accord in the Temple And Sozomen reporteth out of P●●lo Iudaeus Sozom lib 6. cap. 18. that the Christians in Aegypt continued all the six daies in deuotion so earnestly as that they forgat to take their food from morning till night and the people of Edessa would not bee terrified from their often meetings Ruff. lib. 2. c. 5. through the feare of death threatned vnto them Which I doe not rehearse as fauouring the Monasticall life which is wholly spent in blinde deuotion for euery man must liue in a calling not onely generall as hee is a Christian but specially as he is a member of a Common-wealth and if Anna did liue in the Temple shee had doubtlesse some other imployment besides prayer and fasting and for those of the Primitiue Church their time was extraordinary and most dangerous but I rehearse these examples to commend the general of omitting no day without giuing the Lord his due 3. We haue for this great encouragement giuen Hee is pronounced a blessed man Psal 1.1 Psal 119. ●8 Verse 99. that doth exercise himselfe in Gods word and meditae therin day and night Dauid saith that because Gods Commandements were euer with him he was made wiser than his enemies Yea saith he ● haue had more vnderstanding than all my teachers I vnderstood more than the ancient So that he which will be wise indeed must doe as Dauid did haue euer Gods Commandements with him and make Gods testimonies his daily meditation 4. We haue to vrge vs to holy duties our owne great necessitie euery day We are daily subiect to sin and therefore must daily seek the remission of our sins by praier according to the direction Giue vs this day our daily bread We haue daily businesses vpon which wee need but cannot looke for a blessing without daily earnest prayer otherwise we may build Psal 1 27. watch and worke but in vaine we are subiect to daily dangers either by reason of the Deuils rage the crie of our sins or our weak constitutions which we cannot look should be preuented without diligent prayer euery day prayer being our last greatest refuge Eph. 6. ●8 according to the Apostle and we daily receiue at Gods hands great blessings the course of which we shall cause him to breake off vnlesse we be daily in rendring praises to his holy name Ephes 6.17 Againe for the reading and meditating on Gods word our necessities do all so require that we should be somewhat emploied herein euery day The Word is the sword of the spirit without which how can we combat with our spirituall enemies that will not leaue vs vnassaulted any day The Word is the milke 1. Pet. 2.2 whereby we must be nourished and grow vp in regard of which we are as new borne babes how then can we in any day liue without it but be very Dwarffes in grace The word is the seed of God by which we are kept from sinning 1. Iohn 3.9 brought to be his beloued and holy children If this seed then be not daily in vs how shal we be kept from being ouergrowne with weeds and briars and so from being reprobate accursed ground The word is a light vnto our feet and a lanthorne vnto our paths how then can we walke on and be kept vpright without dangerous stumbling falling Psal 119.105 vnlesse we haue euery day this light set vp in our minds To say nothing of the readinesse and dexteritie in the Word of God which we shall grow vnto by daily exercising ourselues therein according to the prouerbe Vse maketh perfectnesse and how much the more apt we shal thus become for publike instructions to receiue them for our greater comfort Quest 79. It seemeth then that euery day ought to
of that which grew then of it owne accord Deut. 10.12 because they were in times past seruants and poore and had the liberty of tilling and sowing and reaping six yeares for themselues And he must needs be iudged an vnreasonable seruant who if he serueth so kind a master as that will allow him two or three dayes in a weeke for his own busines doth not willingly go about his masters worke the other dayes Reason 3 1. Sam. 2. The third reason infolded is taken from these wordes The seauenth is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God As if the Lord should haue said I haue specially marked the seuenth for mine owne holy and peculiar so that hee which shall presume to take that or any part of it and make it common by doing worldly workes or following vanitie is a thiefe and a robber vnto me euen as he which being an hired seruant taketh the time to follow his owne businesses wherein his master appointeth him to doe his worke Therefore as no honest seruant will thus vse his Master so no honest seruant of God will thus abuse the Lord for if a lewd seruant thus abusing his master cannot endure his presence though hee bee but a man how shall hee that presumeth thus to abuse the Lord indure when hee commeth seeing that if one man sinneth against another the Iudge shall iudge it but if a man sinne against the Lord there is none that dares plead for him Quest. 85. What are the reasons expressed Answ Two first from the Lords example who rested vpon the seauenth from all his workes of creation Secondly from his blessing inseparably linked vnto the hallowing of this day so that he that keepeth it holy shall finde it vnto his comfort a blessed day also The Reasons expressed Explan The Lord not content to haue interlaced the reasons of which it hath beene already spoken addeth further weight of reason For in sixe dayes the Lord made heauen and earth and rested the seauenth c. Reason 1 Ioh. 13. First from his owne example who hauing finished the great worke of the creation vpon the sixe dayes rested the seauenth and for a memoriall heereof hath commended the care of this rest to all his louing subiects euery seauenth day throughout all generations As if hee should haue said I command you O people nothing but what I your Soueraigne Lord haue done before you who when I had made the Heauens the earth the Seas and all creatures rested from this my labour and recreated my selfe in the beholdiog of that I had done follow me therefore and doe likewise after the labour of sixe dayes rest and refresh your selues by sweet and heaueely contemplations and exercises that so in all ages to come ye may be knowne by your holy rests as by my cognizance to be my people and true subiects This reason Christ vseth to his Disciples to perswade humility saying If I your Lord and Master haue washed your feet then ought ye also to wash one anothers feet And very apt are all men to bee led by examples especially of great ones according to that Regis ad exemplar totus componitur orbis After the Kings example the whole world is framed If the King were maimed in any member Fu. Solin Pompen Mela. or had but one eye amongst the Aethiopians they would all willingly make themselues herein like vnto him though to their great paine how much more should all the people of the Lord bee led by his example be like vnto him in keeping holy rests wherin he rested Reason 2 Esa 58.13 ●4 Secondly from the blessing annexed vnto this day being hallowed and kept holy The Lord blessed the seauenth day and hallowed it So that if thou be faithful in the obseruatiō of this day thou shalt not lose thy labour for hallowing this time hath alwayes Gods blessing accompanying it according as more fully it is promised by the Prophet Esay If thou turne away thy foot from the Sabaoth c. Thou shalt thou delight in the Lord and I wil cause thee to mount vpon the high places Chap. 56.2 And againe Blessed is the man that doth this and the Son of man that layeth hold on it that keepeth the Sabaoth and poluteth it not And it is commonly seene that such are blessed men blessed with diuine knowledge and blessed with all the fruites of sauing faith Iustice innocencie and true mercy and blessed with a diligent endeauour about all holy exercises and this is to those that see it the greatest blessing for blessed is that man that exerciseth himselfe in the Law of God Psal 1.1 and meditateth therein day and night If then this Law be so ancient and such as hath beene obserued from the first beginning if it be most equall and indifferent if it bee an entring vpon Gods peculiar right to breake it if the Lord hath gone before vs in the rest of this day in his owne example and if it bee a blessed day also to such as keepe it aright and redounding to their exceeding great good and comfort then rouze vp your dull hearts cast off the clog of worldly thoughts and businesses and lift vp your spirits to the highest Spirit in the due keeping of this holy day Quest. 86. Which is the first Commandement of the second Table or the fifth of the Law Answ Honour thy father and mother that thy dayes may bee long in the land which the Lord thy God giueth thee Quest 87. In which Commandements doe you learne your duty towards your neighbour Answ In the sixe latter Commandements which be of the second Table Quest What is thy duetie towards thy neighbour Answ My duty towards my neighbour is to loue him as myselfe to doe to all men as I would they should doe to me to loue honour and succour my father and my mother to honour and obey the King and his Ministers to submit my selfe to all my goueenours teachers spirituall pastors and masters to order my selfe lowly and reuerently to all my betters To hurt no body by word nor deed To be true and iust in all my dealing To beare no malice nor hatred in my heart To keepe my hands from picking and stealing my tongue from euill speaking lying and slandering To keepe my body in temperance chastitie and sobernes Not to couet nor desire other mens goods but to learne and labour truly to get mine owne liuing and to doe my dutie in that estate of life vnto which it hath pleased God to call me Explan All these recited particular duties are by me to be prosecuted hereafter in the explication of the seueral cōmandements of the second table I shall not need therefore to adioyne any literall comment vpon them here but rather remit the Reader to obserue thē in the branches of streams wherto they seuerally belong Now for the methodicall handling of the second Table I will invert these three questions thus the last
along life in this miserable world and yet remoueth to a Kingdome euerlasting that hee is not true of his promise 1. King 14. Doth any man thinke Enoch the lesse blessed because hee was taken away some hundreths of yeare sooner then others or doth he thinke it an vnhappines in the good sonne of Jeroboam for that he was taken away in his youth no more are they vnhappy or lesse blessed but so much the more whom the Lord is pleased to take away from the euils of this world to come as saith the Prophet Esay 57.1 Quest 2 Why doth the Lord rather promise long life to such as honour father and mother then any other blessing First because life is sweet and we are apt by nature to hearken to any thing to prolong life but this is generall and fitteth other commandements as well 2 More specially because children that honour parents may be said in some sort to prolong their dayes through that ioy wherewith they are affected when they doe well for as sorrow shortneth the dayes according to that of father Iaacob yee shall b●ing my gray head with sorrow to the graue Gen. 42 38. so ioy prolongeth them Againe by nourishing them in their necessity they prolong their dayes euen as young storkes so that it is most equall with the Lord to giue them this recompence in prolonging their dayes which also is an argument of force to moue to obedience and to make them flie disobedience seeing this is a death to their good parents and they are like the viper herein which as is thought is the death both of sire and dam in the breeding and comming forth into the world 3. Because the way to come to an estate of honour is giuing honour according to our prouerb qui nescit parere nescit imperare He knoweth not how to rule that knoweth not how to obey first Wherefore it is iust with God to cut off the disobedient that they may not liue to honour and to prolong the life of the obedient that they may come in their age to bee obeyed and honoured Quest 91. Which is the sixth Commandement or the second of the second Table Answ Thou shalt doe no murther Quest 92. What is here forbidden Answ All murthering of our selues or others and all approbation hereof either by command counsell consent or concealement secondly all iniurious actions tending to the prejudice of our neighbours life thirdly all railing and reuiling speeches fourthly all murtherous desires and affections of the heart as malice hatred and enuie fifthly all cruelty towards the creature which sheweth a murtherous mind in vs. Matth. 5.22 Explan The Lord hauing prouided for the vpholding of euery man in his estate and condition to preuent a confusion amongst the orders of men proceedeth here to take away particular abuses which if they should bee this order cannot stand and first the most horrible of all other murther the despoyling men of their liues Now because the Pharisees erred when they restrained the sinne here to the outward and compleat act of murther our Sauiour Christ reprouing this their absurd cleauing to the letter of the text I haue more largely according to his blessed direction set downe the sinne against this commandement It may well be referred to these fiue heads First actuall murther which is either of our selues or of other men 1. Thou shalt not murther thy selfe howsoeuer thou art pressed by tēptations of pouerty disgrace or other heauy crosses wherevpon the deuill is busie about thee and seeketh to driue thee to this desperate selfe-execution Thou shalt feare and neuer yeeld to so horrible an act whatsoeuer becommeth of thee And that thou maist the better bee preserued because the diuell preuaileth against many in these dayes and against some that haue formerly had a care to doe well I haue set downe heere the most effectuall meanes of preseruation in all assaults Forerunners of selfe-murther First take heed of all forerunners of these temptations as of pride and carying a higher saile than thy estate will beare for when a man commeth thus to be spent and must necessarily come downe and be laid open to the world according to his meanes his proud heart cannot indure to yeeld if by any meanes he may auoid this open debasement wherevpon Satan is ready and biddeth him murther himselfe this is plainely to be seen in many examples in our dayes Another forerunner of this is some notorious sinne or sinnes which are committed in secret but the conscience will not suffer to bee secret but accuseth for them and d then Satan layeth hold heerevpon pressing the threatnings of the Law and neuer ceaseth till he hath driuen a man to the desperate making away of himselfe These hideous sinnes are murther adultery periury apostacie or backsliding from the truth before imbraced and such like A third is generall security in matters of religion from which when the eyes come to be opened there ariseth an horrour and trouble in conscience which the Diuell further presseth to desperate selfe-murther Wherefo●e let euery man first be carefull to auoid these wayes Let him put on humility liuing rather in meaner fashion then he is worth let him watch ouer his hands and hea●t and tongue against mu●thering against adultery and vncleannesse against lying and fo swearing and ouer his waies against backsliding and let him in all his dealings keepe a good conscience If thou shalt say I feare not this temptation I hope I shall keepe mee without this pensiue carefulnesse farre enough from it heare what the Apostle saith Rom 9. ●ee not high-minded but feare consider that thou art a man and if a man subiect to the like passions as the meanest worst of men if thou take not the better heed It is no wisedome to surfet the body then to seek a cure neither is it wisedome to let the enemy into the Citty and then to seek to driue him out againe In like manner it is no wise dome but great folly to put a mans selfe into the hazard of this desperation thinking then to be cured againe ● Labor for pitience Labour for patience in all crosses according to the example of thy master Christ if being a seruant thou be buffetted pinched with hunger and hardly intreated or being a childe art neglected of thy parents and discouraged or being a subiect thou art in danger through thy Princes displeasure consider not so much the greatnesse of thy crosse as the reward if thou haue patience consider the vanity of the most excellent things in this world the shortnesse of all crosses heere and the most worthy partners which thou hast both Christ and all the holy Prophets and Apostles to whose society it is ioy to be ioyned The want of this patience breedeth discontent discontent with the Diuels furtherance desperation and murther 3 Consider if at any time thou beest thus tempted that to murther a mans selfe is the most
that are borne anew of the holy Ghost Strengthen our weak faith that we may certainely beleeue thy gracious promises of life and saluation that being assured of these best things and that thou hast giuen thy deare Sonne Christ vnto vs we may trust in thee for all other things also Inflame vs with loue of thy Maiestie who hast done so great things for vs And because wee cannot better expresse our loue towards thee then by the loue of our neighbour who is after thy image worke in vs the loue of our neighbour yea euen of those that be our enemies and hate vs. Send downe from heauen the fire of zeale for thy glory into vs so that with all earnestnesse we may seeke to aduance it let vs not esteeme of our owne liues in regard of thy glory knowing that such as honour and glorifie thee thou wilt honour them Giue vs sinceritie that in all things we may stand before thee and be vpright Cast vs down with true humility that in Iesus Christ thou maist lift vs vp make vs poore in spirit that thou maist inrich vs with the heauenly inheritance Temper vs with patience in aduersity whatsoeuer thy holy hand shall at any time lay vpon vs. Teach vs to be meek and gentle according to the example of our Sauiour that we may find rest vnto our soules Make vs temperate sober in the vse of thy good creatures holy as thou art holy heauenly as our hope is in heauen innocent and harmelesse in the midst of this crooked generation and fruitfull in all good works to the glory of thy Name Expell and driue out of vs whatsoeuer is an enemy to thy sauing graces blindnesse and ignorance infidelity and hardnesse of heart hatred and enuy coole and luke-warme affections hypocrisie and dissimulation pride and ambition impatience and discontent harshnes and intemperance prophanenesse and worldlinesse deceit and oppression with all other cursed fruits of the wicked flesh which hinder vs that we cannot do those things which we would and as a violent streame carry vs captiue to the Law of sinne Vnto this we are altogether vnable of our selues we know not what to doe but our eyes are towards thee Let the eyes of thy compassion be therefore opened vnto vs behold our weaknesse and put to thy helping hand to support vs draw vs and so shall we come vnto thee Sanctifie all meanes for our helpe furtherance thy Word Sacraments Prayer Meditations Conference and the like especially let thy loue renewed vpon vs this day stirre vs vp to such an answerable measure of true thankfulnesse as that hereby we may be whetted and haue such a new edge set vpon our desires as that we may goe through all hinderances and with all readinesse performe our dutie vnto thee And forasmuch as the night now approcheth wherein we are to enter into our beds as into our graues and there is no power in vs to rise any more or to saue vs from death and destruction O blessed God be thou our protector and Sauiour Bestow such a competent measure of refreshing by quiet sleepe vpon vs and so safegard and defend vs as that being preserued safe by thy prouidence and comforted by thy blessing wee may rise to morrow more able and willing to serue thee in our vocations And these graces we craue as for our selues so for thy whole Church and for euery part and member thereof especially for these Churches vnder the gouernment of our Kings Maiestie for his royall person and for all estates and degrees vnder him Lord look not vpon the crying sinnes of these miserable times bring vs speedily home vnto thee by true repentance and amendment of life and for thine owne glories sake still let the true religion flourish amongst vs confound all plots and deuices to the contrary Be pitifull to all our afflicted brethren be mercifull to all our kindred and more speciall acquaintance knitting vs all together by the firmest band of the Christian faith til being thus coupled together we grow vp to a perfect temple in the Lord and that onely for the merits of Iesus thy dearely beloued Sonne and our infinitely louing Sauiour and Redeemer Amen A Prayer for the Sabbath before publike meeting O Eternall God who hast commanded a double Sacrifice to bee offered euerie morning and euening vpon the Sabbath day we thy vnworthy seruants here humbled in thy presence in obedience to thy commandement according to our boundē duty desire to offer this double Sacrifice of praier in thy house the house of Prayer And we account it no small part of our happines that we may thus freely thus often come into thy holy presence for in thy presence is fulnes of ioy and pleasures for euermore Blessed be thy name O Lord that wee are yet continued in the Land of the Liuing and that with our life wee haue spirituall light without which our life were more terrible then death and that when we haue abused and walked vnworthy of the light louing darkenesse and liuing therein this glorious light is stil continued to enlighten our darkenesse and to guide our feete in the way of peace Good Lord sanctifie vs and dispose vs now aright seeing by thy prouidence we are this day to assemble and meet together in thy house that the beames of this light may shine amongst vs. Forgiue vs all our sinnes purge and wash vs with the blood of Iesus Christ that euen as the Israelites being washed and sanctified saw thy glorie vpon the mount so we may be fit to come into the same presence of glory Dispell in vs the thicke clouds of natural dulnesse that ouer-spread the eye of our mind so that the light though most cleare cannot breake forth vnto vs remoue that hardnesse of heart which maketh vs insensible and without feeling either of thy most grieuous threatnings or of thy gracious promises suppresse in vs all inordinate affections of anger malice hatred and enuy emptie vs of pride worldlinesse vanity and prophanenesse that as new borne babes we may desire the sincere milke of thy word to grow thereby Put into vs due consideration that we may take heed to our feete when we enter into thy house and not offer the Sacrifice of fooles Thus dispose vs O Lord to thy publike seruice and because a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe thy Sabbaths are defiled by vanity and worldly imployment euen when wee are gone from thy house mercifull Father restraine vs here-from helpe vs to consecrate this day as glorious vnto thee and to be sober in eating and drinking holy in conference and talking heauenly in meditation seeking in all things the best edification of our selues and others Open our hands to the necessities of our poore brethren and our hearts to haue compassion vpon such as suffer and be in misery That in all we may be to the praise of thy name keeping a most holy rest and in thy good time come to rest with
thee in thy holy mountaine when euery day shall be a Sabbath and time of vnspeakable delight vnto vs for euer and euer through Iesus Christ our Lord and Sauiour Amen A Prayer for the Sabbath after publike meting MOst gracious God the fountaine of all goodnesse wee desire with thankfull hearts to acknowledge that as at all times so especially this day euen streames of thy grace haue flowed vnto vs to refresh vs when we were drie Thou hast led vs to thy house thou hast set thy doore open vnto vs thou hast heard our prayers and supplications made for our selues and for the rest of thy Church Militant vpon earth suffer them not O Lord to returne empty vnto vs though comming from polluted lips and hearts full of many imperfections Receiue them as sweetned with the precious incense of thy Son our Sauiours passion and perpetuall intercession Thou hast fed vs there with Manna from heauen by the ministry of thy holy word thou hast vouchsafed thy presence vnto vs filling vs with ioy gladnes thou hast giuen vs to belieue to abhor sinne and imbrace thy grace though we are ashamed of our inconstancy and too little profiting in regard of the meanes of so long a time O Lord suffer not this to bee as an vntimely birth in vs or as the grasse vpon the house top that neuer commeth to perfection but worke in vs constancy and perseuerance that where any grace is begun it may be continued and perfited in the day of the Lord and where it is not begun it may be in thy good time Open our eyes still more and more to see those things that concerne the peace and welfare of our soules that wee may folfow after them Giue vs grace to consider the vanity of this world and of all worldly things and that the whole duty of man is to feare God and to keepe his commandements and encline our hearts vnto these and not vnto couetousnes Let vs not be forgetfull hearers of thy Word but carefull doers of thy will let thy Word dwell plenteously in vs that as the Scepter of thy Kingdome it may sway vs as immortall seed it may fructifie in vs as a sword it may cut vp sinne and as a pillar of fire it may guide vs in the night of this world till we come to the heauenly Canaan Forgiue the infirmities of this day our irreuerence in thy worship our vanity worldlines and neglect of so precious time Let not these things hinder but that thy word may become the sweete sauour of life vnto vs but that we may be made hereby fruitfull in all good works to the honour of thy most blessed name through Iesus Christ our onely Mediatour and Aduocate Amen A Prayer to be vsed in the time of sicknes MOst gracious God who onely smitest and art able to heale againe breakest and art able to binde vp againe behold with the eye of compassion mee thy poore seruant iustly broken smitten with thy rod for my transgressions behold I say how I lye at the gate of thy mercy waiting till thy charitable hand bee stretched out to helpe and comfort mee I am a wretched sinner I confesse O Lord and whatsoeuer punishment thou doest inflict vpon mee I deserue tenne thousand times more at thy reuenging hands if thou shouldst enter into iudgement with me In my prosperitie I haue waxed wanton like a ful fed heifer lifting vp my heele against thee I haue giuen my strength vnto sinne and not vnto thy seruice and although thy word hath been sounded in mine eares threatning heauy punishments for my sinnes yet I flattered my selfe in my heart saying I shall neuer bee moued But haue mercy vpon mee most mercifull Father for Iesus Christ his sake remember not these my abusings of thy mercies against mee but let there bee an healing of my transgressions and sins Open mine eyes to see how greatly I haue offended in omitting duties commanded in committing euils forbidden against thee and against my brethren that all my sorrow may be turned into sorrow for sinne that the issue hereof may bee repentance vnto saluation neuer to be repented of And good Father bee pleased vpon my vnfained humiliation and turning vnto thee in mercy to turne vnto me againe speaking peace vnto my mourning soule saying by thy spirit that I shall be comforted And the cause of all misery sinne being remooued out of thy sight let my punishment be remoued also Remember my frailty O Lord how that my strength is not the strength of stones or of iron that I be not tempted beyond that I shal be inabled to beare Temper my bitter cup with such faith patience and wisedome as that I may wisely patiently and with due submission drinke of the same to thy glory mine owne comfort and the good example of others When I am weakest bee thou strongest by thy grace in me and let my prayers in the name of thy deare son preuaile as the wrestlings of Iacob for a blessing in the middest of these grieuous troubles Set the the glory of thy Saints before mine eyes alwaies that I may the better beare these momentany afflictions which are not to be compared vnto that inestimable ioy Make me stedfastly to behold the Lord Iesus heauy vnto the death wounded bleeding and dying an accursed death when hee was altogether without fault or blame that I may not bee despairingly cast downe seeing that I suffer iustly for my sins Giue me a due consideration of thy wonderfull loue manifested in afflictions to thy children that I may reioyce in tribulation seeing that I am punished in this world for my amendement that I may escape the intollerable iudgements of the world to come Turne mine eyes downward to see how thy holiest seruants Iob Dauid and Daniel with infinite others haue more deeply tasted of this cup of aduersitie that I may not grieue to be sorted with them who are now in Paradise with these the like heauenly meditations so fill my mind O Lord that I may beare my infirmities And deferre not but make hast to worke my deliuerance according to thy promise to those that trust in thee I beleeue O Lord helpe mine vnbeliefe let it not hinder the working of this gracious work the freeing me out of this griefe and misery Once againe let mee haue some respit from my paine that I may praise thee in the land of the liuing if through thy mercy I shall be restored to health and strength so sanctifie this affliction as that I may say it is good for me that I haue been afflicted for that I am hereby taught to keepe thy commandements And here I doe promise and vow my selfe O God vnto thee if thou shalt vouchsafe this mercy a perpetuall sacrifice in soule and body to serue thee in new obedience for all time to come If in thy diuine counsell thou hast determined this to be the end of my fraile life here O Lord into thy hands I commend my spirit preserue me to thy Kingdome to the very last gaspe let not Sathan come neere vnto me set a guard of thy holy Angels about me and so assist me with thy grace that both in life and in death vnto the end and in the end I may glorifie thee that my troubles in my bed of sicknesse may end in perpetuall rest in Abrahams bosome and my grieuous pangs in euerlasting ioy and heauenly singing to thee O King and to the Lambe that sits vpon the throne who with the holy Ghost euer liues and reignes one God world without end Amen Grace before Meat O Lord blesse vnto our vse thy creatures at this time prouided for our sustenance that being preserued hereby and comforted we may doe thee more laudable seruice vnto thy glory who art the Author of all good vnto vs through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen Or this O God who hath iustly cursed the earth and all things therein for the sinne of man pardon our sinnes turne away thy curse and vouchsafe thy blessing vpon these thy gifts which we are now to receiue that we vsing them with temperance and thankfulnesse may obtaine by them refreshing and be enabled by them to thy seruice through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen Grace after Meat COntinuall praise be vnto thee O Lord who doest continually prouide so graciously for the feeding of our feeble bodies Leade vs hereby to a tast of our spirituall food so that by the helpe of both wee may grow vp in thy seruice both in body and soule till at the last we attaine thy heauenly Kingdome and be for euer glorified both in soule and body through Christ our Lord. Amen Or this MErcifull Father who neuer ceasest to do good vnto vs though wee neuer cease offending thee and now more especially hast renewed thy bounty in feeding vs with thy blessings Let not the common fruition of thy benefits make vs commonly or lightly to esteeme of them neither when wee are fed let vs wax wanton against thee abusing our strength to the seruice of sinne But let thy perseuerance in goodnesse worke in vs perseuerance in all dutiful obedience to our liues end through Iesus Christ our Lord Amen FINIS
should fall seeing God hath promised his spirit vnto his Church to be alwayes present leading it into all truth Answ The Lord tieth not his spirit to any place for then the famous Churches in Asia should still haue beene true Churches but the spirit is alwayes present to the faithful in all places of the world 139 Quest Which is the fourth thing that you learne to beleeue concerning the Church Answ That there be certaine speciall benefits belonging to the Church and to euery true member thereof viz. The Communion of Saints the forgiuenesse of sinnes the resurrection of the body and the life euerlasting 139 Quest What meane you by the Communion of Saints Answ That holy and sweet fellowship which all the members of Christes Church haue one with another as they all make but one body in Christ so communicating all good things vnto one another whether spirituall or temporall as their mutuall necessities doe require 139 Quest What meane you by the forgiuenesse of sinnes Ans That wonderful grace of God in Iesus Christ wherby he passeth ouer our transgressions as if they had neuer bin committed and releaseth the punishment due for them 148 Quest What meane you by the resurrection of the body Answ That though the body after death lie rotting in the graue yet at the last day it shal be raised by Gods power and being ioyned to the soule shall stand before Gods iudgement seat to giue account of all that it hath done whether good or euill and be rewarded accordingly 155 Quest What maner of bodies shall we haue in the resurrection Answ The very same which now we haue onely whereas they be now naturall they shall rise again spirituall not subiect to death any more nor sustained by naturall meanes of meats and drinks and sleepe and the like 159 Quest Amongst those that dye some are crooked through age some tender infants some blind and some lame shall their bodies at the resurrection then be the same Answ No for all these are weaknesses which shal be done away to the faithfull and strength perfection and comlinesse shall be to euery one of them 159 Quest What meane you by the life euerlasting Answ All that euer-induring happines and all those ioyes which the Lord imparteth to all his elect in the world to come which are so great as that the eye hath not seen nor the eare heard neither can the heart conceiue throughly 163 Concerning the Law Quest Thou saidst that thou wert bound to keepe the Commandements of Almightie God which be they Answ God spake these words and said I am c. 171 Quest How many things dost thou learne out of these Commandements Answ Two things my dutie towards God and my dutie towards my Neighbour 172 Quest How are the Commandements diuided Answ Into two Tables 189 Quest In which Table doe you learne your duetie towards God Answ In the first containing the foure former Commandements 191 Quest How many bee the parts of euerie of these Commaundements Answ Two the Commaundement it selfe and the reason of it 191 Quest In which wordes is the first Commaundement contained and which is the reason Answ The Commandement is Thou shalt haue none other Gods but mee the reason in these wordes I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the Land of Aegypt out of the house of bondage 196 Quest What are we heere commanded Answ To haue the Lord for our God that is to loue him aboue all to feare him aboue all to put our whole trust in him and to make our prayers to him alone 196 Quest What is heere forbidden Answ First Atheisme which is the acknowledgement of no God Secondly ●gnorance which is a neglect of the knowledge of God and of his word Thirdly prophanenes which is a regardlesnes of God and of his speciall seruice Fourthly inward idolatry which is the giuing of Gods worship vnto creatures by praying vnto them trusting in them or by setting the heart vpon them 201 Quest Whence is the reason of this command taken Answ Both from the equitie of it because hee is the Lord our God and none other and from the benefites bestowed vpon vs in bringing vs out of the bondage and thraldome of the Deuill 209 Quest In which wordes is the second Commandement and in which is the reason Answ The Commaundement is Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image nor the likenesse c. The reason for I the Lord thy God am a iealous God visiting the sinnes 212 Quest VVhat is here forbidden Answ All outward Idolatry which is first by making the image of God or of any creature to be worshipped Secondly by falling downe before any image Thirdly by seruing God according to our owne phantasies 212 Quest VVhat are we heere commanded Answ To performe all outward duties of Gods seruice according to his will reuealed in his word for the substance thereof 223 Quest Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ Partly from the punishment to bee inflicted vpon such as breake it vnto the third and fourth generation and partly from the benefits to bee bestowed vpon such as keepe it vnto the thousand generation 227 Quest Which is the third Commaundement and which the reason Answ The commandement is Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine the reason for hee will not hold him guiltlesse c 229 Quest What is here forbidden vnto vs Answ All abusing of the Name of God which is first by blaspheming or giuing occasion to others to blaspheme Secondly by swearing falsely deceitfully rashly commonly or by creatures Thirdly by cursing and banning Fourthly by vowing things impossible or vnlawfull or by neglecting of our lawfull vowes Fiftly by lightly vsing the holy name of God or his word Sixtly by vaine protestations and asseuerations 230 Quest What are we heere commanded Answ To glorifie the name of God in all that we doe thinke speake and desire and to labour that others may bee wonne by our meanes to doe the same 240 Quest Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ From the fearefull estate of such as any way abuse the name of God the Lord holdeth them as guiltie of dishonour done vnto his name 244 Quest If there bee such danger in swearing may a man lawfully sweare in any case whatsoeuer Answ Without doubt a man may sometimes lawfully sweare either for the confirming of a truth which cannot otherwise be knowne and yet necessary or for the strengthening of honest Leagues made betwixt men or lastly a man being called thereunto before a lawfull Magistrate 246 Quest What else is required that our swearing may be lawfull Answ These fower things First we must sweare only to such a truth as we know to bee so Secondly according to knowne intent of him vnto whom or before whom wee sweare Thirdly this being a part of Gods worship we must doe it with great reuerence 248 Quest What if a man shall
Quest Which be those three concerning Gods glory Ans First Hallowed be thy name Secondly Thy Kingdom come Thirdly Thy will be done on earth as it is in Heauen 437 Quest In the first of these what desire you Answ That the name of God may be glorified in the vse of his Titles Word and all his Workes 437 Quest In the second Petition what desire you Answ That the number of true belieuers may be daily increased that Gods Kingdome of grace being inlarged his Kingdome of glory may be hastened 443 Quest In the third Petition what pray you for Answ That I and all the people of God vpon earth may as readily obey Gods will as the Angels and Saints in Heauen 452 Quest Which be the three Petitions concerning our selues Answ The first Giue vs this day c. 2. Forgiue vs our trespasses 3. Leade vs not into temptation c. 459 Quest What pray you for in the first of these Petitions Answ For all things necessary for this present life and therefore we aske but for bread and but for this day 460 Quest What pray you for in the second of these Petitions Answ That God would freely forgiue vs all our sinnes as we doe from our hearts forgiue the offences of men against vs. 471 Quest What pray you for in the third of these Petitions Answ That the Lord would not suffer vs to be carried a-away by the temptations of the world flesh or Deuill to the committing of sinne but that he would deliuer vs from the euill of all temptation both sinne and damnation 480 Quest Wherefore serueth the conclusion For thine is c. Ans It is added as a reason of all the Petitions to strengthen our faith that God being both able and willing doth certainely yeeld to our requests made vnto him therfore we adde a note of confidence and say Amen 487 Quest What is the other exercise of the faithfull Answ The right receiuing of the Sacraments 518 Of the Sacraments Quest The benefits being showed which we are to craue at Gods hands by prayer what further meanes haue we for the better assuring to our soules the promises of all spirituall blessings in Christ Answ The Sacraments of the new Testament which are the pledges of the Couenant betweene God and his people 492 Quest Wherein stands true repentance Answ In three things First in knowledge and acknowledgement of our sinnes past Secondly in godly sorrow and griefe of heart for them Thirdly in a godly purpose to forsake all sin and to lead a new life for all time to come 505 Quest What is faith Answ It is a certaine perswasion of the heart wrought by the Spirit of God grounded vpon his promises that al my sinnes are forgiuen me in Christ Iesus 508 Quest What is required in such as come to the Lords Supper Answ To be rightly disposed before and at the receiuing hereof 532 Quest What ought a man to doe before his comming Answ To examine himselfe for his faith in Christ 532 Quest How may a man know whether he hath true faith or no Answ By two speciall fruits thereof repentance for all his sinnes and loue towards his neighbour 534 Quest Wherein stands true repentance Answ In affection when it is the same towards our neighbour that it is towards our selues void of malice hatred and enuy and desirous of his good as of our owne and in action when wee are readie to doe good vnto others as vnto our selues and to keepe away hurt as from our selues 537 Quest What shall he doe that finds not these things in himselfe after due examination Answ Hee may not keepe away from the Lords Supper for this were a prouoking of God to wrath neither can hee come vnto it without offending in a higher degree 539 Quest What may a man doe then in this case Answ Hee must humbly sue vnto God for the pardon of his sinnes to ftrike his hard hart that he may melt into teares for them and constantly cleaue to his commandement and if there be any dissention he must goe and bee reconciled to his brother 540 Quest What ought a man to doe at the Lords Supper Answ He ought thankfully to remember the inward graces of God towards him by seeing the outward signes 541 Quest What are these graces Answ First the Lords giuing of his sonne Iesus Christ to death for vs set forth by the Ministers taking of the bread wine breaking powring out offering them to vs all Secondly our neare vnion vnto Christ and how wee haue all our spirituall food from him set forth by our taking eating and inward digesting the Bread Wine that become nourishment vnto vs. Thirdly the neare vnion that God hath made by Christ betwixt all the faithful set forth by the same bread being made of many graines of corne and by the same wine made of many grapes 541 Quest What is to be done after the receiuing Answ We must meditate of the couenant of new obedience renewed by this Sacrament that we may more carefully performe it and flie sinne and vice all the dayes of our life 543 Appendix Quest What is the Word of God Answ Whatsoeuer is contained in the Bookes of the old and new Testament and not any other Bookes or writings whatsoeuer 545 Quest How many and which are these Bookes Answ The Books of the old Testament are seuen twenty Genesis Exodus Leuiticus Numbers Deuteronomie Ioshua Iudges Ruth the first and second of Samuel the first and second Kings the first and second of the Chronicles Ezra Nehemiah Ester Iob Psalmes Prouerbs Ecclesiastes Canticles Isaiah Jeremiah Ezechiel Daniel and the Booke of the twelue small Prophets The Bookes of the new Testament are 26. Matthew Marke Luke Iohn the Actes of the Apostles the Epistle to the Romans first and second to the Corinthians Galathianss Ephesians Philippians Colossians and two to the Thessalonians and two to Timothy to Titus the Hebrewes the Epistle of Iames and two of Peter first second and third of Iohn of Iude and the Reuelation of Iohn 545 Quest Are not the Apocrypha Bookes part of the word of God Answ They are not neither haue been euer so accounted in the Church of God but are annexed as being full of good instructions and histories declaring Gods wonderfull Prouidence ouer his people Israel 546 Quest What proofe is there that the other are Gods Word Answ It is proued by their antiquity some of them being before all other bokes sundry times oppugned and sought to be burnt vp by persecutors and yet wonderfully preserued and by miracles from Heauen confirmed which shewes that they came from heauen and are not of mans inuention 547 Quest Hauing this word written is it not sufficient for our saluation without any helpe by preacking Answ It is not sufficient but it must also bee set forth by preaching that the hard places may bee rightly vnderstood we may be kept from errors and haue our dull
rather no paines taken hereabout for he spake but the Word and all was made he did but say of euery thing let it be and it was so Thirdly in regard of the instruments and tooles vsed which were likewise none Fourthly in regard of the time all things were finished in six dayes not that the Lord needed this time for he could haue made all in an instant but partly that we might enter into a more distinct and particular consideration of all his glorious works to set forth his praise partly that his prouident care ouer man might appeare for that hee prepared all things fit for him before his creation to stirre vp the greater care of his glory in man partly to make knowne his soueraigne power ouer all creatures when as hee caused light to bee without Sun Moone or Starres trees plants to growe without the influence of these heauenly bodies shewing hereby that howsoeuer he doth vse meanes ordinarily yet hee is not tyed hereunto but can and will if it please him worke all things without meanes that wee might learne to relye vpon his helpe when we are destitute of all meanes of comfort and lastly to giue example of labouring in our callings the sixe dayes and sanctifying a rest vpon the seuenth Thirdly that he is a Father by adoption is testifyed where it is saide Of his owne will begat he vs with the word of truth and in that of Iohn Jam 1.18 Those that are borne of God sinne not neither can they 1. Ioh. 3.9 for his seede is in them Now to whom he is thus a Father is declared in the words following Herein are the children of God knowne and the children of the Diuell viz. in that the one sort commits not sin the other doth iniquitie that is willingly and wilfully Fourthly that he is able to doe all things himselfe witnesseth to Abraham saying I am God alsufficient and where he saith Gen. 17.1 Reuel 1.8 Luk 3 7. I am the beginning and the end which is which was and which is to come euen the Almighty Yea he cannot onely doe such things as he doth but whatsoeuer else He can out of stones raise vp children to Abraham he is able to make many worlds Fiftly that hee is the Lord and gouernour of the world and the preseruer of all things created yea that the smallest matters are vnder his prouidence hath beene already shewed before in the description of God And moreouer Psal 104. the Prophet Dauid is much in setting forth the same how he prouides for things both heauenly and earthly both for man and beast and the Lord himselfe in the booke of Iob. Job 39.40 Proofe Wherefore that of the Poet is false and absurd Non vacat exiguis rebus adesse loui Sixtly and lastly that I may come to the proofe of that which was first said and first that all these things are to be knowne particularly and all the articles of our faith Ioh. 17.3 This is life eternall to knowe thee to be the very God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ and againe Esay 53.11 By his knowledge shall my righteous seruant iustifie many from whence with many like places it is directly to bee inferred that I must study for a particular knowledge of God and of Iesus Christ and not rest satisfied with an implicit faith beleeuing as the Church beleeueth without knowing what as their teaching is in the Church of Rome at this day though Thomas Aquinns and others not long since haue taught it to bee necessary to knowe all the articles of the Christian faith and onely in other more mysticall points to hold as the Church holdeth without prying into them Ob. The Apostles had a true faith without this distinct knowledge for they knewe not how the redemption of man was to be wrought they were ignorant of Christs spirituall and heauenly kingdome euen after the resurrection in like manner Rahab who was saued by faith knewe onely that the God of Israel was most mighty and aboue all other Gods Sol. I answere and so questionles many more haue beene saued without the distinct knowledge of these things when either for want of meanes or through weaknesse of conceit they haue beene vncapable hereof But note that euer where true faith is there is striuing after the increase of knowledge as in the Disciples who were euer attending to their masters Sermons and questioning with him Master what meaneth this parable and good master teach vs to pray c. Secondly that these things are particularly to be beleeued by euery of the faithfull and without wauering by reason of their weakenesse though as hath beene said the infirmity of our faith attaines not vnto this at all times is the rather to be confirmed Ses 6. Can. 13.14.15.16 because of the many canons made heere against in the councell of Trent Examine therefore the faith of any recorded in the word of God and you shall find it to be such Abraham by faith was fully perswaded Rom. 4.12 Gal. 2.20 Act. 8.37 Paul by faith beleeued that the Sonne of God loued him and gaue himselfe for him Philip required of the Eunuch before his baptizing that hee should beleeue with all his heart c. Againe faith is the testimony of Gods Spirit Rom. 8.16 according to that The same Spirit beareth witnesse with our spirits that wee are the children of God Heb. 11.1 and who dare say then that this is vncertaine Lastly faith is the euidence of things to come and the very existence of things not seene now it is a poore euidence that giueth none assurance but leaueth still in suspence and doubtfull Thirdly that I am more specially bound to beleeue that God is my Father will appeare if wee consider either his command willing vs to call him Father When yee pray Luk 11.2 say our Father c. or the large promises made to those that relye vpon him as vpon their Father If God prouides thus saith Christ for foules and grasse how much more will he for you O yee of litle faith Math. 10. meaning if by a stronger faith they should rely vpon him as vpon their father or lastly the examples of holy men of Abraham Dauid Daniel c. see the Catalogue Heb. 11. 1. Duty Obedience Thirdly for the duties to be performed by vs to shew our faith in God the Father they are foure First we must obey his will Hereby we are sure that we knowe him that is 1. Ioh. 1.2.3 beleeue in his name if wee keepe his commaundements and Christ publiquely disclames all such from being his brethren and sisters but onely such as doe the will of our Father Math. 12. which is in heauen and the Lord himselfe by his Prophet Malachy demaunds saying If J be a Father where is my feare if I be a Master Mal. 2.3.6 where is mine honour As if he should haue said yee are
wanting if they bee workers of iniquity Math 7.22 they shall be bidden Depart yee workers of iniquity I knowe you not for this are the holy Apostles so diligent in stirring vp hereunto Phil. 2.14 15 Doe all things c. That yee may bee blamelesse 〈◊〉 pure and the Sonnes of God without rebuke Haue your c●nuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which shall speake eu●ll of you as of euill doers may by your good workes glorifie God 1. P●● 2.12 and it is the plaine sentence of the Scriptures Without holinesse no man shall see God Lastly that this holinesse is a constant hatred and striuing against sinne and an vnfained loue of vertue and endeauouring thereafter and not onely an outward obseruation of holy duties nor yet on the contrary side habituall righteousnesse sufficient to iustifie vs before God All this is also plainely taught especially by St. Paul in his owne example Rom. 7. hee professeth of himselfe that he loued the good and did striue after it and that he hated the euil and eschewed it in such words as if hee would describe a man panting in his strife with most deadly enemies and grieued that they should any whit ouermaster him and therefore plucking vp his greatest courage and vniting all his forces against them And the same affections against sinne he sheweth to haue beene in the Galatians where hee saith The flesh fighteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh Gal. 5.17 so that yee cannot doe those things that you would and exhorteth all men to the like saying Take vnto you the whole armour of God Eph. 6.13 that yee may be able to resist c. Esa 29.13 More particularly that the holinesse of the faithfull is not onely an outward obseruation of holy duties as some peruert it but this earnest hearty endeauour against sinne appeareth because that this affected singular outward holines as being a meere Image to deceiue the beholders is reiected and the endeauour of the heart only as the substance is accepted The Iewes of old had otherwise beene holy enough when they drew ne●re vnto the Lord with their l●ppes their hearts being farre away and the Pharisees had beene the holiest of all for their fastings prayers and almes for their Sabbaths and Synagogues for their often washings Math. 6. Esa 1. and outward deuotion but they are condemned for most vaine their seruice is so distasted that they are bidden to bring no more oblations they are challenged for their incense new moones and solemne assemblies Math. 7. C●ap 6. For not the hearers of the word but the doers are blessed not the offerers vp of many prayers but the secretly deuouted are rewarded not the sacrificers but the mercifull doe the will of God the Father Againe that our holinesse is not righteousnesse sufficient to iustifie vs before God the Lord himselfe affirmeth when he saith If yee haue done all tha● yee can yee haue done but your duty 〈◊〉 are vnprofitable seruants and S. Paul hath spent many of his writings purposely here about viz. to shew that all such as seeke this way to be iustified shall surely misse of their marke let them colour it ouer how they will alleadging our vnion with Christ so as that our actions are meritorious and perfect through him I am sure that none of the Apostles doe giue any limit vnto this doctrine Paul notwithstanding his vnion acknowledgeth the imperfections of the flesh in him S. Rom. 7.18 1. Ioh. 1.8 Iames saith in many things we sinne all and S. Iohn If we say that we haue no si●n● we deceiue our selues and the truth is 〈◊〉 in vs. And if there be such a mixture of sinne with our holinesse how can any member of Christ trust at all to his owne righteousnesse Can he iustifie himselfe more then the very Apostles and the excellent Christians of their times nay let him take heede rather lest by so doing he be condemned seeing that 1. Cor. 11.31 if we iudge our selues we shall not be iudged and not if we iustifie our selues Eph. 2.20 Againe that the faithfull are euer growing in holines vntill that they come to be perfected in death and then shall be presented without spot or wrinkle Their growth is plainly taught in the Epistle to the Ephesians where speaking of Christ it is said In whom all the building being coupled together groweth to an holy Temple in the Lord that is as any building which becommeth sit for habitation groweth nearer perfection euery day till at the last it be fully finished so doth the Church of God Wherefore wee are often remembred hereof by Peter 2 Pet. 3.18 1. Pet. 2.2 who saith Growe in Grace and in the knowledge of Iesus Christ and where he exhorteth to desire the sincere milke of the Word that we may growe thereby Eph. 4.24 and by Paul saying Be renued in the spirit of your minde and put off the olde man and put on the new that is put him off more and become more holy and righteous Heb. 5. and againe where he reproueth the Hebrews for their weakenesse euen then when by reason of the time they might haue beene strong men in Christ to omit the Lords vpbraidings of his Disciples for that hauing beene with him long still they vnderstood not his parables they were yet weake in faith they had not yet growne in mortification of their fleshlinesse Gal. 5.17 Moreouer that perfection is not attained till death appeareth because whilst we liue we carry the flesh about with vs by reason of which we cannot doe those things we would we are but like a bad writer hauing his hand guided by a more skilfull master this scholler notwithstāding is vnable to write a perfect faire hand by reasō of his owne vntowardnes so the holiest of Gods children is short of perfection by reason of the fleshes weakenes though they be guided by Gods Spirit Phil. 3.9 And this they are not ashamed to confesse against themselues Both Paul I striue saith he after the marke not as though I had already attained it and Iames and Iohn as hath bin already shewed But in death all imperfections vanish away Eph. 5.27 then shall they be presented without spot or wrinkle for Christ therfore gaue himselfe for his Church that he might cleanse and Sanctifie it not hauing spot or wrinkle then the Bride is in her perfect beauty in a vesture of Gold of Ophir with needle-works all glorious she is then as a city Psal 4 5. the pauing of whose streetes is of Gold Reuel 21. the walls of pretious stones all things most bright and shining shee hath a siluer Pallace built vpon her if she be a wall if a doore Cantic 6 9. shee is enclosed with boards of Cedar if she be in any degree of true grace shee is perfected and made happy There is not need of an imaginary purgatory
old age c. The sixth command against murther was written in Cains conscience for that made him to cry out after the murther of his brother Abel Gen. 4 My sin is greater then J am able to beare and whosoeuer shall finde Caine shall kill him Vers 23.24 And Lamech from hence aggrauateth his owne case when he had slaine a man for that he had this law not onely written in his heart but a warning in his great Grand-father Cain And immediatly after the flood the Lord doth expresly set downe Gen. 9.6 Who so sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed for in the Image of God hath he made man Gen. 39.9 The seuenth command was to bee seene in Iosephs heart when being tempted by his mistresse to adultery he said Shal I doe this and sinne against God in the other sonnes of Iaacob also Gen. 34 when Dinah their sister had beene defiled by Shechem who doe therefore put him to death Gen 31.30 The eight Commandement Laban vrgeth vpon Iaacob saying Though thou wentest thy way because thou longedst to come to thy Fathers house yet why hast thou stolne away my Gods vnto which he answereth acknowledging this to be so great a fault as that he saith Gen. 44.5 With whomsoeuer they be found let him dye And this was held to be so haynous a sinne as that Iaacobs sons being charged by the steward with Iosephs siluer cup stealing yeelded themselues vpon the finding of it with any of them to become his bondmen Gen. 20.9 The ninth Commandement heathen Abimelech shewed to be written in his heart when hee complained of Abrahams false testimony concerning his wife of whom hee had said that she was his sister Gen. 26.9 telling him that he had done things which ought not to be done and Isaack is afterwards reproued by him also for the like faults Lastly for the tenth so many as did knowe God aright could not but acknowledge also that it was a sinne against his Maiesty to entertaine euill motions in the minde contrary to any of these Lawes because where these are there cannot be the vprightnesse commanded vnto Abraham God cannot bee honoured with the heart and thus much of the first thing The difference of the lawes of God Now we are to speake of the difference betwixt the Law of God containing these Commandements and other Lawes giuen also by the Lord for besides this Law which is called Morall there is another called Iudiciall and a third Ceremoniall The Morall is so called because it is a perpetuall rule of good maners without the obseruation of which the world cannot stand or if it should stand it would bee but as a confused Chaos and without forme of a world The Iudiciall is so called because as a statute-law it setteth down with what iudgements and censures men were to be censured that did offend in speciall cases The Ceremoniall is so called because it is altogether conuersant about rites and ceremonies shewing what ceremonies were to be vsed by the church of God and what not in his seruice Esa 1.12 1. Sam 15.22 Now the difference betwixt these standeth in many things First in that the morral Law was published and written by God himselfe so as that all the people did receiue it from his mouth but it was not so with the Iudiciall and Ceremoniall for the Lord instructed Moses onely herein and the people receiued them from him who wrote them downe for them 2. The Morrall Law was first giuen as most worthy the other two afterwards as not so much to be regarded in respect of it for when the Morall Law hath beene neglected and the other most diligently obserued the Lord hath beene as much moued as if no Law at all had beene regarded which may easily be gathered both from that of the Prophet Esay Bring no more oblations in vaine incense is an abomination vnto me c. And from that of Samuel to Saul Hath the Lord as great pleasure in burnt offerings and sacrifices as when the voyce of the Lord is obeyed behold to obey is better then sacrifice and to harken then the fat of rams that is to obey the Morall Law farre exceedeth all ceremonies And Dauid hath the like saying in the Psalmes Doe I eate buls flesh or drinke the blood of goats Psal 50 offer vnto God praise and pay thy vowes vnto him c. And I will haue mercy saith Christ and not sacrifice with many more places to the same effect The same also appeareth from the practise of corrupt man which hath euer beene most diligently to obserue ceremonies but most negligently the precepts of the morall Law for our nature is set vpon contraries and therfore looke what we should most carefully obserue that we most neglect looke what should be cared for in the second place that wee looke vnto in the first Math 23. The Pharisies tithed mint and cummin in the payment of their tithes but let passe the weighty matters of the Law and thus was it the manner of the Iewes euer to doe Wherewith say they in Mc●a shall we come before the Lord Mich. 6.6.7 Shall I come before him with burnt offerings and calues of a yeere old will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rammes or ten thousand riuers of oyle And this is the manner of most men at this day they are most strict in outward obseruances but most remisse in the substance of godlinesse in the very act of hearing and prayer not regarding that innocency charity and righteousnesse which should accompany this outward deuotion 3. The ceremoniall Law hath beene oftentimes broken without sin but the morall Law neuer without some speciall countermand from God Gen. 22. Exod 12.36 as when Abraham was bidden to kill his sonne Isaack when the Israelites were bidden to rob the Egyptians yea euen in these very cases the learnedst of the Schoolemen do by sound distinction maintaine that the law it selfe was not broken no nor dispensed withall if we speake properly but onely the matter or obiect of the precept changed by God so the Israelits did not steale from or defraud the Egyptians but tooke their owne when God who hath an absolute power to dispose of all these had before by his command transferred the right and dominion of those rights from the possessors to the takers So likewise did Abraham in offering to kill his sonne vpon Gods command no more breake the Law then a Souldier that at the command of the Generall who hath power of life and death killeth his fellow Souldier As for that act of circumcision or sacrificing Math. 12.5 by which our Sauiour Christ saith that the Priests breake the Sabbath it is not so to be vnderstood as though the Law were broken being rightly vnderstood or as though the Lord went about to iustifie this that a man might without sinne breake this command but hee speaketh of
their strictnesse shewing their weaknesse in maintaining that it was against the Law to doe any worke at all vpon the Sabbath day for that in this sense their very Priests did continually breake the Law His intent then was to shew the right meaning of the command to be this that they should doe no manner worke except such as was of present necessity or helped to the sanctification of the Sabbath day Now for the Ceremoniall Law that it might bee omitted without sinne the Lord himselfe sheweth where hee saith I will not reprooue thee for thy sacrifices or burnt offerings Psal 50.8 that haue not beene continually before me and for Circumcision all the time of the people of Israels being in the wildernesse for the space of forty yeares their children were vncircumcised and yet no sinne imputed and without doubt they failed in sundry other things also Ioshua 5. Matth. 12. as the Priest did in giuing Dauid of the shewbread which it was not lawful for the people to eat and yet we do not find that they were therfore reproued by any of the Prophets howsoeuer it cannot bee denyed but that when they presumed to alter any ceremony they were grieuously punished Leuit 10. as when the two sonnes of Aaron aduentured to sacrifice with common fire they were destroyed by fire comming from heauen When Vzzah presumed to carry the Arke vpon a Cart and to stay it with his hands when as he ought not to haue touched it and it should haue beene borne vpon mens shoulders he was smitten with present death All which I doe not speake to the end 2. Sam. 6. that men should thinke that any of Gods lawes might lightly haue bin brokē without offence but that there being iust cause the ceremonial law was many times transgressed and yet the transgressors remained blameles which is not so with the Morall 4 The Moral Law being neglected maketh men of how holy a sect and profession soeuer worse then Infidels that are without all written lawes and yet obserue the Law of Nature according to the doctrine of the Apostle Rom 2.26 Vers 27. If thou bee a transgressor of the Law thy Circumcision is made vncircumcision and shall not the vncircumcision which is by Nature if it keepe the Law condemne thee which by letter and circumcision art a Transgressor of the Law It maketh men worse then bruit Beastes which haue not a reasonable soule according to that of the Prophet The Oxe knoweth his owner Esay 1.1 and the Asse his Masters Crib but Israel hath not knowne mee It is not so with the ceremoniall that being neglected maketh only worse then the seruants and peculiar people of the Lord should be and a confused multitude of altogether 5. The ceremoniall law was very chargeable and costly the Aulter could not bee maintained without costs the first borne could not bee redeemed without manifold and deepe costs neither could theee be an expiation of sin without costs and charges so that it was burthensome vnto the the people and grieuous to bee borne but the Morall Law putteth to no such busie multiplicitie and encombrance of cost it requireth the right disposition of the heart and then obedience in pract●se will easily follow 6 The Morall Law engrauen in Tables of stone was kept in the Arke which was a signe that it should last perpetuallie euen as Heauen the Throne of God in the figure whereof it was put for euen in Heauen the Morall Law is obserued for which cause it is that we pray that Gods wil may be done in earth as it is in Heauen But it is not so with the other lawes these being to last only to the fulfilling of all by Christ Reas 1 The cerimoniall Law ceased For first to speake of the Ceremoniall Law that was then without doubt to cease euen as there is no further vse of a Candle when the Sunne is risen of a picture when the person is present of the A. B. C. when the Grammer is taught For the ceremonies of the old Testament had none other vse but a little as they were able to set foorth Christ Iesus who was to shed his blood for our sinnes as the blood of beasts was shed and sprinkled in the Tabernacle and Temple of the Iewes to offer himselfe vpon the Altar of the crosse as the beastes were offered there vpon an Altar to beare our sinnes as the scape Goate did the sinnes of the Iewes especially and so of the rest according to which Saint Iohn saith Ioh. 1.17 The Law was giuen by Moses but grace and truth came by Iesus Christ and this may serue for a first reason of the abrogation of the Mosaicall Ceremonies Reas 2 Secondly the renting of the vaile of the temple at Christs suffering and the destruction of the Temple not long after which could neuer since bee built againe shew the same For all the time that the ceremoniall law was of force God would not suffer it to be thus but if for sinne he did he soone returned in mercy againe at the humiliation of his people and restored these seruices Reas 3 Heb. 7.8.9 Thirdly Christ was a new high Priest after the order of Melchisedeck who was greater then Aaron and therefore his order was to cease at the comming of this worthier euen as at the change of head officers amongst the Romans the Dictators ceased when the Emperours came on This argument the Apostle handleth learnedly and at large to the Hebrewes Fourthly Christs comming made vs to be of age when as before men were children and nothing differing from seruants as the Apostle reasoneth to the Galathians saying When wee were children we were in bondage vnder the rudiments of the world c. Now such things as serue for the instruction of children are of no further vse when they come to be men so is it with this law 2. Iudiciall Lawes cease Secondly as for the Iudaicall lawes some are willing to grant that those of them were to cease which concerned some speciall ciuill customes of that people the entailing of their Lands the freedome of seruants in the yeare of Iubilee and such like but as for all those Iudicials which vpheld and backed any Morall Law they would haue them to be still in force and to bind all Christians Of those that lay this yoke vpon vs I must craue pardon and rather thinke that all obligatory power of those Lawes was to cease at the dissolution of the Iewes Common-wealth in as much as those Lawes were by speciall measure of circumstances squared and fitted to the nature of that people as well in the Ciuill as Ecclesiasticall estate and gouernment Here I tread in reuerend Master Caluins stepps Cal Instit lib. 4. cap. 20. Sect. 16. who in his Institutions doth very soundly determine this point shewing that it is neither necessary nor expedient that the Lawes of other Nations should be the same that were
though wee doe still the things of the Law for that neither feare leadeth vs thereunto not rudenesse maketh it hard but Gods Spirit leadeth vs and fitteth our hearts so vnto them as that all things become delightfull and easie And this is the meaning of the Apostle when he saith Such as are led by the Spirit Gal. 5.18 are not vnder the Law and when in another place he saith 1. Tim. 1.9 The Law is not giuen to the righteous but to the lawlesse and disobedient Rom. 8.1 Fourthly in regard of condemnation the lawes curse Without Christ all are vnder heauy plagues and punishments denounced in the law against the transgressors but Christ comming hath set all such as belieue in his name free here-from according to that There is no condemnation to such as are in Christ Iesus and againe he hath deliuered vs from the curse being made a curse for vs. Without Christ Gal 3.13 2. Cor. 8. doe what we could we should still haue bin vntoward and wicked seruants and accursed but through Christ our will is accepted and we are deliuered And thus yee see how there is freedome from the Law and yet the Law continueth Wherefore neither the licentious Antinomi nor the phantasticall Anabaptists are to be heard which deny all vse of the Law vnder the Gospell and maintaine that the motions of the minde onelie which they call Reuelations are to bee followed Neither are wee to account otherwise of that new inuention then false and fantasticall and flowing meerely from idle fantastict braines which teacheth the freedome from the Law to be the Gentile freedome vnto whom it was neuer giuen but onely to the Israelites neither doth belong vnto them but onely so farre forth as it agreeth with the Law of nature and is explaned in the Gospell This is new because all antiquity was ignorant of it Tertullian knew it not for otherwise he would not haue taught as he did that God gaue Moses his Law to all men and not to the Iewes onely that reuerend Father Athanasius was ignorant of it Lib. aduersus Jud. prop. 2. for otherwise hee would not haue taught that the Law was not brought in for the Iewes sake onely neither were the Prophets sent onely to them but were appointed to this Athan. de Lege Euang. that they should be Masters and Pedagogues to the whole world and that they might be accounted a publique and holy schoole as well in those things that belong to the knowledge of God as to the discipline of the soule And the like may be said of all other Ancients witnesse their continuall labouring to commend Moses and to magnifie his writings that they might breede a reuerend opinion hereof in the vnbelieuers Wherefore this is a new deuice and as it is new so is it dangerous many waies and to be taken heed of Let vs then knowing the truth cleaue vnto it knowing that Christ hath giuen no liberty to sinne against the Law in the smallest things let vs still walke as strictly in regard of the Law as if we had no libertie at all there-from that thus we may be answerable to our times of freedome by Christ Iesus and being led by the Spirit haue comfort that we are not neither shall euer be vnder the curse and condemnation of the Law from which thou Lord finally deliuer vs. Amen Hauing been long enough already in the generalities touching the Law we are now to proceed vnto particulars Quest 51. How many Commandements bee there and how are they diuided Answ There be ten which are diuided into two Tables Explan This number of the Commandements as also the diuision was made by God himselfe who gaue them written as hath been already shewed in two Tables of stone to his seruant Moses The Commandements deuided into two Tables and herein therefore doe all Writers agree both ancient and moderne both Protestant and Popish the onely difference is about the right distinction of these Commandements For some haue placed fiue in either Table as the Iewes Philo and Iosephus learned Writers amongst them Some haue placed three in the first Table and seuen in the second as sometime Augustine did to expresse the mysterie of the Trinitie but the Papists doe it at this day to defend their Idolatry and yet to keepe the number of ten they deuide the last Commandement into two and so doe the Lutherans Some againe diuide them by foure in the first Table and sixe in the latter as almost all ancient Greeke fathers Athanatius Origen Gregorius Nazianzenus Chrysostomus c. and some Latines as elsewhere Augustine Hierom Ambrose Sulpitius c. But this controuersie might soone be ended if men would bring their religion to Gods Law and not Gods Law to their religion as they of the Roman Church doe For if the first table bee the first and greatest Commandement of the Law teaching vs to loue the Lord with all our heart and the second be like vnto it teaching our duty towards our neighbour how we should loue him as our selues as Christ himselfe hath taught then it is without doubt that all which teach the loue of God belong to the first and all which teach our duty towards our neighbour belong to the second Table Which being so and foure distinct things giuen in charge touching the loue of God and six touching our neighbour and no more how can the distinction fitly be otherwise made but into foure and six Againe let the last Commandement be well considered and it will easilie appeare to be but one euen all that which forbiddeth coueting both because it toucheth but one thing onely and is againe repeated in a different order in the booke of Deuteronomy Thou shalt not couet thy neighbours wife Deut. 5.21 thou shalt not couet thy neighbours house whereas in Exodus it is Thou shalt not couet thy neighbours house thou shalt not couet thy neighbours wife Which would not haue been if it had been two distinct Commandements but as all the rest so these in their repetition would haue kept their proper places Quest 52. In which Table doe you learne your dutie towards God Answ In the first containing the foure former Commandements Quest What is your dutie toward God Answ My dutie towards God is to belieue in him to feare him and to loue him with all my heart with all my strength and with all my might to worship him to giue him thanks to put my whole trust in him to call vpon him to honour his holy name and his word and to serue him truly all the dayes of my life Our duty towards God in the ●●●wer first Commandements Explan This is in generall the content of the Commandements of the first table and is thus without further distinction set downe hauing respect vnto young children with whom it is well if some good things in generall be put into them as they are able to beare and with such breuity
the sinnes though most loud crying of that people And for this is it that the maine sinnes against euery precept of the first Table were censured with death but it is not so with all those of the second Table Yet doe I not so rigorously presse this rule as to inferre that the least sinne against the first Table must needs bee more heynous then the greatest against the second which hath beene rashly concluded by some Can any Christian perswade mee that I commit a more damnable sinne in being ouertaken with a nap at a long Sermon or comming once late to Church then if I had murthered my owne Father Let me be throwne out of a window if I thinke that Eutychus Act. 20.9 sinned more grieuously then Cain Gen. 4 8. In gathering a proportion betweene one sin and another all respect is not to be had to the obiect against whom the offence is done but regard must bee had also of the kinde of the action committed of the malice or infirmity of the committer c. These bee sometime so superlatiue that they ouerbalance the generall respect to the obiect The comparison therefore betweene the two Tables is to receiue modification and moderation by restraints as caeteris paribus or where there is not ouermuch imparity otherwise in eodem gradu aut specie wherein affections intentions malices presumptions infirmities neglects c. are to bee counterbalanced among themselues and one against another The sixt Rule is this there is so neere a relation betwixt all the commandements of the morall law Rule 6. that whosoeuer obserueth all failing onely in one poynt is guilty of all because as S. Iames teacheth there is one and the same the Author of them all And hence it is that Of two euils Iam. 2. ●0 being mala culpae not penae not the lesser but neither is to bee chosen And hitherto of the first thing now followeth the second Rule 2. Of the singularity of these Commandements of the singularity of these commandements which is in this that euery of these foure hath both the commandement and the reason which is plaine in the three latter and is only called in question in the former because it is not placed as a reason but as a preface to all the commandements before any charge giuen Whence it is The first commandement hath a speciall reason that some haue made it a generall preparatiue perswading to the obedience of all these lawes But it will appeare I take it to bee a speciall reason of the first also and more properly belonging vnto it if we consider first that the other three being subordinate haue their speciall reasons and much more then should this being chiefest and ground of all Secondly the identity of the reason heere vsed and in the second I am the Lord thy God and I the Lord thy God am a iealous God both being alike fit to strike terrour into the offenders as the precepts are alike the one forbidding inward the other outward Idolatry so that if this of the first bee made only generall for the same cause may that of the second and neither shall haue their speciall reason Thirdly if it bee further considered how this reason doth specially fit the precept I am the Lord therefore thou shalt acknowledge me and none other I brought thee out of the Land of Egypt c. therefore thou shalt be vngratefull if thou deny me or ioyne any fellowes with me Quest 54. In which wordes is the first Commandement contained and in which is the reason Answ The Commandemennt is in these words Thou shalt haue none other Gods but me The reason in these I am the Lord thy God which hath brought thee out of the Land of Aegypt out of the house of bondage Quest 55. What are wee heere commanded Answ To haue the Lord for our God which is to loue him aboue all to feare him aboue all to put our whole trust and confidence in him and to make our prayers vnto him alone The manner obserued in handling the Commandements Explan The method which I intend generally to follow in opening the commandements is first to handle the commandement it selfe and then the reason and in euery commandement these two parts the duty inioyned and vice forbidden where the commandement is affirmatiue and contrariwise first the vice forbidden and then the duty when it is negatiue This first commandement is mixt or compounded of both thou shalt haue me for thy God and none other 1. Duty Inioyned Touching the duty it is to haue and to set vp in our hearts and practices the Lord Iehouah who only raigneth in Heauen and in earth for our God which is the maine and principall scope of the whole Law euen as the maine duty of a Subiect towards his Prince is to acknowledge him and to sweare allegeance vnto him which if it be not what will all other Lawes and Statutes auaile What likelihood is there of being contained in obedience in other things Surely none at all but that the person which is vnconformable in the first will liue like a disorderly Riotour and dangerous Traytor So if we refuse to set vp the true God in our hearts which is our vowing allegiance what other account can the Lord make of vs but as of a company of Out-lawes and vnworthy to liue in the Common-wealth of his Church and to bee fellow-Citizens with his Saints Now the Lord is not then acknowledged this duty is not then performed when we make profession in word and outwardly of seruing the true God but when wee loue him in the highest degree when we feare him trust in him and seeke vnto him in all our necessities Wherefore Almighty God in commenting vpon this precept in other places of his holy Word hath shewed expressly how earnestly hee requireth all these things 1 Duty To loue God First for loue he vrgeth it with such a Preface and straineth himselfe to so many varieties in pressing it as if hee would make knowne that all else were nothing without it Heare O Israel Deut. 6.3 saith he by his seruant Moses and take heed to doe it that it may goe well with thee and that thou maist increase mightily c. And againe Heare O Israel the Lord is God only Verse 4. Verse 5. thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thine heart with all thy soule and with all thy might 2. For feare he calleth for it by his Prophet 2. Duty To feare God Mal. 1.6 as they would haue him to account them for his seruants and children If I be a father where is mine honour if J bee a master where is my feare saith the Lord of Hosts And our Sauiour Christ so preferreth this feare as hee putteth downe all feare of great ones in this world in regard of it saying Feare not him which can kill the body but is not able to kill the soule but feare
in a chest So the Lord would haue vs at any time to come vnto his owne Maiesty and whereas this is slandered with the name of presumption let not any word or sillable tending heerevnto be shewed in all the Scriptures and then wee will yeeld it to bee so also but sure it is that all things there sound to the contrary that God is very gratious to all that seeke vnto him without the help of Aduocates Or if we need an Aduocate as sure we doe such an one as partaketh both natures we haue one appointed vs Iesus Christ the righteous 1 Ioh 2 2. who is the propitiation for our sinnes and therfore I am sure that such as flye to others in auoyding supposed presumption doe incurre very damnable superstition Rom. 10. Now we cannot thus set vp the Lord yet in our hearts vnlesse we know him according to that How shall th●y call vpon him of whom they heard not So how shall wee pray vnto him whom wee know not How shall wee loue him and trust in him Ignoti nulla cupido There is no desire of a thing vnknowne we will neuer take any paines in seruing the Lord vnlesse we know him For this cause is ignorance so much exclaimed against and the knowledge of God so highly commended as that it is said to be life eternall Wherefore wee must also endeauour our selues in this as the foundation of all Ioh 17. H●b 11. seeing he ●hat commeth vnto God must first know what God is But concerning this wee shall not need to adde any more in this place because it hath been already handled in the sixth Question vnder the title What God is Quest. 56. What are wee forbidden in this Commandement Answ First Atheisme which is the acknowl●dgement of no God Secondly ignorance which is the neglect of he knowledge of God or of his Word Thirdly prophanenesse which is a regardlesnes of God and of h s worship that is prayer hearing of the Word and receiuing of the Sacram nts Fourthly inward Idolatry which is the giuing of Gods worship vnto creatures by praying vnto them trusting in them or setting our hearts vpon them Explan After the duty Vices forbidden in this Commandement 1. Breach by Atheisme heere follow the vices and sins against this Commandement not all but the principall which haue also other branches springing from them The first and maine breach of this Commandement that striketh at the very head is Atheisme a monster in nature whereby the creature riseth against the Creatour not as the men of Babell to stop the passage of his iudgements but vnlike to all men to disanull him to make him without being who giueth being to all to pull him out of his Throne and to leaue him no authority who is aboue Kings and Princes and to put downe his power who alone by his power vpholdeth all things and in whom only we liue and moue Yet such a sin as this there is amongst monstrous and vnnaturall men and that not only amongst some barbarous people in profession which is the heighth of Atheisme but euen secretly in the heart with which kinde many are infected euen vnder the Gospell And this is when men doe but in their hearts imagine that it is all vanity which is spoken of God or that there is no such God as the word doth describe vnto vs. The diuers kindes of Atheisme Thus there be sundry sorts of heart-Atheisme as first that which Dauid complaineth of in the Psalme The foole hath said in his heart that there is no God Which is when men through a selfe-conceitednesse affect to be wiser then all the world Psal 14.1 doe hold this that there is a God not really but in opinion or shew being an Idol Scar-crow fit only to keepe simple persons in awe by these their reaching imaginations prouing themselues most simple and foolish of all others For what greater folly can there bee then to haue the vnderstanding blinded more then bruite beasts Psal 104. whose eyes doe looke vnto God and so receiue their food in due season but these being daily fed and cloathed by the same God are not able to see so farre as to him that reacheth out the hand of prouidence continually to sustaine them O Aegyptiacall darknesse with which they are beset which neuer befell any that were left vnto nature onely except Epicures Belly-gods that lay ouer-whelmed in the bottome of pleasures gulfe Act. 17. all others scorned to be Atheists and rather than vnto none did sacrifice to the vnknowne God as wee may see by the Athenians Psal 10.3 A second heart-Atheisme is to conceiue otherwise of God then he hath reuealed himselfe in his Word for whatsoeuer is there spoken of God such an one he is yea euery attribute of God is God so that the heart conceiuing a God without any of these is guilty of Atheisme Now the attributes of God are mercy power iustice presence wisedme and holines all infinite and in the highest degree so that he which goeth on in sin blesseth himselfe with the couetous he which flattereth himselfe with a conceit of Gods absence far aboue in the Heauens and couered with the clouds with the wicked against whom Ioh sharpeneth his tongue and he which kisseth his hand in secret Iob. 22.22.3 and sacrificeth to his nets in his prosperity praising his owne diligence industry with the wicked ones of Zephanies time Zeph. 1.12 ascribing neither good nor euill to the Lord hee I say hath an heart possessed of Atheisme And hence ariseth also a third Atheisme when any shall conceiue otherwise of God in regard of the persons in the God-head viz. denying either the Sonne or Holy Ghost as Turkes and Iewes 1 I●h 2.23 for he that hath not the Son neither hath he the Father and then must needs be an Atheist as by the same reason he is that hath not the Holy Ghost For the ground of this truth there is a God See aboue vnder the sixth Question 2. Breach is by Ignorance The second breach of this Commandement is by ignorance which is the very next dore to Atheisme because that where ignorance preuaileth there can be but a poore deale of loue little confidence and simple seruice done vnto the Lord. This ignorance is somtime simple somtime affected Simple ignorance when the meanes of knowledge bee wanting either within a man there being dulnesse want of capacity or without there being no vision prophesying failing preaching coldly or seldome exercised and this excuseth not simple people thus liuing in ignorance Luc. 12. if they doe things worthy of stripes for they shall notwithstanding be beaten euen where vision faileth the people perish Ezech. 3. But if there bee fault in the watchmen their blood shall also bee required at their hands Neither ought this to seeme strange considering that naturall visible meanes the Heauens Sun Stars Rom.
the heart the very Esse of prayer and a worship due onely to their Lord and ours what warrant I say of doing this vnto them seeing the King would thinke his subiects made his fellowes and greatly disdaine if in his presence we should first kneele and put vp our petitions vnto them and then vnto himselfe For the Papists doe much worse praying oftentimes to the Virgin Mary letting the Lord to stand by as it were a cipher Quest 57. Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ Both from the equity of it because he is the Lord our God and none other and also from the benefits bestowed vpon vs in bringing vs out of the bondage and thraldome of the diuell Reason of this Commandement Explan The sinnes against this law being so great and the duties so necessary aboue al others great need there was that it should be fortified by strong reasons and therefore the Lord hath not omitted to vse these although out of his authority hee might haue commanded and with threatnings haue compelled vs vnto the obedience of his will Which teacheth vs first how vnexcusable men are liuing in sinne there being no meanes to draw them to a vertuous and holy course of life omitted for first it is reuealed what the Lord would haue vs to doe then haue wee his absolute command with which no man can dispence and lastly most forcible reasons to moue vs as wee are not brute beasts but reasonable soules Againe this same teacheth the seruants of God the ministers of his word not to handle it negligently but to study for the aptest and best reasons wherewith it may be more inforced and fastned vpon the hearers because God himselfe hath vouchsafed thus to doe and the other remisse handling of Gods word is as the laying of twiggs without bird-lime the casting of a net into the water without weights to presse it downe O let vs study then to deale most workman like as diuine artists neither playing with texts and multyplying tantologies to the wearying of the hearers for want of paines but let vs study with euident demonstrations and arguments of the Spirit to conuince mens consciences of sin that they may bee ashamed and cease here from and of the truth that they may come to be firmely grounded herein and followers of it Reas 1 Rom. 1.20 The reasons of this Commandement are two First from common equity I am the Lord thy God Euery one is easily yeelded vnto when he challengeth but his due but in requiring you to haue me for your God and none other I chalenge but my due for I am the Lord thy God that is I onely am such therefore yee may easily yeeld this vnto mee and yee shall deale most vniustly and contrary to all equity if yee yeeld not to haue none other Gods but me There is nothing here to be further proued but that the Israelites and all we haue daily experience of viz. that the Lord is God only they had experience of it when all the gods of the Heathen were not able to stand against him alone and the visible most goodly creatures of the heauens and earth do teach vs no lesse euerie day but that the infinite power and wisdome which made them all is the onely God of the whole world and this is Iehouah the Lord whose very name essence or being doth imply no lesse but that he alone hath being of himselfe and giueth being to all other things Reas 2 The second reason is taken from the benefits bestowed vpon his people Which haue brought thee out of the land of Egypt Heb. 2. out of the house of bondage Which Egypt was a type of Satans kingdome vnto whom we were all in bondage till the Lord by his Christ came and deliuered vs. Now it is an vnthankfull part as if the Lord should haue said not to make him thy Lord and Soueraigne only vnto whom alone thou art beholding for thy freedome who hath deliuered thee when as before thou wert a slaue and vnder hard bondage but if thou deny to make me thy Lord and God thou shalt shew thy selfe thus vnthankfull because that I alone haue deliuered thee when as before thou wert in slauery therefore thou shalt haue none other Gods but me Here all things are most plaine both to the Israelites and vnto vs they were in Egypt vnder Pharaoh and questionlesse they did there serue other Gods yet it profited not but still they were in sore bondage Exod. 3.4 toyling continually in making bricke for Pharaohs buildings they had taske-masters ouer them most rigorously exacting that they should doe their stintes and not sparing to beate them when they failed and which was most grieuous of all Col. 2.14 their male children were appointed vnto the slaughter so soone as they were borne which did strike them as much as continuall tormenting with swords in their sides But when through the greatnesse of their griefe the voyce of their crie came vp to heauen the Lord sent Moses and Aaron with signes and wonders to deliuer them and by his iudgements so subdued Pharaohs hard heart that he was glad to let them goe and when hee was againe hardened and followed with his forces to bring them backe the Lord diuided the red Sea and let them through but drowned their enemies in the bottome of the deepe Againe for vs of the Gentiles when wee were in bondage vnto Satan who did imploy vs in filthy workes which it is a shame to speake and had power ouer our selues and children so that we were all but dead men dead in sinnes and condemned to death euerlasting when we were I say in this fearefull estate the Lord sent his own Sonne in the flesh who in the crosse ouercame and triumphed ouer the diuell and made vs free yea sonnes and heires vnto God the Father of a kingdome in heauenly places If therefore thou doest either reuerence the commander the most high and mighty if equitie be of any force with thee to giue euery one his due and if thou abhorre the infamous note of ingratitude then tremble to shew any disloyalty any way to the Lord be ashamed to deny the best of all his due and study by all meanes to shew thy selfe thankefull for so great benefits Deny not him that gaue thee beeing with the Atheist neglect nor diuine knowledge with the ignorant bee not loosely minded towards Gods worship with the prophane rob not God of his honour with the Couetous Epicures Selfe-louers and Papists but giue vnto the Lord the loue of all thy heart feare him aboue all put thy whole trust in his holy name and make thy prayers vnto him onely Quest 58. In which words is the second Commandement and which is the reason Answ The second Commandement is Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen image nor the likenesse of any thing that is in heauen aboue or in the earth beneath or in the water vnder
the earth thou shalt not bow downe to them nor worship them The reason is For I the Lord thy God am a iealous God and visit the sinnes of the fathers vpon the children vnto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me and shew mercy vnto thousands in them that loue mee and keepe my Commandements Quest 59. What are we forbidden in this Commandement Answ All outward Idolatry which is first by making the image of God or of any creature to be worshipped secondly by falling downe before any image thirdly by seruing God according to our own phantasies ●ees f●rbidden in this Commandement Expl●n This Commandement being negatiue wee doe first begin with the vice forbidden which is outward Idolatry euery corruption in the outward duties of Gods seruice image-making and image-worshipping are onely named to make it the more odious And we call it Idolatrie because this word signifieth a seruing or worshipping of Idols or images which in Greek are al one the word Englished Idols signifying a shew representation or likenesse the word Englished Image signifying a liuely picture or portrayture now this Idolatry is againe subdiuided 1 The making of Images to be worshipped The first is the making of Images to bee worshipped of things in Heauen either of God who fitteth in Heauen as in his Throne or of his holy Angels and Saints which giue attendance about his Throne Of all these the image of the Lord is simply forbidden as it is further illustrated by other places of Scripture the making hereof may not in any wise be attempted Reas 1 Esay 40.25 Verse 22. First because it is impossible as the Lord himselfe signifieth by his Prophet saying To whom now will yee liken me that I should be like him saith the holy One He sitteth vpon the circle of the earth and the Inhabitants thereof are as Grasse-hoppers he spreadeth out the Heauens as a curtaine and stretcheth them out as a tent to dwell in Looke into the chapter and yee shall see how greatly the Lord disdaineth both the work and the workman and good reason seeing euery image of the God-head Ior. 10.8 Heb. 2● 18. is a doctrine of vanity and though most curiously polished yet a very stocke yea it is a teacher of lies An earthly King or great person would stomacke it much if a paultry painter should presume to set forth his person in base colours without any apparance of royalty or nobility with a swines head and a Pigmees body and much more then will the Lord if by any Image man shall dare to set him forth for he must needes be as much belied and as greatly abused in being pourtrayted by any human shape he being immense and infinitely glorious this base and not the ten thousandth point of his person Wherefore well might the Apostle say Acts 17.29 that Wee ought not to thinke the God-head to be like vnto gold or siluer or stone grauen by the Art and inuention of man Reas 2 Deut. 4.15 Secondly because wee haue an expresse command to the contrarie Take good heed vnto your selues saith the Lord by Moses for ye saw no image in the day when the Lord spake vnto you in Horeb out of the middest of the fire that yee corrupt not your selues and make you a grauen image c. neither can there any toleration be found hereof representing God by the image of a man for that the likenesse of other baser creatures is only expressed seeing Saint Paul in reckoning vp the images of the Heathen Rom. 1.23 saith in way of reproofe that they turned the image of the incorruptible God into the image of corruptible man Moreouer the Lord hath not onely forbidden to make images but hath also straightly charged that they be pulled downe Exod. 23 24. and broken in pieces In the booke of Exodus he saith Thou shalt vtterly ouerthrow and breake in pieces their images Chap. 34 13. And againe Yee shall ouerthrow their altars breake their images in pieces and cut downe their groues And when any King otherwise well affected hath been negligent herein he is branded with it as with a note of disgrace The high places remained yet in his dayes Reas 3 Exod. 31. Thirdly because the Lord is wonderfully prouoked by Images When the golden Calues were set vp in Moses absence how grieuously did he take it how much moued was he with it how hardly could he hold his hands from destroying all the people certainly he was neuer more moued to indignation then by this base Idolatry If any shall say that his anger was not because they would make some remembrance of the true God but for that they ascribed their deliuerance to the Egyptian Gods which were wont to be set forth vnder these likenesses I answer that without doubt they intended hereby to set forth the true God and because their ignorance could not better deuise how to doe it they did it by the similitude of calues the chiefe gods of the Egyptians amongst whom they had liued For first they could not be so simple as to think any worth to be in the Egyptian gods seeing their people had bin wonderfully plagued and at the last drowned in the sea and they their enemies deliuered and saued Again they proclaime the holy day vnto Iehouah Vers 5. and lastly they only desire some visible thing to go before them because Mo●es was a long time absent from them who was wont by his presence to comfort them and to be as it were the Lords Oracle vnto them for which purpose it should seeme rather that they would haue the golden calues fondly supposing that they could not haue Gods presence vnlesse they had some outward thing vnto which they might goe with their blind deuotion Reas 4 Iudges 8.27 Fourthly because Images haue been occasions oftentimes of grosse Idolatry Gideon who had been a Champion of the Lord yet making a golden Ephod procureth the destruction of his owne house and corrupted all Israel for it is said that They went a whoring after it The brazen Serpent which was set vp by the Lords owne command 2 King 18.4 yet turned to be an occasion of Idolatry so great is the danger of Images Reas 5 Lastlie because it is a thing scandalous to such as be without the Iewes and Turkes are hereby hardned against the Christian religion when they compare Moses his Law with the practice of Romish Catholikes who make so much account of Images when the Lord hath put them downe for so great abominations Psal ●15 8 Thus yee see that simplie to haue or to make the Image of God is vtterlie vnlawfull or to make any Image to bee worshipped But wee must here take heede that wee make not this Commandement stricter then the Lord hath made it to cast a snare vpon the consciences of men it is true that as the Image so the Image-maker and Image-worshipper are alike abominable
euen as the holy Scriptures yea which is horrible before them and against them It is a farre greater wickednes accounted amongst them to omit auricular confession once in the yeare which was inuented by man then to leade a vile life all the yeare long to taste a little flesh vpon the Friday then to wallow in the filthy sin of vncleannes that a Priest be coupled vnto one lawful wife then that he defile himselfe with many whores Pap. pharis cap. ●7 to neglect a vow of going on Pilgrimage then to breake the necessarie vow of obedience in diuers Morall and Christian duties to God and man c. and therefore whereas any light punishment sufficeth when Gods lawes are broken such as breake any of their traditions are punished with imprisonment banishment death Neither doth it make any whit the more for their iustification whereas they pretended them to be the Traditions of holy men and ancient for this was the colour of the Pharisies theirs were the Traditions of the Fathers yet they were threatned for teaching and following them as Papists doe at this day Yet on the other side this hindreth not but that a true Christian Church may without any imputation of Idolatry inuent according to Ecclesiasticall prudence and impose decent circumstances of time place habit and gestures for the outward clothing of Gods worship so they be neither burthensome in multitude nor superstitious nor vnsauorie but tending to edification good order and comlines whereby the sincere inward worship may be not choaked but cherished Such are those which our blessed Mother hath thought fit to reteine as being vsed of old in the purer age before the corruptions of Popery crept in but as for the later Ceremonies which are the very spawne of Romish superstition our Church hath most piously and wisely cast them out of her doores I pray God and hope they shall neuer rush in againe Iohn 4.20 Secondly an Idoll is worshipped and not the true God when as men rest in the outward work of his seruice without the truth of heart and spirit For God is a Spirit and all true worshippers worship him in Spirit and in truth As the Apostle saith of comming together to the holy Communion 1. Cor. 11.20 When ye come together into one place This is not to eate the Lords body So is it of all other duties the outward hearing and preaching of the Word the outward praying singing and giuing of thankes are not alwayes acceptable seruice vnto God but when the life of the Spirit and heart is annexed The drawing neare with the lips when the heart is away is abomination to the Lord. And herein againe are they of the Church of Rome to be taxed for that they place the worship of God in outward things in kneeling knocking crouching kissing crossing repeatings praying vpon Beades sprinkling with holy water going on pilgrimage c. and some dull and ignorant people of our Church which serue God with the bare reciting of the Pater noster Creed and ten Commandements with resorting to the place of his worship and inwardly profiting no more then stocks and stones All these and the like doe please the Lord no better with their seruice then Kain did with his sacrifice or the Iewes imperfect offering Lastly an Idoll is worshipped and not the true God when men presume to compasse about the Lords Altar with vnwashen hands when they come impenitently to doe any holy duty For the Lord professeth that he is not delighted in any such seruice yea that he requireth it not yea which is more that it is abomination vnto him Wherefore he dealeth with the Iewes in this case by his Prophet Esay Esay 1.12 as a man would deale with his professed enemy who notwithstanding maketh a shew of loue by offering his best seruice he sendeth him as it were to meete them vpon the way and to stay them from their incense and Sacrifices new Moones and Sabbaths bidding them to bring no more oblations in vaine and professing that hee is weary of their solemne Assemblies c. and the cause hereof was for that their hands were full of bloud that is they liued impenitently in oppression and wrong and other heynous sinnes Now if God be not serued but grieued and made weary by being thus serued what else can it bee but an Idoll vnto which homage is done when holy duties are vndertaken by wicked persons liuing and proceeding in their sinnes Whence wee may see the fearefull estate of sinners which make a trade of wickednesse they runne still more into sinne euen into the worshipping of an idoll when they would be holyest when they would giue God honour they doe most dishonour him when they would bring a present to pacifie his wrath they make him more angry and to bid them bring no more oblations in vaine Wherefore whosoeuer thou art that wouldest please God by doing the parts of his worship present him first with a broken heart and contrite Spirit for thy sinnes as Dauid did Psal 51. Luke 16. wash the feete of the Lord with thy teares as Mary Magdalen did be deiected and haue a sense of thy sinnes foulenes as the poore publican had Rom. 7. let there bee an hatred of that which thou hast done as in Paul let there be a forsaking of sinne as in him that shall haue mercy Prou. 28.13 and then shalt thou bee like to bring an acceptable present and not to depart without thy full load of mercy and iustification Quest. 60. What are wee heere commanded Answ To performe all outward duties of Gods seruice according to his will reuealed in his word The duties of this Commandement Explan This duty of doing all the parts of Gods worship according to his will c. doth necessarily follow vpon the contrary forbidden viz. the following of our owne heads in the seruice of God for if we may not make our phantasies the rule of our doings then certainely Gods word alone must be our rule in all things Againe our God is so wise and prouident for our good as that it cannot but be a great disparagement vnto his care ouer vs to thinke that he hath left vs at sixe abd seauen in matters of so great moment as the parts of his worship be In the old Testament the temple was distinctly plotted out and all sacrifices particularly prescribed Matth 6. And in the new Testament the Lord directeth his Disciples not only in the matter but in the maner of fasting prayer 1. Cor 11. Chap. 14. and giuing of almes Saint Pau● setteth downe the maner of rightly comming to the holy Communion and how the word is to be preached and heard But yet there is difference for matter of circumstance betwixt the old Testament and the new Gal. 4. In the old as in the infancy of the Church euerie particular is set downe about euery duty for that was the time in which they
were vnder age but in the new as in the Churches riper age we haue onely generall rules according to which we are to be ordred in all particulars Rule 1 Rules of circumstance vnder the Gospel Matth. 3.15 1. Cor. 14. First all things are to be done in order and not confusedly the author of this is Christ Iesus when as he offereth himselfe to be baptised of Iohn vrging him to doe it for orders sake for thus saith he ought we to fulfill all righteousnesse and Saint Paul teacheth the same concerning prophesying that one onely should speake at a time and the rest be silent till that he had vttered all which he had to say Hence it appeareth that all disorder about Gods seruice is a fault not to bee tollerated either in vndue comming to Church or going out or walking sleeping talking or by Haukes doggs or vnruly children which breed a confusion in the congregation or when any shall presume to teach or administer the Sacraments publikely without a calling Rule 2 Secondly all things must bee done in greatest humilitie and highest reuerence towards him whose seruice it is when any preach or pray or ioyne with others in these duties men must be vncouered women must bee couered not onely in praying but also as I thinke yet herein I referre to the laudablest custome of our Church when the Word of God is read 1. Cor. 11. for this is the preaching of the Prophets and Apostles who were infallibly guided by the Spirit of truth The Thessalonians are commended for this that they receiue the word as the word of God 1. Thes 2.13 Acts 20. Paul with his company is noted to haue kneeled in prayer euen vpon the bare ground and ancient Christians to haue stood bare-headed all the time of their being in the Church Which reproueth greatly our irreuerence either of Ministers in reading or preaching as if they were vttering table-talke or of people in sitting at the time of prayer lying along sleeping or proudly behauing themselues any way the Turks shall condemne them through the reuerence which they vse to the Alchron of Mahomet And this seemeth to me to iustifie our reuerent humble receiuing of the holy Cōmunion with the most submisse gesture of kneeling which many impugne but without sufficient ground It mattereth not that Christ sat he sat also preaching but we stand and I am perswaded if wee should kneele and the people kneele in hearing to expresse our vnworthinesse about these holy things though we differed from the Apostles and Christians of the Primatiue Church wee should not offend at all Rule 3 Matth 6.1 Thirdly all things are to be done without shew of vaine-glory for this was the great fault of the Pharisies and Christians are warned to take heed of it in their praying fasting and giuing of almes wee are not to desire to be seene of men that we may haue their praise but in our priuate deuotion to be most priuate and in publike not to affect notoriety by exceeding the rest of the congregation in sighing groning knocking the breast c. Rule 4 1. Cor. 13. Fourthly all things are to bee accompanied with loue to our neighbour and zeale for Gods glory for without loue whatsoeuer we doe is as a sounding brasse or tinckling Cimball if zeale be wanting and we be luke-warme we shall be offensiue to the Lords stomacke Reuel 3. and hee will spue vs out of his mouth Wherefore if the minister shall preach coldly or the people heare coldly if they shall together be luke-warme in prayer and praise giuing to the Lord there will be a sacrifice indeed but for want of the fire of zeale vndrest and such as the Lord cannot digest Therefore let Paul his zeale and Peters and Steuers bee imitated by ministers Acts 17. Acts 2. Acts 7. Nehem. 8.6 by burning in the spirit against grosse abuses by earnest exhorting to repentance with most effectuall words and by reprouing with all boldnes the gain-sayers of the truth and let the zeale of the godly in Nehemiahs time bee imitated by our people by giuing the greatest and most heedfull attention by lifting vp the hand in prayer and adding to the Ministers petition Amen Amen Rule 5 1. Thes 5.22 2. Cor. 6 17. Fifthly all things are to be done without shew of idolatry according to that Abstaine from all appearance of euill and Touch none vncl●a●e thing and yee shall be my sonnes and daughters saith the Lord. Therefore of old the Temple was garnished without images and newly the Lords supper made of naked elements Which if it be so how can the Church of Rome be excused being full of representations of heathenisme and in the very Sacrament hauing the image of a Lambe vpon their wafer Cake If any scrupte shall arise hereupon touching the Crosse Copes and Surplisses vsed in the Church of England It may well bee said that they were vsed in the Churches purity and had not their beginning from religion corrupted and so are not resemblances of things meerely naught but first good afterwards peruerted So that if it be replyed that when these things are vsed there is an outward face of Popery I may aswell say in like manner of Gods ancient Catholike Church Euen as when the people of Israel had sacrificed to Molech and other Baals such as afterwards did offer sacrifices vnto God made some resemblance of their abomination for that both offer sacrifice and consent in some ceremonies yet it followeth not that their sacrificing is vnlawfull because that is cut off which maketh it naught so when these things are vsed in our Church it followeth not that they must be naught for some ill resemblance because that is cut off which made them naught they had them yoaked with idolatry and superstition we with the truth Quest 61. Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ Partly from the punishments to be inflicted vpon such as breake it vnto the third and fourth genera ion and partly from the benefits to be bestowed vpon such as keepe it vnto the thousandth generation Reas 1 Reasons of this Commandement of two sorts 1. of terror 2. of comfort Explan The reasons vsed to perswade to the obedience of this commandement be of two sorts the first of terrour the second of comfort Their estate is most terrible whosoeuer they be that dare to offend here the Lords iealousie is kindled against them and hee will punish both them their children and their childrens children after them Their danger is set forth by three degrees First their sin is such against the Lord as his sinne is against a iealous husband that violateth his wiues chastity no price will appease an husband thus prouoked but he will kill the adulterer and as greatly incensed is the Lord against those that commit idolatry it is spirituall adultery the Lord had married them vnto himselfe Hosh 2. that like a good and obedient spouse
they might be to him only but they haue communicated their loue vnto others either stockes or stones or the inuention of their owne braines Reas 2 Secondly euen as the adulterers fault extendeth not onely to the blemishing of himselfe but of his children also who are infamous vnto many generations after so he which committeth this spirituall adultery doth stirre vp the wrath of God not onely against himselfe but against his posterity which as a bastard brood shall bee in disgrace with the Lord vnto the third and fourth generation Ezech. 18. Obiect Thus the Lord should not be so iust as hee professeth in Ezech The soule that sinneth shall die one shall not die for the iniquitie of another Sol It is commonly seene Like fathers like children and in this case is the Lords threatning of visiting sins of fathers vpon their children viz. they making their fathers sins their owne by imitation as commonly they doe Therefore it is not said that he will visit the sins of the fathers vpon all their children and euery one of them neither vpon the childe of euery such father for it is possible as Ezechiel sheweth that a wicked mans child may abstaine from treading in his fathers stepps and then the Lords wrath is pacified towards him whatsoeuer his fathers wickednesse is Reas 3 Deut. 15. Thirdly as an honest man accounteth the Adulteresse his wife and her companions his greatest enemies and haters so doth the Lord account of Idolatours they bee haters of God and therfore he hath euer willed his friends to abstaine from familiaritie with them and to cut them off and to roote them out of the land of the liuing without putting difference betwixt strangers and kinsfolkes So that Idolatry is a most vnnaturall sinne for all the Lords loue in creating preseruing and multiplying his blessings he is requited with hatred and enmitie which is a certaine argument of the Lords hatred against them as our loue of the Lord is an argument of his loue vnto vs and if the Lord hateth them all the creatures are against them they lie open to all dangers Reasons of the second sort of comfort Deut. 28. The second sort of reasons here vsed is taken from the benefits which the Lord promiseth to bestow vpon such as keepe his commandements First they shal haue mercy shewed them Gods blessings of all sorts shall be vpon them and theirs in the house and in the field in their out-going and in their comming in in their corne and their cattell and in all things that they put their hands vnto and when mercy will stand them in most stead at the last most terrible day the Lord will shew mercy vnto them and speake comfortably Come ye blessed of my Father receiue the kingdome prepared for you Matth. 24. from the beginning of the world Secondly they shall haue mercy shewed them in their posterity vnto the thousandth generation that is far longer then the wicked shal be punished in their posterity so much doth Gods mercy exceed his anger and seuerity And this is commonly seene euen in the things of this life wicked men often comming to ruine and their houses being quite cast downe and if not in their owne daies yet in the dayes of their children their goods which they haue heaped vp together in great abundance are soone wasted and scattered abroad whereas the sincere worshippers of God are wonderfully prospered and their children for the most part after them are largely prouided for according to that of the Psalmist I haue been young and now am old yet neuer did I see the righteous forsaken or their seed begging their bread If it falleth out otherwise as sometime it doth it is either because they degenerate 2. Chron. 32. Ezech. 18. and are not like their righteous parents as Manassah was vnlike to his godly father Hezekiah and in this case it is threatned that the child shall die notwithstanding his fathers holines or else because of too much confidence in the world and worldly things Why righteous mens children are punished as Dauid confesseth that he thought he should neuer be moued but he was cast out of his kingdome by his sonne Absalom and if the children of righteous parents should euer inioy prosperity here it would make them thinke it not to come of mercy but as hereditary to the righteous for their works and so Gods mercy should not be so much depended vpon and magnified or lastly for the probation and triall of them that their graces might shine the more and bee perfected as it was with Iob whose patience had not been so admirable had not his affliction been so great So that the Lord in promising mercy to thousands is so to be vnderstood as if they walke in their fathers stepps if he seeth it not necessary to crosse for the remouing of worldly assurance or for the reuiuing or perfecting of grace in them Secondly they which keepe his Commandements are accounted the Lords friends and louers which is the greatest grace in the world for the Lord Christ to expresse his loue to his Disciples saith I haue called you my friends and hereby saith he yee shall know that yee loue me if yee keepe my commandements Comfort enough therefore there is in the sincere worshipping of the Lord and terrour enough in the contrary wherefore let the punishments terrifie thee and make thee afraid of all kind of Idolatrie let the mercies allure thee and make thee frame thy selfe alwaies so to serue the Lord as he requireth Quest 62 Which is the third Commandement Answ Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine for the Lord will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his name in vaine Quest. 63. What is here forbidden Answ All abusing of the names of God which is first by blaspheming or giuing occasion to others to blaspheme the same Secondly by swearing falsely deceitfully rashly commonly or by creatures Thirdly by cursing and banning Fourthly by vowing things impossible or vnlawfull or neglecting our vowes made vnto God Fifthly by lightly vsing the holy name of God or his word Sixthly by vaine protestations and asseuerations Vices forbidden Explan This Commandement being negatiue giueth occasion againe to begin with the vice forbidden which is all abusing of Gods holy name for the honour of God is the maine thing aimed at in the first Table which is when he is set vp in the heart that is the intent of the first commandement by the parts of his outward worship rightly performed which is the intent of the second by the magnifying of his name in all things which is the intent of the third and by obseruing rightly the appointed times of his worship which is the intent of the fourth Breach 1 Is blasphemy Now that the Lord may be honoured in all things the abuses are to be noted and taken heed of The first is blaspheming c. Concerning which note first that
vpon euery newes or light accident For the name of the great God of all is reuerend and terrible as the Lord said to Manoah asking his name Iudg. 13. Esay 66.2 Why enquirest thou after my name which is wonderfull And his word is such as that it is to be trembled at Wherefore let all such as feare this great God learne better to temper their tongues that they not onely sweare not in their common talke but that they doe not triflingly vse his holy name or any parcell of the holy Scriptures 6. The sixt and last abuse is by vaine protestations and asseuerations that is by the needlesse vse of them when some earnest occasion doth not vrge heereunto Against these as against swearing that speach of Christ is direct Matth. 5.37 Let your communication be yea yea nay nay for whatsoeuer is more then these commeth of the euill one of the diuell Quest. 64. What are we here commanded Answ To glorifie the name of God in all that wee doe thinke speake or desire and to labour that others may be won by our meanes to doe the same Duties of this Commandement Explan This is the duty of this Commandement and is thus abreuiated by the Apostle Whether yee eate or drink● or whatsoeuer yee doe doe all to the glory of God For if it be a thing so much displeasing vnto the Lord to abuse and dishonour his holy name then to honour it by all meanes must needs be highly pleasing vnto his Maiestie Deedes First by our doings Gods name is honoured if they be either deeds of piety praying reading hearing preaching of his holy word Psal 50.14.15 c. For thus saith he by the Psalmist Call vpon me in the time of trouble and I will heare and deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie mee Which is as if he should say By calling vpon my name vowing vnto me and performing thy vowes by giuing thankes and praysing my name thou shalt glorifie me Phil. 1.20 And for preaching the Apostle professeth that he reioyced that he was an occasion to many to preach the Gospell for his hope was that Christ should be magnified thereby 2. Cor 8 19. Againe God is glorified by deedes of charitie For Paul exhorting the Corinthians to liberalitie towards the poore Saints at Ierusalem signifieth that a faithfull brother was chosen to accompany him in his iourney to carry and distribute their beneuolence and hee calleth it the grace that was ministred by them to the glory of God and the declaration of their prompt mind Because that when the poore are relieued homage is done vnto God who is in their persons ready to receiue our liberality and his name is also praised by the poore thus relieued and so is he further glorified Now because it is not the doing but the right doing of these things which is accepted Esay 1. Matth. 6. for we reade of some that haue sacrificed kept Sabbaths and solemne assemblies and of some that haue fasted prayed and giuen almes much and yet haue beene reiected I wil heere set downe the right way of performing these these duties that Gods name may haue glory First Rule 1 therefore they must be frequent and often How good workes must be done Iohn 15.8 Herein is my Father glorified saith our Sauiour Christ that yee bring forth much fruite Good Christians are good trees good ground profitable sheepe that are euer yeelding some profit It is not then sufficient to giue almes sometime to preach and heare and pray sometime but very often Wherefore wee are expressely commanded to giue liberally so many as haue 2. Cor. 9.6 euen as he soweth his ground liberally that expecteth a good crop at haruest to cast our bread vpon the waters Eccles 11.1 to giue a portion to sixe and to seauen that is though they to whom we giue can no more yeeld vs our owne againe then the waters if seed be sowne in them or giue liberally to the poore for this is to sow vpon watery ground which in those parts is most fruitefull We are commanded to be instant in preaching 1 Pet. 2.2 1 Thes 5.17 and as new borne babes to desire the sincere milke of the word To pray continually and in all things to giue thankes 2. Secondly these duties must be done in sinceritie and Rule 2 truth that is from the very heart with an aiming at this only end that God may haue glory For God is a Spirit Iohn 4 24. and the worshippers of God doe worship him in Spirit and in truth If any other thing bee aymed at as the praise of men estimation amongst the people to merit heereby at Gods hands or to gaine any thing in the world it is but Pharisaicall deuotion Math. 6. and hath all the reward heere Rule 3 Iam. 2.6 Thirdly these duties must bee done in faith that is both by persons beleeuing and in assurance of being accepted in all our deuotion For in prayer he that commeth vnto God must beleeue that God is and that he is a rewarder of such as seeke vnto him hee must not wauer least hee bee like vnto the waues of the sea and in euery other duty Hearing must be mingled with faith The Iewes are noted Heb. 4 2. not to haue profited by hearing the word because it was not mixed with faith Heb. 11 6. And it is written Without faith it is impossible to please God Wherefore all the vertues and good works of Heathen men haue beene censured for splendida peccata glorious sinnes And the many prayers whippings and pilgrimages performed by the Papists cannot but be in the like sort being partly done in a false faith viz. to merit heereby and partly their owne inuentions and not Gods word being the grownd of these superstitions Rule 4 Esa 1. Esa 66.3 Fourthly that these duties may be to the glory of God a man must be seperate from sin that is not liue impenitently in or make a trade of any sinne For the people of Israel in stead of glorifying God were censured for such as did offer abomination when they brought incense as did weary the Lord when they kept their solemne assemblies He that sacrificed a bullocke was as if hee had slaine a man hee that offered a sheepe as if hee had cut off a dogges head And all this was because their hands were full of blood that is Esa 1.16 they liued in oppression and other grieuous sinnes And the very prayer of the wicked is abhominaaion to the Lord. 2. Speaches glorifie God Secondly we must glorifie God by our speeches as heerein we are priuiledged beyond all other earthly creatures this is by the right vse of the tongue Right vse 1 Ephes 4.29 Iam. 3. Phil. 2.10 First when our talke is not corrupt but tending to the edification of hearers if it bee rayling cursing slandering or filthy the tongue is made a corrupt
duties to bee done towards our neighbour are first workes of present necessitie which could not bee auoyded which are not onely then tollerable but good and commendable according to that speech of Christ when they watched him whether he would heale the man with the withered hand vpon the Sabbath day Mark 3.4 Js it lawfull to doe good on the Sabbath or to doe euill to saue life or to kill as if he should say this is a right Sabbath dayes worke to doe good or to doe any thing tending to the sauing of a mans life in danger So to saue the poore helpelesse beast either fallen into a pit Matth. 12.11 or wanting sustenance he sheweth elsewhere to bee a worke of the Sabbath From the equity of which it followeth that to put to our helping hand against any casualty falling vpon a mans person goods cattell or house is a worke so good and holy as that it wel becommeth the Sabbath day In like manner is it to be held for the sauing of good things which otherwise would be lost by gathering of Saffron milking and making out the milke of kine and sheepe and if there bee any thing else of this nature Likewise houshold businesses in making ready of meat and keeping things in decent comly order are lawfull vpon this day for God will haue mercy and not sacrifice he made not man for the Sabbath but the Sabbath for man that is Matth. 12.7 he doth so much fauour the good of man as that when the strict keeping of this time is preiudiciall to the necessary good of man he would rather haue it giue place hereunto then that it should hereby be neglected 2. Workes of mercy to the poore in gathering reliefe for them and distributing the same for this seemeth to haue been the custome in the Apostles times 1. Cor. 16.2 that euery first day of the weeke collections should bee made for the poore as God blessed euery man 3. Duties of loue to the comfort of our neighbour in distresse by visiting the sicke and poore prisoners Visiting the sicke Matth 25. Chap 5. comforting those that mourne vnder any crosse or calamity and making peace betwixt those which be at variance for as these duties are holy and haue excellent promises and become vs at all times so specially vpon the Sabbath dayes when the publike worship and seruice of God is ended Quest 2 Reasons of keeping the Sabbath The second question touching the sanctification of the Sabbath is wherefore and for what speciall causes there should bee times thus obserued for the publike worship of God seeing that the spirit and heart which are inward and priuate are the principall in his seruice I answere that the causes hereof are sundry and weighty 1. Hereby are exercised the faith and obedience of men when as because of Gods commandement only they shall seperate and set themselues apart from worldly businesses what haste soeuer they haue to goe forward with the same And at three times in the yeare especially were the ancient people of God tryed both for their obedience and faith and affiance in Almighty God in keeping their Sabbaths For all the males were to appeare at Ierusalem three times in the yeare before the Lord many of them comming from a farre and leauing their houses destitute and void of men to be made a prey to the enemy vnlesse God by his prouidence should marueilously preserue them And accordingly were they ready to yeeld themselues to the Lords ordinance yea to more then hee required at their hands for when their enemies set vpon them on the Sabbath they were so precise and superstitious that they would not stirre to arme and defend themselues for feare of breaking the Sabbath 1. Machab. 2. and thus lost their liues without sufficient warrant 2. By this meanes concord and vnity in doctrine and the seruice of God is maintained for let publike meetings bee duely frequented where all things either are or ought to bee prouided to be done according to the direction of Gods holy word and vnity and soundnesse will be maintained but take away these and a confusion both in the matter of religion and in the manner will vndoubtedly follow when euery one shall follow his owne fantasie there being commonly so many heads so many opinions 3. Loue and charity and all sauing graces are the more hereby increased when as we shall be brought publikely as it were vpon the stage and be made ashamed before al men if any man be rude 1. Cor. 14. and wicked in behauiour For this is the effect of the preaching of Gods word the sinner comming is reprooued of all men and accused of al men Moreouer the same prayers the same word the same Sacraments the same God serued there by vs altogether doe put vs in mind of the vnity whereby wee are vnited one vnto another so that as brands being layd together doe make the greater flame so our loue towards one another is the more inflamed by our being thus ioyned together in these holy duties 4. Seruants and cattell obtaine some ease from their sore labour hereby whose good the Lord who is the Creator of all doth also tender for admit that there were no Sabbaths vnmercifull minded men would work out the very hearts of their seruants and cattell wherefore it is often alleaged by the Lord that thy seruants and cattell may rest as well as thou 5. The seruice and worship of God is thus vpheld which would otherwise decay and fall to the ground if there were no times of publike meetings but all men were left vnto their priuate deuotion some vtterly forgetting what they owe vnto GOD some neglecting all and most through ignorance seruing him with superstition in stead of true deuotion Ezech. 20.12 Sixtly the Sabbaths thus publiquely kept are a signe vnto the people of God both to distinguish betwixt them and the heathen that know not God and to represent in some sort the Sabbath that shall afterwards bee kept in heauen from moneth to moneth and from weeke to weeke for euer Esa 66.23 when the Saints of God shall rest from all labour and sorrow world without end That euen hereby they may bee brought to some comfortable meditation of their happinesse to come if it be some comfort to rest from toiling for one day and to be recreated with Gods sweet promises preached vnto vs and singing of Psalmes and praises oh what a comfort may we thinke it will bee when as we shall rest for euer and be in possession of those ioyes which are heere promised in the company of the holy Angels delighting our selues with singing Alleluiah continually Memb. 2 To remember the Sabbath The second member of the dutie heere enioyned is to remember and to bee mindfull of this sanctification And this remembrance must be first generall all the dayes of the weeke when we bargaine couenant and vndertake any businesse afterwards
first then the second and the first last Quest. 1 Math 19.19 First What is your dutie towards your neighbour For hauing finished our dutie towards God in the next place cōmeth to be considered our dutie towards our neighbor which is only generally and at large here laid down in the Catechisme in imitation of our Sauiour Christ who being asked which were the Commandements answered The first is Thou shalt loue the Lord c the second is like vnto it Thou shalt loue thy neighbor as thy self to the young man which asked which they were Thou shalt not kill thou shalt not commit adultery thou shalt not beare false witnes honor thy father mother and thou shalt loue thy neighbor as thy selfe And the Apostle in the same briefe manner giueth the summe of these cōmandements not that good Christians should not search any further into the depth of thē but content themselues with this short epitom for they doe more largely in other places expresse euery brāch of euery of these Lawes Math. 5. and Christ doth in precise words taxe the blind Iewes for thus slighting ouer Gods lawes teaching only thus Thou shalt not k ll then shalt not commit adultery c. and not teaching further the sins here forbidden These briefes therefore serue for remembrances for the wekest memories which when they are held and rightly vnderstood doe acquaint vs more fully with Gods will in euery thing Quest 2 Who is our neighbour Secondly Jn which Commaundemement is your dutie towards your neighbour Good reason is it that our dutie towards our neighbour should be placed in a second Table after that containing our dutie towards God both because God is the most high and farre aboue men and Angels and also because this must be the first wheele as it were that must set vs a worke to loue our neighbour euen for our duties sake toward God who requireth it at our hands Now our neighbour is euery man without exception vnlesse God hath noted him for his enemie though hee dwelleth among the furthest Indies and wee neuer see him though he bee our enemie yet we are bound to loue him and if by Gods prouidence wee be brought to behold his necessitie at any time wee are bound to shew our loue by putting to our helping hand This is made plaine by the parable of the Samaritan Luke 10.30 who in his trauell saw a man wounded by theeues and helpelesse vnto whom though hee were a stranger hee shewed mercy powring oile into his wounds and setting him on his owne beast Esa 58.7 and by the Lord commending to vs our dutie towards our poore neighbour Is it not to deale thy bread to the hungrie and to bring the poore wandring into thy house when thou seest the naked that thou couer him and hide not thy selfe from thy owne flesh so that whosoeuer is flesh as thou art is thy neighbour Quest 3 This commandement exceedeth the rest Ephe. 6.1 Thirdly let this question follow Which is the first of these Commaundements Honour thy father and thy mother c. This Commandement hath in it some thing singular and wherein it exceedeth the rest of this Table viz. a promise according as the Apostle hath noted It is the first Commandement with promise Namely the first of the second Table or the first and onely Commaundement with a speciall promise expressely annexed so as it is not the promise of the second Commandement which is generall and belonging to all But I speake this onely according to the reason of others for without doubt the Apostle calleth it in the same sense the first Commaundement and the Commandement with promise so vsuall is it with him speaking of the Commaundements to restraine them to this second Table onely And as the first of the first Table is the ground of al the rest so is this first of the second Table the ground of the fiue Commaundements following In that first is commended vnto vs a right esteeme of God in this of man made after Gods image and specially bearing Gods Image in him of the Magistrate bearing the Image of his authoritie and power whence he is said to bee a God Psal 82.1 of the ancient bearing the image of his eternitie whence it is that he is said to haue appeared as one ancient of dayes Dan. 9 37. of parents bearing the image of the Creatour of things which before were not of Tutours Ministers and Teachers bearing the image of his wisedome and diuine knowledge And where this due esteeme of men according to their places is setled and againe in superiours towards their inferiours the duties of the other commandements will easily follow euen as when God is rightly set vp in the heart hee is not disgraced by base Images by blasphemies and prophaning of his Sabaoths so giue the honour due to the Parents magistrates masters and instructers and murthering adultery theft false witnesses and coueting will easily bee put away Murthering of a superiour is a debasing of him as of an Oxe or Sheep when he beareth the Image of God in him of an inferiour it is an extinguishing of that reciprocall affection by which thou shouldst bee prouident for his safety because he giueth honour vnto thee Adultery in a superiour is a vilefying of his body making it the member of a foule strumpet when God hath graced him with a resemblance of himselfe in an inferiour it is a grosse neglect of the counsell of good parents and of wise tutors and of the magistrates authority Theft is a trumpet to sound forth our discontent with our present estates and our enuying in stead of honouring others False witnesse-bearing is a plaine shaking off and rooting out of our hearts and the hearts of others this esteeme of our superiours and branding them so as that they may be had in base accompt And for couetousnesse there will be no roome left for these desires if there be a setled esteeme of euery man in his place with his house his wife his oxe and other things about him Quest 88. What is heere commanded Answ To honour That is to loue reuerence cherish and obey our naturall parents the parents of our Countrey and our fathers in Christ 2. To carry our selues lowly and reuerently towards our masters being ruled by them and towards the ancient and all our betters 3. Jf wee bee superiours to walke worthy the honour due vnto vs from our inferiours and to vse all gentlenesse towards them Father how taken Explan That we may the better know the duty of this Commandement it is to be vnderstood that the word Father is diuersly taken in the Scriptures euen for euery superiour in any thing 1. For our superiour in gouernment thus euery King is called a Father because he is Parens Patriae the Father of the Countrey it was a common name of the Kings of the Philistines who were called Abimelech Gen 20.3 which
is the King my father 2. For a Superiour in knowledge and in wise counsell thus the counsellours of State are Fathers of the State as Ioseph Pharaohs chiefe Councellour speaketh of himselfe God hath made me a father vnto Pharaoh Gen. 45 8. and Pharaoh caused the name Abrech that is Father to bee proclaimed before him and the Senatours of Rome were commonly called Patres conscripti reuerend Fathers 3. For a Superiour in priuate and houshold gouernment thus masters of families are called Patres Familias Fathers of the Familie as Naaman the Syrian is called Father by his seruants 4. For a Superiour 2 King 5.13 in the inuention of any Art or Science Gen. 4. thus Iubal is said to be the father of all that play on the Organs and harpe and Iabal the father of all that make tents 5. For a Superiour in things spirituall towards God thus the Ministers of the Gospell are called Fathers in Christ because that through that spirituall knowledge and grace exceeding others they beget men vnto God 1 Cor. 4.5 as Paul who therefore cals the Galatians his little children and professeth to the Corinthians that hee onely was their father for J begat you saith hee vnto Christ 6. For a Superiour in holinesse and power with God thus the King of Israel calleth Elisha Father saying of the Hoast of the Syrians 2 Kings 6.21 Shall I smite them my Father 7. 2. Kings 2.12 For a Superiour in ouersight and instruction thus Elishab called Elijah who brought him vp in the knowldge of prophesying My father my father the chariots of Israel and the horse-men thereof 8. For a Superiour in estate and condition thus rich men vsing their riches aright are fathers of the poore Iob 31.28 From my youth hee hath growne vp with mee as with a father saith Iob. 9. For a Superior in age and yeares thus the gray-headed is called a father and the ancient are as fathers to be exhorted and not to bee rebuked 10 According to the common acception amongst children 1 Tim. 5.1 there is a naturall father and mother which beget beare and bring vs foorth and vp in the world and if one of them dieth or he or shee that suruiueth bee married againe and hee or shee vnto whom is now made also thy father or mother though not by nature yet by law and there is an honour due vnto them Superiours diuers wayes To honour is to giue that reuerend respect which is due to euery superiour whether in authority and power in place and calling or in worth and dignitie 1. In authoritie and power some are superiors by the law of nature some by the law of nations and some by the law of contract By the law of nature our naturall father and mother who are instruments of our very being by whose tender care wee are preserued in our infancy when we cannot help our selues they are therfore to be recompenced by our giuing of due honor vnto them Ephes 6.1 Col 3.20 And this is first obedience in all things in the Lord Children obey your parents in the Lord. Children obey your parents in all things for that is well pleasing vnto the Lord and he is an vnnaturall beast and no childe that giueth not this obedience vnto both father and mother 2. To beare their corrections with submission of this the Apostle speaketh as of a most common thing euen in children that haue nothing but nature to guide them Heb. 12.9 Wee haue had the fathers of our bodies correcting vs and wee gaue them reuerence 3. To reuerence them in giuing them all outward respect which is due to chiefe superiors and fearing to offend them for from hence the Lord taketh his comparison Mal. 1.6 A sonne honoreth his father and a seruant his master if I then be a Father where is mine honour if I be a master where is my feare 4. To cherish them and to giue them maintenance in time of need When the Pharisees did by their traditions vnder a pretence of holines dispence with this duty they were reproued by our Sauiour Christ for hypocrisie saying Why doe yee transgresse the commandement of God by your tradition Matth. 15.3.4.5.6 for God hath commanded Honour thy father and thy mother But yee say Whosoeuer shall say to father and mother by the gift that is offered by me thou mayest haue profit though hee honour not his father and mother shall be free That is if he dedicate his goods and suffer them to want whereas hee might therewith haue relieued them If a Widdow hath children or nephewes saith Saint Paul let them learne first to shew godlinesse towards their owne house 1. Tim. 5.4 and to recompence their kindred for that is an honest thing and acceptable before God Which he further expoundeth afterwards saying Jf any faithfull man or woman haue widdowes that is Verse 16. to their mothers or aunts let them minister vnto them and let not the Church that is other Christians bee charged And God hath made the Storke a wonderfull example to condemne children that are this way vnnaturall to their parents in their age for she nourisheth and bringeth food to her parents in their old age wherefore she hath the name Chesidah Pious or Mercifull in Hebrew And in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth this kind of mutuall retribution being deriued from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth a Storke In these things consisteth the honour due to father and mother and for examples wee may take Iacob who obeyed his father and mother in the choyce of his wife and Shem and Japhet who reuerenced their father Noah and went backward and couered his nakednesse and Ioseph who recompenced his father Iaacobs care with prouiding for him in his old age and all holy men who haue readily performed these duties They are wicked children therefore and accursed as breaking this Commandement in the head that do continually greeue their godly parents by their disobedience and light esteeme of them liuing out of all good order being Drunkards and Swaggerers and plunging into the estate of marriage without yea contrary to their liking The Lord prouided of old that such should be put to death If any man hath a disobedient son Deut. 21.18.19.20 which will not hearken to the voyce of his father nor the voyce of his mother and they haue chastened him and he will not obey them Then shall they take him and bring him out And all the men of the City shall stone him with stones vnto death Honour due to Magistrates Rom. 13.1 The Superiours in authority by the Law of Nations are Magistrates and Gouernours of the Common-wealth The honour due to them is 1. To be subiect vnto them according to that precept Let euery soule bee subiect to the higher powers And againe 1. Pet. 2.13.14 Submit your selues to all manner ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether
doe euill malefactors in an high kind among Christians Alas too many I conclude therefore that that God who in this Commandement saith to euery priuate man Thou shalt not kill doth therewithall and thereby not only permit but also command his own publike Minister to kill for the preuention or auengement of killing other heynous crying sinnes Q●est Here it may be demanded whether this vse of the Sword belongeth alwayes and onely to the Magistrate seeing there are in the Scripture examples of others who haue killed and haue therein been not onely blamelesse but also commended as Phinees and Moses True it is that Phinees had no ciuill power yet is greatly commended for killing Cozby and Zimri But this he did out of speciall instinct and extraordinary zeale which God stirred vp in him for the quenching of an extraordinary plague Moses being yet but a priuate man slew an Aegyptian that stroue with an Israelite But Moses was an eminent type of Christ and performed this and other such actions as a rescuer of the people of God And lest we should doubt whether he had a speciall instinct vnto this enterprise Saint ●teuen sheweth that Moses euen before the solemn commission giuen him by God appearing in the flaming bush had an inward vocation and notice of his own office of a Deliuerer whereof this slaying the Aegyptian was as it were the first act an hands●l which as himselfe knew so he thought that the people of Israel would acknowledge Act 7. ●5 For hee supposed his brethren would haue vnderstood how that God by his hand would deliuer them In briefe I say to such Heroicall examples that we Christians must liue by rules and not by exceptions within the line of our ordinary callings and without aspiring to a boundlesse imitation of extraordinary actions Heree it may be demanded vnto what crimes the vse of the Magistrates Sword ought to be extended and how farre the prescript of Capitall Lawes giuen to the Israelites bindeth Christian Common-wealths Whereto I answer first as modesty requireth that I will not take vpon mee the office of a Law-maker by defining this Secondly that many of those Lawes were peculiar to the Common-wealth of Israel and agree not with our and other Common-wealths Thirdly as for the chiefe defiances of the first Table as hellish blasphemy and grosse Idolatry I doubt not but that in all Christian Estates they ought to be capitall as they were among the Iewes As for the second Table this commandement aboue all the rest is in all Nations fenced and guarded with this extreame punishment ex lege talionis in the same kinde Limbe for limbe life for life which is of force so generally not out of imitation of the lawes of the Iewes but out of the instinct of nature and ballance of euident iustice How farre other offences against our neighbour are to be made capitall is a greater difficulty by reason of the variety of natures and dispositions in diuers people with true respect wherevnto there may bee ioyned an ayme at the best and most principall positiue Lawes prescribed by God vnto the Iewes as I haue heeretofore touched in the preface before the Commandements Gen. 9. Exo. ●●2 To proceed now in the description of that which is heere forbidden vnder that name of murther I say it is to shed bloud vniustly that is ad d●liquium animae to the spilling of life for thus the Lord describeth killing euery where Againe I say it is a shedding of bloud that is direct and purposed not an act by which bloud is shed by accident besides the intent of the doer Exod. 21 13. For in this case it is no sinne but in a fort Gods act according to the wordes of the Law If a man hath not laid wait but God hath offered him into his hand I will appoint thee a pla●e wh●ther hee shall flye and a particular instance is giuen Deut. 19.5 If a man be felling a●ree and his hande strike with the axe and the head slip from the helu● and hit his neighbour that hee dyeth heere it is no murther therefore hee is not worthy to dye by whose stroke this was done there was a place of refuge for such to saue himselfe in But it is not so if two men quarrell and fight and one killeth the other Men may mince it heere and call it onely man-slaughter but indeed it is plaine murther as is euident by the very English word of this commandement Thou shalt doe no murther which is the translation of the Latine N●n o●ci●●es And surely those that are cōuicted of Manslaughter haue in their inditement their load of this word occia●●t So then murther legally and precisely taken is either comprised vnder occision or else it is not forbidden in this commandement which were very absurd Moreouer the case of our excused and refined manslaughter differeth much from this case Put by the Lord by which the Law for the quitting of him that slew his neighbour vnawares is illustrated For though the word not laying wait bee vsed and not hating his bro●her in times p●ssed looking to which words onely his sinne may bee extenuated for that hee that slayeth his neighbour in a sudden quarrell may be said not to haue hated him before yet consider the instance that is giuen of one cutting wood to make plaine this Law and it will appeare that the Lord hath no meaning to giue any toleration to any killing in quarrels but onely out of all pretending before or intending then as it is not with him that killeth another in heat and fury seeing howsoeuer he doth it suddenly yet he endeauoureth it and doth it willingly Indeede it somewhat lesseneth the fault if it shall manifestly appeare that slaying was against the intent of the striker either for that the instrument wherewith was but some little stone or sticke not likely to kill or for that the part of the body smitten was not any principall not much wounded and heerein fauour may be shewed Because that otherwise a maister giuing his seruant correction by the striking of one blow vnawares and death following should become a murtherer whereas oftentimes death hath followed vpon a small cause But in these cases our Lawes and Statutes doe sufficiently prouide And as for the case of Manslaughter now discussed by mee I doe not presume to make my selfe regibus Sapientorem but only declare Gods positiue Law which if I deeme to be more equall and iudicious then the law of other Nations I see not why any man should bee agrieued thereat Sam 12. Lastly I adde by any meanes whatsoeuer and thus all accessaries to murther are murtherers First and chiefly he that commandeth or counselleth as Dauid made himselfe guilty of the murther of Vriah Achitophel of Dauid if it had beene proceeded according to his counsell and the high Priests of the murther of Christ 2. He that consenteth as Pilate did vnto the Iewes about the
sinfull course of life which they might haue amended in them by teaching charging reprouing and requiring better things at their hands and leading them on by a good example For this as hath been shewed is their dutie as it is to furnish them with things necessary for the bodily life and therefore as in the denying of these they which are vnder their gouernment perishing their blood shall be laid to their charge so is it when they deny them meanes necessary for their soules and much more if they giue them the poyson of bad counsell or bad example this murthering of soules shal be charged vpon them 3 Neighbours And lastly euery neighbour that giueth his neighbour drinke to make him drunken that stirreth vp one against another to sighting and quarrelling and generally if hee enticeth to any sinne or doth countenance and fauour and defend it to the heartning of a man on therein euery of these waies he is the cause of the destruction of his neighbour and shall answer as a soule-murtherer For this is taxed in Gods word as an high offence Habbac 2.15 Woe be to him that giueth his neighbour drinke that is to make him drunken and it is set downe as an height of sinne Rom. 1.31 Which not onely doe such things but fauour such as doe them And good reason seeing euery man is bound to keepe his neighbour as much as in him lieth from sinne otherwise he is censured as hating his brother For Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart Leuit. 19.27 saith the Lord but rebuke him plainely ●nd not suffer him to sinne Oh then how shall hee answer it that prouoketh his brother to sinne without doubt hee shall be iudged as an hater yea a murtherer of his brother at the last day Quest 93. What is here commanded Answ Out of the loue that we beare to our neighbour as much as in vs lieth to preserue his life and health and specially the life of his soule by good counsell exhortations admonitions and the like Explan The duty here commanded ariseth from the consideration of the sinne forbidden for if it be forbidden to murther then it is commanded to saue life because he that saueth not life when it is in his power is guilty of murther Now as murther is either of a mans own self or of another man so the duty that we may be free from the guilt of any murther is to endeauour to saue both a mans owne life and the life of another man 1 To saue our owne life by flying in time of danger First then thou art here bound to preserue thine owne life by the vse of all lawfull meanes 1. In the time of danger flying from one place to another whether the danger bee by persecution as Dauid was indangered by Saul and therefore fled from him and as Athanasius an holy father of the Church hid himselfe a long time when he was sought for to the death by the Arians and as Eliah long before fled from Jezabel 1. King 19. or if the danger be by famine as Abraham Isaack Iacob Naomi and other holy persons haue commonly done or if there be danger by the plague the chiefe cure of which deuouring euill next to repentance is to change the aire and that speedily not in an opinion to be safe from Gods stroake but in obedience to his wil who would haue vs to preserue our liues by all lawfull meanes in the time of danger And a principall ground of all this is that commandement of our Sauiour Matth. 10.23 If they persecute you in one City flie into another and the speciall command vnto Eliiah in the time of famine 1. King 17. Gen 12. Gen. 20. and the Lords manifest approbation of Abrahams flying then comforting him and taking his part against Kings If it be demanded but may Ministers flie in the plague-time and leaue their people Answ That Ministers may flie in time of danger Without doubt they may if it bee Gods will to preserue themselues for the greater good of the Church whereas if they should harden themselues and stay amongst the infected there were apparant danger of being cut off and so to bee preuented of doing further good in the Church 2. By vsing lawful meane in times of sicknesse Esay 38.21 Secondly in the time of sicknes keeping thy selfe warme and taking such things as whereby thou mayest be freed from the matter of thy disease and by Gods blessing bee restored Thus Hez●chiah that was sick vnto the death is bidden to take a ●umpe of drie figs and lay it vpon the boile 3. To defend our selues with our best force Thirdly being set vpon by wicked men or by the enemy defending our selues with our best forces 4. By vsing lawfull recreation Fourthly by vsing lawfull recreation at lawfull times by some extraordinary motion of the body or otherwise chearing our minds and spirits with the vse of pleasant pastimes that are in themselues indifferent Such is shooting of which m●ntion is made in the holy Scriptures ● Sam. 1.18 He bad them teach the children of Israel to shoote as it is written in the booke of Jasher And Musicke Nehem. 7.67 Iudges 14 9. vnto which many were brought vp and propounding of riddles and the like But heere is no tolleration for gaming meerely for gaine which in stead of recreating distempereth the mind and body and is commonly accompanied with many foule sinnes To preserue another mans life 1. By almes-deeds Iob 3 9. For the life of another man This is preserued 1. By almes deeds where necessity doth require for thus Iob saith that hee had not seene any perish for want of cloathing c. and some there are in this danger continually vnlesse they be relieued and he that seeth it and hath wherewithall to helpe them but doth not if they perish is guilty of their death 2. To helpe in time of danger 1. King 18.13 2. By rescuing and helping a man in any danger as Obadiah hid the Prophets of the Lord in caues to saue them from Ahab and Iezabel in time of persecution 3 By patience and me●knes 3. By patience and meekenesse preuenting quarrels and bloudshed that doth otherwise often times follow The parts of this gentlenes and meekenes are 1. Soft answers when any meanes be vsed to prouoke vs Prou. 15.1 for a soft answer putteth away strife Dauids fury was calmed when Abigail came vnto him with gentle and pleasing words and without doubt seruants and children might escape many cruell blowes if they would frame their tongues to this soft answering 2. A stayed temper of affections whereby wee are not suddenly moued and for trifling matters neither doe wee keepe our anger as hath beene shewed already Be slow to anger and let not the sunne goe downe vpon thy wrath for thus is this dangerous sinne preuented which for want of this stayd temper many doe
commonly runne into 3. A disposition alwayes to interprete such things as are done against vs in the best sense that wee can as it is noted to bee the property of loue It thinketh not euill 1 Cor. 13.5 for by a misconstruction men are often prouoked causelesly to sinne against their owne soules or when small matters are aggrauated and accounted greater 4. A loue of peace and seeking it with all men as much as may be according to the precept As much as in you lyeth Ro● 12.8 haue peace with all men And againe Dost thou desire to liue long and to see good dayes refraine thy tonge from euill Psal 34.12 and thy lips that they speake no guile cease to doe euill learne to doe well seeke peace and ensue it 5. Lastly a minde content for the loue of peace sometimes to depart with a mans right as Abram the vncle Gen. 13. Math. 17. gaue Lot his nephew his choise being content that part which hee left and Christ when he had proued that hee was not to pay tribute or poll money did notwithstanding pay it being demanded By interring and timely bringing to the buriall dead bodies of Christian people or others which being vnburied would be noysome and preiudiciall to the liues of the liuing Wherefore Abraham prouideth a place to bury Sarah in But this taxeth not the hanging vp of paricides or other notorious murtherers in chaines without buriall who are vnworthy of the honour of Christian buriall And this duty doth more properly belong to the fift Commandement 1 Pet. 2.2 Ro. 10.14 Now as there is a spirituall murthering as well as a corporall so there are duties to be done to preserue the spirituall life and first to preserue thine owne thou art bound to desire the sincere milke of the word as S. Peter saith that thou maist grow thereby 1 Pet. 2.2 Rom. 10.14 attend the preaching hereof whereby faith may be wrought and confirmed and that with all diligence as it is to bee preached in season and out of season thou must hide the word in thy heart by serious meditation as Dauid did Psal 119.11 Cor. 3.16 and let it dwell plenteously in thee pray continually for grace and reuerently receiue the Sacraments and vnto all these ioyne obedience be doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiuing your selues If any of these things bee neglected Iam. 1.22 thy soule cannot liue thou destroyest thy selfe euerlastingly To preserue the life of the soule To preserue thy neighbours spirituall life 1. If thou be a minister teach exhort rebuke vse all meekenes discretion and diligence in doctrine and life to keepe in the right way to bring in such as are out to strengthen the weake to comfort the faint-hearted to curbe the vnruly to informe the ignorant and erronious and to further the sanctification saluation of all 2. If thou beest a Iudge a ruler or a magistrate in executing iustice seeke not onely in regard of temporall punishments to make men affraid of sinning but much more because they shall thus damne and destroy their owne soules commend an honest and deuout course of life both by word and example so as S. Paul saith to Timothy thou maist saue both thy selfe and many others 3. If thou be father or mother master or priuate gouernour teach and season youth in good things betimes command them with Abraham to walke in the way of the Lord instruct them in the grounds of religion out of the holy Scriptures euen in their childhood with Timothies grandmother chastize them duly when they sinne against God as Ely did not and in all things bee an example of holinesse vnto them bringing them to the publike place of Gods worship and praying earnestly for them with Elchana and Hannah and thus thou shalt dedicate them with Samuel to the LORD and well prouide for the saluation of their soules Heb. 3.13 Leuit. 19.27 4. If thou be a priuate person exhort such as are backward and prouoke vnto loue and good workes reproue such as offend and suffer them not to sinne such as are forward in goodnesse incourage with the Kingly Prophet who saith I was glud when they said Psal 1 22. 1 Cor. 10● let vs goe vp to the house of the Lord and by no meanes lay any stumbling-blocke before thy brother by which he should fall and perish and thus many priuate persons to their great ioy saue the soules of others whilest others carelesse of these duties like Cain haue murtherous mindes and say am I my brothers keeper Quest 94. What is the seauenth Commandement Answ Thou shalt not commit Adultery Quest 95. What is heere forbidden Answ First all outward vncleane actions of Adultery Fornication c. Secondly all filthy and vncleane speeches songs and Bookes and Ballads of this sort Thirdly all incontinent thoughts and lusts of the heart Fourthly whatsoeuer is an occasion of vncleannesse as surfetting drunkennesse and idlenesse c. Mat. 5.28 Explanat The sinne heere forbidden is not onely the act of Adultery but whatsoeuer is any way against chastitie or sobernesse either in deed in word or in thought directly or indirectly as a meanes of sinning heere against For thus large our Sauiour sheweth the extent of this Commandement to be where hee saith Whosoeuer looketh vpon a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her in his heart stretchihg this commandement to the very thoughts and the meanes of such wicked thoughts a wandering eye Gen 19.18 First therefore this commandement is broken by vnclean actions of euery kinde whether by beastiality Leuit. 18.23 or by vnnaturall lust Rom. 1.26.27 and so foule an euill is this as that the Lord hath done more against it euen in the view of the world then against any other sinne sweeping away euen whole Kingdomes with fire and brimstone from Heauen not sparing any of that impure people and continuing the memoriall of his iudgement vnto this day by the dead sea which is there by the apples outwardly faire hauing nothing within them but smoke and by the generall desolation of the Countrey voyd of euery liuing creature Deut. 22.22 Or the act of vncleannesse is committed with a man or woman married or betrothed and this is adultery which is also so foule as that the punishment appointed is death If any man bee found lying with a woman married to a man then they shall dye euen both twaine to wit the man that lay with the wife 23. and the wife If a maa bee betrothed to an husband and a man lye with her then shall yee bring them both out to the gates of the Citie and shall stone them with stones to death And good reason that adultery should bee thus puninished because it is an abhominable sinne diuers wayes Against adultery 1. It is a breach of a most sacred couenant made before God and the congregation of his people in most sollemne
vnto such thou deniest vnto the Lord from whom thou receiuest al and vnto whom thou owest all who will also require at the last day saying I was hungry and thou didst not feede me naked and thou diddest not cloath mee sicke and in prison and thou visitedst me not 3 Against sacriledge Lastly robbing of God which is called sacriledge is in things dedicate when they are taken away and in tithes and offerings when they are vniustly paid and without conscience of the right For as the Lord hath forbidden stealing from men so and much more strictly hath hee forbidden stealing from himselfe and appointed more precisely the duties to bee paid to his Ministers in his stead Now that wee may say something of this sinne to moue the consciences of all such as make conscience of any stealing it shall first be shewed Tithes due by Gods Law that tithes are due by Gods Law vnder the new Testament secondly wherein it is offended about the payment of tithes and thirdly how God is robbed in things dedicate Arg. 1 Leuit. 27.30 1. That tithes are due euen in these dayes appeareth from direct Scripture All the tithes of the seed of the ground and of the fruit of the trees are the Lords they are wholy to the Lord he saith not shall be or let them be as Origen hath well obserued of other ceremoniall Lawes which were to last but for a time as of the Passouer This shall be a Law or an ordinance vnto thee and so of other ceremonies But as it is said of the seuenth day it is the Lords Sabbath so of tithes Exod 12.24 they are the Lords Whence ariseth this sound reason That which is the Lords peculiarly perpetually not by any new ordination for a time that is to be paid alwaies without al difference of times of the old and new Testament but such are tithes they are the Lords not made so by any such ordination therefore they are to be paid euen vnder the new Testament also It cannot be maintained that tithes are ceremonial or appurtenances of the Leuiticall Priesthood for God though he gaue them to the Leuites yet did he not first found them in that encorporation but only transferred his owne right to that Order of Priest-hood quousque so long as it should endure and after the ceasing of that Priest-hood the same right descended as it were by entaile to the succeeding Ministery of the Gospell In a word Tythes were due to the Leuiticall Ministers not as Leuiticall but as Ministers and so are successiuely due to the Euangelicall Pastors as Pastors and not formally as Euangelicall And if per impossibile the Gospell could cease yet should not tythes cease but be rendred to whatsoeuer Ministery could be feigned to succeed in place thereof 2. This appeareth further by Scripture 1. Cor. 9.14 concluding the Arg. 2 same by consequence It is ordained saith the Apostle that they should liue of the Gospell that preach the Gospell euen as they did liue of the Altar that did wait at the Altar Whence I reason thus That is due now and to bee paid vnder the Gospell without the paiment of which the preachers cannot be maintained according to Gods ordinance but such are Tithes God hauing ordained them onely and not other meanes for if none other meanes can be shewed to haue been ordained by God to maintaine preachers then tythes only are of his ordinance Therefore tythes are due now in these dayes of the Gospell 3. This appeareth further because that as vnto Aaron Arg. 3 and vnto men after his order tythes were to bee payed so they were payed vnto Melchisedeck after whose order is Christ in whose name and representing whose person are the ministers of the Gospell according to the Apostles reasoning to the Hebrewes Here men receiue tythes that die Heb. 7.8 and there he is said to haue receiued tythes that liueth for euer c. Hence I reason thus That which is Christs due as he is a meanes of Gods blessing vnto the people that is the due of his ministers seruing in the same office but tythes are Christs due seeing they were Melchisedecks euen as they were due to the Priests after Aaron because due to Aaron and they are Christs and Melchisedecks as they were a meanes of blessing for Eonomine in this respect Abraham is noted to haue paied tythes to Melchisedeck when he met him and blessed him Therefore they are due to the Ministers of the Gospell And to such as will vnderstand the Apostle Paul is most plaine for tithes Let him that is instructed make him that hath instructed him partaker of all his goods Cal 6.6 What must hee make his goods common vnto him that he may vse any of them as himselfe none will grant this I am sure Must he only giue him some small matter as an almes at his discretion Ah forced construction to make part of all some gratuitie only out of the money Thus there remaineth no way else to make him partaker of al thy goods but by the due paying of thy tithes from all sorts of thy encreased goods namely which arise from thy Corne from thy Fruite from thy Cattell c. which are called all thy goods Arg. 4 Gen. 14. Gen. 28.22 A fourth argument may be taken from the custome of the Church of God in all ages Abel and Cain acknowledge something due to the Lord when they bring vnto him part of their increase Abraham more particularly payeth the tithe of all Iacob voweth to giue the tenth to the Lord. Vnder the new Testament there was a community of things amongst Christians for 200. yeares according to Tertullian which being dissolued by Vrlan Bishop of Rome tithes came againe into vse according to Origin Ciprian and Gregory long before the Laterane Counsell by which the Popes of Rome maketh them ceremoniall tooke aduantage of impropriations for their owne gaine Who so would be further instructed herein may reade the learned Treatises written of this subiect by Doctor Carlion now Bishop of Chichester by Master Roberts Minister of Norwich and others It is to be renounced therefore as an error to hold that tithes are not now due by Gods law and the Ministery should liue vpon the beneuolence of people as Wickliffe being deceiued in his iudgement did It is not enough to say it was a ceremony and so belonged only to the time of the Law for though a figure might be found herein as Athanasin hath obserued ● an Hebrew letter expressing ten setting forth the first letter of Iesus yet it was not meerely ceremoniall as other things that had no further vse but to prefigure Iesus this being a maintenance for Gods ministers such as hee hath ordained alwaies to bee in his Church though not after the same order yet such as hath been shewed as vnto which tithes are also paid 2 The right paying of tythes It followeth now therefore that
God as Dauid did of Ahitophel and Doeg who had most notoriouslie expressed their malice and as Eliiah did against the Israelites who had killed the Prophets and broken downe the altars Or before men as Paul doth of false teachers to the Galatians and so doth Peter and Iude giuing them disgracefull names that others might take heede of their company and being infected by them or before themselues in publike as Paul calleth the Galatians foolish Gal. 3.1 and bewitched And Esay the Israelites Princes of Sodome and people of Gomorrah Or lastly Leuit. 19.17 Matth. 18.17 in priuate reprouing offenders for Thou shalt rebuke thy neighbour for his fault and not suffer him to sinne And if hee heareth not thee tell it to the Church saith Christ complaine to the Gouernours of the Church from whom he may receiue due censure But it is offended in making such complaints vpon any either if it be but vpon coniecture and not apparant certainty or in doubtfull actions that may haue a better construction or out of malice or vaine-glory seeking by the disgrace of our neighbour to bring our selues into credit or lastly Iohn 8. being in as great or greater fault our selues for Hee that is without sinne amongst you saith Christ cast the first stone at her And hypocrite cast first out the beame which is in thine owne eye and then shalt thou see more clearely to cast the mote out of thy brothers eye The sin against this Commandement therefore is vniustly to detract from the good name of our neighbour by any meanes Deut. 19.17 First by vniust and false accusations and witnessing before any Iudge If any doth thus the Lord prouided That he should by the Judge bee done vnto as hee had thought to haue done vnto his brother and where it is concealed from men God will be auenged 2 Kings 22. Vniust accusations as in Naboths case against Ahab and Iezabil This is a double most hainous sinne a most high degree of taking Gods name in vaine when in his presence before his Vicegerent the false is witnessed and the height of sinne against this Commandement Secondly by accepting of sleighty witnesse against a man Deuit. 17 6. and the Iudges proceeding hereupon in sentence of condemnation for by Gods positiue law there must be sufficient witnesse of two or three when Pilate proceeded to iudgement against Christ in this case he made himselfe as guilty as the Iewes that falsely accused him Leuit. 19.16 Rom. 1.30 Thirdly by slandering and back-biting for Thou shalt not walke about with tales saith the Lord It is noted as one of the properties of such as are giuen ouer to a reprobate sense to be back-biters and much in complaining against this is the booke of the Prouerbs Such are worse then deuouring beasts and foules making a prey of men euen whilst they liue whereas others deuoure onely dead things Hee that hath an ill name wee say is halfe hanged the back-biter therfore that raiseth an ill name is halfe an hangman to his neighbour poysoning as with dead Cantharides with his venomous tongue the boxe of precious oyntment of his neighbour which is his chiefe treasure and with the sharpe Rasor of his tongue cutteth his throate and pierceth his sides as it were with swords and speares And yet this is a common practise in these miserable daies out of the same fountaine as to send forth the sweet water of blessing God so the brackish water of malediction or speaking euill of our neighbours But so much as thou falsly detractest from thy brothers good name before men is detracted from thine before God in heauen to the razing of it out of the booke of life which he hath written Exod. 13.1 Fourthly to haue a mans eares open to receiue false rumours and tales against a neighbour For Thou shalt not receiue a false tale saith the Lord. The slanderer is as the thiefe he that hearkens to him as the receiuer for if there were not some which delighted to heare and so did giue incouragcement there would be no carrier of tales Gal. 6.1 Prou. 11.13 Fiftly to be long-tongued and bee ready to blaze abroad the infirmities and slips of others for hee that is not carnall like Jsmael after the flesh but spirituall doth restore such by the spirit of meekenes The man of vnderstanding will keepe silence hee is a foole that seeketh thus to disgrace his neighbour He that is of a faithfull heart concealeth a secret hee is a slanderer that discouereth a secret Hard surmises 1 Cor. 4.4 Rom. 2. Sixtly in the heart to thinke and iudge ill of our neighbour without apparant cause or for some infirmities to passe sentence of iudgemēt against any man for Iudge nothing saith the Apostle before the time when the Lord wil lighten things that are hid in darkenes He is made subiect hereby to Gods iudgement that iudgeth another man Vaine-glory Seuenthly to be possessed with vain-glory and selfe-loue which is the fountain of all disgrace doing vnto our brother as Eliab Dauids elder brother out of an high conceit of himselfe and of his owne valour made base account of his younger brother Dauid and extenuated his worth When a man is puft vp saith S. Paul hence commeth strife enuy railings euill surmisings 1 Tim 6.4 Prou. 27.2 Wherefore Let another man praise thee saith Salomon and not thine owne mouth Such is the basenesse of a proud minde as that it will build vp the owne credit with the ruines of another mans and varnish it selfe ouer with oyle pressed from anothers credit euen to the vtter spoyling and tearing of it in pieces As he that without conscience seeketh to in rich himselfe out of another mans goods so is he whose tongue runneth ouer the world to rob his neighbours of their good name and to make all other men no body that himselfe onely may bee some body it was a speciall marke wherewith the false teachers amongst the Galatians were branded Against flattery Eighthly to flatter and sooth men contrary to the truth for aduantage praising him that is or may be beneficiall vnto thee or into whom thou desirest to insinuate thy selfe for thine owne benefit when he is not worthy any such praise or when the contrary is true of him As if a man should praise him for liberall which is vainely prodigall or couetous for wise and vnderstanding in such things as wherein hee hath little or no skill for deuout and holy when hee is negligent of holy duties and prophane for discreet when he is Machiauell-like politique for humble and familiar when he is base degenerous for ordering himselfe well in all things when hee doth palpably amisse in many things and like Gnatho in the Comedy swearing it to be true that Thraso saith how false soeuer Flattery is called in hebrew Chalac signifying either blanaus swooth and mollis soft because the flatterer vseth smooth and soft speeches
because they pray not his words which is a harder matter to doe Wherefore to pray these words rightly thou must in some conuenient measure vnderstand them and haue the minde taken vp with them in the vttering the heart still conueying it selfe into the meaning of euery petition which that it may be done there must be vsed good deliberation in him that prayeth Thus if this prayer be said it is well vsed alone or added to other prayers like vnto a wrastler who hauing vsed his best skill and strength to ouercome in his wrastling yet finding the victory getting to bee very hard hee re-inforceth himselfe at the last with all his might force and skill together that he may carry away the prize so the Christian man wrastling as Iaacob with God by prayer in the end re-inforceth himselfe in this prayer that he may not depart vnblessed Two extreames are heere to be taken heed of The one is too much confidence in the words of this prayer often repeated as some Popes of Rome haue granted great pardons to seuen Paternosters and as many Aue Maries said ouer euery day or on some dayes and in some places which is grosse and superstitious The other is too much detracting from this prayer by accounting it no better or not so worthy as a mans owne conceiued prayer which is derogatorie and arrogant Secondly vse this prayer as a forme of direction learning hereby what to aske what first chiefly with what affections and assurance Are not other prayers also to be vsed by vs though differing from this in order yet consonant in matter Yes doubtlesse for otherwise the Apostle Paul in his Epistles would not haue vsed such variety of order and manner in thanksgiuings requests and deprcations for his spirituall children for himselfe for the whole Church nor would the primitiue Christians in their ioynt prayer for the Apostles haue beene so bold as to premise this part of thanksgiuing before their intreating of Gods assistance to the Apostolicall offices as they did when Peter and Iohn being dismissed and charged to speake no more in the name of Iesus they all together prayed vnto the Lord. Act. 4.24 Wherefore though this order bee generally to bee followed yet neither is it alwayes necessary nor yet is it a swaruing from this direction though some of these petitions onely bee asked in our prayers and others bee omitted But the errour is when we goe beyond the rules heere giuen vs doting too much vpon worldly things or hauing proud vnfaithfull or malicious hearts we make our prayers the labor of poluted lippes Why doth the Apostle say that we know not what to aske Quest Rom. 8 26. as wee ought but the Spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed if this be a perfect direction teaching vs all things Or are we not rather to hold it a generall direction onely for matter and that to be true which hee saith for words we know them not afore-hand wee follow not any set forme of speech but as the spirit giueth vtterance at the time of prayer And so heere commeth to bee enquired what is to be thought of set formes of prayer and whether it be well to vse them It is true indeed wee know not of our selues as naturall men what to aske but the Spirit of God teacheth vs partly enlightening vs by the Word of God and partly stirring vp this heauenly motion in our mindes to pray and long after the fulnesse of Gods grace which is an argument of our full deliuerance from mortality and basenesse into perfect glory of soule and body and this onely is the scope of the Apostle in that place Againe because prayer is the worke of Gods Spirit it may bee hence gathered that all such as haue the Spirit and are regenerate doe and are able in some measure to pray to their owne comfort hauing none other helps of prayers made by men or aforehand deuised by themselues Yet it doth not hence follow that it is not good to pray in set formes of prayer no more that it is not good to haue staires to goe vp into an vpper roome because a man may make a shift to goe vp by a ladder or by some other meanes In publique for the ordinary seruice of God it is needfull there should bee set formes of prayer because it is not certaine that euery Minister of Gods Word hath the Spirit of Prayer in him to teach him and if hee had there would be danger through weaknesses of memory of omitting many things needfull to bee prayed for in the congregation of excursions and runnings out into clauses impertinent and idle in so long prayers and of tautologies and repeating the same things againe and againe to the wearying of the congregation Numb 10.35 Numb 6.24 And thus this heauenly seruice of Prayer should bee vnequally performed according to the inequality of the ministers some Churches hauing men able and sufficient some againe very weake ones and deficient For these causes set formes haue beene vsed anciently in the Church of God vnder the Law Moses vsed the same forme of prayer when the Arke remoued and when it stoodstill by the commandement of the Lord he taught Aaron and his sonnes a forme of blessing the people Rom 16.24 2 Cor 13.13 Dauid made many Psalmes which were formes of praise and prayer to bee vsed publikely as the 104 105.106.107 Psalmes the 90. Psalme was a Psalme for the Sabaoth Vnder the Gospell the first forme of prayer is the Lords Prayer the first forme of blessing is that of Paul The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ be with you all or more fully The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ the loue of God and the Communion of the holy Ghost bee with you all Amen And since it hath beene the custome of Gods Church to pray in the congregation by set prayers If therefore these rules following be obserued I suppose it shall be well Rules of prayer First that all vse the set formes of common prayer appointed in publique Secondly if more speciall prayers are to be vsed before or after the preaching of the word for which no set common forme is nor can well bee appointed that euery man endeauour himselfe hecrein either with words studied and set before or then iudiciously and reuerently conceiued as by the Spirit he is able Thirdly that nouices or such as haue not the gift of well conceiuing prayers vse set formes of prayer deuised by others in priuate Fourthly that such as vse the prayers of others labour to be moued with the same spirit of the Authors as if the wordes did flow from the Spirit in them Lastly that no man stand heere without indeauouring to goe further if hee can pray some set forme but striue to grow to more perfection in this heauenly faculty and to bee able without the helpe of set wordes to make knowne his desires vnto the Lord. If
3. We pray for faith whereby to belieue Supplicat 3. that the will of God reuealed vnto vs in his will and to apply his gratious promises to our owne soules for knowledge will not profit without faith without the Spirits teaching of vs as hee taught Peter when to his commendation Christ saith Math. 16.16 flesh and bloud hath not reuealed it vnto thee but the Spirit of my Father which is in heauen Nay to beleeue is to do the will of God for this is the will of the Father saith Christ Iohn 6.4 that yee beleeue in him whom hee hath sent 4. We pray for power to obey the holy will Supplicat 4. and commandements of the Lord now this obedience is both actiue and passiue in doing and suffering Actiue obedience is both gederall and speciall Generall is our sanctification for this is the will of God saith S. Paul euen your sanctification 1 Thes 4.3 leading an holy iust and good life holy by praying reading hearing of the word and meditation as it is commanded 1 Thes 5.27 Psal 1. pray continually and in all things giue thankes and Blessed is that man which doth meditate in the law of God c. iust Psal 15. by righteous and equal dealing with all men as he which shal dwell in the Tabernacle of the most high is vncorrupt in all his wayes good by beneficence and workes of charity towards the poore as warning is giuen to rich men to distribute 1 Tim. 6.17 and giue vnto the poore Speciall obedience is in workes of our speciall callings as we are Princes gouernours or subiects ministers or people husband 1 Cor. 7.10 or wife father or childe maister or seruant of these it is commanded Let euery man remaine in that vocation wherein he is called And more particularly the King and magistrate are set for the praise of the good and the punishment of euill doers Rom. 13. the people must bee obedient to the magistrate Eph. 6. The father must bring vp his childe in the information and feare of the Lord children must obey their parents and likewise for the rest 1. Tim. 3. Coll. 3. Of this obedience there be fiue rules Rules of obeying Gods will and mans Eph. 6.1 Verse 7. Acts 4. 1. Obey Gods will absolutely for himselfe obey man only in God and for God therefore it is added Children obey your parents in the Lord and Seruants obey your masters as seruing the Lord. Esa 29.13 And when men command any thing against the will of God the example of the Apostles is to bee followed obeying God rather then man 2. Obey God in the manner as well as in the matter which he commanded for he is wisest and knoweth best what will please himselfe Otherwise in vaine doe yee worship me saith the Lord. And thou shalt not make any grauen Image to worship the Lord by Obey God in all the matter by him commanded and not in something of thine owne inuention Esay 1.12 as Saul and Peter lest it be said Who required these things at your hands Math. 12. 3. In doing the workes of piety let them giue place if necessity calleth to a work of charity as to thy neighbours house being on fire his Oxe or other beast being fallen into a pit vpon the Sabaoth day 4. Let the workes of thy priuate calling giue place to workes of a publike calling and generall if thou bee labouring vpon the sixe dayes the Lord calling to his house by appointing solemne meetings to his worship thou must leaue thy worke Leuit. 23. and attend vpon the Lord there Thus feast of the Passeouer was kept vpon the sixe dayes the feast of Tabernacles of ●●●st fruits purim and when the Lord called to any fasting c. 5. The workes of a generall cōmon calling must giue place to the works of a speciall vndoubted calling being contrary if a man at any time hath such as Abraham had to kil his own sonne the man whom the Prophet bad to smite and wound him and the Prophet that was forbidden to eate bread in the place of Ieroboams Idolatry 1 Pet 2.15 Passiue obedience is in bearing patiently according to Gods will whatsoeuer is his will to lay vpon vs This is the will of GOD saith Peter that by well doeing yee put to silence the ignorance of foolish men speaking of subiection to the Tyrants of those times and to seruants being wrongfully punished hee propoundeth this comfort If any man for conscience towards GOD indureth wrongfully Verse 19. that is thanke worthy If any man therefore grudgeth and be impatient hee doth against the will of the LORD Now that all our obedience may the better bee accepted it must haue these three properties 1. Chearefulnes and readines it is spoken of as a thing taxed in Cain that in processe of time he came to doe sacrifice Obedience acceptable Gen. 4. 2 Cor. 8. Iam. 1. and God loueth a cheerefull giuer saith Paul he loueth one like to himselfe who readily bestowerh vpon such as aske vpbraiding no man It is not therefore sufficient to obey eyther in doing or suffering when we must needes and are pressed hereunto but we must willingly and cheerefully obey euen in bearing any crosse wherefore He that will be my Disciple saith Christ Matth. 10. must take vp his crosse and follow me 2. Sincerity which is heartily and from the Spirit approuing our selues to God and not affecting the applause and praise of men for thus our obedience will be all lost labor Esa 1. Matth. 6. as that of the Iewes and Pharisies 3. Vniuersalitie which is in all and euery particular thing Marc. 6. for Herod did many things and yet was reiected because he disobeyed in one thing but Iob is approued obediently professing his subiection to God though he should yet aggrauate his misery and kill him 2. The deprecation against all disobedience to the will of God and this is first rebellion an obstinate offending against the knowne will of God when Saul offended thus The deprecation 1 Sam. 15. Psalme 19. his sinne is censured as rebellion This made Dauid so earnestly to pray against this presumptuous sinning Deprecat 2. 2 We pray against prophannesse which is a base estimation of holy duties Heb 12.16 making no more reckoning of the Word of God then of Aesops Fables This is set forth by Esau's example who sold his birth-right for one messe of pottage and is forbidden to all men Vnder paine of being depriued of Gods blessing when we shall seeke it with teares Deprecat Esa 29.13 3. Wee pray against hypocrisie whereby men draw neere vnto God with their lips but haue their hearts estranged from him doing duties which the Lord requireth but not with that vprightnesse This maketh God an Idoll and his worship odious it causeth blasphemy against his holy Name and ruine of many soules who seeing
nature of man were abolished after the Vnion he was mis-termed a man or the Sonne of man and hee could not possibly haue beene subiect to sufferings And on the other side it is absurd to hold two persons in Christ for so hee must not bee one Mediatour and one Iesus but two the Idioms and properties of the diuine nature where falsely in the Scriptures ascribed to the humane and those of the humane to the diuine Ioh. 3.13 as in these sayings Who hath ascended vp into Heauen at any time but the Sonne of man which is in Heauen The Sonne of man was not then in Heauen but God vnto whom man being vnited might be said by the communicating of properties Heb. 6.6 to be in Heauen They crucifie againe to themselues the Son of God The Sonne of God cannot be crucified nor his blood shed it is a property of the man-hood and by reason of the Vnion ascribed vnto God To conclude this errour breakes the Vnion of two natures in Christ and makes his suffering without merit or efficacy Quest 15. What neede was there that the Sonne of GOD should thus abase himselfe to become man Answ Great need on our behalfe who could not be ransomed from our sinnes by Angels or earthly Treasures but onely by his precious bloud 1. Ioh. 1.7 Explan It is the bloud of Iesus Christ saith S. Iohn that clenseth from all sinne and Saint Peter excluding all other things of greatest worth sets downe this alone 1. Pet. 1..8 Yee were not redeemed with corruptible things as gold and siluer but with the precious bloud of Iesus Christ as of a Lambe vndefiled Q. 16. Doth sinne deserue so ill that wee could not by any other satisfactory meanes bee deliuered heerefrom but by the death of the Sonne of God Answ Yet it deserues the infinite curse of the Law that is all iudgement in this world and euerlasting damnation in the world to come Rom. 6. Deut 27. Explan The Sone of God did not needlesly submit himselfe to the curse of the Law for without this we had all perished The wages of sinne is death and the Lord pronounceth all them accursed which continue not in all things that are written in the booke of the Law to doe them Now God will bee iust of his word not one tittle shall fall to the ground And therefore that Law supposed to stand in force without remission there must bee reall and equiualent satisfaction made either by the person offending or by some other in his stead which supply and suretiship cannot bee conueniently performed otherwise then by the same nature which offended nor can temporary satisfaction bee sufficient for the acquitting of an eternall punishment vnlesse performed by a sacrifice of infinite worth and power Wherefore Christ being God must take the nature of man that hee might repaire and restore man Certainly no creature was able to performe this for creatures are finite and cannot beare an infinite burthen such as is the curse of God due vnto sinne it must then be the Prince of Heauen alone the Sonne of God who could not vndergoe this as meerely God for God cannot suffer nor atchieue this as meere man for man cannot conquer Therefore hee must needs become man remaining God and so he reconciled God and man Q. 17. If hee must needs bee made fit to beare the curse why did he not to this end take vnto him some other nature more excellent Answ Man hauing sinned it was most agreeable to the iustice of God to receiue the payment of the debt of sinne in the same nature which committed it Canes 2. Explan It is true the euill Angels also sinned but they are without redemption kept in chaines of darknesse as witnesseth S. Iude Of other creatures man onely needed a redeemer man onely hath sinned and man onely must by the iustice of God dye the death according to that The same day that thou shalt eate thereof thou shalt dye the death and for that thou hast done this cursed art thou viz thou O man therefore the suffering of any other nature could not bee so pertinent nor kindly satisfactory Obiect If Gods law and absolute iustice bee vrged this due satisfaction must bee made not onely in the nature offending but also by the person offending for the direct Law is Amima quae peccat morietur The soule it selfe which sinneth that must dye for its owne sinne Solut. I answer The Law of God and so his Iustice may bee said to stand two wayes in rigore and in vigore If wee consider it in the vtmost rigor and strictnesse of the letter surely it doth not admit of any pledge or surety but requireth that euery singular man offending must beare his owne personall burthen Can you say that the Kings Law is satisfied if a condemned Traytor being to bee executed shall hire his friend to vndergoe that lot for him like a Damon for a Pithias But if wee consider Gods Law as remaining in vigor and vncancelled in regard of a full weight of debt or penalty to bee payed without remission of any the least graine of it then is it capable of a surety or pledge As for example if a man owe mee a summe of money I am no lesse satisfied if another pay me it for him then if himselfe should bring it with his owne hands This is the admirable temper of Gods mercy in admitting a deputy or pledge in a capitall debt and of his iustice in receiuing the vtmost mites of the debt Thus that hee might spare vs hee spared not his onely Sonne O yee Angels admire and adore this wisedome Quest 18. How came it to bee thus with vs men were wee created sinners Answ No. God at the first made man righteous but by yeelding to the Deuils temptation hee made himselfe a sinner Explan This hath beene already further explained Qu. 3. Quest 19. Wherein did man yeeld to the temptation of the Diuell Answ In eating the forbidden fruit and not contenting himselfe with all other fruits of which the Lord had allowed him to eate Explan Reade of this in the third Chapter of Genesis and you shall see how craftily the Deuill comes to the woman vnder colour of wishing her well yea better then God himselfe whereupon shee yeelds to eate and offereth of the forbidden fruit to her husband who did also eate Now what this fruit was it is vncertaine and it is but lost labour to enquire after it Quest 20. Was God so angry that hee would curse man for eating an Apple or Figge or such like Answ That was not the cause of Gods anger but his vnthankfulnesse pride disobedience and crediting rather the Deuill then God Adams sinne in disobeying Gods commandement Explan In that one sinne of eating the fruit forbidden did concurre many sinnes all very great First disobedience when there was but one commandement and man so qualified as that he could easily haue kept the
same Secondly ingratitude and forgetfulnes of Gods great benefits for the Lord had done wonderfully for man prouiding all things ready for him before his creation for necessity and delight had giuen him a pleasant place to inhabit a Paradise and power to eat all manner of fruit of all sorts of trees which hee planted not only he gaue him a straight charge concerning one tree onely that he should not eat thereof for what day soeuer hee should presume to eat thereof he threatned death vnto him yet vngratefull man forbeares not but vpon the very first occasion shewes himselfe disloyall and goes beyond his limits Thirdly pride and aspiring vnto an higher estate euen to be like his maker yea to be equall vnto him for the Deuill told them that they should be as Gods He was not content to be man made after Gods image and Lord and Ruler ouer all creatures in this world beasts foules fishes but seeing the great Lord of all to be of greater dignity he thought to sit in the same chaire of state with him Fourthly disloyalty content to heare his maker blasphemously discredited as being enuious and therfore forbidding him that tree lest by eating of it he should become as good as God himselfe yea in his heart he consented to this blasphemy thinking better of the cursed Deuill of hell then of the God of Heauen who is blessed for euer So that heere was matter enough against him for which to lade him with curses and to packe him out of Paradise Quest 21. But though one man did thus yet all did not are wee all then sinners and vnder the curse Answ Wee were all in his loynes and so what hee did and whatsoeuer estate he fell into it is common to vs all Rom. 5. Rom. 5.12.3.23 Explan This may seeme strange and yet thus doe the Scriptures plainely teach Sinne came in by one man and death by sinne forasmuch as all men haue sinned And againe All haue sinned and are depriued of the glory of God Neither indeede ought it to seeme strange for that we see the like dayly for matters of this world A man nobly borne and accordingly prouided for with a Princely estate yet if hee become a traitor his children and so his childrens children throughout all generations remaine without all Nobility without all their fathers wealth vnlesse it pleaseth their Prince to restore them and anew to bestow it vpon them Euen so our forefather Adam losing that estate wherein hee was made wee his children throughout all generations are without all interest therein vntill it shall please our great Prince and King out of his grace to restore vs againe and repurifie our tainted bloud by the most precious bloud of his deare Sonne in whom hee repossesseth vs of the lost inheritance and that with aduantage Quest 22. It seemes then that wee are sinners so soone as wee are borne before we haue actually done either good or euill Answ Yes verily the childe which is but newly borne yea but conceiued and liuing in his mothers wombe is a sinner and needs Gods grace Psal 51.5 Explan In sinne was I conceiued saith the kingly Prophet and in iniquity was I borne It was said of Esau and Iacob euen before they were borne before they had done good or euill Esau haue I hated Iaacob haue I loued Rom. 9.11 now where there is no sinne God cannot hate Esau then was a sinner whilst hee was yet in his mothers wombe and as it was with him so is it with vs all Otherwise we should not be mortall for where sinne is not there is no mortality And this should make Parents betimes to pray heartily for the grace of God to be shed vpon their children Quest 23. I perceiue then by this which hath beene said that wee are all in a miserable estate by nature but you tell me of Iesus Christ that hee was humbled for vs wherein standeth this his humiliation and in which of your articles is it set forth Answ In these words it is set forth And in Iesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord which was conceiued by the holy Ghost borne of the Virgin Mary suffered vnder Pontius Pilate was crucified dead and buried hee descended into hell and there be three degrees of his humiliation Quest 24. Which is the first degree and in which words Answ First his incarnation set forth in these words Which was conceiued of the holy Ghost and borne of the Virgin Mary Of Christs humiliation Explan Hauing by questions and answeres premised made a way to the consideration of the twofold estate of the Sonne of God viz. his humiliation and exaltation wee now come directly to open the articles touching these and first of his humiliation For the meaning considering what hath beene already said I shall neede to speake but little And in Iesus Christ That is I beleeue in Iesus Christ as being very God equall to the Father but in the order of the persons in the Godhead the Sonne of God and so the second person of the Trinitie and his onely begotten Sonne for in regard of him onely is God a Father by generation as hath beene already shewed though he be the Father of all true beleeuers also by adoption and regeneration and this onely Sonne of God I beleeue to be my Sauiour my Iesus to saue mee from my sinnes I bele●ue him to be Christ that is annointed or fore-appointed in the councell of the Father before all worlds to be the high Priest the Prophet and the King of his Church I beleeue him to bee our Lord that is to haue right of Lordship ouer vs euen as the father hath and power both of life and death ouer such as loue him and are obedient and ouer the stubburne and disobedient Who was conceiued of the Holy Ghost that is though he was made man yet not by ordinary way begotten of man but the power of the holy Ghost made the blessed Virgin to conceiue without man borne of the Virgin Mary that is this wonderfull conception was in the wombe of Mary a pure Virgin of whom he was after borne brought forth and brought vp after the manner of other children 1. Proofe Secondly for the grounds of holy Scriptures from whence all this is taken and first that hee is very God and Lord equall with the Father Philip. 2.6 Saint Paul is plaine Hee thought it no robbery to be equall with God and enough hath beene already said aboue concerning this Secondly that hee was made man like vnto vs in all things sinne onely excepted I shall need to say no more for the proofe hereof Thirdly that hee became man after an extraordinary sort all the holy Gospels doe plainely declare For they shew Math. 1. Luk. 1. 2. how that Mary was contracted vnto a man called Ioseph and before they came together shee was with child by the holy Ghost and that this should be so was prophesied