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

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not things unlawful unpossible and unwarranted by the Word of God not things whereof we are uncertain whether they please God or not but such things as the Scripture warranteth being the true Rule of all right ways the Record of Gods Revealed Will. 5. That being thus made it is carefully to be kept and religiously to be performed having an eye to that party with whom we have to deal For as Vows are to be made with reverence so are they to be performed with care and diligence otherwise we grosly abuse the Majesty of God and take his Name in vain So that Vows are not in themselves unlawful or to be condemned so as they be restrained and bounded in the compass of the Law of God Consider farther in Vows these Particulars viz. 1. If they be made of any thing flat against the Word of God they cannot binde or tye us to the performance thereof for all the force and power of binding us is to be borrowed and derived from the Word of God otherwise they have no strength or efficacy to constrain or command 2. They must not be made of such persons as want sufficient Reason Judgement Discretion and Understanding as Children Fools or Furious persons 3. They must be so made as they may stand with Christian Liberty for we may not in any sort make that absolutely Necessary which God hath left free unto us ensnaring the Conscience and abridging the Liberty which Christ hath purchased contrary to the Commandment of the Apostle Gal. 5.1 4. That a Vow made of a thing unpossible is no Vow at all but an intolerable presumption and a wilful tempting of God 5. They must not be against a mans general or particular Calling that is neither against his calling as he is a Christian neither against that special calling wherein he liveth 6. They must not be rash heady sudden idle or unadvised but made with Advice Meditation and Deliberation for rash Vows are not lawful though the things vowed may be done lawfully 7. They ought all to be of great moment and importance not idle and trifling toys like the Popish Vows whereof one voweth a Pilgrimage to the Saints another to fast or eat no Flesh at such a Feasts Even whereof the one is superstitious and the other devilish 1 Tim. 4.1 3. 8. They must not be made for false and wrong ends as conceit of Merit and opinion of deserving the favor of God and Everlasting Life For the ends which we respect must be good as to exercise and stir up the gifts of Faith Prayer Obedience Repentance and other graces of the Spirit and to testifie our Thankfulness to God for Blessings received at his hand They must not be to binde God unto us but us the closer unto him in a more strict course of life 9. They must come from a free heart performed willingly and chearfully unto God 10. We must pay our Vows without delay we must not put off the time Gen. 33.1 Exod. 5.3 lest the Lord hold us guilty of taking his Name in vain The blister'd Tongues of men scarce ought can vent Without the Breach of this Commandement We cannot sigh reprove admire nor fit Expressions to the fancy of our Wit Without the Breach thereof Courtiers sick For want of words make it their Rhetorick And Poets swear they are undone unless They may have license for some Prophaneness But let all such as Take Gods Name in vain Take heed they Take not Hell too for their pain The Fourth Commandment Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath day Six days thou shalt labor and do all that thou hast to do c. THe Sum of this Commandment setteth out a certain Day wherein God will have men to sever themselves from their ordinary labors and to apply themselves wholly to his Service As God rested the Seventh day after the Creation So Christ having ended the Work of the New Creation rested on this day from the Work of Redemption And as Christ did substitute the last Supper in room of the Passover So he substituted the First day of the Week in room of the Jews Sabbath to be a day set apart to his own Worship From Adam to our Savior Christ the Sabbath was the Seventh day of the Week but from Christ and his Apostles it is the First of the Week that is the Lords day which was instituted for the Seventh day or Sabbath day in respect of Christs Resurrection Now Christ in changing the Sabbath day from the Seventh day to the Eighth did not change the Moral Law for that change was no change of the Substance but of the Circumstance of Time for the Substance of that Law is the enjoyning of a Seventh days Rest unto the Lord now though a Seventh day from the Creation be not kept yet a Seventh day is kept still Hence then doth the Sectarist vainly hold That all days are now alike and none more a Sabbath then another For whereas they alledge We are free from the Law Rom. 7. it is meant of the Ceremonial Law the heavy yoke whereof Christ took from our shoulders and if in any place freedom from the Law be spoken of it is either meant of the Ceremonial and Judicial or of the Rigor of the Moral Law enacting perfect Obedience in every point or else threatning condemnation Neither is that true which is alledged Every day is a Sabbath to a Christian for it is Gods express Command Six days shalt thou labor yet not excluding our daily Service to God This continual Sabbath will not be till we come to Heaven Isa 66.23 Neither may it be in the liberty of the Church to change the Sabbath day again for as it was not at the first changed without Christs Authority so it can receive no further change without him And if the Church had this power then might it be said to be Lord of the Sabbath yet without adjoyning any opinion of such necessity of this unalterableness in the Church as to think it the least part of any ceremonial Worship it being now the Lords day no Jewish Sabbath And this is an unchangeable Rule That one day in Seven neither more nor less is Moral and Perpetual And although the Jews that believed changed the day which was ceremonial yet altered they not the Morality of one in Seven For in the first change they kept two Sabbaths together the Jewish the Seventh day of the week past in memorial of the Work of Creation which was past the Christian the First day which was immediately next the other and the First of the week to come in Remembrance of the Work of Redemption being our Sabbath at the Resurrection of Christ for the time following which is impossible ever to be changed again That which is shadowed forth in the Legal Sabbath is begun in the Spiritual and is perfected and consummated in the Heavenly Sabbath The Breach of this Sabbath is the main sin of the world nay Humane Inventions
honor of the Ministery of the Church or our obedience to the whole Ministery in life and maners and this is the Moral Sabbath The Sabbath is perpetual for these Reasons 1. Because it is placed in the number of the perpetual Commandments 2. Because it was written by the finger of God Exod. 31.18 Deut. 9.10 3. The writing of it in Tables of Stone doth argue that it is perpetual 4. Because it was before there was any use of the shadow or ceremony Forwhat Reasons the Lords day ought wholy to be spent in religious exercises 1. For Reasons drawn from the equity and liberality of God in giving us six days from the Example of Gods Rest and from the consideration of the end why it was appointed to be kept holy 2. It serveth to preserve men from Barbarism and Atheism and all irreligious Prophaneness 3. That it may be a Sign between the Lord and us throughout our generations that we may know that he is the Lord that doth sanctifie us Exod. 31.13 4. Our Savior vouchsafed to honor this day above the rest of the days of the week after his Resurrection and that by his special Appearings in it as well as by his Rising again upon it The special Appearings of our Savior after his Resurrection upon this his own day which should excite us to sanctifie it with prepared hearts and to observe it with the more care and circumspection 1. To Mary Magdalene early in the morning Joh. 20.1 14. 2. To the other Women as they were going to communicate to the Apostles the certainty of his Resurrection which the Angels had declared unto them before at the Sepulchre Mat. 28.9 3. To the two Disciples going to Emmaus Luke 24.21 4. The same day at night he appeared to his Disciples Joh. 20.19 5. On this day for the confirmation of Thomas his Faith he appeared to his Disciples Joh. 20.26 And upon this day also did the Holy Ghost descend On the Sabbath we must Rest 1. Chiefly from sin and thus our whole life should be a continual Sabbath 2. From ordinary not absolutely necessary labor Lev. 23.3 3. From works of special times as ploughing sowing reaping c. Exod. 34.21 Also from buying and selling Neh. 13.16 4. From the works of our special Callings the six days being appointed for them 5. From worldly speeches and thoughts either by making bargains or talking of worldly matters or contriving the same in our mindes The Sabbath is now called the Lords day Wherefore know That things are said to be the Lords in three respects viz. 1. In regard of Duty and service Thus all creatures are the Lords because he is their Creator and Maker to whom as to the High and Mighty Lord all things owe their homage Psal 24. 2. In regard of that Power and Authority whereby he Ruleth all things by his Providence to which Jurisdiction of his all men how wicked and perverse soever are subject Thus Cyrus King of Persia is said to perform the Lords pleasure though he knew not the Lord Isa 44.28 45.1 Psal 119.91 3. In respect of a Propriety and immediate Right that he hath in them being separate from mans use and sanctified to his and to be imployed in his service Thus is the Seventh day the Lords day if we rob him of his service in the least minute of an hour in this day we are sacrilegious and meddle with that which is not our own So that we under the New Testament are tyed to the observation of a Sabbath as well as the Jewswere of old and by as great Authority And this appeareth 1. From the time of the Institution of the Sabbath even in Paradice before Man fell when he had the substance of true Holiness and needed not any figurative ceremony for his comfort 2. From the Morality of this Commandment being placed among the rest of the Moral Laws which are to continue in force for ever Mat. 5.20 3. From the main Reason of this Commandment for the Commemoration of Creation and Redemption is more to us then that of the Creation onely was unto the Jews 4. From the Caveat given by our Savior speaking of Jerusalems destruction Mat. 24.20 In the Jewish Sabbath observe 1. The Jews were as dead men if they wrought on the Sabbath Exod. 35.2 they might not then kindle a fire throughout their habitations Exod. 35.3 2. It was also a figure of the Everlasting Rest of Gods children in the Kingdom of Heaven Isa 66.23 Heb. 4.9 3. It was observed in Remembrance of their deliverance out of Egypt which hapned on that day Deut. 5.15 4. It was tyed precisely to the Seventh day from the Creation and celebrated with sundry set Rites and Ceremonies Numb 28.9 10. Nevertheless there is a Sabbath Moral and Perpetual a time to be set apart to the end of the Worship of God to the end of the world The Reasons of the change of the Sabbath viz. 1. To put a Difference between the Jewish and the Christian Sabbath 2. To keep a Memorial of the day of our Redemption for as the Seventh day kept a Memorial of the Works of Creation so doth this First day of the week the Memorial of the Work of our Redemption which is a work so much greater then the other by how much it is more to Redeem us out of Hell being worse then nothing then it was at first to create us out of nothing Isa 66.24 3. To free the Church from the yoke of the Sacrifices and Ceremonies of the Jews Acts 15.10 for when this day was changed it was more tyed to the Jewish Sabbath which was solemnized with many ceremonies necessarily belonging unto it The Difference between the Christian observing of the Lords day and the Jewish observing of the Seventh day 1. It was not lawful for the Jews to change the Sabbath or to omit it as being a part of ceremonial Worship The Christian Church retaining still her liberty allotteth the First day unto the Ministery without adjoyning any opinion of Necessity or Worship 2. The old Ceremonial Sabbath was a Type of things to be fulfilled in the New Testament by Christ But in the New Testament that signification ceaseth and there is had regard onely of order and comeliness without which there could be either no Ministery or at least-wise no well ordered Ministery in the Church The sinal causes or ends for which the Sabbath was instituted viz. 1. The publike Worship and Service of God in the Church exercise of Prayers Confession and Obedience 2. The Maintenance and Preservation of the Ministery of the Church 3. That it might be in the Old Testament a Type signifying the Spiritual and Everlasting Sabbath Ezek. 20.12 4. For a circumstance of the Seventh day that it might advertise men of the Creation Preservation and Managing of the world 5. That on that day the works of charity bountifulness and liberality should be exercised 6. For the bodily Rest both of Men
and Traditions are ordinarily better observed and more regarded then this Commandment of God The people indeed would rather go to Church then to work but to carnal Delights and Recreations rather then either forgetting the Memento wherewith the Lord more specially commands as well due preparation before as unsophisticate performance in the actual celebration of this holiest of days Such as make no conscience to take the Lords day from him are Spiritual Thieves and meddle with that which is not their own never considering the wrong and injury that they offer unto the Almighty God rested on the Seventh day that is he ceased to create any New parts of the World as being now perfect and such as he would have it to be Good Reason therefore had the Lord of this day on pain of Eternal death of Body and Soul in Hell the place of the Damned strictly to charge and command that every Soul keep this whole day holy to his glory How dares then any creature-Man think his own thoughts speak his own words or do his own works on this glorious day Isa 58.13 the Lords own holy day He that walks away this day in vain Discourse idle Pastimes and sinful Recreations steps every step he thus prophanely steps one step forward to Eternal Death He that gathered but Sticks thereon was stoned to death because he had not kept that Statute which God had enacted as by solemn Proclamation That all sorts that profess themselves his Servants should wait upon him on the Sabbath It was Christs own custom to preach the Gospel in the Synagogues on this day so also the Disciples Acts 20.17 17.1 2. 1 Cor. 16.11 The Doors of the Temple were shut the six days but opened from morning until the evening upon the Seventh day Ezek. 46.1 2. And this sanctifying of the Lords day is a Moral Duty and bindes perpetually otherwise we should have but Nine Commandments whereas they are often called the Ten Words Exod. 34.28 Deut. 14.13 10.4 And Christ came not to destroy but to fulfil and keep the Law Mat. 5.17 Know then we may not make this day a day of vain pleasures and carnal delights a day of Sports and Recreations thinking it sufficient if we follow not the works of our Calling neither may we on this day go or ride about our worldly matters to buy bargain sell and talk with others robbing God of his day to spare one of our own neither is it sufficient to observe onely so much of this day as is enjoyned by Laws and Injunctions of men and prophane the rest of it thereby dividing the Lords day between God and our selves And every sin is so much the greater by how much less the thing is for which men sin I say the less the thing is for which a man will sin and transgress the Law of God the greater always is his sin because the greater is his contempt of God Thus was it with him that gathered Sticks on the Sabbath day and was stoned to death for his pains And thus it is with such as recreate away the Sabbath by walking the Fields who offend God more therein then he that worketh thereon in his Calling for his Necessity Yet here by the way we are to beware of a Jewish Superstition which Christ often refutes in the Gospel that is to think it unlawful to perform on the Sabbath day whatsoever works belonging to the necessity either of his own life or of others for by the end of the Commandment it appears That such works onely are forbidden as hinder the Exercise of the Ministery of Gods Word The parts of this Commandment are two viz. 1. The Commandment That the Sabbath be sanctified that is that it self viz. the Seventh day be allotted for Gods Service Gen. 2.3 Exod. 20.11 16.26 20.10 2. The Reason of the Commandment drawn from Gods Rest on the Seventh day after the Creation and his hallowing thereof Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day that is with great care and Religion and that for these Reasons 1. Because the breach and violating of the Sabbath is the breach and violating of the whole Worship of God for the neglect of the Ministery soon corrupts the whole Doctrine and Worship of God 2. Because by the exacting of this Typical Sabbath God would signifie the greatness and necessity of the Spiritual Sabbath 3. Because God will have the external Sabbath to serve for the beginning and perfecting of the Spiritual Sabbath in us In this Commandment we are commanded to keep holy the Sabbath day which is done 1. By preparing our selves by Prayer and emptying our hearts of sin 2. By assembling together to Pray unto God to Praise him to hear his holy Word and to Receive the blessed Sacraments 3. By meditating upon Gods Works and the Word which we have heard suffering it so to work in us as that we may be furthered in all holiness of life 4. By collecting and distributing to the Poor by visting the sick and reconciling dissentions among Neighbors In this Commandment is forbidden all Prophaning of the Sabbath which is 1. By doing worldly works which are not of present necessity by journeying about worldly Affairs idle resting or absenting our selves from the publike Duties of Gods Word and Worship 2. By forgetfulness of the Sabbath upon the six days by which we often bring upon our selves a necessity of prophaning the same 3. When being Parents or Governors we leave such as are under our charge to their liberty upon that day The Reasons of this Commandment are 1. Partly expressed therein and are taken 1. From the Lords Example who rested the Seventh day from all his works of Creation 2. From his Blessing inseparably linked unto the hallowing of this day 2. Partly enfolded therein are these 1. The Law of the Sabbath is Ancient and was of force in Paradice before Mans Fall 2. Because it is most Equal the Lord allowing us six days to labor in 3. Because the Seventh is the Lords peculiar day so that without Sacriledge we cannot any way prophane it God will have all our children and family to cease from their labors on this day for two causes 1. That these also may be brought up by their Parents and Masters in the service of God and may be admitted unto the Ministery of the Church 2. Because he will have especially on the Sabbath day Love and Bountifulness towards our Neighbors to be shewed and seen in the Church Strangers also are commanded to intermit their labors and that if they were converted to true Religion because they were of the houshold of the Church if they were Infidels it is commanded them not in respect of themselves but in respect of the Israelites and that especially for these two Reasons 1. Lest by their ill Example they should give offence unto the Church 2. Lest their liberty might be an occasion to the Jews to accomplish by them those labors which it was
it Must we never pray it because it may not always be absolutely necessary may it therefore be never expedient Hence then never let any sober Christian more undervalue this Form for Prayer for the reason onely of others thinking too highly of it nor admire it for the reason of others vain undervaluing it but pray it in Knowledge Faith and Fervency without which the words are as a dead letter This Form is compleatly Comprehensive of all things petitionable whether Spiritual Temporal or Eternal an exact Epitomy of what God hath promised to give or man hath leave to ask It is that Form of words for Prayer which our Savior taught his Disciples commanding them when they pray to say Our Father which c. Next follows that Creed which vulgarly is stiled Apostolical whereby we make Confession of that Faith which believes in one God even the true God one in Essence Deut. 6.4 Three in Persons 1 Joh. 5.7 The Father the Creator Psal 134.3 the Son the Redeemer Rom. 5.18 the Holy Ghost the Sanctifier 1 Pet. 1.2 which Believes that the Holy Eph. 1.3 4. and Catholick Church Isa 54.2 consists of the Faithful people of God which Believes that there is a Communion of Saints Eph. 4.15 16. Pardoned of all sins Isa 44.22 Appointed to Rise from Death and to enjoy Eternal Life both in Body and Soul Joh. 6.39 40. In the next a word of the Decalogue in general How in the Table of mans Heart it stood engraven before it was repeated in stone Also how and in what maner the Law was given How many ways the Decalogue's divided with Rules concerning the substance and meaning thereof in general Various and voluminous are the Expositions on the Commandments but here as in a Map quasi uno intuita thou mayest descry the whole Region of the Law of God The same may be said of the whole Work as it stands in relation to the subject it treats of Now because we are not under the Law but under Grace some have dream'd That the Enacting of the Gospel hath Repealed the Statutes made when Moses was Speaker the Lord awaken them Do we now make void the Law through Faith God forbid yea we establish the Law Rom. 3.31 David a man in request with God a man after his own heart took the Testimonies of God for his Heritage for ever made them the joy of his heart and resolved to keep the Commandments of his God Psal 119.112 115. and in ver 126. he saith It is time for thee O Lord to work for they have made void thy Law and in the next Verse most passionately declares his affection saying I love thy Commandments above gold yea above fine gold A plain Discovery why others reject them But if thou wilt live keep the Commandments Prov. 7.2 keep them exactly universally constantly chearfully and sincerely Have no Gods but One and that the onely true God Worship no Created thing In vain do not take Gods Name in thy thoughts actions or otherwise Consecrate the Seventh day Reverence thy Superiors but not with Religious Worship Commit no Adultery by the eye or otherwise Do not play the Thief in thy Calling or otherwise Give no false Testimony and endeavor after that excellent gift of Contentation Thus with holy David have thou respect to all the Lords Commandments and that continually Psal 119.117 for the Lord sheweth Mercy unto Thousands of them that love him and keep his Commandments Exod. 20.6 The next is touching the Infinite Love of God to Man The Decree of Election according to the good will and pleasure of God from all Eternity The Creation of all things out of nothing without any Instruments Means Assistance or Motion onely by the Word of God alone The Redemption of Man by the Imputation of the sufferings of the punishment due for sin in the person of our Mediator Vocation whereby we are called from Darkness to Light from a state of Nature to a state of Grace from out of the World to the Kingdom of Heaven from being Limbs of Satan to be Members of Christ from Children of Wrath to become the Heirs of Heaven Justification whereby God absolveth true Believers from the guilt of sin by the Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ Sanctisication or the inward changing of a justified man purged from all the corruption of Nature and endued with inward Righteousness whereby the Image of God is restored in him Adoption whereby the justified through the Union they have with Christ are accounted of God as his own Children Regeneration or the repairing of the decayed estates of our souls the Holy Ghost actuating the hearts of Gods Elect to a free constant and faithful exercise of a holy life Conversion or mutation of a corrupt Minde Life and Will into a good stirred up in the Chosen by the Holy Ghost through the Preaching of the Gospel Repentance that inward and continual sorrowing and mourning for the Commission of sin joyned with Faith Humiliation and a constant turning from all sin unto God with a hatred and loathing thereof thus accompanied with both inward and outward amendment and New Obedience whereby a man is renewed unto that whereunto he was enabled by Creation whereby being endued with Faith and Repentance he doth according to the measure of Grace received endeavor to yield Obedience to all Gods Commandments with the whole man for which end even the Revelation of the Mystery which was kept secret since the World began was made known to all Nations Rom. 16.26 The next speaks of Fasting that holy and extraordinary Abstinence from the commodities of this life for our better humiliation and preparation to Prayer when any Judgement on our selves or Brethren is either threatned feared begun or executed How this part of Divine Worship hath been of late years prophaned in this Land may to this day be read in the Euroclydons of Gods fearful Judgements Insomuch as it s now necessary that we Fast for our Fasts For did we not Fast to Wrath to Revenge to Strife to Envy to Debate Did we not Feast our Lusts when nought but the posture of a Bulrush could denote our Fasting Did we not Fast at Noon to surfet at Night Did we not even then afflict our Brethren in stead of our Souls Did we not finde pleasure in the day of our Fasts and exact all our Labors Did we not draw Iniquity with cords of Vanity even then when we should have loosed the Bands of Wickedness Did we not even then load on weights grievous to be born in stead of undoing the heavy Burthens Did we not even then also receive the gain of Oppression in stead of letting the oppressed go free Did we not then likewise take the staff of Life from such as were half famished before in stead of dealing our bread to the hungry Did we not then also cast the poor out of their own Dwellings in stead of bringing them that were cast out into our own
or honor 3. When God offers occasion by any work of his Providence we must endeavor to glorifie and magnifie his Name therein whether they be acts of his Mercy or of his Justice We must thus labor to hallow Gods Name for these Reasons 1. Because it is an honor even due unto him Rev. 4.11 2. It is a credit to us also 3. We thereby testifie how we esteem of God 4. The contrary argues impiety Exod. 5.2 Isa 36.20 5. He hath severely punished the prophanation of his Name Exod. 14.28 2 Kings 19.37 Isa 37.36 37. Acts 12.23 6. He created us for this purpose Prov. 16.3 7. As all men account of their Names Eccl. 7.1 so God doth highly of his 8. It is not onely holy in it self but gives holiness to all other things that are holy 9. Moses and Aaron entred not into Canaan because they did not sanctifie the Word amongst the children of Israel Deut. 32.51 Num. 20.12 10. The Lord himself proclaims That he will be sanctified in them that come near him and that before all the people he will be glorified Lev. 10.3 If we say Hallowed be thy Name with our mouthes and prophane it in our lives we bewray a false heart and discover the rotten profession of most damnable hypocrisie by this unchristian contradiction rendring our selves more odious in the sight of God then base dissemblers are in our own estimation Let therefore the practice of our lives demonstrate the sincerity of our hearts keep tune with the Musick of our lips when we sing Glory to God on high and in an holy sympathy eccho forth the Devotion of our souls when we pray Hallowed be thy Name May all our Thoughts Words Actions sanctifie Thee Holy Father May this Prayer be In all our Thoughts in all our Words still pray'd In all our Actions still devoutly said And may our Hearts to this Petition be Joyn'd to make up this holy Harmony Touch thou the strings thereof and then no fear Of jarring discord to ascend thine ear Thy Servants with thy holy Spirit inflame Thy Church shall practice Hallowed be thy Name §. 6. Thy Kingdom come GOds Kingdom is the Rule that he doth exercise over his Creatures generally over all the whole world specially over his Elect over his Church howsoever now dispersed into many places yet making but one Kingdom which is partly in Heaven Triumphant partly upon Earth Militant till the last great Day when in Heaven onely it shall be everlastingly glorious Now besides this there is a Spiritual Kingdom an inward Spiritual Kingdom of God which is over all those in whose hearts his Laws are written to do them and the holy Spirit ruleth and beareth sway and happy is that man who is thus of his Kingdom Let thy Kingdom come that is Let it by continual encrease be augmented and always by a new enlargement and accession be extended and multiplied which thou O Lord in thy Church dost hold and possess wherein we desire That the number of true Believers may be daily encreased that Gods Kingdom of Grace may be enlarged and his Kingdom of Glory hastned Thus let thy Kingdom come outwardly thy Power and Providence being exercised and inwardly Grace being encreased and Glory hastned Let nothing hinder the coming of thy Kingdom neither the Devil nor wicked men neither in the Magistracy Ministery nor People neither infidelity impenitency any raigning sin or negligence but let thy Kingdom come to us that be pilgrims and strangers here on earth prepare us for it and enter us into it that be yet without renew us by thy Spirit that we may be subject to thy Will confirm us also in this estate that our souls after this life and both souls and bodies at the Day of Judgement may be fully glorified yea Lord hasten this glory to us and to all thine Elect. And here also implicitely we acknowledge our opposite disposition to Gods Kingdom and bewail it For this imports That there is another Kingdom even the Kingdom of Satan which is a Kingdom of darkness full of disorder and confusion through sins which greatly hindreth and annoyeth Gods Kingdom of Grace especially This is that Tyrannical Regency by which as the Prince of Darkness he by Gods just permission ruleth in the children of darkness and rageth against the children of light 2 Cor. 4.4 Rev. 12.3 erecting up two other Kingdoms the one of Sin Rom. 6.12.5.21 the other of Death Rom. 5.14 all which are Enemies to this Kingdom we pray for This Petition doth in order next follow Hallowed be thy Name because it is the first means by which Gods Name is hallowed and next to the hallowing of his Name we ought chiesly to pray That Gods Kingdom may come Mat. 6.31 And it is also placed before Thy will be done to teach us That no man can rightly do the will of God and please him unless he be of his Kingdom and delivered out of the Kingdom of Darkness by faith in Christ and the Spirit of Sanctification he shall do his will indeed as a vessel of wrath being over-ruled by his Almighty power but not as a vessel of mercy out of a good heart to be accepted Thus no man can ever do Gods will in any thing till such time as Gods Kingdom be erected in his heart because no man can do Gods will that is not Gods Subject Joh. 1.24 neither can any man keep Gods Law but by Gods grace Psal 119.32 Conclude we therefore That Gods Kingdom is that Spiritual Rule which God through Christ doth by grace begin in us in this life and by glory will accomplish in the life to come Dan. 2.37 Mat. 25.37.6.31 Rom. 14.17 The kingdom of God is threefold viz. 1. The Kingdom of Power Psal 99.1 By this he ruleth Satan and all his enemies Psa 2.9.145.13 commands all creatures and preserveth his own people This Kingdom is external and is a government of all 2. The Kingdom of Grace Mat. 3.2 By this he ruleth the godly and raigns in their hearts by his Word and Spirit Luke 17.20 This Kingdom is internal and a government of the Elect. 3. The Kingdom of Glory Luke 23.42 By this he crowneth the godly with Celestial happiness This Kingdom is eternal and a government of the departed out of this life into heaven The kingdom of God signifies these particulars viz. 1. The sending of the Son our Mediator 2. The ordaining and maintaining of the Ministery of Christ 3. The gathering of the Church by Christ out of mankinde by the voyce of the Gospel and the efficacy of the holy Ghost beginning in us true Faith and Repentance 4. The perpetual Government of the Church 5. The preservation thereof in this life and protection against her enemies 6. The casting away of her enemies into eternal pains 7. The raising of the Church unto eternal life 8. The glorifying of the Church in eternal life when God shall be all in all We therefore when we pray Thy Kingdom
adversity because it cometh unto us by the will of God 5. That God would turn the hearts of all men from sin and bring them every where to the obedience of his will 6. That Events such as are not contrary to Gods will that is that such things may come to pass which so please him 7. That God would bless and prosper our actions and counsels that no other Events may follow them but such as himself knoweth may most serve for his glory and our salvation 8. That God would hasten that time and state unto us wherein we shall perfectly do the will of God that is our state of glory Rules of obeying Gods will 1. Obey Gods will absolutely and for himself obey man onely in God and for God 2. Obey God in the maner as well as in the matter which he commandeth 3. In doing the works of piety let them give place if unfaigned necessity require and calleth to a work of Charity 4. Let the works of thy private Calling give place to works of the publike calling and general as if thou be laboring on the six days the Lord calling to his House by his worship there thou must attend it Lev. 23. 5. The works of a general common calling must give place to the works of a special undoubted calling being contrary if a man at any time hath such That all our obedience to Gods will may be the better accepted of him it must have these three properties 1. Chearfulness and readiness God loveth the chearful giver 2. Sincerity which is heartily and from the Spirit approving our selves to God and not affecting the applause and praise of men 3. Universality which is in all and every particular thing thus Job is approved obediently professing his subjection to God though he should aggravate his misery and kill him The way how to become chearful doers of the will of God or the duties required by this petition to be practised by us that Gods will may be done 1. We must prove what is the good and acceptable will of God Rom. 12.2 that is we must by often tryal of our actions by the Word of God become expert in Gods will and esteem highly of it be it never so contrary to carnal Reason Thus Abraham did Gen. 22.3 2. We must lay aside our own wills and be possessed with a base conceit thereof not leaning thereon 3. We must labor for a true perswasion of Gods mercy in the pardon of our sins and for the salvation of our souls whereby we may shew our selves thankful to God for so great a mercy 4. We must consider that we are the Temples of the Holy Ghost which is a wonderful dignity to sinful men and in regard hereof we must stir up our selves so to live that we make not sad the Spirit of God which dwelleth in us 5. We must consider the blessings of God bestowed on us both in soul and body one by one and this will move us to love God which love we shall shew in doing his will 1 Joh. 5.3 6. Let us consider the threatnings of God against sin and his Judgements upon them that live in sin and these will help to restrain our corruptions that they break not forth into action 7. We must be strict in the matter of sin making conscience of every evil way yea even of the first motions unto sin that never come to consent for this Petition for obedience respects not onely our words and deeds but also our secret thoughts for even they must be brought to obedience unto God 2 Cor. 10.5 8. We must seek to cut off all things that hinder us from doing Gods will we must use Spiritual means and pray for the Spirit to mortifie and crucifie the lusts of the flesh Rom. 8.13 which makes us rebels against God in transgressing his will Now the ground of this work is the death of our Saviour Christ applyed by true Faith to our corrupt hearts 9. We must not live inordinately but in that sort which God hath enjoyned Christians in his word every one godly in the general calling of a Christian and faithfully and conscionably in his particular calling whether of Church State or Family 10. We must endeavor to subject our selves patiently to the will of God in all afflictions whatsoever for it is the will of God that through manifold afflictions we should enter into his Kingdom This Petition teacheth us to bewail 1. Our natural disposition whereby we are prone to rebel against the will of God 2. Our natural hypocrisie even that which remaineth in us after grace received 3. Though we have never so much grace yet to lament and bewail our want of obedience in all good duties because the best of us all fail in the maner of doing them 4. Our impatience that when God layeth any crosses upon us we cannot as we ought endure them patiently and thankfully 5. Our slack and imperfect obedience yea privy pride proud presumption deadness of Spirit secret hypocrisie and other weaknesses incident to us even in our best services 6. The sins of others whereby they disobey the will of God and so rebel against him whereby he is dishonored and therefore must we be passionately grieved for the sins of others and labor to reclaim them In the supplication of this petition we pray 1. For grace to deny our own wills and ways 2. For understanding of the will of God which without it we cannot perform 3. For faith whereby to believe that the will of God revealed unto us is the will of God 4. For power to obey the holy whole will of God which is both active in doing and passive in suffering In the deprecation of this Petition we pray against 1. Rebellion or an obstinate offending against the known will of God 2. Prophaneness which is an undervaluing estimation of holy duties 3. Hypocrisie which is a drawing near to God with the lips but estranging the heart from him 4. Natural Corruption which draweth away to disobedience enticing to evil 5. Wea riness in well-doing a refusing to go forward and a turning back again 6. Impatience murmuring at crosses and discontent at Gods Providence The thanksgiving of this Petition is 1. For disobedience and sin in any measure mortified 2. For the knowledge of Gods will for faith and desires in truth to obey the will of God in all things all the days of our life In this Petition we are taught to frame our lives to an holy imitation of the blessed Angels which will not stand with their humor who account zeal in Religion affected preciseness But such as call God Father in sincerity must set before them the obedience of the holy Angels as a patern for their imitation to a like resemblance although not to a like equality of perfection Now in them we may observe these things for us to follow 1. They desired before Christs Incarnation to look into the mystery of our Redemption wrought by Christ 1
part 5. To beware of distrustful care for that which Christ bids us ask God undoubtedly will give because it is according to his will if we ask in faith and make a sober use of the means that be lawful and look if temporal blessings fail for a good supply in Spiritual Graces 6. To learn to receive our bread from God or any other temporal blessing we enjoy as a fruit of Christs Passion which is the Foundation of every good gift and blessing of God 7. That every one should have a lawful Calling and therein so imploy himself that he may eat his own bread 2 Thess 3.12 8. That all fraud injustice and cruelty in the getting of temporal things is condemned for we pray for our own bread gotten by honest labor that we eat not the bread of violence Prov. 14.17 20.17 9. That we must labor to be in Christ 2 Cor. 13.5 endeavor to maintain our estate Gen. 30.30 and impart our goods to the poor Prov. 19.17 10. That community of goods is an Anabaptistical fancy Josh 13.7 and not commanded in the word for what need of a Law against Theft if all things were common In the Supplication of this Petition we pray for all things needful for us in this present life not being measured by our own will but by the will of the Lord These things are 1. General concerning us all as 1. Peace and tranquility through which small things become great whereas by discord great things decay and come to nothing 1 Tim. 2.2 2. Seasonable weather that the heavens may answer the earth the earth may answer the Corn the Corn may answer us as is promised of God to such as he favoreth 3. Worthy and vertuous Governors of the Common-wealth by whose care Peace may be maintained 4. Healthfulness strength and ability of the people and the encrease of them to our mutual comfort and the dismaying of our enemies Psal 144.12 5. Victory over our enemies that rise up against us 2. Special viz. 1. An honest disposition to labor in our particular Callings to get and preserve such things as are for our maintenance he must not eat that will not work 2 Thess 3.10 no man is priviledged to be idle 2. Good success through Gods blessing on our labor 3. A charitble disposition in us to relieve the impotent poor for we pray for our not my daily bread 4. The Sanctification of the Creatures which is when we are sanctified that receive them for without this there cannot be a comfortable use of them 5. The blessing of God to make the Creatures nourishable unto us for neither they in themselves nor we in our selves have wherewithal to convert them to nourishment 6. Contentation and resting upon Gods Providence in our greatest wants and dangers 7. Humility and lowliness of minde because we are all beggars it is of Alms that we have any thing we have nothing of our own and without the Lords liberality we cannot be sustained In the Deprecation of this Petition we pray with submission to the will of God 1. Against unseasonable weather pestilent influences and vapours plague and all contagious diseases unhealthful constitutions and extreme poverty 2. Against idleness improvident Magistrates Invasion of Enemies and Civil War 3. Against discontent murmuring trust in the Arm of Flesh covetousness and worldly cares hard-heartedness prodigality unjust and unrighteous dealing and against all things that defile man and make the creatures unclean and accursed unto him as pride in abundance discontent in want negligence in mens callings unfaithfulness in dealing improvidence in getting Parsimony in hoording ingratitude in prodigally spending unmercifulness in not giving to the poor unthankfulness for Gods Creatures all abuse of the gifts of God and the like The Thanksgiving of this Petition is For all and every the benefits of this life both general and special even for all such things as before we prayed for and for freeing us from any evils wherewith we have been bodily oppressed yea we thank God that he hath hitherto so bountifully provided for us and others that we have a sufficiency for our present estate and do see his blessing in the getting having and using of all his Creatures for had we the Royalty of the whole world yet without the blessing of Almighty God miserable were our condition so that had we the fowls of the Air at command all the fish in the Sea in a net all the beasts of the Field at our shambles all Creatures in the world at our command and service yet had we need in all humility to address our selves to the Throne of Grace and say Give us this day our daily bread What have we that we have not Lord from thee Save our own Natural impurity Which poysons all the sustenance we take Vnless thou bless it for our Saviors sake Vouchsafe us Lord this day our daily bread Without which Staff of life Mankinde is dead One Crum for Jesus sake the Crums are all We crave the Crums that from thy Table fall Such Alms are precious when thou dost dispence Thy Blessing with those gifts of Providence §. 9. And forgive us our Trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us IN this Petition we pray That God would freely forgive us all our sins and trespasses against his Laws as we do from the heart forgive the offences by men committed against us The word Trespasses in this Petition is by Matthew called Debts and by Luke Sins for sins are debts because we owe obedience of which we fail by sin and because as by debt a man is in danger of imprisonment so by sin of being cast into the prison of Hell whence Christ hath ransomed all Believers by paying the debt Thus the word Debt is a figurative kinde of speech taken from bargaining wherein God is resembled to the Creditor man is the Debtor the Law is the Bond or Obligation and Sin is that Debt of ours for which we stand bound to God by the Law which appears by this That in the Evangelists the words Sin and Debt are used promiscuously as Luke 11.4 compared with Mat. 6.12 Now sin makes us debtors unto God not that we owe it him for we are bound by the Law to the contrary obedience but because upon default of obedience unto God whereto we are bound by the Law we are bound for our sins unto punishment which is as it were a second debt Thus Christ calleth all our sins Debts Matth. 6. both Original and Actual both of Fact and of Omission because they make us debtors to God either of obedience or punishment which we are to pay Forgive us that is Seeing we are not able to pay the debts occasioned by our sins accept of the satisfaction made by the All-sufficient Lord Jesus and for his sake Let not our debts be required at our hands or any of them for the least of which we are never able to answer So that this Forgiveness here asked
our discharge in this life that we be not tormented in the life to come The Reasons why sin is called a Debt to man 1. Because we owe love which is thereby broken Rom. 13.8 2. Because we owe punishment for doing wrong Judg. 1.8 3. Because we owe satisfaction for the wrong done Lev. 6.4 These words As we forgive our debtors are added for these Reasons 1. That we may rightly desire remission of sins that is with faith and repentance a sign and token whereof is the love of our Neighbor 2. That when we finde in our selves true faith and repentance we may so have a certain argument and comfort in us that we are of the number of them to whom remission of sins is promised and that therefore we shall doubtless obtain the same All offences that are done to us of others may be reduced to these three Heads 1. Such as do onely displease us but bring no loss or hurt to us 2. Small injuries such as do not onely displease us but withal bring some little hurt to us either in our life goods or good-name 3. Greater injuries such as are not onely offensive to our persons but withal do prejudice our life and bring a ruine upon our estates both in goods and good-name The forgiveness between man and man is fourfold viz. 1. Of Revenge that is when we requite not evil for evil either by thought word or deed This belongeth to all men 2. Of private Punishments when men return not punishments for injuries done by way of requital though we cannot forgive wholly and perfectly yet we may truly and sincerely 3. Of Judgement when we judge not an injury done to be an injury 4. Of Satisfaction when it is due for some hurt done Now man is said to forgive man when he doth pardon either the wrong done Gen. 50.21 or the punishment appointed for the wrong 2 Sam. 19.23 or the satisfaction which the offender is bound to make Luke 7.4 or all of them as occasion is offered Mat. 18.32 The conditional words of this Petition are useful to us many ways viz. 1. To inform us that asking of pardon and testimony of Repentance go together he that receives the one must express the other for where God gives pardon there also he gives grace to repent and mercy is not granted but on condition of repentance Acts 2.37 38. 2. To teach us to forgive our brethren every day to renew our repentance and to humble our selves and to let us know That we are bound to forgive all persons Gol. 3.12 all sins Prov. 10. and at all times Mat. 17.22 when men offend us and that fully 3. To afford us a notable sign of pardon of sin namely our forgiving of and mercy to our brethren 4. To admonish us to beware of the common sin of this Age which is desire of revenge spite and grudging for if we forgive not we pray in effect that God would not forgive us yea we curse our selves 5. To discover unto us the gross hypocrisie of our Nature for so oft as we make this Petition we make profession of reformation of life in new obedience for this one branch of brotherly Reconciliation here professed doth presuppose our Conversion from all sin since true Repentance for one sin cannot stand with a purpose to live in any other 6. To stir us up to hunger after love mercy gentleness meekness and to endeavor to practice the same continually living in peace 2 Cor. 13.11 laboring to make peace Mat. 5.9 and shewing all tokens of love to our adversaries that they may assure themselves we have wholly forgiven them 7. To shew us the way how to keep true peace of conscience for ever for when we are at one with God and man we have a blessed peace and this is by calling upon God for the pardon of our sins every day and by following after peace with men in the practice of forgiveness and reconciliation which is never sincere without repentance 8. To acquaint us That no man living in malice can say the Lords Prayer as he ought to do Mat. 5.24 and that is a sign of grace to forgive Mat. 17.32 9. To exclude from pardon all such as persecute the Saints of God till they repent and practice as they pray in this Petition By this Petition we are taught 1. To bewail our carnal security going on from day to day in sin without thought of the debt thereby 2. To relye and settle our hearts in all estates in affliction temptation and death it self on the meer mercy of God in Christ by faith in his Blood for the pardon of our sins 3. Not to lie down in the sins we daily commit but renew our estate by true humiliation and repentance which consists in daily examination confession contrition supplication and conversion 4. To use this Petition as a remedy against despair which must not embolden any to sin presumptuously for the Lord hath said he will not be merciful to that man Deut. 29.19 5. That no man possibly can fulfil the Law for the Apostles themselves were commanded to ask pardon for sin every day whereby it is plain they could not fulfil the Law much less can we 6. In all godly maner to endeavor after what we pray for for it is gross also hypocrisie daily to ask the pardon of sin and still to continue in the daily practice thereof 7. Not onely to pray for the pardon of our own sins but of our brethrens also whereby we are taught that the good estate of their souls should be dear and precious to us In the Supplication of this Petition we pray for what soever tendeth to the forgiveness of our sins as 1. The knowledge of our sins without which the tongue may pray for pardon but the heart cannot Thus many poor and miserable souls ignorantly deceive themselves 2. Grace to acknowledge our sins for he that hides them shall not prosper Prov. 28.13 and all that know them do not confess them or else some way justifie themselves 3. Grace to be truly humbled for sin and that in the sense of Gods curse due for it else we are still in our sins and cannot pray to speed 4. Justification through the death and blood-shedding of Christ Rom. 4.25 That Christs righteousness may be made ours and our sins laid upon him for his mercies sake 5. Love and charity towards our brethren that God would give us a heart to be reconciled to them pardoning their offences against us The Deprecation of this Petition is against all things that may shut up Gods mercy and goodness from us as 1. Blindeness of minde and ignorance of our inward estate which is through ignorance of the Law 2. Hardness of heart which keepeth from repentance 3. Despair of Gods mercy and goodness which driveth from God to the Devil 4. Presumption which is the promising of happiness to ones self on false ground 5. Continuance in sin and the least opinion of
exceeding vertue of God 2. Perfect Glory perfect Dignity and full Divine Majesty What is meant by Christs session at the right hand of the Father 1. The perfection of Christs Divine Nature that is the equality of the Word with the Father which he did not receive but ever had 2. The perfection of Christs Humane Nature which compriseth 1. The personal union of the Humane Nature with the Word For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily Col. 2.9 2. The Collation or bestowing of gifts on him far greater and more in number then are bestowed on all Men and Angels 3. The perfection or excellency of the Office of the Mediator that is the Prophetical Priestly and Royal Function which Christ now as the glorified Head of his Church doth in his Humane Nature gloriously exercise in Heaven 4. The perfection of Christs honor that is the Adoration Worship and Reverence which is yielded unto him both of Men and Angels Heb. 1.6 The benefits we receive by Christs sitting at the Fathers right hand are all the benefits of the Kingdom and Priesthood of Christ glorified 1. His Intercession for us 2. The gathering governing and guarding of his Church by the Word and Spirit 3. His defending of the Church against her enemies 4. The abjection and destruction of the Churches enemies 5. The Glorification of the Church The difference of Christs Ascension and ours stands thus He ascended by his own power and vertue we shall not by our own but by his John 3.13 He ascended to be Head we to be his Members He to glory agreeable for the Head we to glory fit for Members Christs Ascension was the cause of ours but it is not so of the contrary Whom seek'st thou Mary What is Jesus he He goes before thee into Galilee This was the Angels voyce Nor was the news Less strange to his Disciples then the Jews Though herein for himself he did no more Then what he did for Lazarus before He 's now ascended and has verifi'd What Enoch and Elias typifi'd He sits at Gods right hand and has thereby In Earth all Power in Heav'n all Majesty §. 7. From thence he shall come to judge both the Quick and the Dead THe last Judgement shall be a manifestation or declaration and seperation of the just and unjust who ever have lived or shall live from the beginning of the world unto the end proceeding from God by Christ and a pronouncing of Sentence on these men and an execution thereof according to the Doctrine of the Law and the Gospel which Execution is not an annihilation or final destruction of the Body and Soul or a perpetual senslesness but an infinite and endless continuance of those Torments which the Wicked in this life despairing do begin to feel forsaken and abjected of God subject to all torments both of Body and Soul And in this last Judgement Absolution to the godly shall be principally according to the Gospel but shall be confirmed by the Law Condemnation to the wicked shall be principally by the Law but shall be confirmed of the Gospel Sentence shall be given on the wicked according to their own Merit but on the godly according to Christs Merit applyed unto them by faith a Testimony and Witness of which Faith shall be their Works Now the Judge shall be Christ John 5.22 neither yet are the Father and the Holy Ghost removed from this Judgement but Christ immediately shall speak and give Sentence and that in his Humane Nature and when he speaketh the Father shall speak by him so that the Judgement shall belong to all the three persons of the Godhead as concerning their Consent and Authority but unto Christ as touching the publishing and executing of the Judgement yea and the Church also shall judge as touching the Allowance and Approbation of this Judgement whereunto they shall then subscribe Luke 22.30 What Christs coming to Judge both the Quick and the Dead signifies 1. That at the second coming of Christ shall follow the renewing of Heaven and Earth 2. That the self same Christ shall come who for us was born suffered and rose again 3. That he shall come gloriously to deliver his Church whereof I am a Member 4. That he shall come to abject and cast away the wicked The Reasons why or causes for which Christ-Man shall be Judge are these 1. Because the Church is to be glorified by the same Mediator by whom and for whom it was justified Acts 17.31 2. That we may have comfort and consolation knowing him to be our Judge who hath purchased us with his blood 3. To deliver his Church and cast away the wicked 4. The Justice of God because they have dealt contumeliously with the Son of Man Zech. 12.10 5. Christ-Man must be Judge because he must judge men therefore he must be beheld of all But God is invisible 6. That he may the more confound the wicked his Enemies who shall be forced to behold him their Judge whom they have so much withstood so wickedly dishonored The Day of the Lord or the time of Judgement is twofold 1. General when Christ shall come to judge the Quick and the Dead in the end of the world 2. Particular at the day of our death when every particular soul must appear before the bar of Gods Tribunal and give an account of what it hath done How Christ shall come to Judgement 1. Truly visibly and locally not imaginarily Mat. 24.30 2. He shall come furnished and prepared with glory and divine Majesty with all the Angels with the voyce and trump of the Archangel and with divine Power 3. The dead shall be raised and the living changed 4. The world shall be dissolved with fire not annihilated but purified 5. He shall come suddenly to the great joy and comfort of all his How the Devil is said to be already judged yea and the wicked also 1. By the Decree of God 2. In the Word of God 3. In his own Conscience 4. As touching the beginning of his Condemnation For what causes the last Judgement shall be 1. The chief and principal cause is the Decree of God 2. A less principal and subordinate cause is both the Salvation of the Elect who are here vexed and the Damnation of the wicked who here do flourish 3. Because of Gods Justice whereof in this life is not a full and perfect execution The threefold effect of Christs coming to Judgement 1. A gathering together at the sound of the Trumpet both of the dead and the living Dan. 12.2 2. A seperation the Elect shall be set at his right hand the Reprobate at his left Mat. 25.33 3. The Judgement it self the Elect shall be with him the Reprobate shall be cast into Hell Mat. 25.46 The execution of the last Judgement shall be thus 1. By the force and vertue of the Divine Power of Christ 2. By the Ministery of the Angels 3. The World Heaven and Earth shall be dissolved
same 2. By the rightly pacified Conscience which is done by Faith in the heart And the Peace here meant is such a Peace as cometh after War after conflicts for sin after knowledge of Gods displeasure with thee after the sense hereof and after all this a knowledge of Reconciliation again Now many in an evil estate live and dye peaceably but deceive not thy self that is onely because they were never acquainted with the Doctrine of Justification and Sanctification because they never saw the danger for to be sure that I am free from a danger and not to know a danger is all one and doth breed a like confidence and security Thus as it is a great mercy to have a true and sound Peace so to have a Peace not well grounded and bottom'd is the most dangerous Judgement in the world That thou mayest therefore the better judge whether thou hast this Sign of the forgiveness of thy sin know That this Peace is threefold 1. With God properly called Reconciliation God in Christ at one with Man Man through Christ at one with God 2. With our selves when the conscience sanctified ceaseth to accuse and the affections subject themselves to the enlightened minde 3. With our Christian Brethren Arguments to perswade us of the forgivenes of our sins if we come unto Christ 1. By the Scripture-expressions so frequently ratifying this Truth 2. By Christs Practice when he was on earth 3. Otherwise Christs Blood should be shed in vain 4. By the Example of others pardoned 5. Else no flesh should be saved 6. God should not else be worshipped and served 7. By the infiniteness of Gods Mercy The universality of Gods Promises touching the forgiveness of sins is threefold 1. Without exception of Time for At what time soever a sinner shall repent him of his sins I will put away his iniquity saith the Lord. 2. Without exception of sins for Albeit your sins were as scarlet they shall be made as white as snow Isa 1. 3. Without exception of person for Whosoever shall depart from his wicked ways and turn unto God he will receive him The Duties to be performed of us in believing the forgiveness of sins to the faithful viz. 1. To pray unto God earnestly every day above all things of this world for the pardon of our sins because this is so great and wonderful a grace 2. To love the Lord and our Savior Jesus Christ with all our hearts and with all our might because God is the Author of this great grace Christ Jesus hath merited the same for us 3. To break off all our sins by Righteousness and not continue any longer therein because we have been enough endangered through sin and are still in the same danger if we continue in it 4. Not to have in any account the Popes Indulgence for sins but to abhor his Blasphemous Pardon for them seeing this is in Gods power onely Four Grounds of possibility of Pardon be the sin never so great 1. That the Mercy of God is infinite yea above all his Works 2. Men of years living in the Church of God and knowing the Doctrine of Salvation shall not be condemned simply for their sins but for continuing and lying in them 3. It pleaseth God many times to leave men to themselves and to suffer them to commit some sin that woundeth Conscience but yet we may not hence think that he is the Author thereof but our own depraved Nature 4. The Promises of God touching Remission of sins and life eternal in respect of Believers are general and in regard of all and every man indefinite This Doctrine of forgiveness of sins doth teach us 1. To acknowledge our selves before God to be grievous sinners to have godly sorrow for them and to seek pardon by daily Prayer for the forgiveness of them 2. To have a circumspect care and fear not to offend God at any time yea a most earnest desire to please him better then we have done Psal 103.3 4. Joh. 5.14 3. To return all praise and thankfulness to God for this so infinite Mercy which appeareth in nothing more then in the forgiveness of our sins 4. To shew back again our love toward our heavenly Father according to the measure of his love towards us the greater sins he hath pardoned the greater love should be returned 5. That the receiving of this Mercy from God must work in us mercy towards our brethren Luke 6.36 Eph. 4.32 Col. 3.13 The sum of this Article may be this Remission of sin is Gods Will not imputing to the Elect to all of them and to them onely their sins but Christs Righteousness which Remission of sins is the work of all three Persons of the Deity granted for Christs Intercession and Merit but freely in respect of us and is received by Faith through the working of the Holy Ghost upon our Conversion and Repentance You that are skill'd in Physiognomy Have ye observ'd in men Condemn'd to dye How to the life they do resemble Death Or 's if they liv'd by Artificial breath But travelling to their Execution say A Pardon overtakes them in the way How then the Scene is alter'd they survive Themselves and seem to be now twice alive Draw the Curtain Reade The Gospel saith The Pardon 's seal'd and it is ours by Faith §. 12. The Resurrection of the Body THe Resurrection of the Flesh is a restoring of the substance of our Bodies after Death even of the same matter whereof they now consist and a reviving and quickning of the same bodies with life incorruptible by the same Immortal Soul whereby they now live which God will work by Christ in the end of the world by his Divine Vertue and Power which restoring also shall be of the Elect unto the Eternal Glory of God but of the Reprobate unto Eternal Pains Thus although the body after death lie rotting in the Grave yet at the last day it shall be raised again by Gods great Power and being joyned to the Soul shall stand before Gods Judgement Seat to give account of all it hath done whether good or evil and be rewarded accordingly When Christ as Man for thus onely he can remove from place to place his Godhead ever filling all places shall come down visibly and openly with great Glory and Troops of Angels about him to Judge those that shall be then living for the world shall be full of people even to the hour of his coming and then the Dead being raised out of their Graves even all from the first Adam shall be joyned with the living who shall onely in stead of dying be changed and thus all people together of all Countreys and Nations shall be presented before his Tribunal to receive Sentence according to the Equity yea and Justice of his Gospel whether of Absolution to pass into the Kingdom of his Father or of Condemnation into the Kingdom of Hell with the Devil and his Angels for ever Now though amongst those
That even before the giving of the Law all the Precepts of the Ten Commandments were in a maner known and acknowledged though they require whatsoever was commanded Adam in his Integrity and whatsoever was commanded since Gen. 2.16 17. Exod. 20. The Law being that which God himself delivered to his people by the hand of Moses which also with his own finger he wrote in two Tables of Stone called The Moral Law because it sheweth the Vertues to be followed and the Vices to be avoided as also to distinguish it from the Ceremonial Law which comprehendeth the Ceremonies prescribed by God in the old Church and from the Judicial and Political Laws which contain Judgements and the Penalties to be inflicted on the breakers of this Moral Law The sum whereof is this The First Table containing the four first Commandments Commandeth all the Duties which man oweth to God The Second Table containing the six last Commandments commandeth all that Man oweth to Man according to the Will of God For the Commandments of the Latter Table are to be referred to the first that is to say They are to be kept not indeed so much for our Neighbors sake as for Gods sake of whom they are commanded the First Table being immediately the Second mediately referred unto God the Commandments whereof are not notwithstanding less then those of the First Table but the principal service of the First Table is greater then the principal service of the Second Matth. 22.37 38. Instances of Scripture proving that the Decalogue was in mans heart before it was written in the two Tables of Stone 1. The First Commandment was known unto Abraham when as almost in so many words the Lord said unto him I am God All-sufficient stand before me and be upright Gen. 17.1 And Jacob said Put away the strange gods Gen. 35.2 2. The Second was also known unto Jacob for he purged his house from Idols when he was to build an Altar in Bethel Gen. 35.2 Acknowledging hereby that this was a Corruption which the true God would be offended at 3. The Third Abraham also seemeth to have well known when he sware by the true God unto Abimelech to confirm his League Gen. 21.23 And Jacob when he sware unto Laban by the fear of his father Isaac Gen. 31.53 4. The Fourth is recorded by Moses to have been given in Paradice Gen. 2.2 3. And is likewise set down in Exodus 16.23 5. The Fifth Jacob shewed in his practice when he followed his Fathers direction in taking a wife and his children by going at his command into Egypt and Josephs nourishing him there in his old age Shem and Japheth reverencing their Father Noah are blessed but Ham scorning him is cursed in his Son Canaan Gen. 9.25 26. 6. The Sixth was written in Cain's Conscience which made him cry My sin is greater then can be forgiven and God expresly forbiddeth it Gen. 9.6 7. The Seventh was to be seen in the Sons of Jacob when they said Should he make our Sister a whore Gen. 34.31 In Joseph when his Mistris tempted him Gen. 39.9 and in Judah when he commanded Thamar to be burnt Gen. 48.2 8. The Eighth Laban urgeth upon Jacob Gen. 31.30 who acknowledgeth Death to be due for it Gen. 45.5 And Jacobs Sons say God forbid that we should steal Gen. 44. 9. The Ninth Heathen Abimelech shewed to be written in his heart when he complained of Abrahams false testimony touching his Wife Gen. 20.9 26.9 And of Isaac's for the like yea and Judah kept promise not lying or deceiving Gen. 38.20 10. The Tenth Abraham sheweth to be written in his heart when having recovered the goods of Sodom he coveted none of them being other mens and it was sin to look on a woman to lust after her and punished even in Kings Gen. 12.17 20.7 The maner how this Law was given viz. 1. There was great preparation three days together the people were sanctified according to the maner of those times by Washings and Purifyings So let us prepare our selves by prayer before we come to hear the Lord speaking unto us in the Ministery of his holy Word 2. A strict charge was given them That neither man nor beast on pain of death should come near the Mount whence the Law was to be delivered how much less mercy deserved the Transgressors of these glorious Laws 3. The Lord descended with great terror the Trumpet sounding the Earth shaking and Lightnings flying about Shewing with what fear of offending against those weighty Laws they were to be received into the heart 4. Almighty God himself spake all these words in the hearing of all the people and afterward writ them in two Tables of Stone with his own finger intimating hereby the perpetuity of them and how stony-hard our hearts be that the finger of God alone is able to imprint them there 5. When Moses had broken these two Tables the Lord writ the same words in two other Tables So mans heart by Gods Creation had all the Laws written in it but after his Fall it was without any letter thereof in effect until that the Lord writ them anew 6. At Moses his return from the Lord with these Laws his face did so shine that the people were not able to look on him till he vail'd it neither could the Jews nor any of the Gentiles be able to see into the end of the Law Christ Jesus till the Lord took away their vail of blindeness and hardness of heart 2 Cor. 3.13 14. The Decalogue is divided after a threefold maner viz. 1. It is divided by Christ and Moses into two Tables the former whereof comprise our duty towards God immediately the Second our duties towards God mediately 2. It is divided into Ten Commandments whereof four are ascribed to the First and six other unto the Second Table 3. It is divided according to the things themselves which are commanded or forbidden in the Decalogue now generally is commanded the Worship of God and that which is contrary thereto is forbidden The worship of God being that which is generally commanded in the Decalogue is 1. Immediate when Moral works are immediately performed unto God which is 1. Internal which consisteth partly in this that we worship the true God and that that be performed unto the true God which is commanded in the first Commandment partly that the maner or form of Worship be right and lawful whether it be internal Worship or external which Form is taught in the Second Commandment 2. External which is 1. Private which containeth the private Moral works of every one which are always to be of every man in particular performed and this private Worship is delivered in the Third Commandment 2. Publike which consisteth in sanctifying of the Sabbath and is delivered in the Fourth Commandment 2. Mediate when Moral works are performed to our Neighbor in respect of God delivered in the Second Table which likewise is 1. External which
and Beasts but of Beasts in respect of Men. 7. That men should provoke one another by their Example to godliness and to the praising and honoring of God Psal 22.22 8. That the Church may be seen and heard among men and be discerned from the other Blasphemous and Idolatrous multitude of men that they may joyn themselves thereto who are yet separate from it The Sabbath is broken and prophaned by such things as are opposed to the sanctifying thereof viz. 1. Unto the Delivering and Teaching of the Doctrine is opposed the Omitting or Neglect of Teaching as also a corrupting or maiming of the Doctrine or a sitting of it to the Opinions Affections Lusts or commodities of the Hearers or to any of them 2 Cor. 2.17 2. Unto the right and due Administration of the Sacraments is opposed an Omitting or Neglect of Exhortation to the Receiving thereof as also a corrupt and unlawful Administration of them 3. Unto the study of learning the Doctrine is opposed 1. A contempt and neglect of the Doctrine 2. Curiosity which is a desire and study of knowing those things which God hath not Revealed unnecessary strange and vain 4. Unto the right use of the Sacraments is contrary the omitting and contempt thereof as also a prophaning of them when they are not received as God hath commanded neither by them for whom they were ordained likewise all superstitious using them as when Salvation and the Grace of God is tyed to the Observation of the Rites and Ceremonies or when they are used to such ends as God hath not appointed 5. To publike Prayers is opposed the Neglect of them and an hypocritical pretence at them without any attention or inward devotion also such Reading and Praying as serveth not for any edifying 1 Cor. 14.16 6. To the Bestowing of Alms is repugnant a Neglect of the works of Charity as when we do not according to our power succor the poor that stand in need of our help 7. To the honor of the Ministery of the Church is opposed the contempt thereof as when either the Ministery of the Church is abolished or committed to men unworthy or unable or is denied to be the means and instrument which God will use for the gathering of his Church Likewise when the Members are reproached when their Doctrine is heard and not obeyed maintenance not allowed Time was when this unhappy Nation Might break by Law by Proclamation This Great Commandment and keep this Rest Prophaner then their dumb or silly Beast Silence the Word lest men be Edified And so the Sabbath ' chance be Sanctified Sport it with Heath'nish May-Games make a Jest Of what the Lord had made a serious Rest The Lord hath one Day more but that 's to come Horror I quake to think upon their Doom The Fifth Commandment Honor thy Father and thy Mother that the days may be long in the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee THe Sum of this Commandment is That we perform all such Duties as one man oweth unto another by some particular bond Here are commanded all Vertues proper and peculiar to all kindes of Superiors or to Inferiors or common to them both And all Vices contrary to these Vertues are here prohibited as all irreverence towards those that be in Place or Authority above us and all churlish behavior in such towards those that be of low degree For the End of this Commandment is the preservation of civil order decreed and appointed by God in the mutual Duties of Superiors and Inferiors which are comprehended by the Name of Father and Mother And the Reason of this Commandment is taken from the Promise of long life if God please not to prevent us with the Blessing of Eternal life Now to honor one is to have an high esteem of him and to yield a respect unto him it must first be placed in the heart and then outwardly manifested and that in relation to Parents Authority and Necessity So as honor compriseth here all those Daties which Children in any respect owe unto their Parents it implieth in regard of their Authority both an inward reverent estimation and also an outward submission and in regard of their Necessity Recompence and Maintenance Here both Father and Mother are expresly mentioned to take away all pretence from children of neglecting either of them So that it is not sufficient to honor the Father onely because he is the Mothers Head nor the Mother onely because she is the weaker vessel the Law condemneth him that neglecteth either The Authority of Parents requireth Fear from children their Affection Love Affection in Parents without Authority would make children too bold and insolent Authority without Affection too much like Slaves but both discreetly tempered together make a very good composition Love like Sugar sweetneth Fear and Fear like Salt seasoneth Love Thus the childes duty must be a Loving Fear or a Fearing Love This Fear is an awful Respect of his Parents arising from an honorable esteem which he hath in his judgement and opinion of them as they are his Parents Whence proceedeth on the one side a desire and endeavor in all things not contrary to Gods Word to please them and on the other side an unwillingness to offend them This Fear is an essential Branch of that honor which the Law requireth to their Parents Exod. 20.12 and is in express words enjoyned by the Law Lev. 19.3 This Fear keepeth Love in compass restraining it from sawcy follies for as the heart is affected the carriage will be ordered Had Cham had this filial Fear in him he had never derided his Father Gen. 9.22 nor been cursed for his labor or had Absolom had it in him he had never broached untruths to father them on his Father 2 Sam. 15.3 Mocking and cursing of Parents is expresly condemned Prov. 30.11 The Reward whereof is by Gods Law death Lev. 20.9 yea a shameful and ignominious death for the Ravens of the valley shall pluck out his eyes and the yong Eagles shall eat it Gen. 40.19 which phrase not unproperly describes the execution of a notorious Malefactor that is hang'd and indeed how dyed undutiful Absolom Yet we must know That no submission is to be given to man but such as may stand with the Fear of God Which seasonable Doctrine indicts all such of folly as fear man more then God This was Adams folly to be swayed by a foolish woman This was Aarons folly to erect an Idol to please the people Exod. 32.1 This was Sauls folly to suffer his people to take of the spoil of the Amalekites against Gods express Prohibition 1 Sam. 15.21 This was Joash his folly to hearken to his Princes for the setting up of Idols 2 Chron. 24.17 And thus Pilate played the fool in delivering against his conscience Christ to be crucified to please the people Mark 15.15 As thus Superiors sinned in basely submitting to Inferiors so they likewise sin in unwarrantably submitting to
the wealth and peace of their people like Mordecai 2. Of Ministers is to make themselves Servants unto their people not seeking their own profit but the profit of many that they may be saved as Paul 1 Cor. 9.19 10.33 3. Of Fathers is to educate their Children in the Fear of God taking heed that they give them no evil Example nor provoke them to wrath Prov. 4.3 4. 4. Of Husbands is to dwell with their wives according to knowledge giving honor to the wife as to the weaker vessel like Abraham Gen. 6.16 5. Of Masters is to do that which is just and equal to their Servants as the Centurion Luk. 7.2 for they as well as their Servants are bound to duty 1. By Gods Law for it expresly enjoyneth many Duties to Masters 2. By the Law of Nature which hath tyed as well the one as the other to do as well as receive good 3. By the Law of Nations as appears by divers particular Laws established for this purpose 4. By the Law of Equity for one good deserveth another 6. Of every one is to be of like affection one towards another by serving one another in love according to the Apoliles Rule Rom. 12.16 Gal. 5.13 7. Of our selves towards our selves is 1. To honor God in all our ways 1 Sam. 2.30 2. To keep our Bodies that they be not made the instruments of sin 1 Thess 4.4 5 The common Vertues of this Fifth Commandment viz. 1. That General Justice which is Obedience according to all Laws that appertain unto all in respect of every ones Vocation and Calling 2. The Particular Distributive Justice which keepeth a proportion in distributing of Offices and Rewards or which is a vertue giving every one his own Rom. 13.7 3. Sedulity or Diligence or Fidelity which is a vertue in a man well knowing and understanding those parts which belong properly to his own duty and office examining them and doing according to Gods Commandment those things that belong unto him constantly continually studiously willingly faithfully and chearfully 4. Gravity which is a vertue that observeth that which becometh a mans person and sheweth a constancy and squareness in words deeds and gestures that thereby we may maintain our good estimation or authority that our Calling be not reproached 5. Modesty being a vertue which hath near affinity whereby a man knowing his own imbecility and considering his place and calling wherein he is placed by God keepeth a mean and conveniency of person in opinion and in speech of himself in actions and in behavior that giving no more to our selves then becometh us we may give to others what is theirs Humility and Modesty differ onely in the end for as Modesty is towards men so Humility is towards God Gal. 6.3 6. Love or Tender Affection towards our Kindred or near Allies of Blood 7. Thankfulness which is a vertue consisting of Truth and Justice acknowledging from whom what and how great benefits we have received desiring to return mutual duties honest and possible 8. Equity which is a vertue mitigating upon good cause the rigor of strict Justice in punishing and taxing others offences patiently bearing with some such errors and defects as do not enormously harm the publike safety or the private welfare of our Neighbors and covering and correcting such vices of others or endeavoring to heal and cure them God annexeth a Promise of this Commandment for these Reasons 1. To signifie how greatly he esteemeth that Obedience and how grievously he will punish those who do against this Obedience 2. To signifie how Necessary this Obedience is and so much the more to invite us to the observing and keeping thereof This Commandment hath a Promise of Outward Temporal Prosperity annexed to the performance of it which though to the wicked does by meer consequence through the Abuse of it turn to evil yet to the godly it is a Blessing and Fruit of Gods Love as appears by these Reasons 1. It is good as it was at first made and ordained of God Gen. 1.31 2. It tends to mans good if it be rightly used 3. It was bestowed on man before he had offended Gen. 2.8 4. It is a Promise of God to them that fear him and keep his Commandments Levit. 26.4 c. 5. The Saints have prayed and been thankful for it Gen. 28.20 6. The contrary was first inflicted as a punishment of sin and is often threatned as a token of Gods wrath which accordingly hath been often inflicted on Transgressors Lev. 26.15 who meritoriously have incurred it This Promise of long life includes a Blessing of all earthly things Now there is a Right to earthly things two ways or the Right unto the Earth is twofold 1. Civil which stands good before men by their Laws and Customs Thus men are called Lords of their Land and so the Turk at this day is a mighty Lord of a great part of the whole World 2. Spiritual which is warrantable and approved with God himself Such Right and Title had Adam to all the World before his Fall which he lost by his Sin both from himself and all his Posterity but yet in Christ the same is recovered to all the Elect In regard of this Right the Meek are said to inherit the Earth Mat. 5.5 So that it is most evident the Turk and all Unbelievers and ungodly persons are but Usurpers of those things which otherwise Civilly they do lawfully possess For all our Right to the Earth was lost in Adam and is onely recovered by Christ so that till we have our part in him we cannot justly with a good Conscience possess any part of the Earth for he is Prince of the Kings of the Earth Rev. 1.5 and the High Lord of all the World Though long life be here promised as a Blessing yet may the Righteous have their days shortned for their good as in these and such like respects 1. That they may be taken from the evil to come 1 Kings 14.13 2. That they might be made an example to others 1 Kings 13.24 3. That by a temporal death eternal Condemnation might be avoided 1 Cor. 11.32 4. That their chiefest and greatest Reward might be hastned Gen. 5.24 Heb. 11.5 The Promise of long life and Prosperity is not so appropriated to this kinde of Righteousness as if it appertained to no other but in these and such like particular respects 1. Because Obedience to Parents is one of the surest evidences of our conformity to the whole Law and a good foundation for the performing of all duties to man 2. Because Performance of duties to Parents is a special means under God of prospering and living long whereas rebellious children hasten their own sad ends 3. Because Parents are a special means to procure the welfare and long life of their children partly by provident care and partly by fervent and frequent Prayer 4. Because Disobedience draweth down much mischief on the heads of children and many ways doth often
which are the windows of the heart 2 Pet. 2.14 Isa 3.13 3. Of the Ears when we listen unto unchaste talk and shew no dislike to nor hatred of it 4. Of the Tongue when we take delight in unchaste speeches and filthy Ribaldry by which the hearts of others are corrupted and our own manifested to be so before Eph. 4.29 1 Cor. 15.33 5. Outward in Fact and this is called Sin finished whereunto all the former are as steps or degrees and in the end bring it forth as an end which they have conceived The hainousness of this sin of Adultery may appear by these particulars viz. 1. We sin against God by withstanding his Will in prophaning the holy Ordinance of Matrimony by making the members of Christ the members of an Harlot most ungraciously defiling those bodies which should be the Temples of the holy Ghost converting them into Stews 2. We sin against our Neighbor because this sin is not committed alone but we draw others to it also 3. We sin against the Wife or Husband of the married party by a most ungodly particular wrong 4. We sin against the fruit of our own body whom we brand with a Note of perpetual infamy Gen. 21.10 5. We sin against our own Families which are ruined by being defiled Beggery waits on Lust Job 31.12 6. We sin against the Places Societies and Kingdom where we live because we defile the Land and cause it to vomit out the Inhabitants Gen. 34.27 7. We sin against the Church of God by hindring the propagation thereof and causing it to be evil spoken of by others 8. We sin against our selves because we make our bodies the instruments of Sin and Satan infecting them with loathsom diseases here and plunging them together with our Souls into Hell hereafter 9. It is a sin committed against each person of the Trinity as 1. Against the Father whose Covenant is broken Prov. 2.17 2. Against the Son whose members are made the members of an Harlot 3. Against the Holy Ghost whose Temple is defiled and polluted 1 Cor. 6.19 10. The hainousness of this sin appears by the fruits thereof viz. 1. The Alienation of conjugal Affection which ought to be inviolable 2. The Devastation of the goods and estate of the Family 3. Provocations to unnatural wishes and practices of clandestine Murther 4. If not a gauling terrifying conscience then a seared one a hard heart a reprobate sense 5. The procuring of many loathsom diseases to the body 6. The execution of the fearful Judgements of God denounced against it if unrepented Adultery though never so secretly committed is surely punished of God and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the wrath of God is kindled against all such unclean persons Eph. 5.6 2. Because it appears to be a most grievous sin worse then Theft Prov. 6.31 32. 3. Because it defileth the Land not onely persons and houses but whole cities and countreys till all are become abominable Lev. 19.29 4. Because of our calling being Redeemed by God to serve him in purity and holiness all our days 1 Thess 4.3 4 5 7. The Reasons and Motives to avoid Fornication and lust viz. 1. Our Bodies are the Lords and must be serviceable unto him the body is not for fornication but for the Lord 1 Cor. 6.13 2. We thereby make void the glorious work of our Redemption The Lord for the body 1 Cor. 6.13 but Fornication and Sanctification can never stand together 3. Those Bodies shall Rise again not to glory but to shame if we here defile them with beastly lusts 1 Cor. 6.14 4. The Members of Christ that is the bodies of the faithful may not be made the members of an Harlot 1 Cor. 6.15 by profession we seem to be the members of Christ but by unchaste lust we pull our hearts from Christ and knit them to an Harlot 5. This sin is against the body whereas other sins are without the body 1 Cor. 6.18 but the Fornicator both useth and abuseth his own body and leaveth a proper blot and stain upon it making it both the instrument the subject and the object of sin 6. Consider the state and condition of mans heart by effectual calling it is the dwelling place and Temple of the Holy Ghost but by unclean lusts we make it a cage of all unclean Spirits Our body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost and destruction is threatned to the defilers of this Temple 1 Cor. 3.17 So that a Fornicator is also a Sacrilegious person 7. We are wholly Gods and not our own to do what we list or to dispose of our selves 1 Cor. 6.19 20. 8. We all desire to see God and to know his love in Christ for our comfort in this life and Salvation but without holiness and purity of heart we can never see God Heb. 12.14 9. If we suffer our hearts now to burn with fleshly lust we make an entrance in them for the burning of Hell fire for ever for these two alway go together Burning lust and Hell fire unless Repentance come between General Preservatives against this sin or the way to prevent Adultery viz. 1. To consider the near Union betwixt God and us so great is his Love as that he hath married us to himself and made us his Spouse therefore is he most jealous over us and in the very instant of impurity or uncleanness casts us off as the members of an Harlot 2. To consider that God is holy and pure and the Devil an unclean Spirit to whom he is joyned in fellowship that sinneth by uncleanness 3. To tye and binde our selves by Covenant and Vows from the occasions which as sparkles of fire do light upon the tinder of our corrupt Nature Job 31.1 4. Set a watch over thy heart that lustful thoughts proceed not thence Prov 6.25 5. Shut thine eyes Job 31.1 that they wander not after the beauty or properness of any ones person or on lascivious Pictures or on any other like allurements 6. Stop thine ears that they listen not to any enticements of others Prov. 7.21 7. Lock fast thy Tongue that it utter no unchaste and corrupt communication Eph. 5.3 4. 8. Seal up thy Lips that they delight not in wanton kisses Prov. 7.13 9. Manacle thy Hands that they use no wanton dalliance Prov. 6.29 10. Fetter thy Feet that they carry thee not near the place where filthiness may be committed Prov. 7.25 11. Have a care of thy company that thou be not defiled with others wantonness and uncleanness Eph. 5.7 12. See to thy Dyet that it be not inordinate and luxurious Gen. 19.33 13. Moderate thy Apparel that it be not garish and lascivious Ezek. 23.6 15 40. 14. Mis time not thy precious hours that they be not vainly and idly spent 2 Sam. 11.2 Special Preservatives for single persons against this sin viz. 1. To beat down the body and bring it into subjection to abstain from such meats and drinks as inflate and provoke to
liberty to sin afterward or at least to suppose that we have thereby merited at Gods hands what we fasted for Take heed of this a rightly grounded assurance of Gods mercy is highly commendable but a self-opinionating conceit of merit for the Works sake done is uncreaturely presumption a flat contradiction to the very end of Fasting which should be Self-unworthiness Self-denial true Humiliation This Fasting must never be without Prayer for Prayer and Fasting were joyned together Ezra 9.5 Neh. 1.4 Dan. 9.3 Judg. 20.26 Luke 2.37 5.33 1 Cor. 7.7 True indeed it is that Prayer is available without Fasting but Fasting never without Prayer for Fasting is not the worship of God but onely a help to it and the most principal end of a Religious Fast is Supplication or extraordinary Prayer whereunto as subordinate may be added Examination Humiliation and Mortification As touching the time of a Religious Fast it is now free in regard of Conscience indeed in the Old Testament they had a set time of Fasting as the tenth day of the seventh Moneth Levit. 16.29 But in the New Testament there is no set time which bindes the Conscience onely men must Fast as just occasion is offered and as for Civil-Politick Fasts they are set for orders sake and not to binde the Conscience Fasting was once Ceremonial when the Lord commanded by Moses that every Soul once in the year should humble it self in Fasting before the Lord in one of the great Assemblies of his people Levit. 16.29 c. 23.27 c. And though the Ceremony of the day be taken away by the coming of Christ Gal. 4. yet the thing it self continueth and remaineth in force The circumstances of Moral Duties may be changed but the substance may not be abrogated for where the same causes continue there the thing it self abideth Therefore this holy Exercise is of as great and necessary use as ever it was and remaineth in as full force and strength as ever it did Joel 2.12 Luke 5.33 c. 1 Cor. 7.5 Acts 13.2 3. The seasons of Publike Fasts being the times of any general Affliction upon our selves or our Brethren whether of Sword Pestilence or Famine or any other just judgement whether threatned feared begun or executed For Private Fasts the same rule holds in private Afflictions neither is any time unseasonable when the Religious Soul sequesters it self for this Spiritual Physick of private Humiliation Holy Feasting is a time of Solemn Thanksgiving for Benefits received or Evils removed wherein the Creatures of God may be more liberally used then at any other time For this is a day of Rejoycing wherein it was once said to the people of God Eat the fat and drink the sweet Neh. 8.10 Wherein we must be very careful to preserve the fear of God within our hearts Exod. 18.12 Jobs fear was lest his sons should cast this fear of God out of their hearts in their Feasting and so offend God In every bit we eat and every drop we drink we must remember the caveat our Saviour gives Luke 21.24 Take heed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfetting and drunkenness yea in this time of Holy Feasting there is also enjoyned us a certain kinde of fear of man Prov. 23.1 2. When thou sittest to eat before a Ruler put thy Knife to thy throat that is Bridle thine Appetite have respect not to pass the limits of Sobriety Temperance and Moderation The lawfulness of these Feasts may be derived from the Primitive Church so as the poor be regarded superfluity and riot avoided and the right end intended which is the praise and glory of God expressed in Thankfulness for the abundance of his Blessings Thus after the Sacrifices and Offerings Aaron and the Elders of Israel came to Feast with Jethro before God Exod. 18.12 So Ezra the eight Go your ways eat the fat and drink the sweet and send part to them for whom none is provided for this is the day of the Lord. In the Primitive Church it was a Custom to have a Feast before the Lords Supper made by the Communicants unto which some brought Honey some Bread some Wine some Milk and every one according to their ability contributing something thereunto These were called Love Feasts because they were herein to testifie their mutual Love among themselves as also to the poor who hereby were relieved and to the Ministery it self which was by these Feasts partly sustained But in these Feasts there were many spots Jude v. 12. who were eye-sores and disgraces to these holy Feasts pampering and feeding themselves and riotously wasting the Goods of the Church in stead of taking care for the poor and the Ministery for whose this Contribution was made It were to be wished there were no such spots in our Feasts at this day that neither blemish them by Surfetting Drunkenness or Wantonness nor by excluding the poor from having an interest therein Three things required for the right observation of a Religious Fast viz. 1. That the Causes be just and weighty such as these viz. 1. When we our selves are faln into any grievous sin whereof our Conscience accuseth us and whereby we procure the wrath of God against us So did the Israelites 1 Sam. 7.6 2. When some among us fall into any grievous sin though we our selves be free from it because for the sins of others Gods judgements may justly fall upon us For this Paul blamed the Corinthians 1 Cor. 5.2 3. When the hand of God in any judgement lies upon us Thus did the Israelites Judg. 20.26 4. When the hand of God in any fearful judgement lies heavy on others among whom we live though we our selves be free So David 2 Sam. 12.16 Psal 35.13 5. When Gods judgements are imminent and as it were hang over our heads So did Jehosaphat 2 Chro. 20.2 3. 6. When we stand in need of some needful Blessing of God especially such as concerns Salvation Thus did Cornelius Acts 10.30 7. For Gods blessing and good success on the Ministery of the Gospel So did the Church for Paul and Barnabas when they sent them to Preach Acts 13.3 And so ought we to do at this day 2. That the right maner of Fasting be observed which stands in these particulars viz. 1. Abstinence from meat and drink and all maner of nourishment of the Body 2. Abstinence from all maner of sin whether in thought word or deed 3. Abstinence from sleep such as thereby the body may be the more humbled and afflicted with the want of food 2 Sam. 12.16 4. Abstinence from soft and rich apparel Exod. 33.4 6. Jon. 3.6 2 Sam. 12.20 5. Abstinence from Matrimonial benevolence 1 Cor. 7.5 Joel 2.16 6. From the ordinary Works of our Calling Levit. 16.29 31. 23.28 32. 7. Abstinence from all pleasant and delightsom things which may any way refresh Nature 2 Sam. 12.20 Dan. 10.3 8. Abstinence from all maner of Sports Pastimes and
Recreations they being all contrary to sound Humiliation 9. So far forth to abstain from Sin Meat Delights and all worldly things whatsoever that as well the Soul as the Body may be thereby afflicted 3. That the right ends of a Religious Fast be observed viz. 1. To subdue the flesh that is to bring the Body and so the bodily lusts into subjection to the Will and Word of God subduing the corruption of Nature We must not therefore think it sufficient to abstain from flesh and Popishly pamper our Bodies with restorative Conserves nor eat the day before or the day after the day of Fasting sufficient for two days 2. To stir up our Devotion and to confirm the Attention of our Mindes in hearing and in praying it prepares us unto Prayer and furthers us therein 3. To be a spur and provocation to true Humiliation and Repentance 4. To admonish us of our guiltiness before the Lord and to put us in minde of the Acknowledgement of our Sins whereby we are become unworthy of any Blessing Gift or Mercy 5. It serves for an outward Testimony and Profession of our Humiliation and Repentance to testifie the humility and the contrition of our hearts that is to say Our inward Sorrow for sin our Repentance and effectual turning The Religious Fast is twofold viz. 1. Private performed by one or more in a Family that our Prayers may be the more effectual Neh. 1.4 2 Sam. 12.16 3.35 Psal 35.13 69.10 Dan. 9.10 Acts 10.30 2. Publike performed by the whole Congregation Joel 2.12 Jonah 3.7 This ought not to be used of a few and therefore all sorts of people should come to the same and none absent themselves from the Assemblies in such publike times of Publike Humiliation The several sorts of Fasts viz. 1. Physical when for Healths sake a man forbeareth food a Fast prescribed by the Physitian to preserve and restore Health 2. Politique when certain times of abstaining from food are enjoyned for the preservation of plenty and preventing of penury 3. The Fast of Sobriety and Temperance Rom. 13.13 1 Cor 9.25 1 Thes 5.6 1 Pet. 5.7 Of this Fast Bernard saith 1. That the Eyes must fast from curious sights and all wantonness 2. The Ears must fast from Fables evil Reports and unsavory Discourse 3. The Tongue must fast from Slander Murmuring and Railing Speeches 4. The Hands must fast from evil works 5. The Soul must fast from Sin and doing our own will Luke 21.34 Ezek. 16.49 4. Enforced Necessary or Constrained Fast as in time of Famine or the poor mans Fast or in a Besieged City or Ship far from Land 5. Moral when men eat and drink sparingly not so much as their Appetite desireth but onely so much as may preserve Nature and Maintain Health and Strength 6. Spiritual when men abstain from Vice which is as food to their corrupt Nature Isa 58.6 7. Miraculous when men extraordinarily assisted by the power of God abstain from all maner of food longer then the Nature of man is able to endure which cannot be brought into imitation Such was the Fast of Christ Mat. 4.2 of Moses Exod. 34.28 and of Elijah 1 Kings 19.8 8. Hypocritical when men without respect to any occasion of Fasting appoint set times weekly monethly or quarterly to Fast Thus fasted the Pharisees Luke 18.12 whom Christ taxed of Hypocrisie Mat. 6.16 9. Idolatrous when men making difference betwixt Meats for Conscience sake abstain from one kinde and glut themselves with another and yet count this a Fast 10. Superstitious when men place Religion and Holiness in the abstaining from Meat making the very outward act of fasting to be a part of Gods Worship contrary to the Apostle 1 Tim. 4.8 11. Religious or the true Christian Fast when men seasonably abstain from refreshing their Bodies to make them the more fit for Religious Duties being an abstinence for one day commanded of the Lord from all Meats and Drinks and Delights of this Life thereby to make solemn profession of our Humiliation it being the end thereof to further and better it Lev. 23.27 c. Psal 35.13 Deut. 10.12 1 Kings 21.27 c. 2 Chron. 12.6 7. Ezra 8.21 In our Fasts we must seek to approve our selvs and our Actions onely to God for which end we must observe these 3 Rules viz. 1. With our Fasting we must joyn a Conversion of our heart from Sin unto God Joel 2.12 Now that our heart may turn to God in Fasting we must have special regard to our behavior both before in and after our Fast whether publike or private As 1. Before the Fast we must prepare our selves thereto in an holy maner by a serious consideration of the Causes and Occasions of our Fast So did Jehoshaphat 2 Chron. 20.3 2. In Fasting we must labor to have more tender Affections and deeper Humiliation then ordinary 1 Sam. 7.6 3. After the Fast we must labor for Reformation and Amendment of life that our behavior both towards God and Man may be every way better then before 2. We must be sure we propound unto our selves therein the right ends of a Religious Fast for if we fail therein and propound other ends unto our selves we corrupt the whole action unto our selves 3. With our Fasting we must joyn the Duties of the second Table in the works of Justice Mercy and Love to our Brethren for without these our Love to God is not sincere and he rejects that bodily Humiliation that is severed from them Isa 58.3 c. Popish Fasting is abominable for these Reasons which may well prevail with us to abhor it viz. 1. In their Religious Fasts they allow one Meal so it be not flesh and beside that drinking of any kinde of Wines or Drinks taking of Electuaries Strong-Waters and Conserves and such like at any time of the day which is a Mock-Fast and nothing else 2. They make distinction of Meats necessary to a Fast and that not for Civil ends as Magistrates may do or for Temperance sake as private men may do but for Conscience sake which is a Doctrine of Devils 1 Tim. 4.3 3. They binde men in Conscience to many set days of Fasting and make the omission thereof a deadly Sin wherein they take away our Christian Liberty for there was no want of care in our Savior Christ to appoint all good means for the mortifying of the flesh and yet he prescribed no set Fasts in the New-Testament 4. They make Fasting meritorious teaching That a man thereby may satisfie Gods Justice whereby they do Blasphemously derogate from the All-sufficiency of Christs Obedience and Worship 5. They make no Conscience of Fasting from Sin though it be the chief end thereof nor is their Fasting an afflicting of the Soul or Humiliation of the Inward Man but a Formal hanging down of the head wherein too many of us Protestants are of the same Religion Touching Holy Feasting the Liberty thereof is permitted for these Reasons 1.