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A64622 A body of divinitie, or, The summe and substance of Christian religion catechistically propounded, and explained, by way of question and answer : methodically and familiarly handled / composed long since by James Vsher B. of Armagh, and at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now printed and published ; whereunto is adjoyned a tract, intituled Immanvel, or, The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God heretofore writen [sic] and published by the same authour.; Body of divinity Ussher, James, 1581-1656.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1645 (1645) Wing U151; ESTC R19025 516,207 504

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to pray that their flight might not bee on the Sabbath day to the end that they might not bee hindred in the service of God doth thereby sufficiently declare that hee held not this Commandement in the account of a Ceremony Matth. 24. 20. But it sometimes shadoweth our sanctification and our eternall rest Col. 2. 16 17. Exod. 31. 13. and is therefore Ceremoniall That followeth not For 1. There is no Commandement which hath not some Ceremonies tyed unto it as in the Commandement touching Murther to abstain from strangled things and bloud And the whole Law had the Ceremony of the Parchment Law So that by that reason the whole Law should be Ceremoniall which is absurd 2. The Ceremoniall representation of our eternall rest came after the Commandement of the rest and therefore is accessary and accidentall for which cause the time of correction and abolishment of Ceremonies being come Dan. 9. 7. Matth. 11. 13. Acts 15. 6. Col. 2. 13 14. Heb. 10. 14. Gal. 5. 2. that use may well fall away and yet the Commandement remaine it being out of the substance of the Commandement What is the speciall day of the week which God hath set apart for his solemne Worship The first day of the week called the Lords day 1 Cor. 16. 2. Rev. 1. 10. Acts 20. 7. Was this day set apart thereunto from the beginning No For from the first Creation till the Resurrection of Christ the last day of the week commonly called Saturday was the day that was appointed thereunto and that which the people of God constantly observed And why so Because upon that God ceased from the worke of Creation Gen. 2. 2 Exod. 31. 17. How came this day to be changed By divine Authority How doth that appeare 1. By the practise of our Saviour Christ and his Apostles Iohn 20. 19 26. Acts 2. 1. 20. 7. which should be a sufficient rule unto us especially the Apostles having added a Commandement thereunto 1 Cor. 16. 12. 2. There is no reason why it should be called the Lords day Rev. 1. 10. but in regard of the speciall dedication thereof to the Lords service for otherwise all the dayes in the weeke are the Lords dayes and he is to be served and worshipped in them What was the cause that the day was changed Because it might serve for a thankfull memorial of Christs Resurrection For as God rested from his labour on the last day of the weeke so Christ ceased from his labour and afflictions on this day Mat. 28. 1. Gen. 2. 1 2. As the one therefore was specially sanctified in regard of the Creation of the World so was the other in respect of the restauration and redemption of the world which is a greater worke then the Creation Can this day then be altered No power of any Creature in Heaven or Earth can alter it or place another seventh day in the place and stead thereof But doth this Commandement directly require the seventh day from the Creation No but the seventh day in generall Doth not the reason annexed where the Lord in six dayes is said to make Heaven and Earth and to rest the seventh day and therefore to hallow it confirme so much No not necessarily For it doth not hence follow that we should rest the same day the Lord rested but that we should rest from our worke the seventh day as he rested from his which seventh day under the Law he appointed to be Saturday so nothing hindreth but by his speciall appointment under the Gospell it may be Sunday and yet the substance of the Commandement nothing altered Why doth not the New Testament mention this change Because there was no question moved about the same in the Apostles time When then doth this our Sabbath begin and how long doth it continue This day as all the six is the space of twenty foure houres and beginneth at the dawning though we ought in the Evening before to prepare for the day following Why doth our Sabbath begin at the dawning of the day Because Christ rose in the dawning and to put a difference between the Iewish and a true Christian Sabbath For as the Iewes begun their Sabbath in that part of the day in which the Creation of the World was ended and consequently in the Evening so the celebration of the memory of Christs Resurrection and therein of his rest from his speciall labours and the renewing of the World being the ground of the change of that day it is also by the same proportion of reason to begin when the Resurrection began which was in the Morning Can you shew this Example Yea Paul being at Troas after he had preached a whole day untill midnight celebrated the supper of the Lord the same night which was a Sabbath dayes exercise and therefore that night following the day was a part of the Sabbath For in the Morning he departed having staid there seven dayes by which it is evident that that which was done was done upon the Lords day Acts 20. 7 10. Is the Lords day only to be separated to Gods service No For of this manner are holy Fasts observed for the avoiding of some great evill present or imminent Lev. 23. 27. Ioel 2. 12. holy Feasts for the thankfull remembrance of some speciall memorable mercies obtained Zach. 8. 19. Ester 9. 17 18 19. To what Commandement doe you refer the Churches meeting on the working dayes That is also by a manner of speech of one part for the whole contained in this Commandement yea it reacheth to the times which the Family appointeth or that every one for his private good proposeth although the Bond to that time is not so strict as is the Bond to observe the dayes of Rest. So much of this Commandement in generall What doe you note therein in particular 1. The entrance in the word Remember 2. The parts of the Commandement What is to be observed in the word Remember That although all the Commandements are needfull diligently to be remembred yet this more specially Why so 1. Because this Commandement hath least light of nature to direct us to the observation of it 2. For that we are naturally most negligent in it suffering our selves to be withdrawne by our worldly businesse from the Lords service upon the Lords day and therefore such a speciall warning is needfull to be added What things are we thence to remember 1. To looke backe unto the first institution of the Sabbath day in Paradise Gen. 2. 2 3. before all Sacrifices and Ceremonies 2. So to beare it in mind as to live in continuall practise of the duties we learned the Sabbath day last past 3. To bethink our selves before of the works of the Sabbath and so to prepare our selves and our affaires Luke 23. 54. that we may freely and duely attend on the Lord in the Sabbath approaching What should be done in this preparation of the Sabbath 1. We should so compasse all our businesses in the six working dayes that our worldly affaires enter not or incroach into the possession of the Lords day Not only willingly but not so much as by any forgetfulnesse As when through want of foresight or forecasting the payment of mony due by obligation or any such businesses that might be prevented shall fall out on that day 2. We should sanctifie our selves
and those that are under us to keep that day What is contrary to this The neglect of Preparation for the Sabbath before it come and of fitting our hearts for holy service when it is come What are the parts of this Commandement They are two First to keep the Lords rest Secondly to sanctifie this rest For it is not sufficient that we rest from worldly businesses but it is further required that it be a holy rest The first sheweth what works we are to decline upon this day the other what duties we are to performe What are the workes that we must decline and leave undone on the Lords day Not onely the workes of sinne which we ought to leave undone every day but also the workes of our ordinary callings concerning this life and bodily exercise and labours which upon other dayes are lawfull and necessary to bee done Marke 3. 4. Ezek. 23. 37 38. Num. 15. 32 33. Exod. 31. 10 11 12 13 14. 34. 21. Nehem. 13. 15 c. Esa. 58. 13. What instances have you in Scripture of the performance hereof The Israelites ceased both from those works which were of the least importance as gathering of sticks Num. 15. 32. and from such also as were of greatest weight as working at the Tabernacle and building the Temple on the Sabbath day and consequently all other workes betwixt these extreams as buying and selling working in seed time or harvest were forbidden unto them Are we as strictly bound to rest from all our outward businesses and to forbeare all worldly labour upon this day as the Israelites Yea so farre forth as the morality of the Commandement reacheth but by the Ceremoniall Law there was enjoyned unto the Iewes a more exact observation of outward rest which to them was a part of their Ceremonial worship whereas unto us the outward rest is not properly any part of the sanctification of the day or of the service of God but only a meanes tending to the furtherance of the same even as in Fasting and Prayer Fast is of it selfe no part of Gods service but a thing adjoyned thereunto and so farre forth onely acceptable in the worship of God as it maketh a way and readier passage for the other 1 Cor. 8. 8. What did that most strict observance of outward rest signifie unto the Jewes Their continuall Sanctification in this world Exodus 31. 13. Ezek. 20. 12. and their endlesse rest in the world to come whereof this was a Type no lesse then the land of Promise Heb. 4. 4 5. 10. How was the latter of these specially typified In this world Gods Children are subject to the fiery tryall but after these troubles rest is provided for them 2 Thes. 1. 7. and no fire to be feared in that after world For a more lively representation of that there was a charge laid upon the children of Israel that no fire might be kindled throughout all their habitations upon the Sabbath day Exodus 35. 3. though it were for the very preparing of the meat which they should eate Exodus 16. 23. which was allowed unto them even in the two great solemne dayes of the Passeover Exo. 12. 16. Is it then lawfull for us to make a fire and dresse meat upon the Lords day Yea certainly because these were proper to the Pedagogy or manner of government of the Children of Israel under the Law as may appeate by this that there was no such thing commanded before the Law was given by Moses and consequently being not perpetuall must necessarily follow to bee Ceremoniall Now after the Sabbath that Christ our Lord rested in the grave the Ceremoniall Sabbath lyeth buried in that grave together with those other Rites which were shadows of things to come the body being in Christ Col. 2. 16 17. Therefore we being dead with Christ from these Ceremonies are no more to be burthened with such Traditions ibid. verse 20. Nor to bee brought under the bondage of any outward thing It is a liberty purchased unto us by Christ and we must stand fast unto it that blessed houre being come wherein the true worshippers are to worship the Father in Spirit and Truth John 4. 23. To leave then the Ceremoniall Sabbath and to come to the Morall How is the Rest required therein laid downe in the fourth Commandement By a Declaration First of the Works from which there must be a cessation Secondly of the persons that must observe this Rest. How is the former of these expressed In these words In it thou shalt not doe any Worke Exodus 20. 10. What is required of us hereby That for the space of that whole naturall day we cease in minde and body from all our worldly labours yea from the workes of our lawfull Calling and all other earthly businesses whatsoever more then needs must be done either for Gods glory or mans good What gather you of this That all exercises which serve not in some degree to make us fit to the Lords worke are unlawfull upon the Lords day Why doe you say that we must rest in minde and body Because this rest must be of the whole man in thoughts words and deeds Esa. 58. 13. Is it meerely unlawfull to doe any bodily or outward businesse on the Lords day No. First for such works are excepted as are presently necessary either for common honesty or comelinesse Secondly the actions of Piety requisite for the performance of Gods service on that day Acts 1. 12. Mat. 12. 5. Thirdly extraordinary exigents of Charity for the preservation of the Common-wealth 2 Kings 11. 9. Fourthly the preservation of our owne and others life health and goods in case of present necessity or great danger of their perishing if they were not saved on that day Mat. 12. 10 11. Marke 3. 4. Luke 13. 15 16. What be the speciall breaches of this part of the Commandement 1. The making of the Sabbath a common day through common labours in our ordinary callings Neh. 13. 15. vaine speech and talking of our worldly affaires Esa. 58. 13. thinking our owne thoughts and no other but a common use of the Creatures 2. The making it a day of carnall rest unto idlenesse feasting pastimes c. which draw our mindes further from God then our ordinary labours Exod. 32. 6. Whither are referred all recreations which distract us as also excessive eating and drinking which causeth drowsinesse and unaptnesse unto Gods Service and Worship 3. The making it a day of sinne or the Devills holy day by doing that on the Lords day which is no day lawfull Mar.
blessing of God upon the week going before What are the private duties that are to be performed out of the Church Such as we performe either in secret by our selves alone or in common with our families at home or others abroad both before the publick exercises in the Church the better to performe them and after the more to profit by them What be they in particular First Private Prayer Secondly Reading of the Word Thirdly holy Conference touching the Word of God and familiar talke of things belonging to the Kingdome of heaven Luke 14. 7. 16. Fourthly Examination of our selves and those that belong to us what we have profited by the hearing of the Word and other exercises of Religion Fiftly Catechising of our families Sixtly Meditation upon Gods Word Properties and Workes as well of Creation as of Providence especially that which he exerciseth in the government of the Church Psal. 80. 88. 92. Seventhly reconciling such as are at variance and visiting the sick relieving the poore c. 1 Cor. 16. 2. Neh. 8. 12. For these also are works of the Sabbath VVhat proofe have you of this continuall exercise and imployment 1. In the Law every evening and every morning were Sacrifices which on the Sabbath were multiplyed Numb 28. 9. 2. The 92. Psalme entituled A Psalme for the Sabbath to bee sung that day declareth that it is a good thing to begin the praises of God early in the morning and to continue the same untill night That wee may know then how to spend a Sabbath well declare more particularly how we may bestow the whole time in exercises of holines and first begin with the evening preparation Our care must be over night that having laid aside all our earthly affaires we begin to fit our selves for the Lords service that so we may fall asleep as it were in the Lords bosome and awake with him in the morning VVhat must be done in the morning when we awake We are to put away all earthly thoughts and to take up such Meditations as may most stirre up our hearts with reverence and cheerfulnesse to serve the Lord the whole day after wherein first we are to consider the great benefit of the Lords Sabbath and so cheere up our hearts in the expectation to enjoy the same Secondly to covenant with the Lord more religiously to sanctifie the whole day after In making of our selves ready what are we to doe Rising as early for the Lords service as we doe for our owne businesses and bestow no more time nor care about our apparell and such like then needs must we may then occupy our minde about such matters as bee most fit for that time which ordinarily may be these two 1. To thinke upon Gods goodnesse in giving us such apparell and other necessaries which many others want so that wee may judge all things we have rather too good for us then bee discontented with any thing we enjoy 2. Considering how well our bodies be apparelled and provided for to seek more to have our soules better apparelled with Christ Iesus Being up and ready what are we to set our selves to Wee must set our selves to our morning sacrifice either alone or with others if it may be some short Prayer for our preparation being used VVhat Meditations must we here enter into Two especially the one for that which is past the other for that which is to come VVhat for that which is past To cast our weeks account at least how God hath dealt with us in benefits and chastisements and how wee have dealt with him in keeping or breaking his Commandements that by both we may finde matter to comfort and humble us to move us to thankfulnesse for mercies received and to earnest suit and labour for pardon of our trespasses and supply of all our necessities VVhat for that which followeth To prepare our selves for the publick Ministerie and as it were to apparell our selves and make our selves fit to go to the Court of the Lord of Hosts with his children and before his Angels What things are necessary hereunto 1. A due regard whither we goe before whom what to doe and what ends wherewith to honour God and to receive grace from him 2. An earnest hunger so to use the meanes to Gods honour and our good 3. True faith that we shall enjoy our desire 4. Ioy and Thankfulnesse in the hope of such Blessings 5. Humility in regard of our unworthinesse 6. Vnfained purpose of amendment of life What must be added unto these To the Meditations fervent Prayer must be joyned and Reading for our furtherance in Gods service and such as conveniently can are to joyne together in a Christian Family to read pray and confer and Governours to instruct their Families in such matters as are then befitting Having thus spent the time privately what is to be done in publick We are to goe to Church in all comely sort before the publick Ministry is begun and then with all diligence to attend and to give consent thereunto and so to take to heart whatsoever shall be brought unto us that by all the holy exercises we may be edified in all needfull graces The publick Ministry ended what are we to doe We are to occupy our minds on that we have heard and when we come to place and time convenient to set our selves more especially to make use of it to our selves and others pertaining to us and to water it with our prayers that it may grow and bring forth fruit What say you to our diet and refreshing of our nature on this day Care would be had that it be such as every way may make us fitter for holy duties And to this end we are to season it with Meditation and speeches of holy things How is the afternoone to be spent 1. The time before the Evening Sacrifice we are to bestow either alone or with others in such Exercises as may best quicken in us Gods Spirit 2. For the Evening Sacrifices in all respects to behave our selves as in the Morning and to continue to the end 3. This publick Ministry fully ended to keep our minds in like sort as before on that we have heard and so being come home either alone or with others to enter into an examination of our selves for the whole day How are we to end the day 1. With thanks for Gods blessings on our labours 2. Humble suit for pardon of all our faults escaped 3. Earnest desire of grace to profit by all that we may persevere unto the end and be saved Doe you make any difference betwixt the Sabbath nights and other nights Yes we should lay our selves downe to rest in greater quietnesse that night upon the sense and feeling of the former Exercises so that our sleep should be the more quiet by how much the former Exercises of that day have been more holy otherwise we should declare that we have not kept the whole day so
holy to the Lord as we ought What be the sins condemned in the second part of this Commandement Generally the omission of any of the former duties and in particular 1. Idlenesse which is a sinne every day but much more on the Lords day 2. Prophane absence from or unfaithfull presence at Gods Ordinances 3. Neglect of calling our selves to a reckoning after holy Exercises 4. Being weary of the duties of the Sabbath thinking long till they be ended Amos 8. 5. Mal. 1. 13. What are the helps or hinderances to the keeping of this Commandement We must adde to the forementioned duties of remembrance an ardent endevour to taste the sweetnesse of holy Exercises Psa. 24. 2 3. 84. 1. c. that so we may come to make the Sabbath our delight 2. We must avoid and abhorre all prophane opinions either disanulling the necessity of the Sabbath or equalling any other day to it together with such meetings and Companies Exercises and occasions whereby we shall be in danger to be drawne to the unhallowing of the Sabbath day Ezek. 22. 26. So much of the Commandement What reasons are used to inforce the same Foure Whence is the first taken From equality by a secret reason of comparison of the lesse That forasmuch as God hath allowed us six dayes of seven for our affaires to doe our owne businesse in whether it be labour or honest recreation and reserved but one for himselfe when as he might most justly have given us but one of seven and have taken six to himselfe we ought not to thinke it much to spend the whole seventh day in the service of God What learne you from hence The unequall and wretched dealing of most men with God who by the grant of this Commandement urge usually at their servants hands the worke of a whole day in every of the six dayes yet upon the Lords day thinke it enough both for themselves and those under them to measure out unto the Lord three or foure houres only for his service using one measure to mete the service due unto themselves and another to mete the service due unto God which is a thing abominable before God Pro. 11. 1. And so much the more as the things are greater and of more value which they mete with lesser measures Whence is the second Reason taken From Gods owne right who made the Sabbath and is Lord of it For the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God This day is his and not ours Whence is the third From the example of God That as God having made all things in the six dayes rested the seventh day from creating any more so should we rest from all our works God himselfe ceasing from his worke of Creation on that day and sanctifying it with what joy ought we to imitate our God herein Gen. 2. 2 3. Exod. 31. 17. Did God cease from all works on the seventh day No verily he did then and still continueth to doe a great worke in preferring the things created Ioh. 5. 17. What learne you from this 1. That we be not idle on the Lords day seeing Gods example is to the contrary but attend upon the Lords service 2. That as the Lord preserved on the Sabbath day things created in the six dayes before but created none other new so by his example we may save things on that day which otherwise would be lost but we may not get or gaine more Whence is the fourth and last reason drawne From hope of blessing because God ordained not the Sabbath for any good it can doe to him but for the good of unthankfull man and therefore he blessed and sanctified it not onely as a day of service to himselfe but also as a time and meanes to bestow encrease of grace upon such as doe continually desire the same Exodus 31. 13. Esa. 56. 6 7. What is meant by Sanctifying it The setting it apart from worldly businesses to the service of God What by Blessing Not that this day in it selfe is more blessed then other dayes but as the acceptable time of the Gospell is put for the persons that receive the Gospell in that time so by blessing this day he meaneth that those that keep it shall be blessed and that by setting it apart and separating it by this Commandement from other dayes to be kept holy by publick exercises of his holy worship and service God hath made it an essentiall meanes of blessing to them that shall sanctifie it as they ought Wherein shall they be blessed that keep the Sabbath day 1. In all the holy exercises of the Sabbath which shall serve for their further increase both of the knowledge and feare of God and all other spirituall and heavenly graces accompanying salvation 2. In matters of this life we shall not onely not be hindred by keeping the Sabbath but more blessed then if we did worke that day as on the other side the gaine on the Lords day shall by the curse of God melt and vanish away what shew of profit soever it have and bring some curse or other upon our labours in the week dayes which in themselves are lawfull and honest So much of the first Table concerning our duties to God the due performance whereof is called Piety wherein God as a King or as a Father of an houshold doth teach his Subjects or Family their duties towards himselfe What is taught in the second Table Our duties to our selves and our neighbours the performance whereof is commonly called Justice or Righteousnesse wherein God teacheth his Subjects and Familie their duties one towards another What is the summe of the Commandements of the second Table Thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy selfe Lev. 19. 18. Mat. 22. 39. Or As you would that men should doe unto you doe you unto them likewise Mat. 7. 12. Luke 6. 31. What generall things doe you observe belonging to this Table 1. That it is like unto the first Matth. 12. 39. and therefore that according to the measure of our profiting in the first Table we profit also in this In which respects the Prophets and Apostles doe commonly try the sincerity and uprightnesse in profiting under the first Table by the forwardnesse in the second 2. That the workes thereof are in higher or lower degree of good or evill as they are kept or broken towards one of the houshold of faith rather then towards a neighbour simply 1 Cor. 6. 8. 10. 32. Gal. 6. 10. Deut. 22. 2 3. 3. That out of our bond to our neighbour we draw all our duties to all men 1 Thes. 3. 12. 5. 15. reaching them even to the wicked so farre forth as we hinder not Gods glory nor some great duty to others especially the houshold of faith for sometime it may so fall out that that which men require and that otherwise are right may not bee given as Rahab though subject to
3. 4. but then most abominable Ezek. 23. 37 38. 4. The keeping a peece of the day not the whole or giving liberty to our selves in the night before the whole Sabbath be ended 5. The forbearing our selves but imploying others in worldly businesses for preventing of which sinne God is so large in naming of the persons which in this Commandement are forbidden to worke Why is there a particular rehearsall of these persons in this Commandement To take away all excuses from all persons in this Commandement for the Lord did see that such was the corruption of men that if they themselves did rest upon this day from labours they would thinke it sufficient not caring how they toyled out and wearied their servants at home with continuall labour as many doe so that it were better to be such mens Oxen then their servants so small care they have of their soules What is the speciall use of this rehearsall To teach us that all sorts and degrees of persons are bound to yeeld this duty unto God and that the Sabbath is to be kept both by our selves and those that doe belong unto us Was it not ordained also for the rest and refreshing of men and beasts especially Servants which could not otherwise continue without it That also was partly intended as may appeare by Deut. 5. 14. but not principally for the things here contained doe concerne the worship of God but that wearing and toyling out of servants and beasts is against the sixt Commandement and working is here forbidden that men might be the more free for the worship of God and therefore though servants had never so much rest and recreation upon other dayes yet they ought to rest upon this day in that regard Why is there mention made of allowing rest to the beasts First that we may shew mercy even to the beasts Prov. 12. 10. Secondly to represent after a sort the everlasting Sabbath wherein all Creatures shall bee delivered from the bondage of corruption Rom. 8. 20 21. Thirdly because of the whole imployment of men in the Lords service for beasts cannot be travelled or used in any worke upon that day unlesse man be withdrawne from Gods service yea though the beast could labour without mans attendance yet his minde would some time or other be carryed away and distracted thereby that it would not be so fit as it ought to be for Gods service To whom especially is the charge of this Commandement directed To Housholders and Magistrates who stand charged in the behalfe both of themselves and of all that are under their roofe and Government Jos. 24. 15. Neh. 13. 15. Heb. 13. 15. What is the charge of the Housholder That not only himselfe keep the Lords day but also his Wife Children and Servants as much as may be For as they serve him in the weeke dayes so he must see that they serve God on the Lords day What gather you of this That a Housholder should be as carefull of the Lords businesse as of his owne And if he will not keep such a servant as is not carefull in his ordinary worke much lesse should he keep any that will not be carefull in the Lords worke how skilfull soever he be in his owne What is the Magistrates part To see that all within his gates keep the Lords day Jo. 24. 15. even strangers though Turks and Infidels Neh 13. 15. causing them to cease from labour and restraining them from all open and publick Idolatry or false Worship of God much more all his owne Subjects whom he ought to force to heare the Word 2 Chron. 34. 33. So much of the first part of this Commandement touching our rest from all worldly businesses What followeth in the next place The second and greater part of this Commandement which is the sanctifying of this Rest and keeping it holy unto the Lord by exercising of our selves wholly in the service of God and performing the duties of that day Are we as strictly bound to these duties as the Jewes Yes verily and more then they because of the greater measures of Gods graces upon us above that which was upon them What is required of us herein To make the Sabbath our delight to consecrate it as glorious to the Lord Isa. 58. 13. and that with joy and without wearinesse Amos 8. 5. with Mal. 1. 13. and that also with care and desire of profit we bestow the whole day as nature will beare in holy Exercises What are these Exercises They are partly duties of Piety Acts 13. 13. 15. 20. 7. Psal. 92. 1. as hearing and reading the Word Prayer singing of Psalmes and feeding our selves with the Contemplations of the heavenly Sabbath partly of mercy 1 Cor. 16. 2. Neh. 8. 12. as visiting and relieving the sicke and needy comforting the sad and such like How are these duties to be performed Hartly publick in the Church where the solemne worshipping of God is the speciall worke and proper use of the Sabbath Partly private out of the Church and that either secretly by our selves alone or joyntly with others What if we cannot be suffered to use the publicke meanes Such as are necessarily debarred from the publick duties must humble themselves before God mourning and sorrowing for this restraint Mat. 24. 20. Psal. 42. 6. 84. 1 2 3. and with so much more care and earnestnesse use the private meanes Psal. 53. 1 2. What is the first duty we are to performe in the publick Assembly To joyne in Prayer with the Congregation which is an excellent duty for if as Christ saith When two or three are gathered together in his Name he will grant their requests how much more will he heare his servants when two or three hundred are gathered in his Name What is the second To heare the Word read Luke 4. 16. Acts 3. 16. 15. 20. for blessed is he that readeth and they that heare the Word Rev. 1. 3. What is the third To heare the Word preached Luke 4. 16. 22. Acts 13. 14 15. 15. 21. 20. 7. What is the fourth To communicate in the Sacraments by being present when the Sacrament of Baptisme is administred unto others and by receiving the Sacrament of the Lords Supper our selves after a decent order in the appointed time Acts 20. 7. 1 Cor. 11. 20. Why should a man be present at Baptisme First that hee may give thanks to God for adding a Member to his Church Secondly that he might be put in minde of his own Vow made to God in Baptisme by seeing the childe baptized What is the fift duty to be performed in the Congregation Singing of Psalmes What is the sixt Exercise of the Discipline of the Church against offenders 1 Cor. 5. 4. What is the seventh Collection for the poore and Contribution for relieving the necessities of the Saints of God 1 Cor. 16. 1 2. where we are to give according to our wealths and the
is of good report whatsoever is praise-worthy c. As for baptisme of Infants it is sufficiently warranted by reasons of Scripture though not by example Obj. 2. They object that it is by Tradition and not by Scripture that we know such and such Books to be Scripture Though new beginners doe first learn it from the faithfull yet afterwards they know it upon grounds of Scripture as an ignorant man may be told of the Kings Coin but it is not the telling but the Kings stamp that maketh it currant and good Coin Obj. 3. It is objected that it was by Tradition and not by Scripture that Stephen knew Moses to be 40 years old when he left Pharaoh Acts 7. 23. That Luke knew a great part of the Genealogie of Christ Luk. 3. That Jude knew Satans striving for Moses body Jude v. 9. and the Prophesie of Enoch ver 5. 14. That Paul knew Jannes and Jambres 2 Tim. 3. 8. and the saying of Christ that it is more blessed to give then to receive Acts 20. 35. Such particular Histories or speeches might be received from hand to hand but no different Doctrine from that which was written Obj. 4. The Apostles testimony is objected 1 Cor. 15. 3. 2 Thess. 2. 15. Hold the traditions which you have been taught whether by word or our Epistle He meaneth the doctrine he delivered unto them which was nothing different from that which is contained in the Scriptures The Scriptures you say are a rule and a line but are they not as the Church of Rome imagineth like a rule of lead which may be bowed every way at mens pleasures They are as a rule of steel that is firm and changeth not Matth. 5. 18. Psal. 19. 9. for seeing they are sufficient to make us wise unto salvation as is before proved it followeth of necessity that there is a most certain rule of faith for instruction both of faith and works to be learned out of them by ordinary means of reading prayer study the gifts of tongues and other sciences to which God promiseth the assistance of his grace Joh. 5. 39. Jam. 1. 5. And this sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God written as the example of Christ our generall Captain sheweth Mat. 4. is delivered unto us by the holy Ghost both to defend our faith and to overcome all our spirituall enemies which are the Devil and his instruments false Prophets Hereticks Schismaticks and such like Eph. 6. 17. Therefore the holy Scriptures are not as a nose of wax or a leaden rule as some Papists have blasphemed that they may be so writhen every way by impudent Hereticks but that their folly and madnesse as the Apostle saith 2 Tim. 3. 9. may be made manifest to all men Are the Scriptures then plain and easie to be understood There are some hard things in the Scripture that have proper relation to the time in which the Scripture was written or uttered or which are prophesies of things to be fulfilled hereafter which if we never understand we shall be never the worse for the attaining of everlasting salvation there are other things in Scripture belonging to the saving knowledge of God all which are dark and difficult unto those whose eyes the God of this world hath blinded 2 Cor. 4. 4. 2 Pet. 3. 5. Joh. 8. 43. but unto such as are by grace enlightened and made willing to understand Psal. 119. 18. howsoever somethings remain obscure 2 Pet. 3. 16. to exercise their diligence yet the fundamentall Doctrine of faith and precepts of life are all plain and perspicuous for all Doctrine necessary to be known unto eternall salvation is set forth in the Scriptures most clearly and plainly even to the capacity and understanding of the simple and unlearned so far is it that the Scriptures should be dangerous to be read of the Lay folks as Papists hold How prove you this which you have said Deut. 30. 10. 11 c. Moses taketh heaven and earth to witnesse that in the Law which he had written he hath set forth life and death and that they can make no excuse of difficulty or obscurity This Commandement which I command thee this day is not hidden from thee neither is it far off c. which Paul also Rom. 10. 16. applieth to the Gospel Psalm 19. 8. the Prophet David testifieth that the Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul the testimonies of the Lord are true giving wisdome to the simple and Psalme 119. 105. Thy Word is a Lampe or Candle unto my feet and a Light unto my pathes Prov. 1. 4. It giveth subtilty to the simple and to the young man knowledge and discertion and Prov. 8. 9. All the words of wisdome are plain to them that will understand Esa. 45. 19. The Lord saith I have not spoken in secret in a dark place of the earth I have not said in vain to the seed of Jacob Seek mee 2 Cor. 4. 3. Paul saith If our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost c. 2 Pet. 1. 19. S. Peter commendeth Christians for taking heed to the word of the Prophets as unto a light that shineth in a dark place c. The Scripture is our Fathers Letter to us and his last will to shew us what inheritance he leaveth us but friends write Letters and Fathers their wils plain It were to accuse God of cruelty or desire of mans destruction for to say that he should make the means of their salvation hurtfull unto them Women and children have read the Scriptures 2 Tim. 3. 15. Saint Paul affirmeth that Timothy was nourished up in the Scriptures from his infancy namely by his Grandmother Lois and his Mother Eunice whence the same Apostle commendeth chap. 1. 5. If little children are capable of the Scriptures by the small understanding they have and lesse judgement there is none so grosse which hath the understanding of a man but may profit by it comming in the fear of God and invocation of his name Obj. 1. But here the Papists have many things to object against you to prove that the Scriptures are darke and hard to be understood and First that the matters contained in them are Divine high and beyond mans reason as the Trinity the Creation of nothing c. These matters indeed are above humane reason and therefore are we to bring faith to beleeve them not humane reason to comprehend them but they are delivered in Scripture in as plain tearms as such matter can be Obj. 2. Peter saith that something in Pauls Epistles be hard and wrested by men 2 Pet. 3. 16. First he saith not that all Pauls Epistles are hard but something in them which we grant Secondly they are the wicked and unsetled in knowledge that wrest them as the Gluttons and Drunkards abuse meat and drink Obj. 3. If Scriptures were not dark what need so many Commentaries upon them and why are they
his name Psal. 145. 1 2 3. among which the chief and principall are his Attributes or Properties What are the Properties or Attributes of God They are essentiall faculties of God according to the diverse manner of his working 1 Joh. 4. 16. Psal. 145. Are they communicable with the creatures No yet of some of them there are some shadows and glimpses in Men and Angels as Wisdome Holinesse Justice Mercy c. other some are so peculiar to the divine Essence that the like of them are not to be found in the creatures as simplenesse infinitenesse eternity c. How may these Properties be considered They may be considered either in themselves as they are essentiall or in their works or effects which are all perfect either as they be absolute or as they be actuall absolute in himself by which he is able to shew them more then ever he will as he is able to doe more then ever he will doe Mat. 3. 9. God is able of stones to raise children unto Abraham actuall is that which he sheweth in the Creation and government of the vvorld as Psal. 135. 7. All things that he will he doth c. Again something we may conceive of his Essence affirmatively knowing that all perfections which vve apprehend must be ascribed unto God and that after a more excellent manner then can be apprehended as that he is in himself by himself and of himselfe that he is one true God and holy but much more by deniall or by removing all imperfections whatsoever as of composition by the titles of simple spirituall and incorporeall of all circumscription of time by the title of eternall of all bounds of place by that of infinite of all possibility of motion by those titles of unchangeable incorruptible and such like What description can you make of God by these Properties God is a Spirit eternall or more fully God is a spirituall substance having his beeing of himself infinitely great and good Joh. 4. 24. 8. 58. Exod. 3. 14. 34. 6 7. Ps. 145. 3. 8 9. What learn you hence To acknowledge both my beeing and wel-beeing from him and for him alone Acts 17. 28. 1 Cor. 10. 30. Eph. 2. 10. What mean you when you say that God is a substance God is such a thing as hath a beeing in himself of himself and which giveth a beeing to all other things What mean you by that addition Of himself It hath a secret opposition to all creatures which have a beeing but not of themselves whereas God alone is he in whom we live and move and have our beeing Acts 17. 28. which proveth that he alone hath his beeing of himself How many things conceive you of God when you say that he is a Spirit Sixe things First that he is a living substance Secondly that he is incorruptible Thirdly that he is incorporeall without body flesh bloud or bones for a spirit hath no such matter Luke 24. 39. Fourthly that he is invisible i. he cannot be seen with any mortall eye neither can any man possibly see him Fiftly that he is intangible not felt Sixtly that he is indivisible i. he cannot be divided How prove you that God is invisible and not to be seen with carnall eyes That no man hath seen God is plainly set down 1 Joh. 4. 12. that no man can see God is as plainly proved Exod. 33. 20. 1 Tim. 6. 16. and besides Scripture the same is also manifest by reason for we cannot see our own souls which are ten thousand times a more grosse substance then God much lesse can we see God which is a most pure and spirituall substance Obj. 1. We read Gen. 18. 1. that God appeared to Abraham and Deut. 5. 24. that he shewed himself to the Israelites God gave them indeed some outward sights whereby they might be certain of his presence and therefore it is said that the Lord appeared unto them but his substance or essence they saw not for to know God perfectly is proper to God onely Joh. 6. 46. Obj. 2. We read Gen. 1. 26. that man was made according to the image of God It would seem therefore that God is corporeall and visible as man is The image of God consisteth not in the shape and figure of his body but in the mind and integrity of nature or as the Scripture saith in wisdome righteousnesse and holinesse Col. 3. 10. Eph. 4. 24. Obj. 3. Why then doth the Scripture attribute unto him hands feet c The Scripture so speaketh of him as we are able to conceive thereof and therefore in these and such like speeches humbleth it self to our capacity attributing members unto God to signifie the like actions in him To what use serveth this doctrine that God is a Spirit It teacheth us first to worship him in spirit and in truth Joh. 4. 23 24. Secondly to drive away all fond imaginations and grosse conceipts of God out of our hearts and all pictures similitudes of God out of our sights that we frame not any image of him in our minds as ignorant folks doe who think him to be an old man sitting in heaven c. For seeing that God was never seen wherunto shall he be resembled Moses urgeth this point hard and often to the Israelites saying Deut. 4. 12. they heard a voice but saw no similitude and addeth ver 15. Take ye therefore good heed unto your selves he saith not only take heed but take good heed and therefore take good heed for saith he again ye saw no manner of similitude on the day that the Lord spake unto you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire then he commeth in the next four verses to the thing that they must therefore take heed of that ye corrupt not your selves and make you a graven Image the similitude of any figure the likenesse of male or female c. Rom. 1. 23. How may the Attributes or Properties of God be distinguished Some doe concern the perfection of his essence some his life which in God be one and the same thing distinguished onely for our capacity What call you the perfection of Gods essence His absolute constitution by which he is wholly compleat within himself and consequently needeth nothing without himself but alone sufficeth himself having all things from himself and in himself Or thus perfection is an essentiall property in God whereby whatsoever is in God is perfect Gen. 17. 1. Psa. 16. 2. 50. 12. Rom. 11. 35 36. What ariseth from hence All felicity and happinesse all endlesse blisse and glory What is the felicity of God It is the property of God whereby he hath all fulnesse of delight and contentment in himself What learn you from the perfection of God That he is to seek his own glory and not the glory of any in all that he willeth or willeth not doth or leaveth undone What gather you thereof They are confuted that think God is moved to
2. yet that word mentioned in the 1. Gen. where it is written that the Lord said Let there be light c. was Gods command which then had beginning whereas the Son was from all eternity To what end were all things created For Gods glory Prov. 16. 4. How doth the glory of God appear in them First his eternall power and Godhead is seen in raising all things out of nothing by his word alone Esay 40. 12. Rom. 1. 20. Jer. 10. 12. 51. 15. Secondly his infinite wisdome is made known by them Psal. 104. 24. Jer. 10. 12. 51. 15. Thirdly his goodnesse unto all his creatures is hereby manifested which is very excellently set out by the Prophet in the 104. Psalm Fourthly his infinite authority doth appear by them What uses then are we to make of the Creation First we are thereby taught to discern the true God from all Heathen and Idoll gods in the world Esay 45. 6 7. Jer. 10. 11 12. for nothing in heaven and earth can give a beeing to a creature but God Secondly we are to weigh them and learn their properties Eccles. 7. 25. Thirdly we should learn to give God glory for them Rev. 4. 11. Psal. 92. 5. where it is made one end of the Sabbath Ps. 104. throughout Fourthly we are to gather comfort to our selves from hence That resting upon this faithfull Creator our hope needs not fail us so long as either heaven or earth have any help for us 1 Pet. 4. 19. Esa. 37. 16 17. What doth the Scriptures teach us concerning the goodnesse of the creatures That God made all them in such excellency of perfection for their beeing working order and use that himself did fully approve of them and so establish them Gen. 1. 31. which established order is that which is called Nature In how many things doth the goodnesse of the creatures consist In three First in perfection of their nature Secondly in their properties and qualities whereby they are able to doe those things for which they were created Thirdly in their uses unto man How manifold is that good which men receive by them Threefold First profitable good Secondly pleasant good Thirdly honest and Christian good How were all things made good when we see there be divers kinds of Serpents and noysome and hurtfull beasts That they are hurtfull it commeth not by the nature of their creation in regard whereof they at the first should only have served for the good of man What doe you note in the time of their Creation The beginning and the continuance thereof Might not the world have been before all time even from eternity No for absolute eternity belongeth only to God neither could any thing that is subject to time be after an infinite succession of other things What say you then to Aristotle accounted of so many the Prince of Philosophers who laboureth to prove that the world is eternall Wherein he laboureth to finde out a point of wisdome which he had learned of none other that was before him he therein bewrayeth his greatest folly for his chiefest reason being grounded upon the eternity of the first mover is of no force to prove his most absurd position seeing God as he is Almighty and always able to doe what he will so is he most free and not bound to doe all that he can but what when and how it pleaseth him But seeing Aristotle was enforced by reason to acknowledge God to be the first mover even against his will for it seemed that he endevoured as much as he could to quench the light of divine knowledge shining in his face or obstinately to close his eyes against the same and yet not onely spoiled God of the glory of his Creation but also assigneth him to no higher office then is the moving of the sphears whereunto he bindeth him more like to a servant then a Lord the Judgement of God uttered by S. Paul Rom. 1. 21. is most notoriously shewed upon him in that he knowing God did not glorifie him nor give him thanks but became vain in his disputations and his foolish heart was darkned while he professed wisdome he was made a fool approving Idolatry and that wickednesse which the Apostle there sheweth to be a just punishment of Idolatry and nature it self abhorreth Arist. Polit. lib. 7. cap. 6. lib. 2. cap. 8. How long is it since God did create the world Four thousand years before the birth of our Saviour Christ and so about 5614 years before this time Why is the order of the years of the world so carefully set down in the Scripture To convince all Heathen that either thought that the world was without beginning or that it began Millions of years before it did To give light to all sacred Histories of the Bible To shew the time of the fulfilling of the Prophecies which God foretold But why was not the world made sooner Saving the hidden wisdome and free pleasure of the Maker therein appeareth the free power of God to make or not to make and his absolute sufficiency within himself as having no need of any externall beeing only creating that he might communicate manifest his goodnes How long was God creating the world Six days and six nights Why was he creating so long seeing he could have perfected all the creatures at once and in a moment First to shew the variety distinction and excellency of his severall creatures Secondly to teach us the better to understand their workmanship even as a man which will teach a child in the frame of a letter will first teach him one line of the letter and not the whole letter together Thirdly to admonish us that we are bound to bestow more time in discerning and knowing them then we doe Fourthly that we might also by his example finish our work in six days Fiftly that we might observe that many of the creatures were made before those which are ordinarily their causes and thereby learn that the Lord is not bound to any creature or to any means thus the sunne was not created before the fourth day and yet dayes which now are caused by the rising of the sunne were before that so trees and plants were created the third day but the Sun Moon and Stars by which they are now nourished and made to grow were not created till after the third day Hitherto of the creation in generall what are the particular creatures The world and all things therein Acts 17. 24. or the heavens and the earth and all the host of them Gen. 2. 1. How many heavens are mentioned in the Scriptures Three the first is the ayre wherein we breathe the birds doe fly and the snow rain frost haile and thunder are begotten Matth. 6. 26. Gen. 7. 11. The second is the sky wherein the Sun the Moon and the Starres are placed Gen. 1. 14 15. Deut. 17. 3. The third wherein the Angles and the soules of the Saints from
Such as are made of the four Elements equally mingled together How many kinds be there of them The things that have 1. A being without life 2. A being and life without sense 3. A being life and sense without reason 4. A being life sense and reason as man What is common to the three last kinds That together with life there is power and vertue given unto them to bring forh the like unto themselves for the continuance of their kind which blessing of multiplication is principally in the two last sorts of creatures that have the life of sense beside the life of increase and therefore the Lord is brought in to speak to them in the second person Gen. 1. 22. 28. which he did not to the grasse corne and trees which are creatures of the second kind What learn you from hence That the chiefe and speciall cause of the continuance of every kind of creature to the worlds end is this will and word of God without the which they or sundry of them would have perished ere this by so many means as are to consume them Declare now in order the severall works of the six dayes and shew first what was done the first day The rude masse or matter of heaven and earth being made of nothing the first night of the world as hath been declared God did afterward create the light and called it day Gen. 13 4 5. What note you hereof The wonderfull work of God not onely in making something of nothing but bringing light out of darknesse 2 Cor. 4. 6. which are contrary and distinguishing betwixt day and night before either Sun or Moon were created What was the work of the second day The Firmament was created to divide the waters above from the waters below What was done the third day The third night as it seemed God caused the waters to retire into their vessels and severed them from the dry land calling the one seas the other earth Then in the third day which followed that night he clad the earth with grasse for the use of beasts only corn and trees for the use of man also What shape is the water and earth of They both together make a round globe Whether is the water or the earth bigger The water Why then doe they not overwhelme the earth They are restrained and kept in by the mighty power of God How many sorts of waters be there Two salt waters as the sea and fresh waters as floods springs lakes c. What be the parts of the earth First Hills Secondly Valleys and Plaines How many benefits doe you receive by the earth in generall Foure First we are made of the earth Secondly we dwell on the earth Thirdly it giveth fruits and nourishment to all living creatures Fourthly it is our bed after death What benefit receive you by the hills They are a shadow against storms and heat they be fit for grasing of cattle they are fit places to set Beacons on to shew that the enemies are at hand c. What benefits receive you by the Valleyes and Plaines 1. They receive water to water the earth 2. They are most fit places to bring forth all kind of fruit and herbes and grasse How cometh it to pass that God first maketh the grass corne and trees ere he made the heavenly bodies of the Sunne Moon and Starres from whose influence the growth of these proceedeth To correct our errour which tye the increase of these so to the influence of the heavenly bodies even to the worshipping of them therein forgetting the Lord who thereby sheweth that all hang upon him and not on them forasmuch as he made them when the heavenly bodies were not What doe you gather from hence That the fruitfulness of the earth standeth not so much in the labour of the husband-man as in the power which God hath given the earth to bring forth fruit Thus much of the works of the 3d. day what was made the 4th day Lights which are as it were certain vessels wherein the Lord did gather the light which before was scater'd in the whole body of the heavens How are these lights distinguished Although they be all great in themselves to the end they might give light to the dark earth that is farre removed from them yet are they distinguished into Great Small Sunne Moon Starres Why doth Moses call the Sun and Moon the greatest lights when there are Starres that exceed the Moon by many degrees First because they are greatest in their use and vertue that they exercise upon the terrestriall bodies Secondly because they seem so to us it being the purpose of the Holy Ghost by Moses to apply himselfe to the capacity of the unlearned What is the use of them First to separate the day from the night Secondly to be signs of seasons and dayes and yeares Thirdly to send forth their influences upon the whole earth and to give light to the inhabitants thereof How are they signs of times and seasons First by distinguishing the time spring summer autumne winter by their work and naturall effect upon the earthly creatures Secondly by distinguishing the night from the day the day from month the month from the yeare Have they not operation also in the extraordinary events of singular things and persons for their good and evill estate No verily there is no such use taught of them in the Scriptures What creatures were made the fift day Fishes and birds What were the fishes made of Of all four Elements but more it seemeth of the water then other living things Gen. 1. 20. VVhat were the birds made of Of all foure Elements yet have more of the earth Gen. 2. 19. and therefore that they are so light and that their delight is in the ayre it is so much the more marvellous VVhat did God make in the sixt and the last day of Creation It is probable that he made in the Night thereof the beasts of the earth going creeping Tame or home-beasts Wilde or field-beasts Day man in both sexes that is both man and woman the history of whose creation is set down Gen. 1 26 27. in the discourse of the sixt days work and repeated in cap. 2. v. 7. and more at large after the narration of the Lords rest in the seventh day vers 18 19 20 c. Why was man last made of all the creatures 1. Because he was the most excellent of all the works of God in this inferiour world 2. Because he was the end of all unreasonable creatures and therefore that he might glorifie God for all the creatures that he saw the world was furnished with for his sake 3. Because God would have him first provided for ere he brought him into the world that so he might have this world for which God had made him Prince as it were his Palace furnished with all things convenient and if he had care
after a man hath been enlightned with it and felt a taste thereof manifested in outward action by some blasphemous oppugning the truth of set hatred because it is the truth What are you to consider in this sin The nature thereof and the deadlinesse of the same What note you in the nature The reason why it is so called and the quality thereof Why is it called the sin against the holy Ghost Not because it is committed against the third Person only for it is committed against all three but because it is committed against the light of knowledge with which the holy Ghost hath enlightned the heart of him that committed it and that of set malice for every one that sinneth against his knowledge may be said to sin against the holy Ghost as Ananias and Sapphira were said to doe Act. 5. 3. But that is not this great sin of malice resisting the truth because it is the truth but of infirmity What qualities and properties hath this great sin First it must be in him that hath known the truth and after falleth away Heb. 6. 5. therefore Infidels and Heathens doe not sin this sinne neither any that are ignorant though maliciously they blaspheme the truth Secondly it must be done of set malice because it is the truth as the Pharises did Mat. 12. 31. Heb. 6. 6. Therefore Peter that cursed himself and denyed that he knew Christ to save his life did not sinne this sin nor Paul that did persecute him doing it of ignorance Thirdly it must be against God himself directly his Son Christ Jesus Mat. 12. 31. Heb. 6. 6. Therefore it is not any particular breach of the second Table nor a slip against any speciall sin of the first Can these qualities at any time befall the elect or children of God No and therefore they that feel in themselves the testimony of their election need not fear their falling into this sin nor despair VVhat is the deadlinesse of this sin above other sins First God hath pronounced it shall never be pardoned not because God is not able to pardon it but because he hath said he will not forgive it Secondly this sin is commanded not to be prayed for when persons are known to be guilty of it 1 Joh. 5. 16. whereas we are bound to pray for all other persons Thirdly this is the ordinary and first sin of the Devill and therefore is he never received into mercy no more then those that are guilty of it Thus much of the sinne against the holy Ghost Shew now the differences of actuall sins in regard of the degrees attained Some are only sins but others are wickednesses and some beastlinesses or devilishnesses for though originall sin be equall in all Adams children yet actuall sins be not equall but one much greater then another Are not sins well divided into Veniall and Mortall None are Veniall of their own nature but only to the faithful they are so made by the mercy of God in Christ. Doe all naturall men alike commit all these kinds of sin No for though all are alike disposed unto all manner of evill Rom. 7. 14. having in their corrupt nature the seeds of every sin yet doth God for the good of humane society restrain many from notorious crimes by fear of shame and punishment desire of honour and reward c. Rom. 13. 3 4 5. How doth God employ men in this state of sin First he guideth them partly by the light of nature Rom. 2. 14 15. Joh. 1. 9. and partly by common graces of the Spirit Esa. 44. 28. unto many actions profitable for humane society and for the outward service of God Secondly he over-ruleth their evill and sinful actions so that thereby they bring to passe nothing but what his hand and counsell had before determined for his own glory Act. 3. 16. 4. 27 28. What are the things that generally follow sin They are two Guilt and punishment both which doe most duly wait upon sin to enter with it and cannot by any force or cunning of man or Angel be holden from entring upon the person that sin hath already entred upon both likewise doe increase as the sinne increaseth What is the guilt of sin It is the merit and desert of sin which is as it were an obligation to the punishment and wrath of God whereby we become subject to Gods debt or danger that is to condemnation Rom. 2. 15. 3. 9. 10. 19. For every man by reason of his sin is continually subject to the curse of God Gal. 3. 10. and is in as great danger of everlasting damnation as the Traitour apprehended is in danger of hanging drawing and quartering Is there any evill in the guilt before the punishment be executed Very much for it worketh unquietnesse in the mind as when a man is bound in an obligation upon a great forfeiture that very obligation it self disquieteth him especially if he be not able to pay it as we are not And yet more because where other debts have a day set for payment we know not whether the Lord will demand by punishment his debt this day before to morrow What learn you from this That sith men doe shun by all means to be in other mens debt or danger as also the Apostle exhorteth Rom. 13. 8. Owe nothing to any man and Solomon also counselleth in the matter of suretiship Prov. 6. 1 2 3 4 5. we should more warily take heed that we plunge not ourselves over head and ears in the Lords debt for if it be a terrible thing to be bound to any man in stature Staple or Merchant or recognizance much more to God who will be paid to the uttermost farthing How else may the hurt and evill of the guilt of sinne be set forth unto us It is compared to a stroake that lighteth upon the heart and soul of a man where the wound is more dangerous then when it is in the body Gen. 44. 16. 1 Sam. 24. 4 5 6. and so it is also a sting or a bite worse then of a viper as that which bringeth death Have you yet wherewith to set forth the evill of the guilt It seemeth when the Lord said to Cain if he sin against his brother his sin lyeth at the door Gen. 4. 7. that he compareth the guilt to a dog that is always snarling and barking against us which is confirmed by the Apostle who attributeth a mouth to his desert of sin to accuse us Rom. 2. 15. What is the effect of this guilt of Conscience It causeth a man to flie when none pursueth and to be afraid of the fall of a leaf Prov. 28. 1. Levit. 26. 36. VVhen a man doth not know whether he doth sin or no how can he be smitten or bitten or barked at or flie for feare therefore against all this evill ignorance seemeth to be a safe remedy No verily for whether we know it or no his guilt remaineth as
the world Esa. 9. 7. What fruit receive we by the Kingly office of our Saviour Christ By it all the treasures brought in by his Priestly and Propheticall office are dealt to us continually For from it all the means of applying and making effectuall unto us Christ and all his benefits doe come yea without it all the actions of his other offices are to us void fruitlesse and of none effect What comfort have we by this Hereby we are assured that by his Kingly power we shall finally overcome the flesh the world the devill death and hell To whom will this blessed King communicate the means of salvation He offereth them to many and they are sufficient to save all mankind but all shall not be saved thereby because by faith they will not receive them Matth. 20. 16. Joh. 1. 11. 1 Joh. 2. 2. Are not the Faithfull in some sort also made partakers of this honor of his Kingdome Yes verily For they are made Kings to rule and subdue their stirring and rebellious affections and to tread Satan under their feet Rom. 6. 12. 16. 20. Rev. 1. 6. 5. 10. You have spoken of the two natures and three offices of our Saviour Shew now in what state did Christ God and man perform this three-fold office In a two-fold estate 1. Of abasement and humiliation Phi. 2. 7 8. 2. Of advancement and exaltation Ph. 2. 9. Col. 2. 15. Eph. 1. 20 21. In the former he abased himself by his sufferings for sin whereof we have heard largely in the declaration of his Priesthood In the latter he obtained a most glorious victory and triumphed over sin thereby fulfilling his Priesthood and making way to his Kingdome What was his estate of Humiliation It was the base condition of a servant whereto he humbled himself from his Conception to his Crosse and so untill the time of his resurrection Phil. 2. 7 8. Wherein did this base estate of the Son of God consist In his Conception Gestation and Birth and in his Life diversly as in his Poverty Hunger Thirst Wearinesse and other Humiliations even unto death of which heretofore hath been spoken What learn you from this that Christ first suffered many things before he could enter into his Glory Luk. 24. 26. 46. That the way to reign with Christ is first to suffer with him and such as bear the Crosse constantly shall wear the Crown eternally Rom. 8. 17 18. 2 Tim. 2. 12. 4. 8. James 1. 12. What is his estate of Exaltation His glorious condition Phil. 2. 9. Heb. 2. 9. beginning at the instant of his Resurrection Acts 2. 24 31 36. and comprehending his Ascension Eph. 4. 8. Acts 2. 34. Heb. 9. 24 25. Sitting at the right hand of God his Father Psal. 110. 1 2 5 6. Mark 16. 9. 1 Pet. 3. 22. and the second comming in glory to judge the world Mat. 25. 31. What is the first degree of this estate His glorious Resurrection for after he had in his manhood suffered for us he did in the third day rise again by his own power from the dead Eph. 1. 19. Luc. 24. 7. 1 Cor. 15. 4. What it needfull that Christ being dead should rise again Yes it was for his own glory and our good Acts 2. 24. 1 Cor. 15. 21 22. How for his glory That being formerly abased as a servant and crucified as a sinner he might thus be declared to be the Son of God and exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour Phil. 2. 7. Luc. 23. 33. Esay 53. 12. Rom. 1. 4. Act. 5. 30 31. How for our good That having paid the price of our redemption by his death we might have good assurance of our full Justification by his life 1 Pet. 1. 19. Acts 20. 28. Rom. 4. 23. 1 Cor. 15. 17. What speciall comfort ariseth from this that the Lord of life is risen from death 1. It assureth me that his righteousnesse shall be imputed unto me for my perfect Justification that he that had the power of death is destroyed Heb. 2. 14. his works dissolved 1 Joh. 3. 8. and that all our misery is swallowed up in Christs victory 1 Cor. 15. 54. 2. It comforteth me because it doth from day to day raise me up to righteousnesse and newnesse of life in this present world 3. It ministreth unto me a comfortable hope that I shall rise again in the last day from bodily death What fruits then are we to shew from the vertue of his resurrection We are to stand up from the dead to awake to righteousnesse to live unto God and dying in him or for him to look for life again from him Eph. 5. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 34. Rom. 6. 4. 11. Phil. 3. 20. 1 Thes. 4. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 22. Col. 3. 4. Why is Christ said to raise himself To let us know that as he had power to lay down his life so he had also to take it up again Joh. 10. 18. What gather you hence That being Lord both of quick and dead he can and will both quicken our souls here to the life of grace and raise our bodies hereafter to the life of glory Rom. 14. 9. John 5. 21. Phil. 3. 21. Why did he rise the third day Because the bands of death could no longer hold him this being the time that he had appointed and the day that best served for his glorious resurrection Act. 2. 24. Mat. 20. 17. 12. 40. Why did he not rise before the third day Lest rising so presently upon his death his enemies might take occasion of cavill that he was not dead Mat. 27. 63 64. 28. 13 14. And why would he not put it off untill the fourth day Lest the faith of his Disciples should have been weakned and their hearts too much cast down and discouraged Mat. 28. 1. Luc. 24. 21. What gather you hence That as the Lord setteth down the tearm of our durance so doth he chuse the fittest time of our deliverance Rev. 2. 10. Mat. 12. 40. Dan. 11. 35. Hosea 6. 2. What is the second degree of his Exaltation His Ascension Mark 16. 19. Ephes. 4. 8 9. For we beleeve that Christ in his humane nature the Apostles looking on ascended into heaven What assurance have you of Christs Ascension The evidence of the Word the testimony of heavenly Angels and holy men Luc. 24. 51. Acts 1. 9. Wherefore did Christ ascend into heaven Because he had finished his Fathers work on earth Joh. 17. 3 4 5. and that being exalted in our nature he might consecrate a way prepare a place Joh. 14. 2 3. and appear in the presence of God to make intercession for us Heb. 4. 29. 9. 24. VVhat benefits did he bestow upon his Church at his Ascension He triumphed over his enemies gave gifts to his friends and taking with him a pledge of our flesh he sent and left with us the earnest of his Spirit Eph. 4. 8. Heb. 10. 12. 20. 2
by hearing that is by hearing the blessed promises of grace offered to the people Rom. 10. 14. 17. Faith doth not consist in darknesse and ignorance but knowledge is of the ingredience of it John 12. 39. and therefore sometimes put for it John 17. 3. Esa. 53. 11. Where God doth work Faith there he gives a saving light to the understanding though in divers measures and degrees as there are weak measures of Faith so weak measures of knowledge and apprehensions in saving mysteries But no man can build upon Gods gracious word and promise for the truth and reality of what he speaks without he know what he speaks Secondly we may here learne that Faith doth not consist onely in the understanding or onely in the will but in the whole soule the whole intelligent nature is the seat of Faith And therefore either Faith is not a supernaturall gift of God or else they speak ungraciously of Gods grace in the work of Faith who attribute no more to God then the renovation of mans understanding and revealing those things to him which by nature he could not see leaving the action of consenting and embracing by faith the things revealed to mans free-will so sharing the businesse of beleeving between God and man the enlightning of the understanding shall be Gods but the inclining the will must be a mans own any further then it may be invited by morall perswasion But the Scripture every where shews faith to be such a transcendent and supernaturall gift as far exceeds all naturall power to produce or reach unto God doth all in this high businesse by his powerfull Spirit and supernaturall grace But how then is it said that man beleeveth man receiveth Christ man comes unto him These phrases and the like shew what man doth when faith is wrought in him how his soul acts by it and exerciseth this excellent habit received And it is thus 1. By Gods teaching him he understands by Gods enlightning his mind he sees the excellency of the Lord Jesus and firmely assents unto the word of grace as true that indeed Christ is the only blessed Saviour and that all the promises of God in him are yea and amen 2. By Gods changing and enabling his will he wils by Gods sanctifying his affections he loves and embraceth by Gods printing and sealing them on his heart he possesseth and closeth with Christ and the precious promises of mercy in him and embraceth the tenure of the Gospel as the sweetest and happiest tidings that ever sounded in his eares and entertains it with the best welcomes of his dearest heart and placeth his eternall happinesse on this Rock of salvation Put now all these things together They all shew that faith is nothing else but a supernaturall action and worke of God in man whereby mans heart that is all the powers of mans soule move as they are first moved by God So that the action of man in beleeving is nothing but his knowing of heavenly things by Gods revealing them and causing him to know them his willing them and embracing them by Gods enabling him to will and embrace them Thus the motion of mans heart to Christ being moved by God is called mans beleeving with the heart even as a wheel which of it self cannot move yet being moved by a higher wheel doth move which motion though it be but one yet is said to be the motion of two that is of the Mover and of the thing moved It seemes then that justifying faith consists in these two things viz. in having a mind to know Christ and a will to rest upon him Yes whosoever sees so much excellency in Christ that thereby he is drawn to embrace him as the onely Rock of salvation that man truly beleeves to Justification But is it not necessary to Justification to be assured that my sinnes are pardoned and that I am justified No that is no act of faith as it justifieth but an effect and fruit that followeth after Justification for no man is justified by beleeving that he is justified for he must be justified before he can beleeve it and no man is pardoned by beleeving that he is pardoned for he must be pardoned before he can beleeve it But faith as it justifieth is a resting upon Christ to obtain pardon the acknowledging him to be the only Saviour and the hanging upon him for salvation Mat. 16. 16. John 20. 31. Acts 8. 37. Rom. 10. 9. 1 John 4. 15. 5. 1. 5. It is the direct act of faith that justifieth that whereby I doe beleeve it is the reflect act of faith that assures that whereby I know I doe beleeve and it comes by way of argumentation thus Maj. Whosoever relyeth upon Christ the Saviour of the world for Justification and pardon the word of God saith that he by so doing is actually justified and pardoned Min. But I doe truly relie upon Christ for Justification and pardon Concl. Therefore I undoubtedly beleeve that I am justified and pardoned But many times both the former propositions may be granted to be true and yet a weak Christian want strength to draw the conclusion for it is one thing to beleeve and another thing to beleeve that I doe beleeve It is one thing for a man to have his salvation certain and another thing to be certain that it is certain How then doth the soul reach after Christ in the act of justifying Even as a man fallen into a river and like to be drowned as he is carried down with the floud espies the bough of a tree hanging over the river which he catcheth at and clinges unto with all his might to save him and seeing no other way of succour but that ventures his life upon it this man so soon as he had fastned upon this bough is in a safe condition though all troubles fears terrours are not presently out of his mind untill he comes to himself and sees himself quite out of danger then he is sure he is safe but he was safe before he was sure Even so it is with a Beleever Faith is but the espying of Christ as the only means to save and the reaching out of the heart to lay hold upon him God hath spoke the word and made the promise in his Son I beleeve him to be the only Saviour and remit my soul to him to be saved by his mediation So soon as the soul can doe this God imputeth the righteousnesse of his Son unto it and it is actually justified in the Court of Heaven though it is not presently quieted and pacified in the Court of Conscience that is done afterwards in some sooner in some later by the fruits and effects of Justification What are the Concomitants of Justification Reconciliation and Adoption Rom. 5. 1. Joh. 1. 12. What is Reconciliation It is that grace whereby we that were enemies to God are made friends Rom. 5. 10. we that were rebels are received into favour we that were
far off and aliens from God are now brought neer through Christ Eph. 2. 12 13. 18. 19. 1 Joh. 1. 3. Heb. 12. 22 23. What is Adoption Adoption is the power and priviledge to be the sons of God Joh. 1. 12. Eph. 1. 5. derived unto us from Christ who being the eternal Son of God became by Incarnation our brother that by him God might bring many sons and daughters unto glory Heb. 2. 10. What are the benefits that flow to us from our Adoption 1. Some are privative immunities and freedome from many grievances as 1. We are freed from the slavery of sin Rom. 6. 14. 2 From condemnation Rom. 8. 1. 3 From all slavish fears and terrors Rom. 8. 15. We have not received the spirit of bondage to fear again but the spirit of adoption 4 From the law not Ceremoniall only Gal. 5. 1. but Moral freed I mean from the curse of it freed from the condemning power of it freed from the coaction and compulsion of it freed from the rigorous exaction inexorable demands of it as it is a Covenant of works But not freed from the doctrine of holinesse contained in it the justified and adopted are every way freed from the Law as it was an enemy and against us Luc. 1. but not freed as it is our guide and director containing the rule of Gods holy will Our Sonship doth not free us from service but from slavery not from holinesse but to holinesse There is a free service which benefits the condition of a son Gods service is perfect freedome 2. Some are positive dignities as 1. Free accesse to the throne of Grace that we may come to God in prayer as to a Father Gal. 4. 6. Rom. 8. 15. 2 We have an Interest in Gods particular and speciall Providence 2 Cor. 6. ult Rom. 8. 28. 3 We by our adoption have a free and sanctified use of all God● creatures restored the right unto which we forfeited in Adam for no man hath any true right to any thing now by nature he may have the use of Gods creatures by Gods patience forbearance but not by Gods licence and allowance untill he be in Covenant with God in Christ and made a son and heir with him and then all things are restored 1 Cor. 3. 21. Rom. 8. 32. 4 From Adoption flows all Christians joy which is called the joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1. 8 9. Rom. 5. 2. For the spirit of Adoption is first a witnesse Rom. 8. 16. 2ly A seale Eph. 4. 30. 3ly The pledge and earnest of our Inheritance Eph. 1. 14. setling a holy security in the soul whereby it rejoyceth even in affliction in hope of glory Doe the Justified children of God always then rejoyce Joy considered as a delightfull apprehension of the favour of God gladding the heart though it ought continually to be laboured for Phil. 4. 4. and preserved yet it may be at times not only darkned and daunted but for a time even lost and to be restored Psal. 51. 12. yet it is as all spirituall gifts of God perpetuall and without repentance if we regard 1. The matter of rejoycing which is Gods unchangeable love and grace Mal. 3. 6. 2. The causes and fountains of joy in the regenerate which are the never failing graces of Faith Luk. 22. 32. Hope Rom. 5. 5. and Love towards God in Christ 1 C●● 8. 3. The valuation even in the deepest dismay of our part and hope in Christ above the pleasures of ten thousand worlds 4. The pretence and claim of a faithfull heart promising and challenging unto it self a comfortable harvest of joy for the present seed-time of sorrow Psal. 42. 5. Psal. 126. 5. 57. 11. So much of the first main benefit which Christians receive by their communion with Christ viz. Justification Now what is the second benefit which is called Glorification and Sanctification It is the renewing of our nature according to the Image of God in righteousnesse and true holinesse which is but begun in this life and is called Sanctification and perfected in the life to come which therefore is most strictly called Glory How far forth is our nature renewed in this life by Sanctification This renewing is of our whole nature 1 Thess. 5. 23. Rom. 12. 2. the understanding being enlightned the will rectified the affections regulated the outward man reformed But not wholly in this life and this is done by the powerfull operation of the Spirit of God who having begun a good work in us will perfect it unto the day of the Lord Joh. 13. 6. Psal. 51. 10. Ezek. 36. 26. What be the parts of our Sanctification Two answerable to the two powerfull meanes whereby they are wrought First Mortification or dying unto sin and thereby freedome from the dominion thereof by the death of Christ Rom. 6. 6 7. Secondly Vivification or quickning unto newnesse of life by the power of the resurrection of Christ In regard whereof it is also called our first resurrection Rev. 20. 6. How doth Sanctification differ from the former grace of Justification In many main and materiall differences as 1. In the order not of time wherein they goe together Rom. 8. 30. nor of knowledge and apprehension wherein this latter hath precedency 1 Cor. 6. 11. but of nature wherein the former is the ground of this latter 2 Cor. 7. 1. Secondly in the Subject the righteousnesse whereby we are justified being inherent in Christ for us but this of Sanctification in our selves from him Rom. 8. 10. Thirdly in the cause our Justification following from the merit our Sanctification from the efficacy of the death and life of Christ. Fourthly in the Instrument Faith which in Justification is only as an hand receiving in Sanctification is a co-working vertue Acts 15. 19. Gal. 5. 6. Fiftly in the measure Justification being in all Beleevers and at all times alike but Sanctification wrought differently and by degrees Sixtly in the end which being in both eternall life Rom. 6. 23 24. yet the one is among the causes of reigning the other onely as the high-way unto the kingdome What is the rule and square of our Sanctification The whole word of God Joh. 17. 17. Ps. 119. 9. as containing that will of his Rom. 12. 2. which is even our Sanctification 1 Thess. 4. 3 c. How doe you prove that Gods word is such a rule 1. By expresse warrant of Scripture 2 Tim. 3. 14. 17. 2. By the resemblances and things whereunto it is compared as to the way we walk in Jer 6. 16. Mark 12. 14. Act. 18. 24 25. to a Light and a Lanthorn in a dark place to guide our feet into the way of peace Psa. 119. 105. Prov. 6. 23. 2 Pet. 19. 20. Luc. 1. 77. 79. to a Glasse Jam. 1. 25. to a Rule Line Square Measure and Ballance whereby must be framed ordered measured and
part thereof unto idle and curious questions 2 Pet. 3. 16. 3. By abusing it to prophane mirth by framing jests out of it or against it Psal. 22. 13. Also by making Playes and Enterludes thereof 4. By maintaining Errour sinne and prophanenesse by it Mat. 4. 6. Isa. 66. 5. 5. By applying it to Superstition and unlawfull Arts to Magicall spels Sorceries and Charmes for the healing of diseases finding out of theft c. Deut. 18. 11. Acts 19. 13. How is Gods Name taken in vaine in regard of the Sacraments and other holy Mysteries and Ordinances of God When they are unworthily received and prophanely used Mal. 1. 11 12. 1 Cor. 11. 27. 29. Jer. 7. 4 10. So much of the chiefe particulars forbidden in this Commandement What are the helps or hinderances of the obedience thereof 1. That we both inure our hearts to feare and reverence the great and dreadfull Name of the Lord our God Deut. 28. 58. Eccles. 9. 2. and keep a carefull watch over our lips and lives lest by any meanes we dishonour him Psal. 39. 1. 2. That we avoid both the company of prophane persons who set their mouth against Heaven Psal. 73. 9. and all unnecessary dangers wherby divers have been occasioned to deny the Lord Mat. 26. 69 c. What is contained in the Reason annexed to the Commandement A dreadfull penalty That the Lord will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his Name in vaine What is the summe of this threat That God will not leave this sin unpunished 1 King 2. 9. but will grievously punish the breach of this Commandement whereby he threatneth extreme miseries and judgements to the Transgressors For it being our happinesse to have our sins covered and not imputed Psal. 32. 2. it must needs be extreame unhappinesse to have it reckoned and imputed unto us What is implyed herein A fit opposition That howsoever mans Lawes take not hold of offending in this kind yet God will not acquit them Psal. 1. 5. nor suffer them to escape his righteous and fearefull Iudgements Zach. 5. 3. Jer. 5. 12. Neither shall the Transgressor scape unpunished although the Magistrate and the Minister also would pronounce him innocent and although the Malefactor flatter himselfe as if all dangers were past nay the more free that usually he escapes the Iudgements and punishments of men the more heavy plagues and vengeance will surely light upon him from God except he repent Hitherto of the Commandements concerning that service which is to be performed to God at all times as occasion shall require which is that which concerneth the speciall time wholly to be bestowed in his Worship The fourth and last Commandement of the first Table which setteth forth a certain day especially appointed by the Lord himselfe to the practise of the Worship prescribed in the three former Commandements for therein consisteth the chiefe point of the sanctifying of that day What are the Words of this Commandement Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath day c. Exod. 20. 8 9 10 11. What are we to observe in these words First the Commandement and then the Reasons annexed thereunto What is the meaning of the Commandement It challengeth at the hand of every man one day of seven in every week to be set apart unto a holy rest and requireth all persons to separate themselves from their ordinary labour and all other exercises to his service on the same that so they being severed from their worldly businesses and all the works of their labour and callings concerning this life they may wholly attend to the worship of God alone Neh. 13. 15 16. Esa. 58. 13 14. Why doe you adde these words apart and separate To make a difference between the Sabbath dayes wherein wee must wholy and only serve God and the exercises of the other six days wherein every man must serve him in his lawfull calling What need is there of one whole day in every week to serve God seeing we may serve him every day That is not enough For 1. To the end that we should not plunge our selves so deeply into the affairs of the world as that we should not recover our selves the wisdome of God hath thought it fit that one day in seven there should be an intermission from them that we might wholly separate our selves to the service of God and with more freedome of spirit performe the same 2. A whole day is needfull for the performance of all the parts of Gods service and worship as hearing of publike Prayer and the Word preached Chatechising Administration of the Sacraments exercise of holy Discipline and consideration of the glory of God in the creatures 3. If Adam in his perfection had need of this holy day much more have we who are so grievously corrupted 4. If the Lord in love and wisedome considering our necessities both of soule and body hath set out a weeks time for both of provision that as every day we set apart some time for food and spend the rest in labour so we set one day in the week aside for our spirituall food and bestow the other dayes on our earthly affaires so as this day may in comparison be accounted the soules day wherein yet wee must have some care of our bodies as on the six dayes we must have some care of our soules What is forbidden in this Commandement The unhallowing or prophaning of the Sabbath either by doing the works of our calling and of the flesh or by leaving undone the works of the Spirit But is not this Commandement Ceremoniall and so taken away by the death of Christ No but is constantly and perpetually to be observed and never to cease till it bee perfectly consummated in the heavenly Sabbath Hebr. 4. 9 10. How prove you that 1. Because it is placed in the number of the perpetuall Commandements otherwise the Morall Law should consist but of nine words or Commandements which is contrary to Gods Word Deut. 4. 13. 2. Because this Commandement amongst the rest was written by the finger of God Exod. 31. 18. whereas no part of the Ceremoniall Law was 3. For that it was written in Tables of stone as well as the other Deut. 5. 22. As to signifie the hardnesse of our hearts so to signifie the continuance and perpetuity of this Commandement as well as the rest 4. Because it was before any Shadow or Ceremony of the Law yea before Christ was promised whom all Ceremonies of the Law have respect unto for the Sabbath was first instituted in Paradise before there was any use of Sacrifices and Ceremonies Gen. 2. 1 2 3. 5. The Ceremonies were as a Partition wall betwixt the Iews and the Gentiles but God doth here extend his Commandement not onely to the Iewes themselves but also to strangers Exod. 20. 10. Nehem. 13. 15 16 c. 6. Our Saviour Christ willing his followers which should live about forty yeares after his Ascension
the King of Jericho might not revile the Spies but should have failed in her duty if she had betrayed them at the Kings Commandement and therefore in this case shee did well in preferring the obedience she owed to God before the duty she owed to man Josh. 2. 3. In like case also Ionathan revealing his Fathers counsell unto David and preferring the greater duty before the lesser did well 1 Sam. 19. 3. So we owing a greater duty to our Countrie then to our naturall kindred must rather refuse to reliefe them if they be Trayters then suffer any hurt to come to our Countrie But what if two have need of that which I can give but to one onely I must then preferre those that bee of the houshold of faith before others Galat. 6. 10. and my kinsemen and those that I am tyed unto by a speciall bond before strangers Iohn Chap. 1. v. 14. Acts 10. 24. What are we specially forbidden to doe by the Commandements of the second Table To doe any thing that may hinder our neighbours dignity in the fift Life in the sixth Chastity in the seventh Wealth in the eighth or good Name in the ninth though it bee but in the least secret motions and thoughts of the heart unto which we give no liking nor consent for unto that also the last Commandement doth reach How are these six Commandements of the second Table divided Into such as forbid all practise or advised consent to any hurt of our neighbours and such as forbid all thoughts and motions of evill towards our neighbour though they never come to advised consent of the Will The first five Commandements doe concerne such things as come unto consent and further the last such as come not unto consent at all How are those five Commandements of the first sort divided Into those that concerne speciall duties to speciall persons and those that concerne generall duties to all those duties which concerne speciall persons are commanded in the first those that generally concerne all men either in their life chastity goods or good name are enjoyned in the foure Commandements following What gather you hence That we are to distinguish between duties and duties between sinne and sinne done towards men and that to offend principall persons and such unto whom wee are in speciall manner obliged is greater sin because God hath singled out this one Commandement for these persons What are the words of this Commandement which is the fift in order Honour thy Father and thy Mother that thy dayes may be long upon the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee Exod. 20. 12. What is to be considered in these words 1. The Commandement 2. The Reason What is the meaning and scope of this Commandement That the equality of mens persons and places in whatsoever estate Naturall Civill or Ecclesiasticall and with whatsoever relation to us bee duely acknowledged and respected for it requireth the performance of all such duties as one man oweth unto another by some particular bond in regard of speciall callings and differences which God hath made between speciall persons What be these speciall persons Either in Equalls or Superiours and Inferiours for this Commandement enjoyneth all due carriage of Inferiours to their Superiours and by consequent also of Superiours to their Inferiours and likewise by analogy of equalls among themselves under the sweet relation betwixt Parents and Children or betwixt brethren of the same family and the generall duty of honour What are Equalls They be equall in gifts either of Nature or Industrie as brethren in a family Citizens in a Common-wealth Pastors in a Church c. What is required of Equalls That they live equally amongst themselves loving one another and affording due respect to each other Rom. 12. 10. that they live together sociably and comfortably preferring each other before themselves and striving to goe one before another in giving honour 1 Pet. 2. 17. 5. 5. Eph. 5. 21. Phil. 2. 3. that they be faithfull one to another What is here forbidden Want of Love Incivility Strife and Vaine-glory whereby they seek to advance themselves one above another and to exalt themselves above their fellowes Phil. 2. 3. Matth. 23. 6. What are Superiours They be such as by Gods ordinances have any preeminency preferment or excellencie above others and are here termed by the name of Parents 2 Kings 2. 12. 5. 13. 6. 21. 13. 14. 1 Cor. 4. 15. Col. 3. 22. to whom the first and principall duties required in this Commandement doe appertaine Eph. 6. 1 2. Why are all Superiours here called by the name of Parents 1. For that the name Parents being a most sweet and loving name men might thereby be allured the rather to the duties they owe whether they be duties that are to bee performed to them or which they should performe to their inferiors 2. For that at the first and in the beginning of the world Parents were also Magistrates Pastors Schoole-masters c. How doth this agree with the Commandement of Christ Mat. 23. 7 8 9. that we should call no man Father or Master upon earth Very well for there our Saviour meaneth onely to restraine the ambitious Titles of the Pharisees in those dayes who desired not onely so to be called but that men should rest in their authority alone for matters concerning the soule Who are Inferiours comprehended here under the name of Children Such as by the Ordinance of God are any way under Superiours who are principally and in the first place to performe the duties required in this Commandement Why is the Commandement conceived in the name of Inferiours Because their duties are hardest obeyed in all estates What is here contained under the name of Honour Not onely Cap and Knee but every particular duty according to their particular estates Mal. 1. 6. Why are these duties comprehended under the word Honour Because it adds an ornament and dignity unto them What is the Honour that Inferiours owe to all Superiours in generall 1. Reverence in heart word and behaviour Lev. 19. 3. Eph. 6. 1. 5. For the reverence of the mind is to be declared by some civill behaviour or outward submission as of rising before them and of giving them the honour of speaking first c. Lev. 19. 32. Iob 29. 8. 32. 6 7. 2. Obedience to their counsells 3. Prayer to God for them with giving thanks 1 Timothy 2. 1 2. 4. Imitation of their Vertues and Graces 2 Timothy 1. 5. 4. 9. 8. 9. What contrary sinnes are here forbidden 1. Want of Reverence inward or outward 2. Despising of Superiours Iude v. 8 9 10. Prov. 30. 11. 3. Neglect of Prayer and other duties What is the duty of all Superiours towards their Inferiours That they answerably afford unto them love blessing according to the power they receive from God Heb. 7. 7. 11. 20. Gen. 9. 25 26 27. good
to their Clients Who are under the Government of the Civill Magistrates All persons and Subjects in the Realme City or State where they are Governours Rom. 13. 1. What are the duties of Kings and inferiour Magistrates in the Common-wealth They are twofold First in respect of Gods matters Secondly in regard of civill affaires 1 Tim. 2. 12. The former whereof regardeth the good of the soules the latter of the bodies of their Subjects VVhat is the Civill Magistrate to doe in Gods matters and for the Soules of the Subjects 1 He should pray for them that God would make their hearts obedient unto him 2 He should see that God be honoured in his Dominions that abuses in Religion be reformed and the truth promoted and maintained after the example of David Solomon Hezekiah Iosias and other good Kings 2 Cro. 14. 3 4. 15. 12 15. 17. 6 9. 3. He should plant the sincere preaching of the Word among his subjects that so they may be more obedient unto him And take care that the good things already taught and established may be done as God hath appointed He is not to make new Lawes of his owne for Religion but to see those Ordinances of Religion which are grounded upon the Word of God duely established and preached that so God may be truly served and glorified and the Church within his Realmes and under his government may under him leade a quiet and peaceable life in all goodlinesse and honesty 1 Tim. 2. 2. For he who neglecteth this duty unto God shall never performe his duty to man how politick soever he seeme to be VVhat is the Magistrate especially to performe in respect of civill affairs 1. He must looke to the peace of the Common-wealth over which he is set 1 Tim. 2. 2. defending his subjects from their enemies and preserving their lives in war and peace and suppressing murderers robbers and all outragious persons 2. He must not only maintaine peace but also honesty that by him we may not only lead a peaceable life but also an honest 1 Tim. 2. 2. where specially he is to provide that all uncleannesse be removed 3. He must see that justice be duely executed Psal. 72. 2 4. and that the Ministers thereof give judgement speedily in matters belonging to their judgement 4. He must take order that every man may enjoy his owne Psal. 72. 4. 5. He must cherish the good and discountenance the bad and take order that Malefactors may be punished and well doers may be encouraged Psal. 72. 4 7. Rom. 13. 3 4. VVhat is the sin of Magistrates Carelesnesse in performing those former duties VVhat is the duty of Subjects to their Magistrates 1. To pray for them that God would rule their hearts by his holy Spirit that under them we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godlinesse and honesty 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. 2. To help them with our goods paying willingly customes taxe and tribute due to them Mat. 22. 17 21. Rom. 13. 6 7. which condemneth the popish Clergy that detract this Tribute 3. To adventure our lives for them in war and peace 2 Sam. 21. 16 17. and 23. 15 16. 4. When they doe us wrong not to rebell but endure it patiently for it is better to suffer for well doing then for evill 5. To be obedient and dutifull unto them and to obey their Lawes in the Lord. Doe their Lawes binde the Conscience As far as they are agreeable with the Lawes of God the doe but otherwise they doe not for there is but one Law-giver who is able to save and to destroy Jam 4. 12. VVhat learne you out of the former That Drunkards Theeves Murderers c. breake both this Commandement and that other under which those sins are principally contained VVhat out of the latter That the Papists are to be condemned who hold that the Popes Lawes doe binde the conscience What be the sinnes of Subjects 1. Disobedience and Rebellion Refusing and repining to pay dues Hitherto of the duties of Superiours Inferiours and Equalls Shew now what are the helpes of the obedience of this Commandement They are either common to all or proper to Inferiours and Superiours What is common to all There must be endeavour to nourish and increase a naturall Affection Rom. 12. 10. Humility Rom. 12. 16. and Wisedome to discerne what is good and fitting for our owne and others places Rom. 13. 7. What is proper to the Inferiours Hee must see God in the place and authority of his superiours Rom. 13. 1. setting before his eyes the dreadfull threatnings and example of Gods vengeance on the seditious and disobedient Eccles. 10. 8. What is proper to the Superiours He must be the same to his Inferiours that he would have Christ to be unto himselfe Eph. 6. 9. remembring the tragicall ends of Tyrants and Vsurpers What hindrances of these duties are to be avoyded 1. Selfe-love which maketh men unfit either to rule or to obey 1 Tim. 3. 2 3 4. 2. Partiall inquiry into the the duties of others towards us joyned for the most part with the neglect of our owne Eccles. 7. 23 24. 3. The furie of the Anabaptists 4. The company of seditious persons and despisers of government Prov. 24. 21 22. What is the reason annexed to this Commandement That thy dayes may be prolonged and that it may goe well with thee in the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee Deut. 5. I6 What is taught in this reason That God moveth the hearts of Superiours to promote the good estate of Inferiours for so also doe the words sound Exodus 20. 12. that they may prolong thy dayes besides the providence of God to the obedient which is farre above all experience of mens provision What is the summe of this promise The blessing of long life and prosperity to such as by keeping this Commandement shall shew that they regard the Image and Ordinance of God Eph. 6. 1 2 3. Rom. 13. 1 2. Have not the other Commandements this promise No not expressely which sheweth that a more plentifull blessing in this kind followeth from the obedience of this Commandement then of the other that follow Hence it is called by the Apostle the first Commandement with promise Eph. 6. 2 3. it being the first in order of the second Table and the only Commandment of that Table that hath an expresse promise and the only Commandement of the Ten that hath a particular promise But how is this promise truly performed seeing some wicked men live long and the godly are taken away in the midst of their time 1. The Lord performeth all temporall promises so far forth as it is good for us and therefore the godly are sure to live so long as it shall serve for Gods glory and for their owne good but the wicked live to their further condemnation Isa. 56. 20. 2. It is enough that the promises of this life be performed
inlargement of it in this world That by Christ the head of the Church God would governe his people to the perfect salvation of the elect and to the utter destruction of the reprobate whether open Rebels or faigned hollow-hearted Subjects What great need is there that we should pray for the kingdome of God For that being taught that we should pray that the kingdome of God may come hereby we are put in mind of another kingdome of Satan and darknesse which opposeth strongly against his kingdome Mat. 12. 24 25. 2 Cor. 6. 14 15 16. Why doe all men naturally abhorre Satan even to the very name of him They doe in words and shew but when they doe his will live under his lawes delight in his works of darknesse subject themselves to the Pope and other his instruments they are found indeed to love him as their father and honour him as their Prince whom in words they would seeme to abhorre For as the same men are affirmed by our Saviour Christ to approach unto God with their lips and to have their hearts farre from him Mat. 15. 8. so are they in their lips farre from Satan but neare him in their hearts What other oppositions are there against Gods Kingdome The flesh and the world Gal. 5. 10 17. What be the meanes we ought to pray for that our Saviour Christ may governe his Church in this world thereby Inward and outward What inward things doe we pray for That God would give his holy Spirit as the chiefe and principall meanes whereby our Saviour Christ gathereth and ruleth his Church conveighing his spirit of knowledge and good motions into his people And consequently we pray against the motions and temptations of Satan and of our owne flesh What are the outward things we pray for The meanes whereby the Spirit is conveighed namely the Word and the dependances thereof the Sacraments and Censures What pray we for concerning the Word That it being the scepter of Christs kingdome Mar. 1. 13. the rod standard of his power Psal. 110. 2. Isa. 11. 4 10. Isa. 44. 4 10. called the Word of the kingdome Mar. 1. 13. the kingdome of heaven Mat. 13. may have free passage every where 2 Thes. 3. 1. and may be gloriously lifted up and advanced and it only having place all not agreeable thereunto and all traditions and inventions of men may be rejected What pray we for concerning the Sacraments That as they are the Seales of Gods promises and the whole Covenant of grace so they may be both ministred and received in that purenesse and sincerity which is according to his Word and all false Sacraments and sacrifices put under foot What pray we for concerning the Censures That not only private persons but the whole Church may be ruled by the line of Gods Word that so well doers may be advanced and evill doers censured and corrected according to the degree of their fault and therefore that all impunity or tyrannous tortures of conscience may be taken away What further doe we pray for That God would furnish his Church with all such Officers as he approveth that being indued with speciall gifts may be both able and willing to execute their charge diligently and faithfully What further desire you in this Petition That where these things are only begun they may be perfected And that every Church may be polished and garnished that Sion may appeare in her perfect beauty and so the Iewes may be called and so many of the Gentiles as belong unto Christ and the contrary enemies may be either converted or confounded What doe we pray for in respect of every member of the Church Even as poore captives are alwayes creeping to the prison doore and labouring to get off their boults so we out of a sorrowfull feeling of the spirituall bondage we are in to Satan and sin pray that the kingdome of Christ may come and be advanced in every one of our hearts in justice righteousnesse peace and joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. that as Kings unto God we may subdue within us all those either opinions or affections that rise up and rebell against God What then are the particulars concerning the kingdome of grace that we doe crave of God in this Petition 1. That Satans kingdome may be abolished Acts 26. 18. the bands of spirituall captivity loosed 2 Tim. 2. 26. Col. 1. 13. the power of corruption that maketh us like well of our bondage abated Gal. 5. 24. the instruments of Satans tyranny as the Turke and Pope and all such out-lawes from Christ defeated 2 Thes. 2. 8. 2. That it would please God to gather out of every part of the world those that belong to his election 3. That God for the gathering of them would raise up faithfull and painfull Ministers in every part of the world where there are any which belong to his election That all loyterers and tongue-tyed Ministers being removed Isa. 56. 10 11. faithfull and able watchmen may be set over the flocke of Christ Mat. 9. 38. with sufficient encouragement of maintenance countenance protection c. and the word of God may be freely preached every where 2 Thes. 3. 1. 4. That it would please God with the blessing of his spirit to accompany the word so that it may be of power to convert those that belong unto him 5. That it would please God every day more and more to increase the holy gifts and graces of his holy Spirit in the hearts of those whom he hath already called effectually 6. That the Lord by his word and spirit would rule in the hearts and lives of his Saints Col. 3. 15 16. making them also Kings in part by overcomming the corruption which is in the world through lust 7. That God would raise up godly and religious Magistrates which should further and countenance his worship as much as in them lyeth 8. That the eyes of all men especially Princes may be opened to see the filthinesse of the whore of Babylon Rev. 17. 16. and the true beauty of pure Religion and of the Spouse of Christ Isa. 60. 3. 9. That God would banish and root out of his Church all those things which may hinder the proceeding of his kingdome in the hearts of those that belong unto him 10. Finally that he would finish the kingdome of grace calling his elect uncalled Rom. 9. 27. confirming such as stand 2 Thes. 2. 17. raising the fallen Jam. 5. 15 16. comforting the afflicted Isa. 61. 3. and hasten the kingdome of glory What doe we desire of God in this Petition concerning the Kingdome of glory and our good in the world to come 1. That God would be pleased to take us out of this sinfull and conflicting life into peace with Christ and translate us unto the kingdome of heaven Phil. 1. 23. 2. That the number of the elect being accomplished the finall dissolution of all things may come That God would hasten the second
least crum of bread or drop of water much lesse the kingdome of heaven and salvation at the hands of God Luke 17. 10. Gen. 32. 10. and because our labour and diligence cannot prevaile without Gods blessing What learne you further That seeing God giveth to whom he will and what he will we learne to be content with whatsoever we have received Moreover to be thankfull for it seeing all things in regard of God are sanctified by the Word and in regard of our selves by prayer and thanksgiving 1 Tim 4. 5. And last of all not to envie at other mens plenty being it is Gods doing Matth. 20. 15. What reason is there that they should pray for these things of God which have them already in their Garners Cellars c. in abundance Very great Because 1. our right unto the creatures being forfeited in Adam we having now nothing to plead but onely Gods Deed of gift made unto us in Christ the second Adam and heire of all things in whom and with whom all things are conveyed to us Psalm 8. 7 8 9. Heb. 1. 2. Rom. 8. 32. 1 Cor. 3. 22. so that although we possesse them yet are we not right owners of them but by faith which is declared by prayer for them 2. The things we doe possesse we may easily a hundred wayes be thrust from the possession of them before we come to use them according to the proverb that many things come between the cup and the lip 1 Sam. 30. 16 17. Dan. 5. 5. 2 Kings 7. 17. 3 Although we have the use of them yet will they not profit us neither in feeding nor cloathing us unlesse we have the blessing of God upon them yea without the which they may be hurtfull and poisonable unto us Esa. 3. 1. Hag. 1. 6. Prov. 10. 22. Dan. 1. 13 14 15. Psal. 78. 30 31. By all which reasons it may appeare that the rich are as well to use this petition as the poorest praying therein not so much for the outward things as Gods blessing upon them Why doe we say Give us Hereby we professe our selves Petitioners for all men especially the houshold of faith that for the most part every one may have sufficient and where want is others may be enabled to supply it out of their abundance 2 Cor. 8. 14. Why doe we say This day or For the day That we are to pray for bread for a day and not for a month or yeare c. it is to teach us to restraine our care that it reach not too farre but to rest in Gods providence and present blessing and therefore not to be covetous Exod. 16. 19 20 21. Pro. 30. 8. So that hereby we professe the moderation of our care and desire of earthly things Matth. 6. 34. with our purpose every day by labour and prayer to seeke these blessings at the hands of God Is it not lawfull to provide for children and family Yes verily not onely lawfull but also needfull Gen. 41 34 35. Acts 11. 28. 29. 2 Cor. 12. 14. 1 Tim. 5. 8. But here our affections are onely forbidden to passe measure as to have a carking and troubling care seeing the vexation of the day is enough for it selfe Matth. 6. 34. but commit our wayes unto the Lord and to roll our matters upon him who will bring them to passe Psalme 37. 5. Prov. 16. 3. Why is the Bread called ours seeing that God must give it us To teach us that we must come unto it by our owne labour Gen. 3. 17. Psalme 128. 1. 1 Thes. 4. 11. In which respect hee that will not labour should not eate 2 Thes. 3. 8 9 10. For it is called our bread which commeth to us by the blessing of God on our lawfull labours 2 Thes. 3. 12. so that neither God nor man can justly implead us for it What is the reason of the word daily By daily bread or bread instantly necessary or such as is to be added to our substance wee understand such provision and such a proportion thereof as may best agree with our nature charge and calling Pro. 30. 8. For this word in the Evangelists Matth. 6. 11. Luke 11. 3. and in the proper language of the Spirit of God is the bread fit for me or agreeable to my condition Which is an especiall lesson for all estates and callings to keep them within their bounds not onely of necessity but of Christian and sober delight and not to aske them for the fulfilling of our fleshly desires Psalme 104. 15. Iohn 12. 3. Prov. 30. 8. 1 Tim. 6. 8. Rom. 13. 14. Iam. 4. 3. Hereby also we are taught that every day wee must require these blessings at Gods hands What doe we then begge of God in this Petition 1. That it would please God to preserve this mortall life of ours so long as he seeth good in his wisedome that it maketh for his glory and our good 2. That he would bestow upon us all good things needfull for the preservation of this life 3. That he would give us care and conscience to get those needful things by lawfull meanes which condemneth First those that use wicked and unlawfull meanes towards men Secondly those that goe to the devill 4. That he would give us grace to use painfulnesse and faithfulnesse in our calling that labouring with our hands the thing that is good we may eate our owne bread Ephes. 4. 28. 2 Thes. 3. 12. 5. That we may adde unto our labour prayer that it would please God to blesse our labours in getting those things and thanks-giving for them being gotten as whereby on our part all Gods blessings are assured and sanctified unto us 1 Tim. 4. 4 5. 6. That we may put our confidence not in the meanes but in Gods providence and contain our selves within the care for the meanes leaving events unto Gods onely disposition Phil. 4. 6. Psal. 37. 5. 7. That it would please God to give us faith and grace aswell in want as in abundance to depend on his providence for outward things Phil. 4. 12. 8. That we may be contented with and thankfull for that portion of temporall blessings which it shall please the Lord to measure out unto us as his gift Heb. 13. 5. Psal. 16. 6. not envying such to whom he giveth more So much of the Petition for things belonging to this life What doe we desire in those two which belong unto the life to come Perfect salvation standing in the deliverance from the evils past contained in the former and those to come comprised in the latter By the former we pray for justification and by the latter for sanctification To begin then with the former What are the words of the fifth Petition And forgiue us our debts as euen we forgiue them that are debters unto us Mat. 6. 12. Luk. 11 4. Where we are to observe 1. The Petition for the forgivenesse of our sins 2. The reason added for
fervently and importunately to knock at the gate of his mercy for the pardon of our sins removall of judgements and grant of the graces and blessings we need Psal. 51. 1 2 c. vers 14. 112. 4. but also to make a sure Covenant with his Majesty Nehem. 9. 38. of renewing and bettering our repentance thence forward in a more earnest and effectuall hatred of sinne and love of righteousnesse Esa. 55. 7. Jonah 3. 8. What fruit or successe may we look for having thus sought the Lord Who knoweth whether by this meanes we may stand in the gap and cause the Lord to repent of the evill intended and to spare his people Joel 2. 14 18 c. Ionah 3. 9 10. At the least for our particular we shall receive the mark and mercy promised to such as mourne for the abominations generally committed Ezek. 9. 4 6. together with plentifull evidence of our salvation and assurance of the love of God towards us Matth. 6. 18. Pro. 28. 13. 1 Iohn 1. 9. strength against temptations patience and comfort in afflictions with all other graces plentifully vouchsafed especially upon such renewing of acquaintance by him who is the rewarder of all that come unto him Heb. 11. 6. so that we need not doubt but that as we have sowne in teares so we shall reap in joy Psal. 126. 5. and as we have sought the Lord with fasting and mourning so he yet againe will be sought Ezek. 36. 37. and found of us with holy feasting and spirituall rejoicing What is an holy feasting A comfortable enjoying of Gods blessings to stirre us up to thankfulnesse and spirituall rejoicing Or to describe it more largely It is a solemne Thankes-giving unto God for some singular benefit or deliverance from some notable evill either upon us or hanging over us which hee hath bestowed upon us especially after that in fasting we have begged the same at his hand Zach. 8. 19. Ezek. 9. ad 32. for this is a duty especially required for the acknowledgment of such mercies as we have by the former course obtained Psal 30. 11 12. 50. 15. Esther 9. 22. and so answering thereto that from the one the other with due reverence may be conceived What ought especially to be the time of this duty The time that is nearest unto the mercy and benefit which we have received as we see in the story Esther 9. where the Iewes that were in the countrey and in the provinces did celebrate their feast on the 14. day of the moneth Adar because they had overthrowne their enemies the 13. day before and the Iewes in Sushan because they made not an end of the slaughter of their enemies before the 14. day was past they celebrated it the 15. day Look 2 Chro. 20. 26. and that example of Jacob checked for deferring the paiment of his vow at Bethel Wherefore ought we to take the time that is next the deliverance Because we being most strongly and thoroughly affected with the benefit we receive the first time it is bestowed upon us especially where there is not onely a notable benefit befallen unto us but thereby also we are freed from some notable evill that was upon us or near unto us we are then most fit to hold a feast unto the Lord. Why is the ordinance of a yearely Feast by Mordocheus rather commanded upon the day after the slaughter of their enemies then the day of the slaughter To set forth that rejoicing ought not to be so much for the destruction of our enemies as that thereby we obtaine peace to serve God in Wherein doth this feast consist The scope and drift of it is to rejoice before the Lord and to shew our selves thankfull for the benefit received not onely in that we are delivered but that we are delivered by prayer that we have made unto God whereby our joy encreaseth and whereby it differeth from the joy of the wicked which rejoice that they are delivered as well as we How may that be best performed Partly by outward and bodily exercises and partly by spirituall exercises of godlinesse What are the outward exercises A more liberall use of the creatures both in meat and apparell then is ordinary May we eat and drink on that day more then on others No the exceeding is not in the quantity of meat and drink but in a more dainty and bountifull diet then ordinary Neh. 8. 10. which yet is to be referred to the exercise of godlinesse and therefore ought to be used in that moderation and sobriety as men may be made more able thereunto even as the abstinence in fasting is used to further humiliation of the mind and affecting of the soule What is the exercise of godlinesse It is either in piety and duty unto God or in kindnesse unto men What is the duty unto God To lift up our voice in thanksgiving unto him as for all other his mercies whereof this benefit should cause the remembrance as one sinne causeth the remembrance of others Psalme 51. so for that present benefit and for that purpose to call to remembrance and to compare the former evills which either we were in or were neere unto with the present mercy and every part of the one with the members of the other What other duty of Piety is to be performed unto God By a diligent meditation of the present benefit to confirme our faith and confidence in God that he that hath so mightily and graciously delivered us at this time will also in the same or the like dangers deliver us hereafter so farre as the same shall be good for us What is the kindnesse we should shew towards men An exercise of liberality according to our power out of the feeling of the bountifull hand of God towards us To whom must that be shewed To our friends in presents and as it were in New-years gifts Rev. 11. 10. and portions to be sent to the poore and needy Neh. 8. 10. What remaineth further of these holy Feasts The sorts and kindes of them which are as before we have heard of Fasts to which I refer the Reader Hitherto of Prayer and the extraordinarie circumstances thereof Fasting and Feasting what is a Vow A solemne promise made unto God by fit persons of some lawfull thing that is in their choise and power to performe it It is thought that Vowes are Ceremoniall and not to pertaine to the times the Gospell There are indeed good yea excellent persons that think so which carry so much the more a dislike of Vowes because they have beene abused in Popery Howbeit it appeareth by the fifty Psalme verse 14 15. that it is a constant and perpetuall service of God as shall appeare What is the proper end and use of a Vow It is twofold First to strengthen and confirme our faith Secondly to testifie our thankfulnesse unto God but no way to merit any thing at Gods hand So that whereas the
therein of the things common to the godly with the wicked What are the things proper to the godly signified by the good and fruitfull ground 1. The receiving of the seed in a good heart 2. The bringing forth of fruit with patience Luke 8. 15. What is there meant by receiving the seed into a good heart By the seed is meant the word of promise whereby God hath said he will be mercifull to us in Christ By the receiving it into a good heart is meant the receiving it by faith in Christ. Where it is said that the Word must be received into a good heart it may seeme that a man hath a good heart before he receiveth that seed Doubtlesse naturally they are all alike and there is never a barrell better herring as they say but as the face answereth the face in the glasse so one of the sons of Adam is like another in their nativity they have by their parents till they be regenerated And therefore it is called a good heart in respect of Gods changing of it by the ingraffed word James 1. 21. and by these words he putteth difference between the fruits of the three former and the fruits of this last For that there is no difference in the outward shew of fruits but only in regard that those fruits proceed from an uncleane heart and these from a heart that is cleansed How may we know that we have true faith and so approve our selves that we are good ground By good fruits which are the effects of faith What are the effects of faith Reconciliation and sanctification Rom. 8. 1 2 3. Eph. 2. 6. Col. 2. 1 2 3. the fruits of the former are set downe Rom. 4. 1 2 3 4. The fruits of the latter are repentance and new obedience which have been already declared What speciall tokens observe you out of the former whereby we may discerne a justifying faith from the faith of the worldlings The end of our faith being the salvation of our soules which shall be at the day of judgement if we can willingly forsake father and mother sister and brother wife and children and abandon the world and say Come Lord Jesus come quickly we may assure our selves we are in a happy case What speciall marks of justifying faith observe you out of the latter 1. To be zealous of Gods glory 2. To love Gods children for these be the speciall effects of our holy faith What is the Word further compared with and likened unto The Apostle Peter 1 cap. 2. ver 1 2. compares it unto milke As new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the Word that ye may grow thereby teaching us that the VVord is not only of use for our begetting unto God but for our daily nourishment that we may grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ 2 Peter 3. 18. so it is called a light a lanthorne and is appointed to be our guide our Counsellor our Comforter c. Is this meant only of the Word preached Doubtlesse the blessing of God both in an especiall manner wait upon that ordinance when it is said That when Christ ascended up on high he gave gifts to men some Apostles Ephes. 4. 12. and some Pastors and teachers for the gathering of the Saints for the edifying of the body of Christ yet withall the reading of the Word with Prayer and diligence is of singular use and benefit and commended unto us by our Saviour Search the Scriptures Iohn 5. 39. and how readest thou Luke 10. 26. and by the example of the Bereans who searched the Scriptures daily and examined the things they heard in the publick ministery of them Acts 16. 11. So much of the Word What are the dependances annexed to it Sacraments 1 Cor. 10. 3 4. and Censures Matth. 18. 15. 1 Cor. 5. the one sealing the Promises the other the threatnings of the Gospell What are Sacraments The seales of the Promises of God in Christ wherein by certaine outward signes and sacramentall actions confirming the same commanded by God and delivered by his Ministers Christ Iesus with all his saving graces is signified conveyed and sealed unto the heart of a Christian. For Sacraments are seales annexed by God to the word of the Covenant of grace Rom. 4. 11 1 Cor. 11. 23. to instruct assure and possesse us of our part in Christ and his benefits Gal 3. 27. and to bind us to all thankfull obedience unto God in him Rom. 6 4. Was not Gods Word sufficient What need have we of Sacraments This argues our infirmity and manifesteth Gods great love and mercy who for the furthering of our understanding hath added visible signes to his word that our eares might not onely bee informed of the truth but our eyes also might more plainly see it and for the greater strengthning of our faith vouchsafeth to confirme the covenant of grace unto us not onely by promise but also by outward seales annexed thereunto The like meanes had Adam himselfe in Paradise to put him in remembraece of Gods will And if he in his perfection needed a token of Gods favour which was the tree of life how much more wee that are corrupt and sinfull if we were Spirits or Angels wee should not need these helpes but sith God knowing our frailties and what is best for us hath given us these seales to our further comfort let us use the receipt of so skilfull a Physitian unlesse wee will hasten our owne deaths How doth God by the Sacraments assure us of his mercies in Christ By the exhibiting to the worthy receiver by such outward signes whether Elements or Actions as himselfe for the reliefe of our weaknesse hath prescribed whole Christ God and men with all his benefits 1 Cor. 10. 4. in whom all the promises of God are yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1. 20. Doe they seale nothing else but the promise of God unto us Yes they seale our promise unto God that we take him onely for our God and Redeemer whom alone by faith wee rest on and whom we will obey How doe they binde us unto God Wee receiving them as pledges of his infinite love in Christ doe thereby professe our selves bound to expresse our thankfulnesse by all duties to his Majesty Col. 2. 6 7. and for his sake one to another Eph. 4. 3 4 5. Describe yet more largely what a Sacrament is A Sacrament is an Ordinance of God wherein by giving and receiving of outward Elements according to his will the promises of the Covenant of grace made in the bloud of Christ being represented exhibited and applyed unto us are further signed and sealed betwixt God and man Or it is an action of the whole Church wherein by certaine visible signes and outward things done according to Gods institution inward things being betokened Christ with all his benefits is both offered unto us and received by us offered I say to all in the Church but exhibited
this is is but the porch the shell and outside all that are outwardly received into the visible Church are not spiritually ingraffed into the mysticall body of Christ. Baptisme always is attended upon by that generall grace but not always with this speciall To whom then is Baptisme effectuall to the sealing up this inward and speciall grace We must here distinguish of persons baptized the Church doth not onely baptize those that are grown and of years if any such being bred Pagans be brought within the pale of the Church and testifie their competent understanding of Christianity and professe their faith in the Lord Jesus and in Gods precious promises of remission of sins by his bloud and their earnest desire to be sealed with Baptisme for the strengthening of their souls in this faith but the Church also baptizeth her infants such as being born within her bosome of beleeving parents are within the Covenant so have right unto the seal thereof Doth the inward grace always accompany the outward sign in those of years baptized No but onely then when the profession of their faith is not outward onely and counterfeit but sincere and hearty they laying hold on Christ offered in the Sacrament by a lively faith which is the hand to receive the mercies offered Acts 8. 37. If thou beleevest with all thy heart thou maist be baptized saith Philip to the Eunuch for it were absurd to extend the benefit of the seal beyond the Covenant now the Covenant is made only to the faithfull Joh. 1. 10. Mark 16. 16. He that beleeveth and is baptized shall be saved but he that beleeveth not whether he be baptized or no shall be condemned Simon Magus Act. 8. 13. and Julian and thousands of Hypocrites and Formalists shall find no help in the day of the Lord by the holy water of their baptisme without it be to encrease their Judgement But what say you of infants baptized that are born in the Church doth the inward grace in their baptism always attend upon the outward sign Surely no the Sacrament of baptisme is effectuall in infants onely to those and to all those who belong unto the election of grace which thing though we in the judgement of charity doe judge of every particular infant yet we have no ground to judge so of all in generall or if we should judge so yet it is not any judgement of certainty we may be mistaken Is every elect infant then actually sanctified and united unto Christ in and by baptisme We must here also distinguish of elect infants baptized whereof some die in their infancy and never come to the use of reason others God hath appointed to live enjoy the ordinary means of faith salvation What is to be thought of elect infants that die in their infancy have no other outward means of salvation but their baptisme Doubtlesse in all those the inward grace is united to the outward signs and the holy Ghost doth as truly and really and actually apply the merits and bloud of Christ in the justifying and sanctifying vertue unto the soul of the elect infant as the minister doth the water to its body and the invisible grace of the Sacrament is conveyed to the outward means But how can an infant be capable of the grace of the Sacrament Very well though infants be not capable of the grace of the Sacrament by that way whereby the growne are by hearing conceiving beleeving yet it followeth not that infants are not capable in and by another way It is easie to distinguish between the gift conveyed and the manner of conveying it faith is not of absolute necessity to all Gods elect but only to those to whom God affords means of beleeving It is the application of Christs righteousnesse that justifieth us not our apprehending it God can supply the defect of faith by his sanctifying Spirit which can doe all things on our part in the room of faith which faith should doe Doe we not know that the sin of Adam is imputed to children and they defiled by it though they be not capable to understand it even so the righteousnesse of Christ may be and is by Gods secret and unknown way to elect infants and so to those that are born deaf and fools not capable of understanding for though God tieth us to means yet not himself he that hath said of infants to the belongs the kingdome of God knows how to settle upon them the title of the Kingdome and we have no reason to think but that even before or in at or by the act of Baptisme the Spirit of Christ doth unite the soul of the elect infant to Christ and cloath it with his righteousnesse and impute unto it the title of a son or daughter by Adoption and the image of God by sanctification and so fit it for the state of glory But what is to be thought of the effect of Baptisme in those elect infants whom God hath appointed to live to years of discretion In them we have no warrant to promise constantly an extraordinary work to whom God intends to afford ordinary meanes for though God doe sometimes sanctifie from the wombe as in Jeremy and John Baptist sometime in Baptisme as he pleaseth yet it is hard to affirm as some doe that every elect infant doth ordinarily before or in Baptisme receive initiall regeneration and the seed of faith and grace For if there were such a habit of grace then infused it could not be so utterly lost or secreted as never to shew it self but by being attained by new instruction But we may rather deem and judge that Baptisme is not actually effectuall to justifie and sanctifie untill the party doe beleeve and embrace the promises Is not Baptisme then for the most part a vain empty shew consisting of shadowes without the substance and a signe without the thing signified No it is always an effectuall seal to all those that are heirs of the Covenant of grace the promises of God touching Justification Remission Adoption are made and sealed in Baptisme to every elect child of God then to be actually enjoyed when the party baptized shall actually lay hold upon them by faith Thus Baptisme to every elect infant is a seal of the righteousnesse of Christ to be extraordinarily applyed by the holy Ghost if it die in its infancy to be apprehended by faith if it live to yeares of discretion So that as Baptisme administred to those of years is not effectuall unlesse they beleeve so we can make no comfortable use of our Baptisme administred in our infancy untill we beleeve The righteousnesse of Christ and all the promises of grace were in my Baptisme estated upon me and sealed up unto me on Gods part but then I come to have the profit and benefit of them when I come to understand what grant God in Baptisme hath sealed unto me and actually to lay hold upon it by faith Explain this
he gave him the Tree of life to be a pledge of his promise It was not the Tree of life that gave Adam life but the promise Adam might have lived by the promise without the Tree but the Tree could doe him no good without the promise Thus God promiseth Christ and his benefits to the faithfull and to their seed and then he gives us Baptisme to seale these promises it is not Baptisme that saves us but the promises it is not water that purgeth our sins but the bloud of the Covenant why then was the Sacrament added for our weaknesse to be a strengthening to our faith not to give any strength or efficacy to the Covenant made in the bloud of Christ Gods Word is as sure as his bond his promise is as effectuall as his seal and shall as surely be accomplished the Sacraments onely give strength to our faith in apprehending it What infer you from this That where God is pleased to dispense his seals and Sacraments they are great comforts and pledges of his love and to despise or sleight them were a horrible sleighting even of the Covenant it selfe But where he denieth means and opportunity of enjoying the signes the things signified are never the farther off or lesse effectuall It is said Gen. 17. 14. that the uncircumcised should be cut off from Gods people because he had broke the Covenant but it is meant onely of voluntary and wilfull refusing of Circumcision for the people of God in the wildernesse were forty years without the outward sign of Circumcision they were not without the inward grace Davids child died the seventh day a day before the time appointed for Circumcision and yet both his words and his cariage expresse that he doubted not of the salvation of it so the theef upon the Crosse beleeving in Christ was received with Christ into Paradise though he were never baptized hee had the inward grace of Baptisme the washing of the bloud of Christ though not the outward signe when God affordeth means wee must wait upon him for a blessing in them and by them when he doth not afford means we must not tie the working of his grace to them God who sanctifieth some in the womb knows how to sanctifie all his elect infants and by his Spirit apply the merits of Christ unto them without the outward water Some have the outward signe and not the inward grace some have the outward sign and the inward grace some have the inward grace and not the outward sign we must not commit Idolatry by deifying the outward element the rule will hold It is not the want of the Sacraments but the contempt or wilfull neglect of them that is dangerous What other errors of opinion and practise doe you observe about Baptisme As some through ignorance and superstition have too high a conceipt of the outward signs so others through ignorance and prophanenesse have too mean and base an opinion of them some there are who esteem of Baptisme as of a meer Ecclesiasticall ceremony and Church complement as if there were no serious vertue or efficacy in it or profit to be expected by it or had no other use but to give the childe a name and there is an end they look no further How doth it appear that some have so sleight an opinion of this Ordinance By their answerable practises such as these and the like 1. Often Baptism is deferred and that upon every trifling occasion as if it were a businesse of no great weight and moment but might attend every ones leisure and many times through delay the child dieth without it which though it doth nothing prejudice the childes salvation yet it will lie heavy upon the parents conscience for neglecting Gods Ordinance when he afforded opportunity 2. Often the Minister is sent for home to perform that service with few in a private chamber when no eminent necessity urgeth to the dishonour of so sacred a businesse which ought to bee a most solemne and publike action of the whole Congregation 3. Though the child be brought to Church yet often some by-by-day is chosen and not the Lords Sabbath and it is then done as if it were only womens worke to be present at Baptisme who have most leisure to spend time about matters of smaller consequence 4. If it be on the Sabbath then the maine care and preparation is about matters of outward pomp and state every thing is fitted and prepared for the purpose but onely that which should chiefely be viz. the hearts and mindes of those that goe about a businesse of that nature 5. While the Sacrament is in performing the demeanor of many shew that they have a slight opinion of that service some turning their backs upon it going out of the Church so soon as sermon is done as if the word was worth the minding but not the Sacrament others prating and talking all the while as if there were nothing for them to learne by but no duty for them to performe in that action 6. Lastly infants are brought to the Sacrament of Baptisme in their infancy but are never by their parents taught the doctrine of Baptisme when they come to years of understanding Baptisme is not made use of as it ought in the whole course of mens lives these things shew that men commonly have a meane conceit of this Ordinance What is the best way to reforme these irreligious practises A serious pondering considering of the high dignity of this divine ordinance that wil cause a devout reverent demeanor in that holy busines 1. Every one should consider that it is no customary formallity but an honourable ordinance instituted by the lawful authority of God himselfe who never imposed any service upon his Church in vain It was honoured by our Saviour Christ himself who sanctified it unto us by submitting unto it in his owne sacred person confirmed by his practise by his precept c. 2. Every one should consider that there are infinite mercies sealed up by it to the faithful and to their seed It is a visible admittance of thy child if thou beest a Parent into the Congregation of Christs flock signifying its interest in the heavenly Ierusalem which is above Is this a busines to be mumbled over in a corner Christ came from Galile to Jordan to be baptized is the receiving of thy child into the bosome of the Church in a full Congregation no comfort unto thee is it not mercy to see the bloud of Christ ministerially sealed up unto thy Infant to purge it from that pollution which it hath brought into the world with it which also thou makest confession of by presenting it to this mysteriall washing Is it not joy to thy heart to heare the whole Congregation of Gods Saints pray for thy childe and that God hath honoured thee so much as to count thy very childe holy and within his Covenant thinke on these things 3. Every one that
Church to meet in the day for feare of persecution Wherefore herein the laudable custome of the Church of administring it in the Morning when our wits and capacities are best is to be followed In which respect also there is some difference between this Sacrament and the Sacrament of Baptisme which may without any inconvenience be administred in the afternoone What is the fittest day for the Administration of this Sacrament The Lords day is the fitttest day for the administration of the Sacrament For although our Saviour Christ did administer it on another day for the reasons before declared yet he did not bid us so to doe But the Apostles example and religious practise herein is to be followed which did celebrate the Supper of the Lord on the Lords day So much of the time Now for the nature of this Sacrament how may it be knowne First by the matter and secondly by the forme of it What is the matter of the Supper of the Lord Partly outward as the elements of bread and wine partly inward as the body and bloud of Christ. For as many graines make but one loafe and many grapes but one cup of wine so I beleeve that those outward elements signifie Christ and him crucified with all the benefits of his death and passion even whole Christ with all the fruits of his mediation Mat. 26. 26 27. 1 Cor. 11. 24 25. Wherefore did the Lord make choice of Bread and Wine for the outward Elements of this Sacrament Because meaning to set forth our spirituall nourishment by them they are of all the meanes of our corporall nourishment the chiefest Psal. 104. Why did he not content himselfe with one of these only He tooke both that he might hereby shew how plentifull and assured redemption we have in Christ whom these doe represent Wherefore it is no marvell that the Papists in the prohibiting of the cup doe answerably teach our salvation to be neither wholly in Christ nor assuredly What Argument doe you observe in the institution of the Sacrament against this Robbery The foreseeing Spirit of Christ knowing the sacriledge that Popery would bring in for the robbing of the people of the use of the Cup hath prepared a preservative against it speaking here more fully of the cup which he did not of the bread Drinke ye all of this Mat. 26. 27. What Bread used our Saviour Christ Ordinary bread such as was used at the common Table at that time it was indeed unleavened bread but it was so because no other was then lawfull at the feast of the Passeover Are not the Bread and VVine changed into the body and bloud of Christ in the Sacrament No they are not changed in nature but in use 1 Cor. 10. 16. For the words of eating and drinking doe properly belong to the outward elements of bread and wine and by a borrowed speech doe improperly belong to the body and bloud of Christ to note unto us the communion we have with our Saviour Christ of whom we are as verily partakers by a lively faith as of the bread and wine by eating and drinking them And thus we say that these elements are changed in use because being seperated from a common use they are consecrate to signe and seale to us our spirituall nourishment and growth by the body and bloud of Christ Iesus Luke 22. 19. 1 Cor. 10 3 4. For as the Sacrament of Baptisme doth seale to us a spirituall regeneration so the Lords Supper a spirituall feeding and even as well the body and bloud of Christ is in Baptisme given us for cloathing as they are given in the Lords Supper for nourishment Therefore the bread and wine are not the true body and bloud of Christ but the signes and tokens of them as in Baptisme the water was onely a signe of Christs bloud not the bloud What further reason have you to overthrow the carnall presence of Christ in the Sacrament 1. If the bread were turned into Christ then there should bee two Christs one that giveth another that is given for our Saviour Christ gave the bread c. 2. If the bread be the very body of Christ there should then bee no signe of the thing signified and so no Sacrament Rom. 4. 11. Where their miserable shift that the whitenesse is the seale and signe is not worthy the answer 3. The wicked receiver might then eate and drinke Christs body and bloud as well as any true beleever Iohn 13. 2. 30. 4. The Minister cannot give the inward grace but the outward Element in the administration of the Sacrament Luke 3. 16. What reason was there to move our Saviour Christ to use such a borrowed speech in this so great a mysterie Because it is ordinary and usuall in the Scripture to give the name of the thing signed and signified to the signe as it is called the tree of life which was but a signe of life Gen. 2. 9. So in the Sacraments of the old Testament Circumcision is called the Covenant Gen. 17 10. that is the token of Covenant verse 11. Or the Lambe or Kid the Passeover whereof it was a signe onely Exo. 12. The selfe same manner of speech is also used in the new Testament of Baptisme called the new Birth taking away of sinnes whereof it is onely a seale So that unlesse the Lord would in this Sacrament have departed from the wisdome of the Spirit of God accustomably received he must needs here also tread in the same steps of a borrowed and figurative speech Howbeit it may seem that to have used a more proper speech would have been more meet for him being neare unto his death and more convenient for their understanding He did after his last Supper use as figurative speeches as this in the 14 15 16. of John and that without all danger of darknesse of speech there being often times more light in a borrowed then in a proper speech And a Trope of force must be yeelded when he saith that the cup is the new Testament It maketh further for the corporall presence that our Saviour Christ saith in his supper that his body was then broken and not that it should be broken after That is also usuall to the Scripture for further certainty to speak of things to come as of them that are present But there is nothing impossible unto God 1. The question is here not of the power but of the will of God what he will have done 2. God cannot doe those things in doing whereof he should contradict himselfe and therefore the Scripture feareth not without dis-honour to God to say that he cannot lye nor cannot deny himselfe Tit. 1. 2. 2 Tim. 2. 13. Why is the cup called the cup of the New Testament Because it is a seale of the promise of God touching our salvation in Christ which being in old time under the Law shadowed by the shedding of bloud of beasts is now after a new manner accomplished in
hath both made and sanctified were not as fit as the skin of a Beast which the Artificer hath tanned and sewed 3. They must moreover according to the Commandement of Christ eat and drink the Bread and Wine not laying or hanging it up or worshipping it as the papists doe 4. Lastly they must use thanksgiving offering up themselves both souls and bodies as a sacrifice of thanks Rom. 12. 1. in which regard this Sacrament is called the Eucharist What is to be done after the action 1. We must by and by use joyfull thanksgiving with prayer and meditation being so comforted in heart in the favour of God towards us that we be ready with a feeling joy to sing a Psalme unto the Lord Matth. 26. 30. 2. We must continually endeavour to finde an increase of our faith in Christ love to God and all his Saints power to subdue sin and practice obedience with all other sanctifying and saving graces 1 Cor. 10. 16 17. 11 21. Col. 2 6 7. 2 Pet. 3. 18. For a true believer shall feele in himself after the receiving of the Sacrament an encrease of faith and sanctification a further deading of the old man and so a greater measure of dying unto sin a further strength of the new man and so a greater care to live in newnesse of life and to walk the more strongly and steadily in the wayes of God all the dayes of his life this being a Sacrament not of our incorporation as Baptisme but of our growth which albeit one cannot alwayes discerne immediately after the action yet between that and the next Communion it may be easily espied in our service towards God and men What if a man after the receiving of the Sacrament never find any such thing in himself He may well suspect himself whether he did ever repent or not and therefore is to use means to come to sound faith repentance For the Lord is not usually wanting to his ordinances if men prepare their hearts to meet him in them If we receive no good no refreshment at this spirituall feast if God send us away empty either it is because we have no right unto his mercies being not in Christ and so not accepted or because some secret unmortified lust remaineth in us like Achans wedge of gold so some beloved sin either not seen or not sufficiently sorrowed for and resolved against lyeth glowing in the heart which causeth God to frown upon our services like a dead flye causeth the ointment to stink therfore in this case a man should descend into himself make a more strict search into his conscience that he may againe come before the Lord with more humilty and better preparednesse and God will reveale himself in due time to every one who unfainedly seeketh after him in his ordinances So much of the Sacraments What are the Censures They are the judgements of the Church for ratification of the threates of the Gospell against the abusers of the Word and Sacraments What doe these Censures profit the Church of God Very much for by them the godly having strayed from the course of sincerity are through obedience brought home againe But the wicked are hardened by them through disobedience whereof it is that the wicked are properly said to be punished the godly only chastened and corrected But it seemeth that corrections rather belong to Magistrates then to Ministers The Magistrates by the Lawes of the Common-wealth punish some by death others by other torments and some by purse which belongeth not to the Minister who hath to doe only with the soule And these spiritual censures are of as necessary use in the Church both to help the godly and to restrain and root out the wicked out of the Church as those penall Lawes of the Magistrate in the Common-wealth They therefore who upon this pretence that God forceth no man to come unto him suppose the censures to be unprofitable are like unto children that will have no rod in the house Whereby doth the necessity of Censures appeare Easily for sith in the Church of God there be of all sorts as in a net cast into the sea which catcheth good and bad It is impossible without correction to keep good order in the Church especially to restraine the wicked hypocrites from offending and thereby slandering their profession If then there were no hypocrites there were no use of Censures Not so but the serve most of all for them that make no conscience of their calling For the best man that is having some sparkes of his naturall corruption remaining unregenerate may fall and offend and therefore must be chastened by the Church But this is the difference the godly falling by infirmity by correction doe amend but the wicked offending purposely by punishment are hardened What is to be gathered of this That sith censures are as needfull in the Church as the rod in the house or the Magistrates sword in the Common-wealth for offendors yea and of so much more use as these are for the body and this life and the other for the soule and life to come they that set themselves against them care not what disorder there be in the Church but seek to exempt themselves from punishment that they might doe what they list and make the Gospel a covert for all their wickednesse who are like to them in the second Psalme that would not beare the yoake of Government So much for the use and necessity of Censures What is the doctrine of them especially delivered In the 18 chapter of Saint Matthew from the 15 verse to the 20. where both their institution and ratification is laid downe For first our Saviour declareth the degrees of the censures ordained for such as are called brethren which are generally corrections according to the greatnesse of the offences and then treateth of their power and authority What is to be observed in the degrees of the censures That the censures be according to the offences as if the offence be private the censure thereof must be private wherein the censurer is to deale circumspectly 1. That he know the offence 2. That he admonish the offender secretly 3. That he do it in love convincing his offence so to be by the Word of God What further duty is required of us in this case 1. That we runne not to others to slander the offenders which Moses forbiddeth Levit. 19. 16. 2. Not to keep the injury in minde of purpose afterwards to revenge it 3. Not to deale roughly with one under pretence of seeking the glory of God 4. Not to despise the offender but by all means to seek his amendment Who are to be admonished openly in the Church Those that sin openly What if they will not amend by admonition● Then they are by suspension to be barred for a time from some exercises of Religion and if by that they will not amend then they are by excommunication to be cut
heaven yet he is not by and by to be admitted to all priviledges of the Church but to be suspended for a time till the fruits of repentance may better appear for if some in the law for a certain pollution in a lawfull duty of burying the dead were suspended from the Passeover Numb 9. 6. much more in the Gospell for such obstinacy How many sorts of suspensions then are there Two one going before excommunication and the other following the same towards them that are penitent both which were shadowed in the Leviticall law in the case of Leprosie For first in the 13. of Levit. we finde that upon suspition of Leprosie a man was shut up for a time not only from the worship of God but also from all society of men and how much more may it be lawfull under the Gospell to execute the censure of suspension af●er two admonitions upon a known offence when it is set down in the 14 of Levit. That a man cleansed from his leprosie was brought home unto the campe and placed in his tent where he stayed for certaine dayes it being not lawfull for him to come into the Tabernacle So much of the medicinall censures what is the last censure of fearfull revenge The curse unto death called by S. Paul Anathama Marenatha 1 Cor. 16. 22. that is accursed untill the Lord come or everlastingly which is thought to have been executed upon Hymeneus and Alexander by Paul 1 Tim. 1. 20. and afterwards upon Iulian by the Church then Against whom is this censure to proceed This everlasting curse which is the most fearfull thunderclap of Gods judgement is to be pronounced only against such as are desperately wicked that have nothing profited by the former censures and shewe th●ir incorrigiblenesse by their obstinate and malitious resisting all means gratiously used to reclaime them giving tokens even of that unpardonable sinne against the Holy Ghost Which fearfull sinne by how much the more difficult it is to be discerned and knowne by so much the more care is this heavie doome to be used by the Church Yet doubtlesse God doth sometimes give cleare tokens thereof in bl●sphemous Apostates such as Iulian and others who malitiously oppose deride and persecute that truth of God which they have been enlightned in And where God doth set such marks upon them the Chu●ch of God may pronounce them to be such and carry it selfe towards them accordingly What are the outward enemies that oppose against the Church of Christ Some doe under the shew of friendship and some with profession of enmity Who are the open enemies Heathens Iewes Turks and all that make profession of prophanenesse by sitting down in the seat of scorners What enemies are they that make shew of friendship Such are al those that bearing the name of Christians do obstinately deny the faith whereby we are joyned unto Christ which are called Hereticks or that break the bond of charity whereby we are tyed in communion one to another which are tearmed Schismaticks or else adde tyranny to schisme and heresie as that great Antichrist head of the generall apostasie which the Scriptures forewarned by name Where are we forewarned of the Apostasie Where the Apostle foretelleth that there shall be a generall apostacy or falling away from the truth of the Gospell before the latter day Is it meant that the whole Church shall fall away from Christ No it were impossible that a perfect head should be without a body Why is it then called generall Because the Gospell having been universally preached throughout the world from it both whole Nations did fall and the most part also even of those Nations that kept the profession of it howbeit still there remained a Church though there were no setled estate thereof Is it likely the Lord would barre so many Nations that lived under Antichrist and that so long from the means of salvation Why not and that most justly for if the whole world of the Gentiles were rejected when the Church was onely in Iury for some 1500 years and seeing of the Iewes ten Tribes were rejected and the remainder but a few were of the Church with great reason might the Lord reject those Nations and people for so many ages seeing they rejected Gods grace in falling away from the Gospell which the Lord most graciously revealed unto them rather then to their Fathers before them Is this apostasie necessarily laid upon the See of Rome Yes verily as by the description may evidently appear What are the parts of this Apostasie The head and the body for as Christ is the head of the Church which is his body so Antichrist is the head of the Romish Church which is his body Who is that Antichrist He is one who under the colour of being for Christ and under title of his Vicegerent exalteth himselfe above and against Christ opposing himselfe against all his offices and ordinances both in Church and Common-wealth bearing authority in the Church of God ruling over that City with seven Hils which did bear rule over Nations and put our Lord to death a Man of sinne a Harlot a Mother of spirituall fornications to the Kings and people of the Nations a childe of perdition a destroyer establishing himselfe by lying miracles and false wonders all which marks together do agree with none but the Pope of Rome How doth the Apostle 2 Thess. 2. 3. describe this Antichristian head unto us First he describeth what he is towards others and then what he is in himselfe What is he towards others That is declared by two speciall titles the Man of sinne and Sonne of perdition declaring hereby not so much his own sinne and perdition which is exceeding great as of those that receive his marke whom he causeth to sinne and consequently to fall into perdition as Ieroboam who is often branded with the mark of causing Israel to sin and he is so much more detestable then he by how much both his idolatry is more and hath drawn more Kingdomes after him then Ieroboam did Tribes In what respect is he called the man of sin In that he causeth man to sinne and this the Pope doth in a high degree justifying sinne not by oversight but by Lawes advisedly made not onely commanding some sinnes which we are by our corrupt nature prone unto as spirituall fornication but also to the great profanation of the holy name and profession of Christ permitting and teaching for lawfull such as even our corrupt nature not wholly subverted through erronious custome of sin abhorreth as incestuous marriages and breaking of faith and league equivocating and the like which profane men by the very light of nature doe detest In what sense is he called the child of perdition Not as the unthrift mentioned in the Gospel neither as Judas who is passively called the Son of perdition but actively as it is other where expounded where he is called the destroyer Rev.
not by the ordinary way of naturall generation is thereby freed from all the touch and taint of the corruption of our flesh which by that means onely is propagated from the first man unto his posterity Whereupon hee being made of man but not by man and so becomming the immediate fruit of the womb and not of the loyns must of necessity bee acknowledged to be that HOLY THING which so was born of so blessed a Mother Who although shee were but the passive and materiall principle of which that precious flesh was made and the holy Ghost the agent and efficient yet cannot the man Christ Jesus thereby bee made the Son of his own Spirit Because Fathers doe beget their children out of their own substance the holy Ghost did not so but framed the flesh of him from whom himself proceeded out of the creature of them both the handmaid of our Lord whom from thence all generations shall call blessed That blessed womb of hers was the Bride-chamber wherein the holy Ghost did knit that indissoluble knot betwixt our humane nature and his Deity the Son of God assuming into the unity of his person that which before he was not and yet without change for so must God still bee remaining that which hee was whereby it came to passe that this holy thing which was born of her was indeed and in truth to bee called the SON of GOD. Which wonderfull connexion of two so infinitely differing natures in the unity of one person how it was there effected is an inquisition fitter for an Angelicall intelligence then for our shallow capacity to look after to which purpose also wee may observe that in the fabrick of the Ark of the Covenant the posture of the faces of the Cherubims toward the Mercy-seat the type of our Saviour was such as would point unto us that these are the things which the Angels desire to stoope and look into And therefore let that satisfaction which the Angel gave unto the Mother Virgin whom it did more specially concern to move the question How may this bee content us The power of the Highest shall overshadow thee For as the former part of that speech may informe us that with God nothing is impossible so the latter may put us in minde that the same God having overshadowed this mystery with his own vaile wee should not presume with the men of Bethshemesh to look into this Ark of his lest for our curiosity wee bee smitten as they were Onely this wee may safely say and must firmely hold that as the distinction of the Persons in the holy Trinity hindreth not the unity of the Nature of the Godhead although every Person intirely holdeth his owne incommunicable property so neither doth the distinction of the two Natures in our Mediatour any way crosse the unity of his Person although each nature remaineth intire in it self and retaineth the properties agreeing thereunto without any conversion composition commixtion or confusion When Moses beheld the bush burning with fire and yet no whit consumed he wondred at the sight and said I will now turn aside and see this great sight why the bush is not burnt But when God thereupon called unto him out of the midst of the bush and said Draw not nigh hither and told him who he was Moses trembled hid his face and durst not behold God Yet although being thus warned we dare not draw so nigh what doth hinder but we may stand aloof off and wonder at this great sight Our God is a consuming fire saith the Apostle and a question wee finde propounded in the Prophet Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire who amongst us shall dwell with the everlasting burnings Moses was not like other Prophets but God spake unto him face to face as a man speaketh unto his friend and yet for all that when hee besought the Lord that he would shew him his glory hee received this answer Thou canst not see my face for there shall no man see me and live Abraham before him though a special friend of God and the father of the faithfull the children of God yet held it a great matter that he should take upon him so much as to speak unto God being but dust and ashes Yea the very Angels themselves which are greater in power and might are fain to cover their faces when they stand before him as not being able to behold the brightnesse of his glory With what astonishment then may wee behold our dust and ashes assumed into the undivided unity of Gods own Person and admitted to dwell here as an inmate under the same roofe and yet in the midst of those everlasting burnings the bush to remain unconsumed and to continue fresh and green for evermore Yea how should not wee with Abraham rejoyce to see this day wherein not onely our nature in the Person of our Lord Jesus is found to dwell for ever in those everlasting burnings but in and by him our own persons also are brought so nigh thereunto that God doth set his Sanctuary and Tabernacle among us and dwell with us and which is much more maketh us our selves to be the house and the habitation wherein he is pleased to dwell by his Spirit according to that of the Apostle Yee are the Temple of the living God as God hath said I will dwell in them and walk in them and I will be their God and they shall be my people And that most admirable prayer which our Saviour himself made unto his Father in our behalf I pray not for these alone but for them also which shall beleeve on me through their word that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us that the world may beleeve that thou hast sent me I in them and thou in mee that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loved them as thou hast loved me To compasse this conjunction betwixt God and us he that was to be our JESUS or Saviour must of necessity also be IMMANUEL which being interpreted is God with us and therefore in his Person to be Immanuel that is God dwelling with our flesh because he was by his Office to to be Immanuel that is he who must make God to be at one with us For this being his proper office to be Mediatour between God and men he must partake with both and being before all eternity consubstantiall with his Father he must at the appointed time become likewise consubstantiall with his children Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and bloud he also himself likewise took part of the same saith the Apostle We read in the Romane history that the Sabines and the Romanes joyning battell together upon such
discharge in the least measure His surety therefore being to satisfie in his stead none will bee found fit to undertake such a payment but he who is both God and Man Man it is fit he should bee because Man was the party that by the articles of the first Covenant was tyed to this obedience and it was requisite that as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one man likewise many should be made righteous Again if our Mediatour were onely God he could have performed no obedience the Godhead being free from all manner of subjection and if he were a bare man although he had been as perfect as Adam in his integrity or the Angels themselves yet being left unto himselfe amidst all the temptations of Satan and this wicked world he should be subject to fall as they were or if he should hold out as the elect Angels did that must have been ascribed to the grace and favour of an other whereas the giving of strict satisfaction to Gods justice was the thing required in this behalf But now being God as well as Man he by his own eternall Spirit preserved himself without spot presenting a far more satisfactory obedience unto God then could have possibly been performed by Adam in his integrity For beside the infinite difference that was betwixt both their Persons which maketh the actions of the one beyond all comparison to exceed the worth and value of the other we know that Adam was not able to make himselfe holy but what holinesse he had he received from him who created him according to his owne image so that whatsoever obedience Adam had performed God should have eaten but of the fruit of the vineyard which himselfe had planted and of his own would all that have been which could be given unto him But Christ did himself sanctifie that humane nature which he assumed according to his own saying Joh. 17. 19. For their sakes I sanctifie my self and so out of his own peculiar store did he bring forth those precious treasures of holy obedience which for the satisfaction of our debt he was pleased to tender unto his Father Againe if Adam had done all things which were commanded him hee must for all that have said I am an unprofitable servant I have done that which was my duty to doe whereas in the voluntary obedience which Christ subjected himself unto the case stood far otherwise True it is that if we respect him in his humane nature his Father is greater then he and he is his Fathers servant yet in that he said and most truly said that God was his Father the Jews did rightly infer from thence that he thereby made himself equall with God and the Lord of Hosts himselfe hath proclaimed him to bee the man that is his fellow Being such a man therefore and so highly born by the priviledge of his birth-right hee might have claimed an exemption from the ordinary service whereunto all other men are tyed and by being the Kings Son have freed himself from the payment of that tribute which was to be exacted at the hands of Strangers When the Father brought this his first-begotten into the world he said Let all the Angels of God worship him and at the very instant wherein the Son advanced our nature into the highest pitch of dignitie by admitting it into the unity of his sacred Person that nature so assumed was worthy to be crowned with all glory and honour and he in that nature might then have set himself down at the right hand of the throne of God tyed to no other subjection then now he is or hereafter shall be when after the end of this world he shall have delivered up the kingdome to God the Father For then also in regard of his assumed nature he shall be subject unto him that put all other things under him Thus the Son of God if he had minded onely his own things might at the very first have attained unto the joy that was set before him but looking on the things of others he chose rather to come by a tedious way and wearisome journey unto it not challenging the priviledge of a Son but taking upon him the form of a mean servant Whereupon in the dayes of his flesh hee did not serve as an honourable Commander in the Lords host but as an ordinary soldier he made himself of no reputation for the time as it were emptying himself of his high state and dignity hee humbled himself and became obedient untill his death being content all his life long to be made under the Law yea so farre that as he was sent in the likenesse of sinfull flesh so he disdained not to subject himself unto that Law which properly did concern sinfull flesh And therefore howsoever Circumcision was by right appliable onely unto such as were dead in their sins and the uncircumcision of their flesh yet he in whom there was no body of the sins of the flesh to be put off submitted himself notwithstanding thereunto not onely to testifie his communion with the Fathers of the old Testament but also by this means to tender unto his Father a bond signed with his own bloud whereby he made himself in our behalf a debtor unto the whole Law For I testifie saith the Apostle to every man that is circumcised that he is a debtor to the whole Law In like manner Baptisme appertained properly unto such as were defiled and had need to have their sins washed away and therefore when all the land of Judea and they of Jerusalem went out unto John they were all baptized of him in the river Jordan confessing their sinnes Among the rest came our Saviour also but the Baptist considering that he had need to be baptized by Christ and Christ no need at all to be baptized by him refused to give way unto that action as altogether unbefitting the state of that immaculate Lambe of God who was to take away the sinne of the World Yet did our Mediatour submit himself to that ordinance of God also not onely to testifie his communion with the Christians of the new Testaments but especially which is the reason yeelded by himselfe because it became him thus to fulfill all righteousnesse And so having fulfilled all righteousnesse whereunto the meanest man was tyed in the days of his pilgrimage which was more then he needed to have undergone if he had respected only himself the works which he performed were truly workes of supererogation which might be put upon the account of them whose debt hee undertook to discharge and being performed by the Person of the Son of God must in that respect not onely be equivalent but infinitely over-value the obedience of Adam and all his posterity although they had remained in their integrity and continued untill this houre instantly serving God day
above and his Israel lying here below are conjoyned together and the onely ladder vvhereby Heaven may bee scaled by us is the Son of man the type of whose flesh the veile vvas therefore commanded to bee made vvith Cherubims to shevv that wee come to an innumerable company of Angels when wee come to Jesus the Mediatour of the New Testament who as the Head of the Church hath power to send forth all those ministring spirits to minister for them who shall bee Heirs of salvation Lastly wee are to take into our consideration that as in things concerning God the main execution of our Saviours Priesthood doth consist so in things concerning man hee exerciseth both his Propheticall Office whereby hee openeth the will of his Father unto us and his Kingly whereby hee ruleth and protecteth us It was indeed a part of the Priests office in the Old Testament to instruct the people in the Law of God and yet were they distinguished from Prophets like as in the New Testament also Prophets as well as Apostles are made a different degree from ordinary Pastours and Teachers who received not their doctrine by immediate inspiration from Heaven as those other Holy men of God did who spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost Whence S. Paul putteth the Hebrews in minde that God who in sundry parts and in sundry manners spake in time past unto the Fathers by the Prophets hath in these last dayes spoken unto us by his Son Christ Jesus whom therefore hee stileth the Apostle as vvell as the High Priest of our profession who was faithfull to him that appointed him even as Moses was in all his house Now Moses wee know had a singular preheminence above all the rest of the Prophets according to that ample testimony which God himself giveth of him If there bee a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my self known unto him in a vision and will speak unto him in a dream My servant Moses is not so who is faithfull in all mine house with him will I speak mouth to mouth even aparently and not in dark speeches and the similitude of the Lord shall he behold And therefore wee finde that our Mediatour in the execution of his Propheticall office is in a more peculiar manner likened unto Moses which hee himself also did thus foretell The Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a Prophet from the midst of thee of thy Brethren like unto mee unto him yee shall hearken According to all that thou desiredst of the Lord thy God in Horeb in the day of the assembly saying Let mee not heare again the voyce of the Lord my God neither let mee see this great fire any more that I dye not And the Lord said unto mee They have well spoken that which they have spoken I will raise them up a Prophet from among their brethren like unto thee and will put my words in his mouth and hee shall speak unto them all that I shall command him And it shall come to passe that whosoever will not hearken unto my words which hee shall speak in my Name I will require it of him Our Prophet therefore must bee a Man raised from among his Brethren the Israelites of whom as concerning the flesh hee came who was to perform unto us that which the Fathers requested of Moses Speak thou to us and wee will heare but let not God speak with us lest wee die And yet that in this also wee may see how our Mediatour had the preheminence when Aaron and all the children of Israel were to receive from the mouth of Moses all that the Lord had spoken with him in Mount Sinai they were afraid to come nigh him by reason of the glory of his shining countenance so that hee was fain to put a vaile over his face while hee spake unto them that which hee was commanded But that which for a time was thus made glorious had no glory in respect of the glory that excelleth and both the glory thereof and the vaile which covered it are now abolished in Christ the vaile of whose flesh doth so overshadow the brightnesse of his glory that yet under it wee may behold his glory as the glory of the onely begotten of the Father yea and wee all with open face beholding as in a glasse the glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. And this is daily effected by the power of the Ministery of the Gospel instituted by the authority and seconded by the power of this our great Prophet whose transcendent excellency beyond Moses unto whom in the execution of that function hee was otherwise likened is thus set forth by the Apostle Hee is counted worthy of more glory then Moses in as much as hee who hath builded the house hath more honour then the house For every house is builded by some one but hee that built all things is God And Moses verily was faithfull in all his house as a servant for a testimony of those things which were to bee spoken after but Christ as the Son over his own house This house of God is no other then the Church of the living God whereof as hee is the onely Lord so is hee also properly the onely Builder Christ therefore being both the Lord and the Builder of his Church must bee God as well as Man which is the cause why wee finde all the severall mansions of this great house to carry the title indifferently of the Churches of God and the Churches of Christ. True it is that there are other ministeriall builders whom Christ employeth in that service this being not the least of those gifts which hee bestowed upon men at his Triumphant Ascension into Heaven that hee gave not onely ordinary Pastours and Teachers but Apostles likewise and Prophets and Evangelists for the perfecting of the Saints for the Work of the Ministery for the edifying of the body of Christ. Which what great power it required hee himself doth fully expresse in passing the graunt of this high Commission unto his Apostles All power is given unto mee in Heaven and in Earth Goe yee therefore and teach all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you and lo I am with you alway even unto the end of the World Amen S. Paul professeth of himself that hee laboured more abundantly then all the rest of the Apostles yet not I saith hee but the grace of God which was with mee And therefore although according to that grace of God which was given unto him hee denyeth not but that as a wise Master-builder hee had laid the foundation yet hee acknowledgeth that they upon whom hee had