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A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

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spiritual conflicts which in their own nature are so unpleasing and so bitter that were it only their own Laws we should see them live more merrily in the world And what makes after Ages imbrace those Scriptures though good men should make them since they are contrary to flesh and blood and might therefore be rejected In a word a good man could not have said O earth earth earth hear the word of the Lord Jer. 22 29. if it had been his own Invention 2. Bad men did not do it the lyar the drunkard the thief the swearer would never have made Laws against lying Drunkenness stealing swearing nor have counselled men to have shunned their company nor damned themselves eternally for their so doing Since therefore neither in heaven nor in earth can there be found ●ut a Creature to be but probably supposed the Author of the Scriptures it remains therefore that the Creator must who is God blessed for ever 2. From the testimony of the Scripture it self it is apparent that God is the Author of it He that gave the Law was the same that brought Israel out of Egypt viz. the Lord God ●xod 20.2 He that commanded Iohn to write to the Churches of Asia was the first and the last Rev. 17. Thus saith the Lord Hear the word of the Lord is a usual phrase in Scripture which co●ld not have been said by Men or Angels had it been their own It was he that gave Moses the Law the Statutes and the Judgements for all Israel Mal. 4.4 It was God that spake by the mouth of his Holy Prophets which have been since the world began Luke 1.70 All the words that are written in that Book are his words Ier. ●0 2 What Isaiah uttered it was the Lord that spake it Isa. 1.2 what Ieremiah spake the Lord commanded Ier. 1.7 Nay what ever the holy men of God spake it was as they were moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 3. From the excellency of the matter contained in the Scripture it appears to be of God where it promiseth it goes above the power reason or invention of man as Those that do well shall shine as the stars and as the firmament nay as the Sun for ever and ever Dan. 12.3 and Matth. 13.43 The Incarnation of God a Virgin bearing a Son the resurrection of the dead all without the reach of man making Laws for the hearts of men of Kings and Princes poor and rich high and low shews that it is not of man threatening eternal death and promising eternal life both which are without the power of men and that to soul and body both which by man nor the powers of man cannot be reached unto It perswades to nothing but what is in it self good were it not commanded and disswades from nothing but what is in it self hurtfull were it not forbidden and that oftentimes without giving any reason but the will and authority of the Law-giver why must not men swear steal c. The Lord hath forbidden it The Proem to the Law is I am the Lord thy God Exod. 20.2 I am the Lord is often given as the only reason of the Law Lev. 18. 4. From the effects thereby wrought the Scripture hath wrought that upon the hearts souls and consciences of men that the writings of men and Angels could never have accomplished it fills sometimes the very souls of men so full of terrour and other times so full of comfort that were not God the Author thereof could not be effected he that is in love with sin and dark through sin it makes him to hate sin and to be in love with righteousness it hath brought the hearts and spirits of men to so much certainty that all the tortures torments and pains that men or devils could invent was not once able to make them doubt of it 5. From the scope and final end of the Scriptures it declares that God is the Author of them if any creature had been the composer of them he would in one verse or other have sought something to himself but the scope of the Scripture is purely for the glory of God the honour of God the praise of God to make men admire God to have them praise God to have them pray to God and to depend upon God and in their ways to acknowledge God It debaseth every creature in comparison of God and puts all things under the feet of God by which it is demonstrable it is from God 6. From the constant consent and declaration of the holy Catholick Church that in all Ages under and after Moses before and afte● the Judges before and under the Kings before and after the Captivity before Christ and in his time before the coming of the Holy Ghost and af●er the Apostles untill this very time hath in all Ages been consented to and looked upon as the word of God the very word of God the only word of God the holy word of God and besides this the Church hath owned no other The same Teacheth the Reformed Churches of Helvetia Article 1. of Bohem. Art 1. of Fra●ce Art 2. of Belg. Art 3. of Wirt Art 31. of Scot. Art 17. Quest. 2. Whether the Scripture ought to be mens only Rule There are many that pretend to new Revelations new lights walking according to and going a whoring after their own Inventions but that the Scriptures are to be our only rule these following Arguments may declare 1. It is the only infallible and unalterable Rule Many Rules and Laws have there been in the world which time hath altered and experience hath made to appear not good but the Scriptures of God remain the same no addition to them no dimunition of them to Kings and people they are now what they ever were and they shall be what for the present they are to all generations For ever O Lord thy word is setled in heaven Psal. 119.89 All other Rules have and may still deceive but this hath never deceived nor failed and is the same for ever and ever 2. The Churches of Christ had never any other Rule the word of God the Scriptures of God was ever the Rule of their Doctrine in matters of Faith The Rule of their lives in matters of fact Malachy that ends the Old Testament commands them to Remember the Law of Moses and Iohn that concludes the new pronounceth him Blessed that keepeth the Prophesie of the sayings of this Book Rev. 22.17 And whoever speaks not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Christ himself appeals to the Scriptures to be the Tryers of his Doctrine Iohn 5.39 3. They are written that they might be our Rule These things are written that we might believe that Iesus is the Christ and that believing we might have life John 20.31 We are to take heed unto this doctrine 1 Tim. 4.16 We have a more sure word of prophesie unto which we shall do well if we take heed
but vastly differ in the manner of keeping these days as also in other points touching those days For 1 The Catholick Church performes worship or makes prayer even in those days to God alone whereas that of Rome offers supplications petitions intercessions to those Saints in whose days they are performeing that or any other holy service 2 The Catholick Church keeps feasts for no Saint but what she is sure had a being and once were and keeps no day but upon good and real grounds now that of Rome hath days observed and prayers made to those whose very being not without just cause are called in question It is very much to be doubted if ever there were such a man as Saint Christopher or Saint George or such a lady as Saint K●therin or how can they know that Ios●ph the supposed Father of our Lord was a pious confessour or that Lady Anne was mother of the virgin Mary Who was he that told them that the virgin Mary never dyed but was taken up to heaven alive Aug. 15. and therefore that day must be in red letters in the Roman Almanack and on that day prayers must be made to her This is not to serve the Lord Christ the days that the Catholick Church keep are such as have in them a real truth and not legendary vanities 3 The Catholick Church keeps no days in memorial of Saints but those whom she knows to be good they were not only men but good men whom she honours with a day now in this the Church of Rome also fails she hath not only days in remembrance of them that never were but dayes in memoriall of them that never were good Thomas Becket must be Sainted and given to the Christmas holy days by way of augmentation and yet his religion purely consisted in rebellion and being an arch traytor deserved to be preferred in another sort and as we pray to Saint Feriol for geese to Saint Agatha for sore breasts to Saint Giles for Children to Saint Hubert for dogs to Saint Iab for them that have the pox to Saint Kathern for knowledge to Saint Orilia for the head arch to Saint Russin for madnesse to Valentine for the falling sicknese so we must pray to B●cket for sinners when if stubornesse be as iniquity were he in a capacity to be bettered by prayers supplications ought to be made for him yet poor souls are taught to pray Tu per Thomae sanguinem quem pro te Impendit ●ac nos Christe scandere quo Thomas ascendit The like might be sayd of many others 4 The Catholick Church she loves useth and enjoyneth those days to be observed as meanes conduceing to the good of men and no further no what ever day be enjoyned by Rome were it Beckets or Leola's they must be observed as part of divine worship binding the consciences of men to the observation of them though but of humane constitution in themselves and often times fictitious in their nature Quest 2. Whether the Festivalls appointed by the Church of England may lawfully be observed Those solemnities established by law in the Church of England ought not by any that is compos mentis well in his wits to be spoken against for they appear in many respects to be lawfull and usefull 1 From that countenance God gave to those feasts Instituted by the Church of the Jewes under the Law the the days of Purim was never spoken against and that seven days feast of Iudas Maccabeus his institution was graced by our Saviours observance shall they and may they appoint days to worship God in for temporall mercy and not be blamed what hinders then but that the Church of England may appoint days to return thanks for spiritual mercy shown to her in common with the whole Church of Christ on Earth 2. From the nature of that worship she in those days performes though the day may be denominated from a Saint or kept in remembrance of one yet the prayers she offers up are purely to Christ the Gospel she reads is the Gospel of Christ the b●ead she breaks is the communion of the body of Christ and nothing is done in way of worship but what is agreeable to the rule of Christ and will of Christ. 3. From that opportunity that they put into the hands of such as hunger after spirituall food they may by these often hear the word of the Lord receive the Sacrament instituted by the Lord as a memoriall of his death untill his second coming and what ever ordinance they take most delight in or receive most refreshment by of that they have abundance in the using of those dayes instituted by the Church 4. From that profit that would accrew to the poorer and weaker sort of people to them those days would be a Catechisme upon the feasts of the nativity to hear of the birth of Christ and afterward of his circumsion and then of his passion and then at Easter of his resurrection and then of his ascension and then of the spirits descension and so forward this might being taught upon those dayes be of very great consequence to all Christians especially to those whose understandings are not ripe enough for high contemplations in subjects of this nature 5 From that power that the Church hath to ordain fasts and dayes of humiliation which is granted we may draw her power to ordain feasts and dayes of thanksgiving which is the thing doubted but of the power of the Church in such cases we have spoken in another place 6. From the doctrine of reformed Churches Confess of Helva Art 24. of Bohem. Art 17. which Churches deliver their minds thus that of Helvatia says Every Church doth choose unto it self a certain time for publick prayers c. it is not lawful for every one to overthrow this appointment of the Church at his own pleasure and if the Churches do religiously celebrate the memory of the Lords Nativity Circumcision Passion c. according to Christian liberty we do very well allow of it The Church of Bohemia says thus Many of the ancient Ceremonies are retained among us at this day of this sort be many appointed for feasts and holy days c. such as Christs nativity such as be dedicated to the Apostles c. chiefely of those Saints of whom there is mention made in holy Scripture all these things are done of us that the word of God may be taught and that he may be glorified among us c. the same teacheth the Church of Ans. Art 4. The ignorant must or may learn that the observation of those dayes is no superstitious observation of days condemned in Gal. 4.10 for with the Atheist there is neither good luck nor bad luck supposed to be in them neither with the Papists are the consciences of men tyed to them It is no more a sin to observe such times as the Church teacheth then it is will-worship to observe noon for dinner time or to open a shop
are providing our selves to defendin points of grand concernment and as a preliminary discourse to the following truths we shall preface upon that Subject Every Heretick stands confident in his errour and each seducer pleads for a belief of his Doctrine by imposing the name Church upon those whom they have so seduced and made Proselytes to their Hereticall Tenets by which means the glorious Fabtick of the Catholick Church is like a lodge in a Garden of Cucumbers sleighted and disesteemed of many we shall stand therefore a short season upon this holy ground and take a true survey of her large dimensions Da Domine perficere qui dedist● velle For her height or Altitude by the Scripture I see that she is higher then the Heavens her Head who is above all principalities and pow●●s is Christ the Lord. Ephes. 5.23 He is at Gods Right hand and in her affections she is at the same place Col. 3.2 Behold see you her not going up to heaven like Pillars of smo●k leaving the Wildernesse of this World Can. 3.6 Her hasty departure occasion'd betwixt Love and fear longing to be with her beloved and fearing to be devoured by faithlesse and unreasonable men who like Foxes have encompassed her about purposing to tear her in pieces from whom that she may be delivered she assumes the wings of a great Eagle and maketh her nest above the stars For her breadth or Latitude by my Creed I see her of an infinite and inconceiveable extension I believe that the Church is catholick she is as broad as the World as old as the Creation her age you may suppose to be attended with weaknesse but it is not the last visit that Christ her Husband made her renewed her strength like an Eagle so that shee walks and is not weary she runs yet is not faint holds pace with eternity it self Perceive you not Christ the everlasting Son of the father to be the corner stone of this glorious building 1 Pet. 2.6 And untill he cease being it shall never know dilapidations By the same Perspective or Fiduciary Optick Nerve I see her of a comely and beautifull proportion and holy uniformity I believe that the Catholick Church is holy The Kings Daughter is glorious within Christ her Spouse is ravished with the beauty of her eyes Cant. 4 9. Therefore she shall ever be Reverenced in mine He whose eyes are Ten Thousand times brighter then the Sun hath shined upon her garments of wrought Gold and protests that there is no spot in her Cant. 4.7 Let me therefore never cast a blot upon her He that is her Husband hath made her so Ephes. 5.27 Therefore let me that am her son ever hold her so but for the clearer understanding of this matter we shall 1. See the Nature of the Church in Generall 2. Resolve some questions concerning her The nature of the Church of Christ by a due weighing of this description through faith and Scripture may be fully manifested and known It is First The Whole Society or Company of Beleevers 2. Elected and appointed by Gods Eternall decree 3. Called by the Word of the LORD 4. From amongst the rest of Mankind 5. For the bringing of glory to his own Name and giving unto them Eternal lfie In this Description take notice 1. Of the Members of the Church they are the whole Society or Company of Believers in what age soever they lived in what place soever they aboad in however dispersed where everscattered whether far or near old young male female High and Low Rich and Poor All that ever were and all that ever shal be all that ever lived upon the Earth with all that ever dyed in the Womb from Adam the first man that ever was known with and until the last man that shal ever be born makes up this Temple of God and all of them are but severall Members of that body whereof the Lord Jesus is the head 1 Cor. 1.2 Rom. 12.5 2. Of the Causes of the Church and they are either 1. The efficient cause Gods Eternal decree There are none made members of the Church by chance nor by their own care and industry who by taking thought can adde one Cubit to his Stature and he is high with a witnesse who hath his head above the clouds None shall sit in the Kingdome of God but they for whom it is prepared of the Father Matth. 20.23 And it is prepared for them before the Foundation of the World God by his decree must separate Believers from among men or faith shall never purifie the hearts of men and Election must precede Vocation Gal. 1.15 The least blossome of true holinesse will never grow nor never was seen to bloom upon that stem whose root was not Predestination Ephes. 1.4 5. 2. The Instrumentall cause which is their Call by the Word of the Lord this is the means used for the bringing of many Sons and Daughters into glory It is the charge of Almighty God to the Apostles to hear his Son Iohn 17.5 It is the charge of the Son that the Apostles preach to the World Matthew 28.18 19. And by the benediction of the Spirit by that there is added to the Church dayly such as shal be saved Acts 2.47 None shall be glorified but such as are called with a holy calling we must hear the joyfull sound of his Word before we can see the glory of his countenance for whom he glorifieth he justifieth and whom he justifieth them he also calls Rom 8.30 This Call is so necessary to the Churches being that the Greek Word for Church comes from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from their being called and indeed none shall be crowned with the Lamb but such as fight with him and none shall fight under him but such as are called chosen and faithfull Revel 17.14 We have those that pretend a call in this generation but we have cause to suspect it is not by the word of the Lord for if so they would be holy without blame before him in love Ephesians 1.4 They would be full of love were they full of the Spirit and of joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith Galathians 5.22 Bitternesse wrath anger clamor and evill speaking should be far from them with all malice Ephesians 1.31 The word of Christ we are to look after if we seek to obtain glory for that leads unto it Revelations 22.7 And we are to entertain it in our hearts if we would have that to shine upon our heads the same Doctrine is taught us by the Church of England Art 17. Yet we must understand this calling of or by the word to be onely necessary First when God is pleased to give the word Secondly to those persons who are of years wit or discretion to understand the word or Thirdly where God hath given the naturall meanes for the hearing or reading of his word 3. The formal cause remotely described Separated from amongst the rest of mankind by
in that he did it in the first month of his Reign nay more he did that in the first day of that first Month as may be collected from verse 17. of that Chapter he speaks to the Levites and calls them sons vers 11. by which he acknowledged himself t● be their Father and we are informed that they gathered themselves together at the commandment of the King some in our days would have questioned his authority by the words of the Lord vers 15. a King commanding things lawfull is a commandement of the Lord. They set the Temple in order sanctifie both it and themselves and informs the King thereof vers 18. The King rises early himself and gathered the Rulers of the City together but be will see the people worship God and goes to the House of the Lord and sets the Levites marke the King sets them that is orders them to stand in their places with Cymballs Psalteries and Harpes according to the Commandements of David and of Gad the Seer and Nathan the Prophet c. vers 25. In the distribution of the Levites in their places Courses and Offices these three consulted but that instruments of Musick was Davids own Ordinance appears both by the 27. ver of this Chapt. and also by Ezra 3.30 Where at the building of the second Temple these things were practised as from Davids authority with severall other places all being in order at the Kings appointment Hezekiak commanded to offer the burnt-offering upon the Altar ver 27. And he with his Princes commands the Levites to sing Praise with the words of David ver 30. Here is medling with the Church if there be any medling in the World But further God hath appointed that the Passeover should be kept in the first Moneth of the Year yet Hezekiah with his Princes takes Councill and agrees to keep it in the second Month a Proclamation made accordingly Chron. 30.5 If the Sun it self had not hasted to have gone down or at least gone back ten degrees upon the Temple of Ierusalem to have beheld this holy Kings zeal in meddling with Church affairs it had been no wonder Iosiah is famous for this even for meddling with the Church let the expression be excused the times forceth me so to speak whose Father Manasseth being dead who also had commanded his people to serve the Lord their God in reference to the duties of the Temple 2 Chron. 33.16 at Twelve years of age began to purge Iudah and Ierusalem from Idolatry makes a Covenant with the Lord before the Lord to walk in all his ways and statutes and caused marke all his authority and medling all that were pres●nt in Iur●salem and Beniamin to stand to it 2 Chron. 34.32 For the people to make a Covenant among themselves and make their King to stand to it or c. is not good Divinity nay this King made all that were present in Israel to serve even to serve the Lord their God vers 33. Further He keeps a Passeover 〈◊〉 first Month and sets the Priests in their charges What a 〈…〉 here is would some of our English had said I should 〈◊〉 weary my Reader in a point so clear if I should insist on the practises of Zernbabel or other famous Princes who cast an eye to the Church of God and put out their hands to help her and how much they helped her so much their honour their grandure and their safety was augmented and confirmed both by God and man and indeed how shall their memories be blessed if they do it not It is sometimes a blot in good Kings and a dead flye that makes their anointing Oyl to send forth no good savour that the High places were not taken away Let Conastntine the great be honoured by the Christian World and King Edward the 6th of glorious memory be ever esteemed among the best of Princes and his Parliamentum Benedictum be of all generations called blessed 2. From that confusion and disorder that would inevitably besal the Church of Christ if Kings and Magistrates did not meddle with with it may this be proved What disorders fell upon the Church of Israel when their Kings and Princes took no notice of it is clear How God was worshipped is known and what in our days will befall her if Magistrates act not is easily to be conjectured Diversity of judgements would breed diversity of Doctrines and that will bring forth contention and that would produce confusion All Laws though made never with so good advice would be by turbulent spirits trode under foot if in the least they were crossed in their peevish opinions It were dangerous to leave all men to their own practices and opinions in matters of Religion Heresie might passe for Divinity and the doctrine of Divells might passe for that of God And how could it be restrained By a meeting of the Clergy or Presbytery you may say Who shall call that meeting Themselves Which of them Any one If any one call them together Then any one may chuse to meet but suppose a meeting by what authority will you make Laws By our own this is excellent doctrine at Rome Who would rehearse those Laws when you have made them Mum. There is no such power in the Word Presbytery so met that I know off as to ham-string any man from entering the Pulpit or Tongue-tye him when he is in it so that either the civill Magistrate must be medling or there will be no obeying 3. Either the civill Magistrate must meddle with the Church or there will be some that will be medling with his Throne The great Turk knows how necessary this is Pharoah King of Egypt knew it All Histories witnesse it the German Emperour subscribes to the truth of it and those among us that can but number 20. or 30 Years cannot be ignorant Murder Rapin Rebellion Treason Sedition Fire and Sword have been the direfull consequences of suffering men to preach and pray what they saw good without controul or constraint So long as there be men there will be failings so long as there are sinners there will be irregularities and therefore there must be Laws and bridles either the civil Magistrate must be medling or there wil be no living 4. From that contempt and reproach that would befall the Church if Magistrates did not meddle with her I am perswaded that it is for fear that Church or Church-Officers should be regarded that makes many deny the Magistrates authority in it if Solomon in all his glory honour the Priest he shall be respected in all Solomons Court The Church hath Noble Titles given her in Scripture and good Laws wil give her in the sight of men dignity thereunto there is honourable mention made of all the Ordinances of the Church and through faith they have got a good report it is fitting that their mouths be stopped that would defaine them and do slander them in the face of her own people There were some
sedition or division to requit it will foster Heresie Hereticks do corrumpere sidem and Schisma●●cks or Separatists do disrumpere charitatem the one corrupts the Doctrine of the Church the other falls from her Communion both are fruits of the flesh and they that do such things shall not inherit the Kingdome of God Verse ult The sin of Separation is so infectious that in Scripture we are to separate from them that so do Rom. 16.17 There is a Rule in Divinity that wil make the sin of separation to be great it is this Those sins are the greatest which are most contrary to and do most oppose the greatest of Christian vertues or graces Now they are recorded 1 Cor. 13.13 Now abideth Faith Hope and Charity but the greatest of these three is Charity Now by the Rule distrust in Gods promises or in his power is a great sin it being a sin against hope Heresie or a stout persisting in an errour is a far greater sin for it is a sin against faith and seeks to cover conceal if not to destroy the truth Now Charity is greater then either of these that follows therefore that that sin that destroys the peace of the Church untyes the Ligatures by which the whole body is compact together is the greatest but this doth the sin of Separation a thing by this age of no account yet they wil find it of great moment in the day of their Account It is a sin generally accompanied with the other lusts of the flesh viz. Hatred Varience Emulations Strife Wrath which seldome lurks long in a Corner but in time appears in the field in the habit and acts of Murtherers Ravishers Traytors and all with the voyce of Iacob pretending Godlinesse and conscience as Histories do abundantly show But to answer the Question So long as a Church makes no separation from Christ no separation is to be made from it but to keep in it is the duty and safety honour and happinesse of him that would enjoy the Communion of Saints the forgivenesse of sins the Resurrection of the body unto life Everlasting A Church separates from Christ two ways 1. When she overthrows the foundation of that Doctrine that is laid by Christ the foundation of all truth is already laid and he that goes to overthrow that may be said to turn from it Do we see a society of men whether Nationally or Domestically whether openly or secretly going in that road that thwarteth the foundation or fundamental points of Religion there must be a separation Rev. 18.4 whether it be in the adding to these fundamentals as if they were not sufficient or taking from them as if they were redundant or superfluous This made the Reformed Churches beyond Sea and the Church of England to separate from the Church of Rome which hath both taken from and added to those fundamental Truths whereupon the Church was by the Lord and his Apostles erected and builded Having to the Scriptures added some Books as the Apocrypha makes the Scriptures to be an imperfect Rule and must have Traditions to compleat it That the sense and meaning of the Scripture depends upon the Churches authority That in all matters of Controversie not the Scriptures but the Church must be the Judge They have made five Sacraments more then Christ made They have clearly blotted out the whole body of the second Commandment out of the first Table of the Law in several Books That Infants that die without Baptism are eternally separate from God except they be as it were martyred by which martyrdom they are baptized Baptismo sanguinis with their own blood They teach that men are not justified by Faith alone before God They make Saints and holy men departed assistant in the work of reconciling us to God and therefore maintain they must be prayed unto That the Doctrine of Purgatory must be believed if we would be saved That the efficacy of the Sacraments depends upon the worthiness or intention of the giver That Baptism totally abolisheth Original sin That the real fleshly body of Christ is in the Bread at the Sacrament of the Lords Supper as soon as the Priest pronounceth the words Hoc est corpus meum this is my body if he should say Corpus mea it were no Sacrament They take the Wine or keep the Cup from the Laity in that Sacrament That the wine in that Ordinance must be mingled with water that that Sacrament is profitable not only for the living but for the dead The Priest is not to bless a second marriage They baptize Bells with the very words of Baptism and by that they teach Devils are drove from the Church O Romanists great is your Faith and give them proper names That God-Fathers and God-mothers at the Font by reason of the nearness of their Spiritual Kindred are not to nor must no● marry for the seventh generation That the Pope or Bishop of Rome is the universal Head of the Church and Christs Vicar All which ●enets as they were utterly unknown to the former Bishops of Rome nor heard of in the Church of Christ for many Ages so they are for the present opposed by all the Reformed Churches abroad who have upon that account forsaken her and England hath thrown her off and separated from her and by the Champions of the several Churches hath their separation been defended By vertue of that Catholick truth 1 Tim. 6.3 If any man teach otherwise that is then the Scriptures do and consent not to wholsom words of our Lord Iesus and to the Doctrine which is accord●ng to godliness c. from such separate turn away or withdraw thy self their separation is justifiable What Paul would have Timothy in this place to do he practiseth himself in another Acts 19.9 yet probably in one and the same City was it both done by Paul and to be done by Timothy Saint Paul being in Ephesus some there were that believed his word others not but hardened their heart speaking evil of him and of the Gospel After he had preached three moneths and perswading to the things concerning the Kingdom of God he separated the Disciples he would not have those Believers that had received the Truth to be in any Church-fellowship with those that spoke against it Luther who began to rise up and take his farewell of the Church of Rome Anno 1517. being an Augustian Frier was called an Apostate answered Consitetur se esse Apostatam sed beatum Sanctum qui sidem Diabolo datam non servavit that he had only fallen back from that Covenant and Engagement he had made with Satan Not that there is a separation to be made from all the Doctrine of Rome for she holds many great mysteries of Divinity purely and soundly wherein we must and do all agree with her as Christians but he that is a true member of the Church of Rome as it now stands he must believe that the least coal in Purgatory is very
near as hot as hell he must believe the least point of Reliques with as strong a faith as the greatest mysteries of the God-head and if he deny any of the former he is no lesse an Heretick then if he had denied the latter and he that believes not the Churches tradition to be as necessary to be believed as the Epistles of Paul he cannot be saved Indeed there is not an Article of the Church of Rome that is Catholick wherein reformed Churches differ from her but in those Articles that are but of Yesterday such as those above mentioned they stand at a distance praying for her but loth to touch her she being not sick of a small Ague but hath running sores Ulcers Infections Pestilential humours within her which makes them write over her as if she were visited Lord have mercy upon her but dare not make themselves one body with her H. The Apologist of the Church of England declares That we have Renounced that Church wherein we could not have the Word of God sincerely taught being mixed with tradition nor the Sacraments rightly administred the one half of the Lords Supper being but given to the people and Baptisme being given to Bells c. Nor the Name of God duly called upon praying to the Saints and Angels and in a Latin tongue which the people understand not To conclude we have forsaken the Church viz. of Rome as it is now not as it was in old time past c. and come to that Church viz. of England wherein all things be governed purely and Reverendly This overthrowing of the foundation thou maist call Heresie in d●ctrine Yet by caution take not the manners of the people for doctrine let the people be what they will the man what he pleaseth it is neither the good lives of men nor the bad lives of men that makes or unmakes Churches but false and corrupted doctrine Much loosenesse was in the Church of Corinth and Prophanenesse partic●larly about the Sacrament of the Lords Supper yet the Apostle gives no ground at all for separation only exhorts to a more orderly peaceable walking and a more holy and prepared celebration Neither must we take things indifferent for doctrine nor every blemish for fundamentall Heresie It is an errour in our age to take Circumstances and outward Ceremonies for essentiall parts of worship There was much corruption in the Church of the Jews in our Saviours time and much false glosses put upon the Law yet in regard the fundamentals were not razed he commanded his disciples to hear even the Pharisees who yet were thieves and robbers being none of those appointed to expound the Law which justified not their manner of teaching but the truth of the doctrine taught who sate in Moses chair Matth. 23.1 2 3. but gives them a Caveat to beware of the practices and leven of the Pharisees that is hearken and obey to those truths and fundamental precepts that they give out teach to be in my Fathers Law first taught by Moses as cirumcision the way and manner of the Sacrifices which in the Jewish Church were necessary points but refuse those things they lay down as from tradition as Corban washing of cups for not these but the other are commanded you to do Moreover you must be sure not to separate your selves from those who possibly are ignorant of the depths of Sathan in that particular doctrine delivered for Christ pities such and speaks comfortably to them Revel 2.4 nor from others whom you can perceive in the least to disown that corrupted doctrine though privately being troubled at the razeing out of necessary principles How many poor souls are led away from the truth by those that creep into houses in our days that are ignorant possibly of the designes of their prime Teachers following them as much as the people followed Absolon viz. in the simplicity of their heart these giving great encouragement to those that so teach makes them bolder to go on against the unity of the faith showing the Number of their Disciples loving to hear those Doctrines that either add to or take from the infallible and unalterable rule of the Word in both which the Church of Rome is erroneous and therefore the separation from her justifiable 2. We may lawfully separate our selves from a Church when she enjoyns those acts of worship as necessary not enjoyned by Christ when a Church preacheth corrupted doctrine as from God we may separate from her so may we nay so ought we to do when she injoyns false worship to be performed to God whether it be in worshipping him after a false manner or giving another besides him true worship Deut. 10.20 This is another cause of the reformed Churches separation from Rome their Beads their Ave Maries their Fastings a great part of worship with them their praying to Saints as those that have the plague must pray to St. Rochus those that have the tooth-ache to Apollonia those that are poysoned to Saint Iohn those that are in Captivity to Saint Leonard those that have the Fistul● to Saint Quintin Women that are in labour must pray to Saint Margaret but especially to the Virgin Mary besides those common prayers that you must make in common to all the Saints and to the Angels also must prayer be made There is a little Book published by the Authority of Pope Pius the V. in which almost at the beginning that all might prosper the better you have this Prayer Precibus meriti● beatae Mariae semper Virginis omnium sanctorum perducat nos Dominus ad Regna Coelorum The Summe of which Prayer is this that God would be pleased to lead bring the Petitioner unto Heaven by the intercession praers and merits of the blessed Virgin and of all the Saints I do wonder that Christ should be left out by whose merits and intercession alone we are saved but I marvail most whether all these shall be a distinct Company by themselves for of the whole company of the Virgins they cannot be the foolish Virgins had no Oyle the wise had but enough to save themselves where is there any of their merits then left for me yet this is better then Tu per Thomae sanguinom c. These with many more of the like nature as praying for the Dead offering or burning up of incense praying in an unknown Tongue that common people know not what they pray their Ordination of the Hoast their holy water their penance their Pilgrimages their oyl or Chrisme sal● and spittle used in Baptism was the cause of that separation made from her by the reformed Churches these points and this kind of worship being not Catholick for as before they separate not from Rome in any point of worship that she holds in Common with the Ch●rch of Christ but these being brats of her own begetting they deny them entertainment or Countenance and separate themselves from her and their separation is justifiable
This Errour in point of worship you may call Idolatry But beware that you take not decent or comely Ceremonies for essentiall parts of worship The Apostle urging women in the Church of Corinth to be covered 1 Cor. 11.6 that which they might think was too much precisenesse in him for we may be apt to suppose he discontented them that did otherwise was decent in his eyes and commanded to be done but not making it a point of worship nor pressing it upon them as part of Gods service declares that ceremonies may be used in but ought ever to be differenced from the worship performed In brief whatever Ceremony of what nature or kind soever that is enjoined that is not contrary to the Word of God and by the Officers of the Church thought comely to be used as tending to make that worship then used to be the more Reverenced and esteemed by the performers is not to be opposed This age discovers what a dis-respect contempt undervaluinig thoughts most men have even good men in a great measure of the house of God table of God service of God and Servants of God since decent and comely ceremonies were banished from the Church of God and where such ceremonies are injoyned and thou separatest thou art guilty of renting the seamlesse coat there being no cause for making that separation justifiable For Here●●e then and Idolatry only then is there a cause of separation and what ever is more then these cometh of Satan Wherefore though our departure were a trouble to them sayth Reverend Bishop Iewel speaking of Rome yet they ought to consider how just cause we had of our departure And in another place he saith It is true we have departed from them and for so doing we give thanks to Almighty God but yet from Christ from the Apostles and from the Primitive Church we have not departed Romes Heresie and Idolatry gave a just ground for the Reformed Churches separation But In our days there is made such a separation as by no Scripture can be justified there being nothing in matter of doctrine taught nor in point of worship performed that in the least contradicts the Word written or the worship injoyned and therefore their sin is the greater tending to the destroying of that love charity concord union that ought to be in and amongst the members of the Church we must not cut off the arm for every scratch or smal hurt much lesse cut off our nose because it seems to stand awry through a false glasse neither ought we to separate from the body of the Church for every small errour in it as for every Ceremony that in our judgment is amisse and indeed those that are most separate from the Church now in the highest points of doctrine and fight against her did but at first dislike her Ceremonies so dangerous it is to yield in the least to the sin of Schisme for the hurt in that quickly turns to the Gangreen of Heresie Those that disliked her Su●plice now scorn her preaching those that disliked her prayers will not now pray at all those that disliked standing at the Creed now will fall down to no God those that disliked her Crosse in Baptism now scorn the Spiritual washing those that looked sowr upon my Lord the Bishop now casts stones at the Preacher Master G Those that dug down her Altars now would pull down her Churches they that saw her kneel at the Lords Supper and grumbled because she sate not are now so holy that they scorn it Which thing duly and seriously weighed might make men afraid to play about the hole of the asp or to put their hand in the Cokatrice den nay to touch it were it but with a stick least as it befals him that toucheth the Torpedo a spiritual numbnesse or Judiciall stupefaction befall them that they shall no● move one foot forward in a right way more Seldome can we see them returning to their mother Church and to that doctrine wherein they were baptized but like sheep out of the Fold as soon as out of the Church porch they wander further and further and so far they are gone that for the present I am not disposed to go after them but to such as are within hearing I give this short direction viz. to behold such as have gone before them that at first did but st●mble at straws were troubled at trifles thought to have gone no further yet whither are they now hurried look back to the Church you have left view her orders her Sacraments her points of worship study them try them by the Sciptures if you can find them contrary or repugnant to the written Word of God stand stil and save thy own soul but follow not them for they went in the way of Cain and run greedily after the errour of Balaam perished in the Gainsaying of Co●e Clouds without Water carried about of Winds raging waves of the Sea foaming out their own shame wandring stars Jude 11.12 13. By good Words and fair Speeches they deceive the hearts of the simple not for our Lord Iesus Christ but for their own belly Romans 16.18 Quest. 7. Whether more Religions then one may be Tollerated where the true Church is Established In the opening of this Question knowing the times wherein I live and the fewnesse of my years I will not shew you my opinion but you shall hear the Judgement of a Master in our Israel that was gathered with gray hairs to his Fathers and lately fell asleep One Religion is to be Tolerated and no more to be publickly taught then one 1. Because there is but one God who is the object of Religion his Essenc● being simple and indivisible his worship is also to be diversitie of Religion breeds and produceth only diversity of Opinion touching God which in time may in the conceits of men d●stroy his unity and Onenesse 2. As there is but one truth so there ought to be but one Religion for false Religions either teach to worship false Gods or else in a false way and manner to worship the true God which made God himself in constituting the Church of the Jews in a strict manner to give charge touching that and in his constituting the Church of the Christians to do the same by commanding them to stone that Prophet that taught otherwise and us to curse that Angel that should teach other Doctrine then he did then by Moses and now to us by his Son give teach command and appoint Deut. 13.1 Gal. 1.8 3. There is but one Church which is the ground and pillar of truth 1 Tim. 3.15 and one Spirit to lead that Church in the way of truth and therefore there ought to be but one Religion which is the Doctrine of that one Truth 4. There is but one way to heaven and eternal Life in which way few through ignorance and errour walk or find and ways to Hell and destruction which many through corrupted nature fall
Church of England is a true Church as it is now constituted her Doctrine being pure she holds nothing nor injoyns nothing upon her members in matters of salvation by way of precept neither doth she add to nor take any thing from the nature of the Sacraments that the Lord Christ hath left behinde him in the Church by way of practice she doth and may injoyn and she hath power to ordain several Ceremonies to be performed in the receiving of them which in themselves being not contrary to the Scriptures nor taught by her as necessary for salvation urged only as edifying for their meaning and decent for the service performing her Members may and they do give her all due obedience and their obedience is justifiable You need not here be put in minde of that caution formerly given viz. not to take manners for doctrine it is a high errour to conceit the vertue power efficacy of an Ordinance to consist in or depend upon the goodness of him that doth administer the same A prophane person a known Swearer may purely dispense the Sacraments for that lies not as God forbid it did in the purity of any mans conversation but in the pure adhering to our Lords Institution The pure preaching of the word hangeth not upon the purity of him that speaketh but in the purity of the word spoken of The purity of Doctrine lies in the agreement of it unto Scripture and not in the agreement of a mans life unto the word if so how many had Christ converted what multitudes of people had Paul brought to the knowledge of the truth more then he did The same Doctrine teacheth the Reformed Churches and the Church of England Art 26. To conclude this Chapter in all Instituted Ordinances it is neither Pauls goodness nor Apollo's graces nor Iudas's wickednesse that is the cause of the plants fruitfulness or barrenness from the grace of God must we look to receive the promised reward 1 Cor. 3.7 In natural as in prayer sometimes it may be otherwise Iames 5.16 CHAP. II. Of the Scriptures COL 3.16 Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. HAving viewed this beautifull heavenly and holy building for it is Gods 1 Cor. 3.9 which is as Ierusalem a City compact together we shall now behold the foundation upon which it stands The Builder of it was skilfull in all kind of cunning Work and a Fabrick of this height or altitude required a foundation suitable deep strong and sure he therefore founded it upon a Rock Matth. 16.18 by which the several parts of it stand firm the carved and polished work thereof knows no shaking the least vessell therein though earthen yet being chosen for the Masters honour knoweth no falling down by tottering The foundation of this glorious Metropolis Royal Edifice or House of God is in truth and nature but one yet since Scripture speaks of it as two we shall speak in that Language and shew you that the Church hath 1. An increated essential foundation which is that holy thing whose name is Jesus Christ the Lord Matth. 16.18 begotten before the beginning of the world it is the Lamb of God the Rock of Ages it is he that is holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners the only begotten Son of the Father who taking upon himself to deliver man did not abhor the Virgins womb it is he whose name is wonderfull Counsellor the mighty God the Prince of Peace the everlasting Son of the Father the Man who is Gods Fellow Zach. 13.17 2. A Created Doctrinal foundation this is the Law and the Prophets Ephes. 2.20 It is the word written which is profitable for Doctrine and reproof for correction and instruction in righteousness that the man or Church of God might be perfect throughly furnished unto all good works In summ it is that word that was spoken by the Fathers by the Saints by the Prophets and Apostles who were the servants of God Phil. 1.1 Of these two we may say as Ioseph said of Phara●hs doubled dream Gen. 41.26 They are but one yet not one so but that the preheminence is given to the first under the notion of a Corner stone Isa. 28.16 that giving both strength to the building and directions to the Builder And indeed the Prophets and Apostles laid no new Foundation but added to that corner stone laid to their hands daily such firme Christians as they had fitted for this holy superstructure taking directions in their building from its pos●ture for unto it all the building fuly framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord Ephes. 2. ult No foundation being laid therefore but what is united to this strengthened by this supported by this and directed by this shews that properly there is none but this Saint Paul who was a wise and excellent Master builder himself 1 Cor. 3.10 understanding there was a Church builded at Colos. a City of Phrygia the greater in the continent of Asia the lesse so called from one Phryxus a King thereof had no desire it should stand empty left the evill spirit which hath been cast out should take possession again as at this time he was like to do whether by their falling back to Paganisme and Heathnish customes again or by being taught the necessity of imbracing the doctrine or Ceremonies of Jewisme would have the Word of Christ dwell richly in them This Country of Phrygia had once in it a King named Gordius who of a Plow-man being chosen King tyed or hampered his Plow-Tacklings in such a knot that he predicted that none should untye them but he that was to be Conquerour of the World it was called Nodus Gordianus this Prophesie was fulfilled in Alexander who because he could not untye it by Art cut it asunder with his Sword and for afterward conquering the World was sirnamed the Great At this time there was among these Phrygian Colossians some that hampered their understandings by a counterfeited humility who with their dark Axiomes would have intruded upon them worshipping of Angels which knots to untye that they might be great the Apostle sends them or recommends unto them the Sword of the Spirit Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly In this Country also was the City of Midaium where Midas the son of this Gordius lived and dwelt he as the Poets fain asked of Bacchus who was his Guest that what ever he touched might become gold his great riches was the ground of the Fable his ●ute was granted by which he turned Mountains into gold but finding that he could neither eat nor drink but Goblets and Viands of Gold he recalled his wish and by washing himselfe in the River Pa●t●lus communicated that virtue to the River which afterward brought up golden sand The River that comes from the Mount Tmolus brings with it abundance of gold and
Either 1. Strictly for those Precepts Sayings Sermons Exhortations that he gave made left behind in the World when he was visibly dwelling among men in the shape and form of a Servant and whosoever lets these words dwell in them they shall be like men dwelling upon a Rock the water may come about them but it shal never hurt them they may come about their feet but never swell up to the head the wind may blow but not a hair of his head fall to the Earth Mat. 7.27 2. Largely for all the Words Sayings Prophesies Sermons that were spoken by all whom he commissioned to preach after for the whole Doctrine of the Old and new Testament rejecting nothing nor turning out of doors of the great and capacious building of our souls no Word no Scripture since we can see the Image of Christ upon them all we know that Orally and Vocally or Verbally Christ made no Psalm yet here they are put down as the Words of Christ for they were truly Prophetically and spiritually made by him they are a part of that holy Book called the Word of Christ not excluding the other persons but including for it hath various titles according to the purpose and pleasure of the holy Ghost It is the VVord of God Ephes. 6.17 It is the VVord of the Lord 2. Thes. 2.3.1 It is the VVord of Life Phil. 2.16 and here it is the VVord of Christ. In those other places the Son is not excluded quod necessario subintelligitur non deest and here the Father with the Spirit are concluded That the whole body of the Doctrine of the Scriptures and what ever is contained therein may be called the word of Christ though Christ might not be yet come in the flesh may be thus demonstrated 1. They were all uttered and spoken by his spirit or they were written by that spirit that came from him Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy ghost 2. Pet. 1. ult Now the Holy ghost is sent by the Father in his Sons name Ioh. 14.26 and the Son sends the Holy ghost again from the Father Ioh. 15.26 It was this Spirit that put words in the mouth and mind of Noah Abraham Isaac Iacob David Solomon Iehosophat Iob Daniel Ieremiah VVhat shall I say the time would fail to speak of Gideon Barack Sampson Peter Paul and Iames the Lords Brother all which were acted by one and the same spirit which proceedeth from the Father and the Son prompting them and dictating to them the things Councels prophesies that are recorded in the Oracles of God 2. They did all of them hold him out to the VVorld or to the Sons of men speak of him Abraham saw his day Iohn 8.56 Moses wrote of him Ioh. 5.46 Isaiah saw him born of a Virgin Isa. 7.14 and told the VVorld of it Isa. 9.6 Ieremiah saw the children of Bethlem slain for him Ier. 31.15 He was seen from the top Tower of divine speculation giving eyes to the blind and ears to the deaf Isa. 35.5 He was sold for thirty pieces of silver Zacch 11.13 he was seen scourged mocked and crucified Isai. 53.4 5. he was seen to rise from the dead the third day Hos. 13. 14. Psal. 16.10 Ion. 1.17 he was seen to intercede at the right hand of God Dan. 9.17 he was seen coming in the clouds to judge his people Iude 14. his Birth his Reign his Nature his Suffering the cause of his Suffering the profits of his sufferings the height of his Power the extension of his Kingdom was made known to the world to Simeon before he embraced him else he would not nay could not have beheld him as the Lords Salvation Luk. 2.30 that is he through whom God appointed salvation to come by Christ himself commanded the Jews to search the Scriptures Ioh. 5.39 as if he had said If you do not find by the Scriptures the properties acts signs tokens of the true Messias spoken of by the Prophets to agree with and in me then believe me not They speak so fully and so largely of him of his Kingdome strength and power that almost it is nothing else but the word of Christ as if he himself were speaking of himself the things concerning himself Every Prophet in his turn prophesied and spake of him untill Iohn and he pointed him with his finger saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 behold the Lamb of God they held him out unto the World in Prophesies and Types the Baptist held him forth to the World in flesh and bones yet fleshand blood revealed it not to him neither but the spirit which he sent before to restifie of those things that should come to pass and that they might be brought by those sayings to believe on the Son of man he brought indeed glad tidings vere magnum id est majus quom humana capit intelligentiam that said To you is born this day a Saviour which is Christ the Lord. Gloria in excelsis he plainer that said Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the World 3. They were all of them ratified and fulfilled of him confirmed and established by him Not a Iota or Title that was foretold of him but was to the height accomplished of him ut impleretur that it might fulfilled which was spoken in the Scriptures is a usual phrase with the Evangelists As Ionas was three days and three nights in the Whales belly so was the Son of man in the bowels of the earth As the Serpent was lifted up that the Israelites beholding it might be cured of those wounds the fiery Serpents had given them so must the Son of man be lifted up on the Cross that whoso beholds him might be saved from the stings of that old Serpent called the Devill and Sathan Revel 12.9 He is the true Melchizedec who meets the faithfull returning from the slaughter of their sins and comforts them with bread and wine and blesseth them yea and they shal be blessed There was one Text and it seems but a mean one yet he wil not dye nay rather he cannot dye until it be fulfilled for at the last gasp he cryes out Ioh. 19.28 I thirst Quodnam Genus Sermonis he that could endure mockings scourges buffettings nay nailing to the Cross cast out of the land of the living and near to be made free among the dead cannot he endure a little thirst This thirst it seems is more then naturall that death it self cannot quench he is a thirst and Heaven and earth shall perish before he drink not those hands feet that in this his condition we would think should rather smite him spurn at him must be imployed to fetch reach him drink Ut impleretur all this was done that it might be fulfilled which was spoken in that Scripture Psal. 69.21 In my thirst they gave mee Vinegar to drink which when he had done then Consummatum est all was finished if it had not been the truth
that had spoken it in the Psalm the truth had not performed it so exactly in the Gosple 4 According to his pleasure were they spoken and at his good wil were they uttered by them The spirit of prophesie did not always abide upon the most holy Prophet hence Advenit Verbum Iehova The Word of the Lord came is a usual phrase among the Prophets Elisha was a man of God and yet the Lord had hid the Shanamites grief from him 2 Ki. 4.2 When he put it in their mouths then they spoke and not before they were his words for untill he spoke to their hearts their mouthswere shut up end they remained silent till the Word of the Lord came there was neither voice nor hearing in truth what he spoke they uttered and when he was pleased to be silent they were forced to be mute 5. The prophesies did but open a passage for him and the whole of them had a tendency to him the Law in all its Ceremonies and in all its precepts doth but lead us conduct us point out Christ unto us it hath no Language in it but Christ in it's Condemning power it is a harsh School-master to drive us to Christ Gal. 3.24 The Gospel hath the self same end viz. To bring us to Christ he stands as it were between both Testaments the Prophets behinde him Call but to touch the hem of his garment and come under the skirt of his apparel the Apostles before him call upon men to imbrace him in their arms by faith joyfully and he himself in their mouth utters but what he delivered in person Come unto me all ye that labour Mhtth. 11.28 6. They are his words in respect of that power and that Commission he gave to holy men to write and teach them he gave the Apostles power to preach and a Commission to teach all Nations Matth. 28.19 It was he that took the Apostles from their other Callings and gave them authority to teach what ever he had commanded They did nothing untill he gave that power and assoon as they received their authority from him they began that heavy though holy Imployment 7. In regard of the publication and promulgation of them whatever was spoken was spoken in the name of the Lord all was preached in the name of Christ they desired to know nothing more then Christ they called upon men to believe in Christ they baptized in the name of Christ not by their own power or holiness but in the name of Iesus Christ of Nazareth did they work their miracles Acts 3.6 It follows then that the whole Scriptures in what way soever delivered whether by vision inspiration dreams by signs by voice by writing by Urim and Thummim by men or by Angels by Prophets or Apostles for God spoke divers ways to our Fathers Heb. 1.1 All of it and every part of that All is the word of Christ which we must have to dwell in us for the words are Imperative Imperativo praceptionis a duty that we are to avoid then and shun him that would seek to turn us from the Faith of that word here enjoyned The Apostle is pleased to call the Scriptures the word of Christ rather then the word of God for this probable reason At this time these Coloss●ans were infected and in danger to be drawn to the old Rites and Ceremonies of the Jewish Church by self-seeking men who desired them to look back to the word wherein indeed these things were written Col. 2.16 but now since he exhorts them to the studie of the word of Christ he foresees and knows that by the word of Christ they shall learn that all those Ceremonies were but as shadows and since Christ is come not binding for which cause he chooseth rather to call it the word of Christ that those Hereticks might not take any advantage to corrupt them which they might have done if he had said the word of God From this we might draw many inferences we shall at this time collect two one concerning the Ministers of Christ the other to all the Professors of Christ. 1. Concerning the Ministers of Christ. Let them not hereafter be afraid of man nor of the son of man let them be bold to say to any offender Non licet tibi with Iohn the Baptist It is not lawfull for thee Mat. 14.4 Let their faces be strong against the faces of men their foreheads strong against their foreheads that they be not dismayed at their looks Ezekiel 3.8 9. the word is not theirs but the Lords Let the word of God be spoken with boldness Acts 4.31 Christ speaks as one that had authority Matth. 7.29 and he hath given authority and power to his servants to charge men to their duty 1 Tim. 6.17 where God threatens sin they must not be afraid to pronounce punishment The Lord God hath spoken who can but prophesie Amos 2.8 As they are to preach it with Authority so let them study it constantly where shall the Ambassadors of the most High know the will of their great Master but here Till Christ come let them give attendance to reading A Minister must be a man apt to teach 2 Tim. 2.24 And it s this alone that can fit him for that function In these lyeth the substance and matter of their Commission therefore they must be looked into studied upon 2. To all the Professors of Christ to all that name the name of Jesus let them freely hear me touching these two particulars 1. Let none of them trust believe or depend upon any new or immediate Revelation for his happiness there are in this Age many that trust to those raptures of the Spirit as they call them and will have no other word dwell in them then that word that the Spirit within suggests within casting aside and refusing the Scriptures as useless and unnecessary because a word without But I hope you have not so learned Christ. We shall carry a small time upon the search of that Spirit pretended to trying it by the Scriptures the touchstone of truth and we shall see if those breathings of the Spirit be different from the blasts of the Prince of the power of the Ayr that rules in the children of disobedience 1. It doth not those things that the Spirit of God should do not to insist upon particulars there were three general Acts that Christ promised his Spirit at his coming should perform unto Believers and this Spirit that goes abroad in this Age performs none of them as may appear by a rehearsal of the severall acts themselves 1. Was to bring to remembrance what ever Christ had spoken Ioh. 14.26 This was to be his work then and his work with all believers is the same now what Christ hath taught what Christ hath spoken is the Spirit to bring to remembrance which he will send That Spirit therefore that teacheth and puts that in the minds of men which Christ never spoke cannot be that spirit sent of
disagreement we must and ought to agree with the Word in all Circumstances as wel when it frowns as when it smiles It wil never chide without a cause nor reprove but for the souls good reason wil have us neither rage nor murmur Quid ergo non altquando castigatio necessaria Quid ni hoc sincer● cum ratione non enim nocendi c. piety will not suffer us to turn it out of doors When once Ierusalem began to fall out with the Word the day of peace was hid from her eyes and destruction comes like an Armed man If the Word cannot live in peace it wil not live at all it will not always strive with man Bear with its sharpest reproofs therefore take its most plain instructions and contemn not it's frequent admonitions and in the end it shall be health to thy Navel and marrow to thy bones Prov. 3.8 Say ever with Hezekiah 2 Kin. 20.29 Good is the Word of the Lord and peace and truth shall be towards thee all the days of thy life Whate contention is there is pride where pride is there Sathan is and where Sathan is an Inmate Christ nor his Word will not dwell SECTION III. LEt the Word of Christ dwell in you c. This is the third particular above proposed wherein we have the persons in whom our Apostle would have this Word of Christ to dwell which because we shall have occasion to speak largely of it in another place we shall be the briefer here In you that is in you Archippus Chap. 4.17 and Evagras Chap. 1.7 i.e. in you Ministers of the Gospel they being Ministers of Colos. that you may be faithfull Stewards and Ministers of Christ that you may know how to comfort the dejected and strengthen the feeble stock In you Parents that you may bring up your children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. In you Masters that ye may know how to command in the Lord and that you may know how to obey as to the Lord. In you young men that you may cleanse your way In you old men that you may be as Guides In you Husbands that you may love your Wives In you Wives that you may reverence your Husbands In you that is in all you that professe the truth and have been baptized in tye Name of Christ that you may work out your salvation with fear and trembling That you may do all things without murmurings and disputings That ye may be blamelesse and harmlesse the Sons of God without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and perverse Nation Phil. 2.14.15 Looking for that blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Iesus Christ Tit. 2.13 SECTION IV. LEt the Word of Christ dwell richly in you c. O 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 copiose abundanter have good store of it let it overflow your souls as Iordan overflowed it's banks in time of Harvest Ios. 3.15 This Word richly imports 1. A diligent care and study after the Scriptures men will take much pains to have their houses richly furnished Nunquam tam mane egredior neque tam vespers domum revert●r quin semper te in fund● conspicer sodere aut errare aut aliquid serre And they will labour hard to increase their substance so men must labour for to obtain the sacred knowledge of the holy Scriptures they must dig for it as for hidden Treasures denoting the labour about it and love they bear unto it Nil tamen difficile c. It may be hard to flesh and blood but remember if any of you lack Wisedome let him ask of God that giveth to all men liberally and it shall be given him Jam. 1.5 and it is true wisedom to know God and him whom he hath sent who is to be found only in in the swaddling cloaths of the Scripture and unto whom we are guided by the light of those Prophesies that went before us of him and he that would take him in his Arms but must take the pains to go into the Temple 2. It holds out abundance of it he is not said to be rich that hath but smal store nor wealthy that hath but wherewithal to supply necessity we must have enough for our selves and our Lanthorn full of light that others may walk holily uprightly and cleanly by our guidance counsell and direction this is not to eat our Morsell alone this makes the mouth of a Righteous Well of Life Prov. 10.11 Where any any that wants refreshment shal not misse of it and none shall go thirste away 3. It holds out some choise portion this is not spoken absolutely but chiefly there is something in it that must be chiefly studied retained he is not said to be rich that hath store of ordinary goods but of some choce Commodity as Plate Mony Jewels which though he look to preserve other things yet chiefly his care is for them there are truths of grand concernment there are foundation stones necessary graces that must be wel laid in the soul that his faith fail not There are some things that Titus must constantly affirm Tit. 3.8 There are weightier matters of the Law these must cheifly be done Mat. 23.23 There are some points that all the Law and Prophets hang upon Mat. 22.40 Temperance Righteousnesse and Judgement to come would be well studied Act. 24.25 when we have studied the Almightinesse of the Father we shall the sooner see how the Son was born of a Virgin I am to study better the cause merit benefit of Christs death then of Stephens The nature of that Covenant that God made to save poor sinners is of greater concernment to me then that that David made with Ionathan concerning his Posterity Now to study well and ponder upon the holynesse graciousnesse and largeness of the nature Covenants and of the mercy of God the Offices sweetnesse of the Lord Christ to know the cause and effect of his first and second coming is of gre●t concernment and he is rich that is wel stored with those great matters yet despiseth not the least 4. A care to preserve and keep it Riches that have been gotten by hard labour are preserved with care and diligence What made men sweat for in the getting they usually observe the profit of it in the spending a bloody Conquest is watchfully looked after whilest an easie victory is secured without noise Where this Word of Christ dwels richly there must be a holy care t● keep it there be thieves that wil endeavour to break through and steal Sathan hath a Picklock to enter the House of the soul of man This made God cause his people to write his Law upon the posts of their house and upon their gates Deut. 6.9 that being constantly in their eye they might not through carelessenesse be debarred the heart The Law is a Tree of life to them that lay hold upon it and by this Word of Christ even with a scriptum est we
receive the seed upon good ground thus to know is only Life eternal he that thus knoweth shall no longer be called a Servant but a Brother a Sister and a Mother to Christ Iesus Matth. 12.50 SECTION II. THe next thing to be opened is to discover what it is to be well acquainted with the holy Scriptures this appears by what hath been already spoken yet for further demonstration to be acquainted with the word of Christ is 1. To know it from all other sayings of the world we are to know the very face of Scripture in the greatest croud of the wisest Sentences and know it from all the wisdom of the gravest Fathers For 1. We cannot otherwise reverence it as we ought we are to tremble at the word of God Isa. 66.2 There is such a Majesty in the word that we are to esteem the very feet of him beautifull that brings it when the voice of God soundeth in our ears if we cannot discern the Royaltie that is in it we are not like to esteem it as we ought or as God requires 2. We cannot otherwise believe it as we ought by not knowing it we may be drawn to doubt of the truth of it in discourses while men are dehorting from this or that vice or exhorting to this or that duty and intermingling either threats or promises the truth of both may be doubted either to the hardening of men in their sin or to cool their affections to the duty 2. To bear it in our mind above all other things in the world our hearts must love it above all see that our thoughts affections our desires our meditations be busied about the nature of it precepts of it promises of it and what ever we forget let us never forget his precepts Psal. 119 93. Let us make it our Companion by meditating upon it all the day ver 97. 3. To make it the Rule of our lives above all other things some walk after the ways of Ierobuam others after the counsel of the ungodly some r●ns with a multitude to do evil others walk after their own inventions many walks after the flesh others according to the Prince of the power of the ayr the Spirit that now worke●h in the children of disobedience But we have a more sure word whereunto they do well that take heed as unto a light in a dark place until the day dawn and the day-star arise in your hearts 2 Pet. 1.19 And as many as walk according to this rule peace be on them and mercy Gal. 6.16 make the word therefore a Lamp unto thy feet and a light unto thy paths and then thou art acquainted with it SECTION III. WE are now to confirm the Doctrine by other places of Scripture in the doing we might muster up Legions of Arguments we shall content our selves with a few such as these viz. Among other warnings given the people of Israel there is one Deut. 11.18 to take heed that they served not other Gods Therefore ye shall lay up these words in your heart saith the Lord and in your soul ●ind them for a sign upon your hand that they may be as Frontle●s between your eyes and ye shall teach them your children speaking of them when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the way when thou liest down and when thou risest up and thou shalt write them upon the door posts of thine house and upon thy gates c. All which put together as laying the word up in their heart and soul teaching it their children always speaking of them it will amount to as much and hold forth the same thing the Doctrine doth We read again Deut. 31.11 12. that men women and children and the stranger that is in Israel must be gathered together That they may bear and that they may learn and fear the Lord God and observe to do all the words of the Law All sorts of persons must hear the Law learn it and observe it Also Iosh. 8.35 There was not a word of all that Moses commanded which Joshua read not before all the congregation of Israel with the women and the little ones and the strangers that were conversant among them Here the above mentioned Law is put in execution and performed by Ioshua no doubt but for the same end which the Lord commanded by Moses which was that they might learn to do accordingly The same did Iosiah 2 Kings 23.1 2. Who sent and they gathered unto him all the elders of Judah and Jerusalem And the King went up into the house of the Lord and all the men of Judah and all the inhabitants of Jerusalem with him and all the Priests and Prophets and all the people both small and great and he read in their ears all the words of the book of the Covenant so did Ezra Nehem. 8.2 3. It is a great charge in the Gospel to search the Scripture Iohn 5.39 and all as new born babes are to desire the sincere milk of the word 1 Per. 2.2 We cannot be ignorant that the man that would be blessed ought to have his delight in the Law of the Lord and in his Law doth he meditate day and night Psal. 1.2 Behold I come quickly saith Christ Blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the Prophesse of this Book Rev. 22.7 These Laws and Precepts were never yet revoked and therefore they st●nd in full force and vertue signifying that it is the duty of all to have knowledge of and to be well acquainted with the word of God the Text it self seems to be Imperative Imperative praeceptionis Let nothing that is let neither Doctrine nor person whatsoever hinder the word of Christ from dwelling in you what means then the bleating of the sheep nay rather the lowing of the oxen in our ears nay rather the barking of Dogs against this Truth Beware of Digs Phil. 2. He that barks against the Scripture against the whole Scripture surely denies that Christ is come in the flesh and therefore is an Antichrist nay denies that there is a God and therefore is an Atheist For 1. It was Gods main drift purpose and intention in sending his Prophets and Ministers Rising up early and sitting up late giving precept upon precept line upon line Isa. 28.10 to have his people know his word and learn his Law 2. It was the end of Christs Incarnation and of his dwelling among men that his words might sink down into the hearts of men and possess their souls and spirits To this end was he born and for this cause he came into the world that he should bear witness to the truth Joh. 18.37 and the word of God is truth 3. It was the end of the Holy Ghost 〈◊〉 Inspiration when he inspired the Apostles in preaching and writing was it not for this that men might be saved by believing and obeying I write to you little children saith the beloved Apostle c. I write to you Fathers c. I write
they sinned that word that might have been purely and unsported given to the Father through negligence forgetfulness wilfulness might not have been delivered intirely and perfectly to the son but now in writing none of these can alter the age that now is can know if others do corrupt and those that come after may judge of this each having copies by them they are able to discover or iudge of the integrity of another neither can any one corrupt it in the least but it may easily be discryed by his neighbour through the copies or writings of it 3 That helpe might be afforded men against those imperfections that attend the best for through fraile nature cares and troubles of the world sutable comforts confirming truths might not suddenly be thought on now by writing this malady hath a proper cure the word being open and before our eyes we may take up and read such truths as may stay the Soul in her greatest shakeings and comfort her in her languishing distempers 4 That mens faith might be the more confirmed in the truth of it when men see the prophecies that were foretold in the book of Daniel and in the Revelation the fulfillings of the threatnings is against the Jews c. To know that these things are done and to see them foretold so many hundred years before induceth a man more firmely to beleeve them then if it were told him barely from another that his Father or Grandfather said it should be so of which he also might have cause to doubt and the truth of the Speaker even in that particular suspect Quest. 10. Whether men be bound to believe all that is in the Scripture For the dispatching this Question we must distinguish 1. Between the Scripture it self and the persons who writ it is not necessary to salvation to believe that Matthew writ that Gospell that goes under his Name nor that Peter writ his to believe what is spoken or written is one thing and to believe that David writ it is another thing 2. Between the writing it self and the time when or the place whence it was written It is one thing to believe the truth of those Epistles of Paul and another thing to believe that they were written from Corinthus as that to the Romans or that from Athens as that to the Thessalonians or from Rome when Paul was brought the second time before Nero as that last Epistle to Timothy 3. Between the Words written and the meaning or sence of the thing writ It is one thing to believe that Paul writ the words of his Epistles in that order method place as we have them in our Bibles ordered and placed and another thing to believe the sence and the meaning of the thing so written we shall find the writers of the Scriptures in citing of places deviate from the naturall order of the Words given them by the first Author which shews that we are not bound to believe that For instance David declares Psal. 16.8 I have set the Lord always before me because he is at my right hand I shall not be moved which Text Peter having occasion to use Act. 2.25 reads it thus viz. I foresaw the Lord always before my face he is on my right hand that I should not be moved The words being clearly varied but the sence and meaning being the same we are tyed to the one and not to the other which alteration is evident in many places particularly the very next verse both of that Psalm and this Chapter 4. Between an Historical and a saving faith we are to believe all that the Scripture contains and set down that is the sence and meaning of it to be no other then the very will purpose mind and Law of God which we must believe if we would be saved And that it was written by David and sent to the chief Musitian by Matthew by Paul and sent to them from Corinthus that the Epistle to Timothy Ordained the first Bishop of the Church of Ephesus was written from Rome when Paul was brought the Second time before Nero as his second Epistle at the close declares ought to be believed by an Historical faith that not being written by the infallible spirit of God but by the Churches Tradition of whose authority in an Historical way it is but presumption in any man to doubt CHAP. IV. Of Reading We are now come to the prosecuting and enforcing of those directions above named as necessary Antecedents for the Words indwaking The first was to read the Scriptures In the handling of which we shall 1. Prove it is a duty to read 2. Direct how to read 3. Resolve some Questions Sect. 1. THat all are to read the Scriptures is a truth that the Religious Christian will not doubt of and the Hypocriticall dare not deny yet that all might be left without excuse we shall prove that all must do it According to the usuall division of Magistrates Ministers and people or of Old and young which comprehendeth al sorts of persons whatsoever 1. Magistrates are to read it God giving Laws concerning the Ruling of his People to him that should be King ●ver them Commandeth Deut 17 18. that when he sitteth upon the Throne of his Kingdom that he shall write him a Copy of this Law in a book out of that which is before the Priests the Levites and it shal be with him and he shal READ therein all the days of his life The King therefore it not exempted from this duty though he be Lord of all notwithstanding all affairs he must READ therein all the days of his life And the truth is he will be the best Ruler that is best acquainted with this word he will know sin the better which he is to punish Rom. 13.13 the better he be acquainted with the Scripture Rom. 7.7 It is the abundance of the sincere milk of the Word that maketh Kings Queens nursing Fathers and nursing Mothers unto the Church Isai. 49.23 that all that live under them may by their knowledge and discipline grow in all godlinesse and wax strong to every good work sucking from their breasts wholesome doctrine springing from good government and Laws and enjoying the fruit of all in every Act of Justice What God doth in this place require of a King who is Supream 1 Pet. 2.13 he requires the same of all Magistrates and Officers under him that are as Kings in their proper places and Domininions and by the Subjects ought so to be beheld 1. That they be not puffed up by conceit of Earthly greatness Psal. 131 1 2. 2. That they may be impartiall in their Sentences Proverbs 31.5 3. That they may uphold and defend the truth of his worship 2 Kings 23.1 2 3 4. 4. That they may know whom to encourage and whom to punish Rom. 13.3 5. That every thing may be done by them as those that must give an account to the King of Kings and Lord of Lord for
Son Iesus Christ whom to know is life Eternall Joh. 17.3 3. Resolve to practise the Word what vice thou findest the word to reprove charge thy own heart not to act strive not against the Spirit in the Word but says speak Lord for thy servant hears What Act or duty it exhorts unto stay not but make hast to perform all Righteous Judgements Make haste least hell and damnation overtake thee left hardness of heart and willfullesse of soul creep upon thee and God and his grace forsake thee and thou become like those that go down into the pit What thou ara commanded to do do it withall thy might resolve to conf●ss● sin and forsake Transgression thou shalt have mercy for sin and for iniquity 4. Resolve to believe the Word and that stedfastly What God hath declared and purposed in his Word touching Saints or sinners in reference to a Tempor●ll or Eternall condition must be believed if we would be saved 1 Cor. 15.1 2. God says that he comes quickly and his Reward is with him Rev. 22.12 Do not mock saying Where is the promise of his coming 2 Pet. 2.3 4. What h●th passed from the mouth of God is by man to be believed if Judgement it is to be feared if promises to be loved The wicked may presume of his present security and cry peace peace The Righteous may doubt of his present safety and say One day or other I shall perish yet say to the Righteous it shall go well with him and wo ●nto the wicked it shall be ill with him Isai. 3.10 11. this if thou believe thou shalt do wel 5. Resolve to receive the Word and that wholly It is not the duty nor suits it with the profession of a Christian to pick out of Scripture and separate one part of the Gospell from another Even in this sence these are days of separation c. Let not a tittle of the Law or Gospell be by thee slighted the Word of the Lord is for ever settled in Heaven his faithfulnesse to all Generations Psal. 119.89 90. though now the Spirit of this World can set the Son against the Father and the New against the Old Testament and the Servant against his Master the Epistles against the Gospell yet from the beginning it was not so The Christian being thus prepared for reading what David said to his Son when he had instructed him cocerning his building of the Temple shall be said for him Now my Son the Lord be with thee and prosper thee 1 Chron. 22.11 2. In Reading 1. Read it Reverendly It must be read as the Laws of the great mighty and Eternall God upon the performing of which depends the Eternall happiness or misery of thet soul that is at this present within thee it must not be read as a story It remains for ever to acquit us or sentence us this man will I look that trembles at my Word Isaiah 66. 2. The Laws was delivered with Thunderings Lightnings and smoak Exod. 20.18 to create a Reverential fear in the souls of men left that fire come down and that smoak break out into a flame to consume that spirit that shall contemn the least of those Commandements 2. Read it heedfully What thou readest let thy Judgement be employed about it not a word thou readest but there is something of an everlasting concernment to thy self Some studie the Scripture and observe things without themselves but these men are not wise O thou man of God flye these things and follow after Righteousness Godliness Faith Love Patience Meeknesse 2 Tim. 6.11 this will profit thee more then to enquire after the State of this or that man or that will profit thee nothing here and the other will both here and hereafter 3. Read it distinctly It must not be read as if we were in haste or could not tarry as Saul for answer from the mouth of the Lord we ought to ponder every line as did Ezraes and his ●ff●ciats when they read the Book of the law of God they read it saith the Holy Ghost Distinctly Nehe. 8.8 he that huddles up this duty but looses his labour and if it be not done again his own happiness if it be hastened by the tongue it is to be feared it will not tarry long at the heart we ought to say to every verse in Scripture as Iacob to the Angel Gen. 30.26 I wil not let thee go except thou blesse me 4. Read it affectionately Arr thou hungry thou would'st eat thy meat with gladness and joy of heart It is the word when thou hast done all that thou must live by be saved by it s called Bread Ames 8.11 And that is the staffe of mans life It s the word of eternall life Iohn 6.68 It s thd water of life that enlightens the Eyes and rejoyceth the heart Psal. 19.8 It feedeth and strengthneth the Soul Deut. 8.3 It maketh a man to be born again 1 Pet. 1.23 It purifyeth and cleanseth men Iohn 15.3 purifies them from tueir iniquity and cleanseth tham from sin Psal 51.2 116 9. And therefore with joy draw thou water out of that well of Salvation Isa. 12.3 5. Read it dayly O how some have loved the Law and made it their meditation all the day Psal. 119.97 There ought not a day to passe without inspection into this word the soule of man is in continual reparation for it is subject unto loss and damages there is no day wherein Satan assaulteth not no day but may be our last day no day wherein man may not see evill or fall into evill and therefore no day ought to passe without our guard against evill and an antidote to cure the evill the word hath a soveraign quality to cure all our running sores we ought therefore to have our meditations there upon night and day but in this two things must be avoided 1. Wearinesse when thou findest thy self growing weary of reading O how fraile is man O bon Jesu lye close the Book and goe about thy lawfull and ordinary occasions for in that thou must also serve God as the Scripture commands the. Yet in this let me charge thee by God not to nourish sluggishness drousiness or idelness 2 Confidence it is the blessing of God that must make thy dayly reading profitable unto thy soul depend not and trust not therefore upon thy doing without him thou canst do nothing In this also it s not onely the hand of the diligent but the blessing of the Lord maketh rich Prov. 10.4 22. that is in the word of Christ. 3. After reading 1. Meditate upon the word it is meditation that gives a soule to reading and breaths in it the breath of life it makes the word to be lively and o stir in the soul. It wat Davids meditation all the day Psal. 119.97 Nay all the night too Psal. 16.7 So must every one th● would frame his heart according to Gods heart and have the Scripture thereupon God would
no Kingdom so Atheistical no Nation so Ignorant no part of the Halitable world so Barbarous but acknowledged a Diety and ownud a ●od some superior power they had to call to in distress something though it were but an Onyon did they bow to the Knee to and adore Those barbarous inhabitants of Matta of Melita seeing a Viper come upon Pauls hand conclude Acts 28.9 that he was a murtherer whom though he had escaped the Seat yet VENGEANCE suffereth him not to live He had escaped drowning yet he will not scape dying some God or other Nemesis po●sibily will not have him live this was a darke acknowledgment of a God 5. From the Testimony of the consciences of men Who is he that can put to silence that tell-tale called Conscience which makes men affraid and tremble even when for all the world they might spend their dayes in mirch what made these Barbarians to think murther a sin a sin that deserved death even this testimony of conscience which though they know not the cause did so sharply reprove them fright them when evill committed that never could they fully nor freely act according to their own desire Suppose one of those in a wilderness meets a passenger loaded with treasure that may be profitable for him he dare not take his goods he dare not take his life why he is affraid of VENGANCE where doth that dwell when did you see it is it not a great way of yet for all this he is affraid that if he do so some time in some place some way VENGEANCE will not suffer him to live this is a dark yet a conscionable demonstration of the being of a God 6. From that restraint that is put upon wicked men in the world If their were but a Bridle in the jawes of the wicked such as they could not shake off how long should the world endure what face of Religion what beauty of Holinesse what acts of Righteousnesse what deeds of Justice nay what naturall maintenance would be either for good or bad if the wicked of the world could have there full swing in iniquity their are stops put to them by conscience they are affraid of VENGEANCE they are held in by Providence God beats out the Teeth of these Lyons and the cheeh Teeth of those young Lyons and oft times brings their wickednesse and their wicked lives to an end together They roare sometimes but as to the Sea he hath made them Bancks and though they lift up themselves yet can they not passe over 7. From the Testimony of the Scriptures in this the being natures properties works of God are so fully held out and in all points necessary so clearly that h● that runs may read it of whose authority if any doubt see Quest. 1. and 6. of the third Chapter Quest. 2. Whether God be a Spirit In reading of the Scripturee we read of the hands of God the Eares the Eyes the Nose the Back the Face the Mouth the Feet of God his Heart his Breath his Throne his Age which gave formerly and at this day doth give occasion to some to conceit God a corporall and bodily substance A Spirit therefore we defend him to be excepting the body of Christ which in fulness of time he took upon him 1. From the Scripture Ioh. 4.24 God is a Spirit saith he who was well acquainted with his nature and Paul who was wrapped up into the third Heavens charges the Heathen for changeing the glory of the incorruptible God into an Image like unto corruptible man Rom. 1.23 If God had a bodily shape there was no ground for this reproof 2. From his nature as 1. From his Infinity were he in the shape of man that is of a bodily substance he could not be infinite every body is confined to its own proper place but God is in all places at once filleth all yet confined to none of old did he declare of himself that he filled both Heaven and Earth Ier. 23 24. It was long before that that it was the ground of Solomns admiration that God would dwell on Earth when behold the Heaven and the Heaven of Heavens could not contain him 1. Kings 8.2 And before that it was the subject of Davids praise that he could not flee upon Earth from his presence and if he went up to Heaven he was there and if he went to Hell he was there Psal. 139.7 All which could not have been true had he been circumscribed with a body Christ himself as man is not infinite but sits at the right hand of God according to the 6. Art of our Creed 2. From his invisibility Were the Son of God again upon the Earth he would be seen because of his body now whoever saw him he is an invisible King 1 Cor. 1.17 A Spirit hath not flesh and bones as you see me have says Christ to his timerous Apostles Luke 24.39 Now God is a spirit Ioh. 4 24. 3. From his Eternity He was for ever and to everlasting shall remain with him is no variablenesse no shadow of changing Now all flesh is grasse and all the goodlinesse thereof as the flower of the field that is naturall of itself which shews if God were a fleshly substance he must in a great measure have a shadow of imperfection 3. Another Argument against that grosse conceit may be drawn from those prohibitions so often urged by Moses against the Israelites making any Image of God Deut. 1.12 Ye heard the voyce of the Words but saw no similitude only ye heard a voyce And again v. 15. Take ye therefore good heed unto your selves for ye saw no manner of similitude on the day that the Lord spake to you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire lest you corrupt your selves and make you a graven Image the liknesse of Male or Female If our Authropomorphites had heard this Law the Argument had not been strong enough to keep away Images they themselves being made after Gods Image and by their Logick the Picture of a man might have been a sufficient representation of God Since in outward appearance he is all one with them and they with him We must note that those Scriptures that hold out God to have a heart or hand c. are but spoken to our capacity that knowing the use of those parts we may be bro●ght to know the better what he is The Holy Ghost speaking to us as Nurses to their Children in that childish Language best understood by them By the eyes of God therefore we must understand his watchfull care and providence over men By his ears his infinite knowledg by his mouth the Word he hath revealed by his Nose his fury kindled by his heart his Eternall decree or his his good liking by his arm the greatnesse of his Power by his hand his effectuall purpose to bring all things to passe by his right hand his honour glory and Majesty by his finger the holy Spirit by his love the
content he takes in men by his hatred a detesta●●on of things done by his feet is signified the power strength speed or presence of God by his back parts an imperfect Image of his glory c. these things being in Scripture in a Metaphorical way to help our infirmities Quest. 3. Whether there be but one God 1. That there is but one God the Scripture in no point is more clear For instance Thus saith the Lord the King of Israel and his Redeemer the Lord of Hosts I am the first and I am the last and besides me there is no God Isai. 44.6 And I am the Lord and oheré is none else there is no God besides me Isai. 45.5 so Deut. 32.39 1 Cor. 8.4 5 6. Deut. 6.4 2. There can be but one Omnipotent Omnipotency is to have all power might and strength there is power and there is Omnipotency Power may do much but Omnipotency can do all power may be suppressed by a greater power but Omnipotency knows no opposition It hath no difficulties nor Lets it works freely and perfectly without co-workers or Materialls if at any time it uses any it at no time needs either Gen. 17.1 I am God Almighty therefore there can be no other God but he For suppose another there must follow a Contest who should be most worshipped most feared most magnified one must yield to the other which denotes impotency which is a denying of a deity 3. There can be but one Infinite To be Infinite is to be fully constantly in all places It is to be without bounds to be unmeasurable to exceed reason or capacity it hath respect to time place power wisdome Justice mercy God is infinite in time being Eternall Infinite in place filling Heaven and Earth in power he do all things in wisdome he knows all things past present and to come In Justice who can dwell with everlasting burnings in mercy for the Righteous go into life Eternal Do not I fill Heaven and Earth saith the Lord. Jer. 23.24 There is therefore no place no time left for another God Suppose one you must at the same instant give him a Vacuum to Reign in which to affirm would but argue emptinesse of Wisdome and shallowness of understanding 4. There can be but one recipient We are commanded to love God with all our strength soul and mind Deut. 6.4 5. there is no part of our love service fear worship to be given to any other then one therefore there is but one 5. Therre can be but one Efficient There are many things in the World depending upon each other as the lincks of a chains which if we measure and count we shal come to the first which is the preserver of all the greatest number hath it's Original from a Unite Trace every Creature in it's steps upward and we shall fall upon one that is the Original of all He is before all things and by him all things consist Col. 1.17 To suppose another God were to suppose a being without acting which is an irrati●nall conceit Yet thre are in Scripture that are called Gods besides the Lord of which afterwards Quest. 4. Whether there be three Persons in the God head and how these persons do agree These things are by many of this age denyed and therefore must be proved and though they may be thought to be needlesse in regard that by many they are believed yet this may give to many an enlightning into the truths that possibly upon trust only are received Before we come to prove the question its proper to premise 1. We must know that this mystery is a great mystery and is indeed above Reason It is to be rather the subject of our admiration then inquisition it 's to be feared that many reason themselves out of Heaven by endeavouring to apprehend the depth and rationality of this 2. That though it be above reason yet it 's necessary for salvation i. e. to such as are of years of discretion Upon this Principle stands the Fabrick of all Religion to quit this is to quit with Christianity 3. That though the word Trinity be not found to be in Scripture yet the thing that we would expresse by that word is in it 1 Iohn 5.7 which holds out that one is three and that three is one which is expressed significantly enough by the Church under the word Trinity 4. That the three Persons in the God-head are distinguished by these Names The first person is called the Father the second is called the Son or the Word the third is called the Holy ghost or the Spirit yet they make not three but one God There are three that hear Record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy ghost and these three are one the other three that follow viz. the Spirit Water and blood are said to agree in one but these three are said to be one 1 John 5.7 that is essentially and naturally These three differs three ways 1. The Father begets Psal. 2.7 Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee He begets Christ by Eternal generation and believers by spiritual adoption in reference to both thes● is he called Father Ioh. 20.17 2. The Son is begotten he is called a Son Prov. 30.4 Iesus is the Christ and is born of God 1 John 5.1 3. The Holy ghost proceedeth from these two Ioh. 15.26 As a man when he looks in a glasse if he smile his image smileth also and if he take delight in it it taketh delight in him the face is one being suppose that the Father the Image of the face in the glasse is another being suppose this the Son begotten of the Father and the smiling of them both is a third thing proceeding from the two former suppose this that the spirit that procoeds from the Father and the Son All these a man knowing to be but one face and of one face may know that these three are but of one ●od That they are personally distinct from each other appears by many Texts chiefly these Prov. 8.25 The Son speaking of himself shews us that when there was no depths I were brought forth when there were no Fountaine abounding with water before the Mountains were setled before the Hils was I brought forth c. When he prepared the Heavens I was there when he established the clouds above when he gave to the Sea his decree then was I by him as one brought up with him c. In which speech it appears that he that was begotten by the Father was a distinct person from him that established the clouds which was the Lord Gen. 1. Again Psal. 33.6 we read that by the word of the Lord were the Heavens made and all the Hoasts of them by the breath of his Mouth Here are the three persons differenced Christ the word the Lord God the Breath of his mouth the Spirit which appears by comparing this Text with Iohn 1.1 and Gen. 1.2 Also Gen. 1.26 One says
to the Prophets and he is God And again I will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son v. 5. Who says these words he that begot him Who begot him He whose Son he is Who is that Son Christ that purged our sins and sate down on the Right hand of the Majesty on high v. 3. Whose Son is he He that spoke unto our Fathers by the Prophets and he was God v. 1. Moreover Prov. 8.22 The Son himself says The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way c. when there was no depths I was brought forth before the Hills was I brought forth Who brought him forth he that made the Earth and who made the Earth God Geu 1.9 10. Many other places might be brought for this truth as Ioh. 17.3 Ioh. 20.17 Rom. 1.7 but we forbear in regard that those against whom the question is raised denye not the divinity of the Father but of the other person 2. By reason drawn from Scripture or scripture reason it appears that the Father is God for 1. Prayer must be made to him Pray to the Father which is in secret Matth. 6.6 Pray Our Father which art in Heaven now we are to pray to none but to God Isa. 42. ● 2. It is he that revealeth hidden mysteries Luke 10.8 This none can do but God Isa. 41.8.22 23. 3. It is he that maketh the Sun to shine and the Stars to give light to the Earth Matth. 5.15 The Sun is his for he made it he made the Stars also Gen 1.16 This showes that he is God Isa. 40.26 4. It is he that maketh the Raine to fall Matth. 5.45 This none can do that but God Jerei 14.22 2. That the Son is God appears by Scripture and Scripture reason 1. By scripture John 5.20 And we know that the son of God is come c. And we are in him that is true even in his Son Iesus Christ this is the true God and Eternal life Heb. 1. ● But to the Son he sayeth Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever Rom. 9.5 whose are the Fathers and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came who is over all God blessed for ever Isa. 9.6 Vnto us a child is born unto us a Son is given c. his name shall be called wonderfull Counsellour the mighty God so John 1.1 The word was God John 20.28 Psal. 68.18 with Ephe. 8.8 Psal. 95.6 compared with 1 Cor. 10.9 Isa. 41.4 with Revela 8 6. Isa. 25.9 Zacha. 2 9. Isa. 7.14 Phil. 16. Phil 2.6 Acts 7.59 Tit. 2.13 1 Tim. 3.16 What ●e●d we oppose those blasphemous Arians any longer h●ve we not heard himself say I and the Father are one John 10. ●0 Reader these things are written that thou mightest believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God and that believing thou mightest have life through his Name Ioh. 20.31 And this is eternal life to know him to be the only true God and Iesus Christ whom he hath sent viz to be the true God also Iohn 17.3 2. By Scripture reason or reason drawn from Scripture t is clear that the Son is God 1. He made and created the world Iohn 13 this none did but God Gen. 1.1 or could do Isa. 44.24 2. He can and doth forgive sins Luke 7.48 this none can do but God Luke 5.8 3. He gives the holy Ghost Ioh. 20.22 this none can do but God Isai. 44.3 4. He preserveth his Church Matth. 16.18 this none can do but God 5. His Name is preached up Phil. 1.18 this ought not to be done were he not God 6. He is Omnipresent he is in Heaven and Earth at once Iohn 3.13 this could not be were he not God 7. He knows the thoughts of man Matt. 9.4 this he could not do where he not God 8. He is Eternall Revel 1.8 this he could not be were he not God 9. He is Almighty Revel 1.8 this he could not be were he not God 10. Men are baptzed in his Name Mat. 28 19. this ought not to be done were he not God 3. That the holy Spirit is God appears by Scripture and Scripture Reason 1. From Scripture Act. 5.3 Why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye against the Holy ghost c. Thou hast not lyed unto man but unto God Isaiah 6.9 The Prophet heard the Lord say Go and tell this people hear ye indeed but understand not c. The Holy ghost is said to speak the Words Acts 28.25 26. By which two places it appears the Holy ghost is God And so 1 Cor. 12.6 there are diversities of Operations but it is the same God which worketh all in all c. To one is given by the Spirit the word of Wisdome to another the gift of knowledge by the same Spirit to another the gift of Faith by the same Spirit Quest. What Spirit is it that giveth these diversities of gilts Answ. It is the same God that worketh all in all and the same Lord v. 5 6. Also we read Deut. 12.6 If there be a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my self known in a vision unto him and will speak to him in a dream now Prophets spake as they were moved by the Holy ghost 1 Pet. 1 21. 2. By Scripture Reason or Reason from Scripture It appears that the Holy ghost is God 1. He is Eternall Heb 9.14 this he could not be were he not God 2. He is Omnipresent Rom. 8.9 He is in all the faithfull whereever they be therefore he must be God Psal. 139.7 3. He is Omniscient 1 Cor 2 10. therefore he must be God 4. He created the World Psal 23.6 this he could not do were he not God Gen. 1.2 Job 26.13 5. He gives the gifts of miracles c. 1 Cor. 12.10 therefore he must be God 6. He calls men to be Apostles Acts 13.2 therefore he must be God 7. Because the sin against him is unpardonable Matth. 12 31 therefore he must be God 8. He knows the souls and consciences of men Rom. 9.1 therefore he must be God 9. He hath a Temple 1 Cor. 6.19 therefore he is the living God 2 Cor 6.16 10. Men are baptized in his Name Matth 28.19 therefore he must be God Thus it appears that the Father the Son and the Spirit are one essentially that is one in Deity The other two parts in which they are one a viz. in Operating and in willing may be dispatched in Word 1. For Operation they work all one and the self same thing together Joh. 5.17 Gen. 1 26 And 2. For willing they will all one and the self thing without opposing crossing or contradicting each other Joh. 8.29 I do always those things that please him viz. the Father saith the Son by consequence the Spirit of the Son must please him which is the holy Ghost Rom. 8.9 and the spirit of the Father must please the Son which ●sthe Holy Ghost Isaiah 48.16 The Church of Christ hath in
God and Prayer and by the Lord Jesus we know now that nothing is ●nclean of it self And that the Kingdome of God consists in no part of it in meat that God hath accepted us whether we eat or not And he that teacheth so is a Minister of Christ and he that teacheth otherwise a messenger of the Devil 1 Tim. 4.1 and 6. Quest. 8 Why would God suffer his dearest Saints to lie under such sad afflictions as are mentioned in Scripture and whether the book of Job be a real History That Gods people groaned under National grievances and under personal troubles is known to all that can but read the causes possibly are not so well known we shall for their information discover some 1 To punish them for their sin Thus were the Israelites pressed under the Heathen Princes so often in the Book of Iudges This made Absalom rebel against David and brought Ierusalem it self to ruine 2 To prevent their sin Gods afflictions and his scourges kept them from setling on the lees it kept the rust from them he would teach them experience by suffering he would frame them according to his own heart Davids afflictions before he came to the Throne made him the holier in it 3 That the wicked might fill up the measure of their sin the godly may be crushed that the wicked may triumph that he may sport and take delight in mischief when he brings his wicked devices to pass Psal. 73.18 4 That the graces of God might be exercised in them None but hath a talent and all that have must improve it Grace if not scoured by affliction will rust in the most heavenly heart Where God hath given beauty he will have it seen and where he hath given gifts he will have them used Abrahams Faith Noahs Obedience Iosephs Fear Pauls Sincerity Iobs Patience Naomies Constancy Ruths Affection and Davids Trust God will put to the touchstone 5 That the Name of God might be glorified by them God hath brought in a great revenew of praise to the Exchequr of his own glory by casting his people into many difficulties and when they have called upon his Name by delivering them out of them all David had not sung possibly so sweetly in the Palace of Ierusalem had he not mourned in the Wilderness of Iudah God loves to hear his children pray and also to praise his Name and to attain both he uses the rod of affliction 9 To make them examples to the Saints that shall follow after them Davids afflictions doth the present age good for by them they learn to keep the law of God Iacobs hard lodging shews us that God will be with them that wait upon him in the poorest condition The troubles of Iob the patience of Iob and the issue of Iob is a soveraign remedy and antidote aginst despair in any or the greatest calamity but this brings us to a second part of the question Whether Iob be a real History There are that would have that book only what Iob says himself is viz. A shadow Job 17.7 They would have it to be no more real then the Parable of the Rich man and L●zarus They suppose that such troubles could not really fall upon a man but they must sinke him such crosses would have broke a mans heart much more his patience It is true indeed that Iobs History is ushered in by a Parable drawn from Kings and Princes courts where in matters of concernments all parties as well accusers as defendents meet together in those words Now there was a day when the Sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord and Satan came also among them denoting the readiness of Angels either to give an acount of what they had done or to receive a Commission for something to be done and to discover the malice or envie of Satan watching all opportunies for the destruction of man But of the History that is the man Iob of the Countrey he lived in of the Children and riches that he had of the troubles that befell him and of the glory that he afterward received we have no more reason to doubt of then of the history of Noah of Abraham of Moses of David or of any other of the Patriarchs For 1 Here are real names real countreys and kindreds described no such thing is ever done in Parables we have no account of the Prodigals name nor of his Fathers nor what Countrey he dwelled in as here In that Parable Luk. 16. We have the Beggar named Lazarus which might be a common name as well as a proper signifying the help of God or one helped of God but now in this History we have proper The land of Vz or Edom Lam. 4.21 Iob was a man of that Land probably the same that is called Iobab the son of Zerah that was King of Edom Gen. 36.33 differing only as Iacob and Israel or as Saul and Paul Here is Eliphaz the Temanite a son of Esaus the Fathes of the Edomites Gen. 36. 10 11. Bildad the Shuhite Abrahams son by Keturah Gen. 25.2 Zophar the Naamathite not improbably of the City of Naamab a City in Iudah towards the Coast of Edom Iosh. 15.21 41. Though in other Authors then the Scripture we read that Ninensis was the rich mans name at whose door Lazarus begged yet there is in that parable that which will not permit it to be any other then a parable and to say it was Herod and Iohn the Baptist as some do is but a declaration that they have neither studied the Parable well nor the history of the Baptist exactly but now in Iob there is no more reason to suspect the name then to suspect Davids or his friend Husha● the Archites neither is there any thing in the story that may not stand with truth they are living rational learned men and for them to speak together is no wonder There are such timely descriptions of persons of cattle of countries of kindred of places as cencurs in no parable whatsoever but in all circumstances holds out a true history 2 The Holy Ghost numbers the man Iob among such as were really and in nature existent speaking of Israel Eze. 14.14 Though these three men Noah Daniel and Iob were in it they should deliuer but their own souls Let no man say that I●b is but a shadow since God said he was a man had a soul and a righteous soul and seeing we doubt not but there were such men as Noah and Daniel why should we doubt of Iob Iob indeed wished that his birth day might not be inserted in the Kalender but these men would blot him out of the book of the Nativities to give him no Mother but a mans brain yet since God hath numbered him among reall Saints he shall pass for a man a righteous man with the Author until such time at he sees him a man as Iob knew he should see his Redeemer 3 The Holy Ghost holds forth both sides of
Iob as a double motive unto perseverance a circumstance no Parable is at tended with so long after the Parable made how often do we hear repeated the story of the rich glutton where or in what place do we hear the story of the prodigal urged in the Epistles Now Iob being alive and his Tragicomedy upon the stage before or in the time of Moses which must be the time of Iobs living in regard Iob sacrificed in his own land which he ought not to have done neither would God either before or at that time have accepted any sacrifice but in Ierulalem neither ought Iob to have sacrificed at all whether there or in Ierusalem since he was no priest besides in those p●ssages of Gods dispensations towards men used much in this book something would have been spoken of those wonders of those Laws that God shewed and gave his people Israel of which there is not one syllable for Iames then to bring Iob as a pattern of patience ●o long after the troubles of Iob is a clear demonstration of its verity The words of the Apostle are these Iames 5 10.11 Take my Brethren the Prophets who have spoken in the name of the Lord for an example of suffering affliction and of patience behold we count them happy which endure Ye have heard of the patience of Job and have seen the end of the Lord that the Lord is very pittiful and of tender mercy shall we imagine that the Apostle would be so far forgetful of the evil consequences of this ar●ument as to urge it if it had not been without exception For perswading them to give heed to the Prophets who suffered and make them our example and in naming of them who had suffered really to hold up one who was a meer shadow a seigned history a Iob and tell the world how he suffered and how he endured because might the people say he never felt do we think that he would have let p●ss all those that truly were afflicted and hold up one that never was But why would he say that they had seen the end of the Lord as concerning Iob when they might answer Iob had never a beginning Nay he concludes that they by Iob might see that the Lord was very pittiful and of tender mercy which had been a very mocking of God had not that history been real For what object could that Chimera be of pitty what provocation for the Almighty to be tender of that man who was never born never breathed 4 It hath been looked upon as real history and no Parallel in all the Churches of God the Iews in their generations looked upon it as a true history and not a fiction the Church of Christ in the times of the Apostles eyed it never as a Parable and therefore in this age we should reverence it as a truth and esteem Iob for a Holy Saint and patient sufferer Quest. 9. Whether there be any difference between the old and new Testament and why the Scriptures are called a Testament In Scripture the Old and the New Testament are often opposed the one to the other the Old sometimes signifying that covenant of works or that of the Law as Ier. 31.31 and sometimes again that covenant of grace made with Abraham and in him to all his seed In this sence doth the Question take the Old Testament and by the New that covenant of grace which God in Christ made with believers is signified now these two insubstance are one and the same agreeing 1 In their Author they were both made by one and the self same God he that was the Lord God of the Hebrews is Lord God of the Christians 2. In their Mediator the same Christ that we believe in they believed in the same Lord Jesus by whose blood men are reconciled to God was spoken of by the Prophets 1 Pet. 1.10 3. In the parties the Old Testament was made with Gods own people his chosen ones this New is made with his people now 4. In the issue or end Eternall life was the Reward then so it is now glory and the enjoyment of God peace and safety in Abrahams bosome then was the reward of a Righteous life the same now the same Heaven for duration for happinesse was proposed to believers which is now In these substantiall things no difference between the Old and the New Testament but they are one and the same to all intends and purposes and are not divided in the substance but in the manner of the Administration of the same they are different As 1. In their extension the old Covenant or Testament was made with one single man family or Nation At most it was confined in the borders of Israel They only were the people of God but now the New is enlarged over all It is taught to all-Nations Act. 13.47 2. In the clearnesse the Old Testament held out a Mediatour and eternal life under typs as offerings and washings and divers sorts of cleansings now the New Testament holds out Christ the sanctifier and puri●ier of the soul clearly and fully and eternall life most evident and plain 3. In their Seals the seals of the Old was circumcision and the Paschal Lamb he that would have eat of the Passeover must first be circumcised The Seals of the new are baptisme and the Lords Supper and he that would eat of our bread and drink of our cup must first be washed with our water 4. In their easinesse the Law was full of Cermonies yea so full that it is called a yoak which was not able to be born Act. 15.10 they were to do so much duty put to so many journies three times every year to Ierusalem from all parts of Iudea they were at so great charges that the Church might very well be said to be in bondage Gal. 4.25 Now the yoak of the Gospell is light and easie Matth 11.30 5. In their duration Many of those Laws that God gave his people were to passe away being only for a time but the Laws of the New are all binding and can admit of no alteration untill all things shall be dissolved But let us come to the second Part of the Question Why the Scriptures are called a Testament That the Scripture is called a Testament is clear Heb. 9.15 with this difference that the Law is called the first Testament and the Gospell the New not that it is of a distinct nat●re from the Old or the first it is called only new in regard of the p●blication of it to believers being delivered and taught in another way and by other means then the first as without shadows and dark types by Christ a Son not by Moses a servant It was writ upon tables of Stone this upon the tables of the heart which makes it look as it were a new thing when for substance it is the same with the other It 's called a Testament 1. In respect that it is the last will of
her Sons and Daughters her man-servant her maid-servant and the stranger within her gates or within her roof 2. To shew the mutual love and care that ought to be in all governours of families the precept of keeping this Law is not given to one single but to every one alike the wife is charged as much as the husband and the husband no less then the wife with looking well to their families touching the worship and Law of God 3. The parties here to be cared for are the parties usually most apt to break our the Son the Daughter c. Marriage is honourable and that in all and God in this precept so far honours the married woman that he will not suppose her to transgress he takes it as it were for granted that she needs not be looked after in that particular She hath been brought up and looked after by her Father and her Mother when she was a Daughter and now she being a wife she will walk according to her education and the heart of her husband trusts safely in her 4. From that oneness that is between a man and his wife God after he had made two made these two one again and whom he had joyned together in marriage he will not dis●oyn in a precept the husband is the head the wife therefore must be the body What is spoken to the head as a duty nature teacheth the Members are to be imployed to perfom Let thou be said to a husband yet the man and his wife being but one flesh the same is spoken to her Quest. 6. Why is not the change of the Sabbath in Scripture mentioned That the Sabbath is changed is apparent why it is changed and that change not recorded or spoken of is not made manifest it might not be mentioned 1. Because not publickly taught by Christ he spoke many things in private to his Apostles Paul intreats the Elders of Ephesus Acts 20.35 to remember the words of the Lord Iesus how he said it is more blessed to give then to receive which words we find not in the history of our Saviours life The doctrine of the change might be taught among those that pertained to the kingdom of God of which the Scripture gives us no account Acts 1.3 If it had been publickly delivered before his death it had been recorded in the Evangelists 2. Because the publication of it might have been a great stumbling block to the Iews God is pleased to bring his people on by degrees After our Savirour came to preach and after he was ascended the sacrifices of the Law were not forbidden he never opposed circumcision the Temple standing things in some sort went on as before to have dashed the sabbath in pieces by a publick Law might have made the people to scruple at Christianity the Apostles wisely take their liberty to keep the first day of the week according to the private precept or in word instinct of Christ and the Spirit prohibite not the Iews their meeting that the Gospel of Christ might not be hindered knowing that time and knowledge might make them leave those things and of their own accord comform to their practice 3. Because it was not publickly opposed things that were much struck at as the necessity of circumcision justification not to be by the works of the Law that Jesus was the Christ the Saviour of the world these were the grand controversies in the Apostles dayes and these we have fully maintained now this of the Christians first day little or nothing medled withal since by the decrees of the Councel the Christians were freed from circumcision sacrifices and the converted Iews might be indifferent also as touching the Sabbath they see the first day kept Holy unto the Lord God of the Hebrews and the converted Gentiles see one day in seven kept to the honour of Christ one party no● opposing the other the Question is not much disputed and the 〈◊〉 therefore not recorded that caution given to the Col. 〈◊〉 2.16 doth exhort the Christians to their liberty in regard Chr●●● is dead says nothing to the Iews by way of reproof still hoping 〈◊〉 time they might be brought to the observing of the Lords 〈◊〉 Being therefore not publickly opposed at least in those places 〈◊〉 which the Apostles writ it is passed over in silence their dispu● being generally about things then and in that age called in qu●●●ion Quest. 7. Whether the Church may Command any other day to be rested on besides the Sabbath God Commanding the seventh day to be kept Holy and giving six dayes for man to work some conclude it unlawful to set apart one day or more for Gods publick worship then he did but it is otherwise the Church may set apart one day or two or more for the publick worship For 1. Because the Commandement is not preceptive but permissive when we are allowed six days to work the meaning is not that we shall fill up all those dayes by working as if it were unlawful for men to do any thing but work shall God never be served in those six dayes must we do nothing but work the meaning therefore is that when we have six dayes before us we shall do all our work not spend them all in working but upon the seventh day we shall do no work at all nothing hinders but that the Church may set apart a day for Gods service there being nothing in this Law that contradict● it 2. Because the Church of the Iews unto whom this Law was given did use such a liberty God gave the children of Is●a●l three feasts in the year each of them seven dayes long and commanded them to be strictly observed Levit. 23. Good Merdecai added a fourth in the Canon of the Scripture Est. 9.26 27. to be kept every year two dayes for the mercies shewn the Iews in their deliverance from Haman Holy Hezekiah added seven dayes more to the feast of Passeover then God did 2 Chro. 30 23. Valiant Iudas added a fifth feast in the book of the Apocrypha 1 Macha 4.59 to be kept seven dayes also at which feast our Saviour himself was present and never reproved it Iohn 10.22 Sure if this was done under the Pedagogy of the Law it may be done under the liberty of the Gospel 3. Because the frailties and imperfections of men require it it is often urged against the set times of the Church that if the Sabbath the day set apart by the Lord be kept it is no matter whether other dayes be kept or no but it would be asked if ever they kept a Sabbath mens frailties failings nay crosses may be much helped sanctified pardoned by their diligent worship in other dayes besides the Sabbath It is strange to hear to read how men will preach that ordinary Lectures ought to be kept and observed by people and yet at another time tell them it is sufficient to keep the Sabbath Ridiculum ●apus purely to oppose the Law of the
Church 4. Because God hath been pleased to bless his people for serving him in other dayes to let pass his approbation of that day set apart by the King of Nineveh for fasting Iona 2.10 the Israelites in captivity Zach. 8.19 set apart a fast on the fourth moneth another on the fifth another on the seventh another on the tenth All which God would turn to ●oy and gladness and chearful feasts it is known that it hath pleased God to refresh his servants with his comfortable presence in these dayes from such accidents as these did the Church of old institute those dayes that are called Rogation An. Ch. 450 wherein by prayers and tears and fasting and supplication the Church obtained great mercies c. And most of those dayes that are kept by the Church of England are owned by Reformed Churches and have been established for above a thousand years but of these afterward 5. Because of that enco●ragement and freedom that the use of those dayes gives to servants Prentices and others whereby the religious may have occasion to pour out their soul before God to read and study his word prepare themselves for his Holy Sacraments if any do abuse the use of these dayes ●●it were a pitty that those that serve God the more chearfully of them should be suppressed for the others prophaness 6. Because we see none speak against them but those that in other points are against all order and could willingly see that all Discipline were laid asleep we may behold them to be factious turbulent hypocrites stumbling at straws Apostates what not Quest. 8. Why doth God put a Remember before the Commandement of the Sabbath onely This word Remember is put in Scripture usually before nothing but what is matter of Moment as thy Creator Eccles. 12.1 From whence thou art fallen Revel 2.5 Lots wife Luke 17.32 that ye being in time passed Gentiles Ephes. 2.11 c. And the Sabbath day to keep it Holy Exod. 20.8 The reasons may be 1. Upon the Holy keeping of that depends in a great measure the observing of all the other nine Commandements how to cleave to God onely to worship him truly to use his name reverendly depends much upon this dayes observation and Holy keeping 2. There is less in nature to teach us the keeping of this precept then in any other of the Commandements nature teacheth us that there is a God to worship this God to honour the name of that God whom we worship to honour parents and though the Barbarian know no body seeth him none can accuse him none can judge him though he escape dangers by sea and perils by land yet he dare not murder for fear of VENGEANCE c. But to set aside one whole day in seven precisely one in seven and that not a part but the whole of a day and this not for thy self alone but thy cattle and thy servants must rest as much as thy selfe as long as thy self and that not at thy conveniency or times of leasure but in the thickest of thy imployments and not at thy pleasure but still one day in seven of this we say nature teacheth nothing and therefore there is a special memento put upon it 3. There is more in nature that may allure us to the breach of this precept then there is to the breaking of any other of the Commandements It is onely the Fool that will say there is no God and if he do it is but in his heart every man hath something of that natural principle to do as he would be done by but the Sabbaths being Gods property we are apt to catch hold of some part of it through the ignorance of God that is in us the day is clear and the streets are clean and such a thing is doing or may be done and profit will follow we shall gain by it c. All this might tend to the prophanation of the Sabbath and therefore God gives a strict charge particularly for that 4. They might in Aegypt have small or no regard unto the Sabbath if they had opportunity The people had been long in bondage and might forget at least in their observance that God had hallowed the seventh day or through bondage not have time to keep it which in time might blot or score the fourth Commandement out of their hearts forget to teach it to their Children which God by this remembrance brings back to their minds again and though they forgot to keep it Holy in Aegypt yet they must Remember it in Canaan It is by some probably conceived that in the latter captivity of the Iews in Babylon Akasuerus making a feast Est. 1.5 for the inhabitants of Shushan which continued seven dayes one of which must necessarily be on a Sabbath day which by reason of that feast that had been held a hundred and fourscore dayes to the Princes of Persia in which several Sabbaths had fallen and that one feast the Sabbath if not for many dayes yet for one was by the Iews neglected to punish which forget fulness God stirred up Haman to root them out and for that one dayes feast they keep a three dayes fast with their nights Est. 4.16 and by that got mercy yet by that might receive instruction the next feast that came and Remember to keep Holy the Sabboth day Quest. 9. Whether the first day of the week may be termed Sabbath or Sunday This is a Question in it self scarce deserving an Answer but by a Pharisaical generation of the sect of the Libertines being counted a piece of prophaness so to call it and a part of Religion to call it otherwise we shall spend a few drops of Ink to Answer it in brief it may be called Sabbath 1. From the sence and signification of the word it is their foolish mistake that because it was on Saturday therefore it was so called whereas if it had been upon a Wednesday so long as men rested upon it it might have been called Sabbath● that being the Hebrew word for rest A Sabbath day is no more then a day of rest Christians therefore resting from all their imployments and doing no manner of work they nor their Sons nor their Daughters nor their man-servants nor their maid-servants c. upon this day may lawfully call it a Sabbath day 2. From the equality of the Christian Churches practice with the Church of the Iews That day that was held Holy by the people of God under the Law wherein they ceased from working and therein did read upon the word of God repaired to the Temple or Synagogues and heard it taught was called the Sabbath the day therefore that is held Holy by the people of God under the Gospel and wherein they cease from working and therein read upon the word of God c. may receive the same denomination 3. From the morality of the Law the Law is moral requiring one day in seven to be kept Holy to the Lord which day
against their sins like men ready to drown or desperate they are strong to wrestle even with God himself 8 When there is any great undertaking that it may prosper Ezra 3.10 11. It is a good thing to ask direction of God in the way wherein we purpose to walk All things are in his hand and according to his power and will so cometh things to pass to fast therefore that God would bless us and prosper the work of our hands is acceptable sacrifice SECT IV. 4 The manner of it This Fast as a Sabbath is two wayes to be performed outwardly and inwardly 1 Outwardly as hath been before declared in abstaining from bodily labor for a fast day is a Sabbath day Lev. 23. 33. food c. and that the whole day for it must be no shorte● then other dayes alwayes provided that nothing be done to the prejudice of health In that case as in the Sabbath God will have mercy and not sacrifice yet as bodily labor profiteth but little 1 Tim. 4.8 so outward resting in it self is not of great value except unto it there be joyned fasting or resting 2 Inwardly he that worketh and he whose soul is not afflicted upon a fast are both in danger Levit. 23.29 30. This inward fast consists 1 In a diligent examination of the soul to find out sin this is a day wherein the soul is specially invited to be reconciled to God the heart must now be searched and the beloved sins must be found that as Samuel slew Agag we may h●w them in pieces before the Lord 1 Sam. 15.33 2 In an unfeigned humiliation before the Lord for sin it is not sufficient to acknowledge that we have offended if we would be accepted we must be penitent Zac. 12.10 3 In an undoubted faith in Christ for a pardon of sin this is a time of prayer and repentance that our sins might be blotted whether private to our selves or common to the kingdome wherein we live Now he that prays Let him ask in faith Iames 1.6 4. In a stedfast resolution through the spirit to oppose sin In this repentance must we continue it must appear in the fruit of practise to be real in the root Dayes of fasting are dayes of attonement therefore sin must be parted withall they are days of Physick therefore we are to abstain from delighting in that which would offend us 5 In a serious meditation of the good word of God if the Fast be private and a diligent attention to it if the Fast be publick It is the word that discovers Gods judgement of this or that kind as famine pestilence sickness unseasonable weather to this or that sin as perjury Sabbath-breaking prophane or common swearing stealing c. which enlightens the soul much in the holy and orderly performance of this duty SECT 5. Questions Resolved Quest. 1. Whether the Fasts of the Church of Rome differ from those of the Church Catholick Quest. 2. Whether Fasting be not a Iewish Ceremoniall or Jewish rite Quest. 3. Why is the Fast of Lent observed by the Christian Church Quest. 4. Why are the Fasts of the Weeks of Ember observed by the Church Quest. 5. Whether it would bring advantage to the Church now to have those dayes again observed Quest. 6. Whether it might not be an acceptable service to have an annuall Fast for the crimes lately acted in England Quest. 1. Whether the Fasts of the Church of Rome differ from those of the Church Catholick The Church Catholick differs not from that of Rome either in the act or ends of Fasting yet toto coelo differ in these following respects 1 The Church of Rome makes fasting to be meritorious they suppose they merit something at the hand of God for their abstinence that is deserve somthing at his hands not so the Catholick Church she teacheth that when we have done all we are to acknowledge our selves unprofitable servants 2 They prescribe certain times as necessary to be keept upon the account of salvation what ever dayes the Church appoints for annuall Fasts it is necessary if they would be save to observe them accordingly hence it is that the neglectd of it as a breach of the third though according to God of the fourth commandement must of necessity be confessed to the priest that such penance may be injoyned as is sutable to that high offence for the expiation of its guilt Now the Church Catholick appoints neither knows she any time to be observed as necessary but what God and his Son appointed in his word 3. They abstain from meals of this or that fort as being for the time prescribed for the fast altogether uncleane their consciences will be defiled if they should eat them that is without authority Now the Catholick Church though she injoyne a fast yet by the Lord Jesus she knows no meat unclean of it self and he that teacheth otherwise is not of God but of Sathan 1 Tim. 43. 4 The Church of Rome looks upon her fasting as a part of Gods worship her very abstaining from meat or from this or that meat is taught to be points of worship the Church Catholick teacheth that Fasting in it self is of no use nor no part of worship But as a fit meanes and as it serves to the uses aforesaid so she requires it not otherwise 5. That some fast particularly lent is of Apostlical institution and out of religion and conscience to be observed the Catholick Church knowes no such law and therefore she keeps not lent upon that account but for other ends and other causes as shall by and by be shown 6. That outward Fasting is of it selfe sufficient without the inward and indeed if fasting that is abstaining from meats or meals be of it selfe a point or part of worship it may be so but the Catholick Church pleads for an Inward fasting or abstaining from sin and for a soul to afflict it selfe for transgression without which the outward fasting is not regarded 7. They are foully belyed by many Authors if good Christians would not take the Fasts of the Church of Rome to be great feasts through the variety of dainties and plenty of wines therein fed upon by which it is not to be called a fast which makes us that for the present we need not show the difference between this and the Fast of the Church Catholick Quest. 2. Whether Fasting be not a Ceremoniall or Iewish rite Who are those among us and about us who teach that fasting in its own nature is not a Gospel but a legal exercise and not to be observed in the Church of Christ but fasely for 1 The ground or end or cause of our religious fasting is moral for the subduing of corruption and exercising our selves in the dutyes of repentance and mortification unto which by experience fasting is known to be an apt meanes and sutable help 2 Christ prophesied or rather commanded Fasting after his own death Luke 5.53 But the dayes will come
altars o places of sacrifice being but chappels of ease unto it nay it is not improbable that it is the very place where Noa sacrificed at first however we are sure it was a place of worship a place where God dwelt in the days of Samuel 1 Samuel 10.3 Further Gen. 22.2 Abraham is commanded to go to mount Moria and offer up his son Isaack the very same place where David is directed by God to build a altar for restraining the plage among his people the place where Abrahams altar stood A. M. 2062. was the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite A. M. 2922. and the place which was his threshing floor was the place where Solomon laid the foundation of his temple A.M. 2933. and then and there God established himself a Church and appointed that to be the place of worship unto the Church of the Iwes but this leades us to the next point viz. 2. After the law and that before the Captivity and after 1. Before the Captivity when Israel had been in the house of bondage and from it delivered and when God had given them rest he appointed a place of worship Deut. 12.5 11. to bring burnt offerings sacrifices tithes which is called his habitation this was in Shiloc Ios. 18.1 and there was the place of Israels service all the days of the days of the Judges even untill the days of David 1 Sam. 1.3 who removed it into his own city 2 Sam. 6.12 Where it abode in tents untill Salomon builded a Temple 1 Kings 6.1 where it remained all the days of the Kings of Iudah untill the days of Zedekiah 2 Chron. 36.11 at which time the Temple or house of the Lord was burned with fire A. M. 3360. 2 King 25.9 and the Lords people carried away to a strange land even unto Babylon where the harps of the sons of Iacob were hung upon the trees by the rivers of Babylon as being of no use since the glory was departed from Israel Psal. 137.2 2. After the Captivity and that before Christ and after 1. Before Christ. When the seventy years of Iacobs trouble was accomplished according to the word of the Lord spoken by the mouth of Jeremiah Cirus King of Persia who had conquered in battel Asyages King or Emperour of B●bylon and united the Monarchy A. 3403. he appointed that the house of the Lord should be rebuilded at Ierusalem 2 Chro. 36.22 the foundation of it is laid by Zerubbabel A. M. 3422. Ezek. 10. and finished A. 3528. and dedicated for a place of publick worship Ezra 6.15 16. this continued the place of worship for 350. years and and then was polluted by Antiochus Epiphanes by reason of Idols but being cleansed by Iudas Maccabeus it was restored unto its first use 1 Mac. 4.59 and repaired afterwards by Herod the Ascalonit King of the Jews who also beautified it with sumptuous buildings and curious stones to obtaine favour of that people not for love of the place which continued the days of our Saviour 2. After Christ and that before and after his ascension 1. Before his ascension In our Saviours time we read freequently of Synagogues so called from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to gather together and may be applied to any thing whereof there is a collection yet they are vulgarly taken for those houses dedicated to the service of God wherein it was lawfull to perform any kind of holy service except sacrifycing The Temple at Ierusalem was as the Cathedral Church for the whole Diocess of Israel and these Synagogues as Parish-Churches to the people When they began the Scripture gives no particular account however in regard that the Temple was a great distance from most of the people and the Sabbaths were to be observed It s probable they were erected in the days of Iosuah after the Lord had given the people rest That they were in Davids time is clear Psalm 74.8 And Moses of old time was preached therein every Sabbath Acts 15.21 In the City of Ierusalem there were 480. of them there were of them in Galilee Mat. 4.23 In Damascus Acts 9.2 At Antioch and at Salamis Acts 13. In all which places Christ and his Apostles did preach and teach the people The Synagogues had written over the gates that of Psalm 118.20 This is the Gate the Righteous shall enter into it and upon the walls within for the people to meditate upon such sentences as these Remember thy Creator Silence is commendable in time of Prayer In them the Scribes ordinarily taught the people And as in the Temple there was a high Priest in these there was a chief Ruler they had in them also an Ark wherein they keeped the book of God and the peoples faces were towards it both these and the Temple were places of publick worship in the time before Christ his ascention 2. After his ascension Peter and Iohn taught in the Temple Acts 3. 5.42 so also in the Synagogues as those of the Libertines Cyrenians Alexandria of Asia Acts 6.9 and several other all which were places set apart for divine service and frequented by the Apostles Acts 14.1 during their life yea since Ierusalems destruction the Jews had Synagogues in Rome Venice Mentz Frankford Fridburg Amsterdam in Polonia and in Hungaria where they meet together to pray and to hear the Law and great preparation is made before their entrance using these words when the bo●k of the Law is brought out of the Ark into the pulpit Let God arise and let his enemies be scattered Psalm 68.1 SECT II. There being in all ages such places as were set apart for divine service in solemn publick manner by the Saints and people of God we may conjecture what they are that would have none but to leave them and come to the Names that unto those places were given in doing which we shall instance only in the more usual remarkable and principal as these viz. I. The house of God Gen. 28.22 Or the house of the Lord 1 Kings 6.1 with many other places and that 1. Because designed for his peculiar service 2. Because here in a special manner he is said to dwell 1 King 8.10 11 12 13. II. The house of prayer Mat. 21.13 That being a principal part of worship not that prayer was confined unto it But 1. Because prayer was there made Acts 3.1 2. Because God in a special manner promised to hear the prayers that were made not only in it but towards it 1 King 8.30 48. 9.3 Dan. 6.10 III. The Temple Mat. 24.1 Take Templum for Tectum amplum a large covered place to hide God in and so the Tabernacle was a Temple the place for publick worship from Moses unto Samuel 1 Sam. 1.9 that being set apart for the same use that the Temple afterward was which was also a very large place 1. Take Templum for Templando or Contemplando for the place where Gods nature word and works were contemplated heard and admired and so all
the places of publick worship from the dayes of Adam might be called Temples however it is generally used for that glorious structure of the house of the Lord in Ierusalem IV. The Church 1 Cor. 11.22 of which there are two sorts 1. The material Church which is builded with the same matter that other houses are yet distinct from them in regard of the use they are designed for they being made to eat and drink in and what if I said to sleep in these for to worship God Of them the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 11.18 22. 2. There is a spiritual Church which is the whole number of the faithfull souls in general or any holy soul in particular which is a personal Church Of them the Apostle speaks Rom. 16.5 The same distinction is made of Temples 1 Cor. 6.19 Hence it is that those places of publick worship of which we are now speaking may be called a Church or Temple that is material Churches being as the Temple set apart for Gods worship and as it were abiding in them Rev. 1.20 SECT III. We come now to be informed touching the necessi●y of those publick places for Christian worship by which we hold not the inconsistency of a Church without these but the dignity only they are necessary for its honourable being and for decency and order for these reasons 1. From the nature of the precepts there are commands in Scripture for the keeping of a Sabbath for the peoples hearing of the Law for the Prophets teaching and for the peoples gathering together all which in their own nature implie the necessity of having a proper and publick place to do these things in 2. From the practise of all Nations we see no Nation almost throughout the habitable world but hath places set apart for the worship of their false Idol gods and it hath been discovered that the Saints of old had places not to say buildings for they were not from the beginning where they erected Altars and worshipped the Lord and inquired of him touching doubtfull cases Gen. 25.22 shall Christians then be backward and want places of worship for to serve their Lord and Master 3. From the confusion that would upon the want of them ensue if every one might worship God in what place he pleased or every family in what place they pleased We may without the Spirit of Prophecy foresee as by a vision that thereupon would follow nothing but disorder confusion devision sedition destruction and it were to be feared damnation 4. From that ease it gives to Ministers In those places one Sermon may feed five yea ten thousand which could not be done were he to go to every particular company in what place they thought best so he should no where be sure of a Congregation and while he were teaching one the other might be without instruction and he not able through weariness to preach any more some must want which in time would make the people heap to themselves Teachers contrary to the practise of good people and sober Christians 2 Tim. 4.3 5. From that care that it puts upon Ministers These publick places and solemn meetings puts a certain awe upon the Preacher that he dare not utter that but what he is able to defend and what he knows to be truth in regard it cannot be recalled without some stain nor denyed without abundance of sin in regard of the multitude that hears which private meetings and corner-assemblies and brew-house or kitchin Sermons clearly takes away it being possible to preach to recal and deny that to one of them which he uttered in another and to speak truly the Kitchin or Barn is a good shelter both against Ignorance Heresie and Falshood 6. From that honour they bring to religion Is it not more honourable for Christ to be worshipped by his Disciples in large decent comely structures the very walls of which hath a certain holiness in them to put an awful respect into the soul of him that enters to see a number of Christians praising the Lord with one breath in this house then to see the same number meeting in a Washouse Warehouse Backhouse or any other outhouse worshipping God When the Turk hath starely Temples the Jews clean Synagouges to perform that service their ignorance and infidelity leads them to SECT IV. Questions resolved Quest. 1. Whether those places may be consecrated Quest. 2. Whether those places may be termed holy Quest. 3. Whether such places that have been builded by Romanists may be lawfully used by Catholicks Quest. 4. Whether at a Christians Entry into those places he may perform his devotion Quest. 5. Whether it be lawfull to have Musick in Churches now Quest 1. Whether those places may be conscecrated When it is affirmed that Christian Churches may be consecrated or dedicated it is not granted that the Walls of it are to be sprinkled with holy water or that crosses are to be ma●e on the pavement with Salt Ashes Water and Wine mingled together with many other Fopperies used in the Church of Rome But a solemn publick setting apart that building for holy uses and no other by preaching and praying which practise is lawfull 1. From the practice of Salomon and other pious Princes 1 King 8.63 having builded the Temple of the Lord at Ierusalem he and his people did consecrate or dedicate the same that is separated it from all secular or civil uses and appropriated the same unto God by prayer and sacrifice desiring that God would own it for his house and hear the prayers that should be made in it or towards it ver 9. which service was accepted and God promised so to do 1 Kings 9.3 the like did Zerubbabel at the building of the second Temple Ezra 6.16 The like did Iudas when he had raised a new Altar in the Temple of Ierusalem the heathens having polluted the other for three years 1 Mac. 4.59 which dedication was owned countenanced and graced by our Saviour himself Iohn 10.22 He was not it seems so scrupulous in his judgement as some in our generation are but that they value not Christ and they differing often in point of practise well may they differ in point of judgement The like we read 2 Kings 12.18 1 Kings 15.15 2. From the Law or rule of proportion if all along we find in the Scripture things that were appointed for the service of God consecrated and that service approved of countenanced and owned by him whether done to persons things or places what should hinder but that things and places set apart now for his worship and service might be also so de●icated were it a pulpit that God would bless the doctrine taught in it a Church that he would bless and cause to prosper the souls of such as delight in it and so of any other thing 3. From the practise of people in their several dwellings they will when they have finished a house set one room apart for a Parlour another for
prayer and therefore prayer is a proper act for the place and no time more sitting then at the first entry 2 Prayer obtains a blessing in other dutyes he is possibly to hear the word read preached or sung to crave a blessing that all these may do the soul good cannot be a branch of superstition 3. It gives a good example unto others when thou seest one performing any act of worship in that sort whether out of formality or otherwise yet by that thou mayst learn that in the Church thou oughtest to worship God heed him not therefore so much as thy self if he give hypocritical service the judge shall judge him fear thou God 4. It is but spoken to draw a contempt upon the house of the Lord those actions with many others are inveighed at that the house of the living God may be had in no more reverence then Barnes Stables not to say Halls or Parlours every thing is Popery in this age wich either tends to decency or comeliness in outwards worship as if we must be papists except we be slovens 5. The reasons brought against this justifiable practise are poor and weak they are these chiefly That they by this would hold forth the Church to be more holy then other places It may be answered it is that they will perhaps not pray at other times It may be aniwered Blame them and reprove them for that by themselves blame them not at all for this to any other Quest. 5. Whether is it lawfull to have Musick in our Churches This is of it self nothing yet since the rulers of the Church are pleased to introduce such a ceremony and others take occasion to barke against them for it it may be seasonable to speake a few things as to the lawfullnesse of its use it appears therefore to be lawfull and that in our days for 1 From the practise of the Saints in the Iewish Church what variety of musicall instruments were introduced by David and Solomon is clear in sacred writ When the ends that these holy Saints proposed to themselves are found out they shall make it appear that it is as Lawfull to have musick now as it was then 2 From the helps men may naturally receive from musick in the time of worship God loves a chearful giver and this may make a drooping soule to give him acceptable service 3 It was never a part of the Ceremoniall law and therefore not abolished by Christ that Law that Christ put an end to was that that belonged to the tabernacle musick being no part of that is no more abolished by Christ then standing Churches or Temples 4 From that vision that was seen in heaven Rev. 5.8 Four beasts and four and twenty Elders worshipped the Lord with harps these are generally taken for Ministers and the congregation and again Rev. 14.2 there is heard the voice of harpers harping and singing from heaven though in the mystery that signifies there joy yet in the Church it is not absurdity to expresse or help their Spiritual joy by the naturall use of musick 5 They who are against this are generally against matters of greater concernment and their opposing of this is the lesse to be admired or noted CHAP. IX Of Ministeriall ordination THe party or person that teacheth which is the priest or Minister comes now to be considered unto whom in the title we have given ordination both are ordinances appoint-by God to go together and both of them for that very thing cryed down in this generation for this time we shall put them together and distinctly handle 1 The nature of ordination 2 The person to be ordained 3 The parties who are to ordaine 4 The duty of them that are ordained 5 Resolve some questions SECT I. The nature of ordination may be expressed in these words viz. It is a solemn setting of one apart and ordaining of a person 2. By Fasting and prayer 3. For the preaching of the Word 4. Dispencing of the Sacraments And 5. Exercising the power of the Keyes 6. With laying on of hands 1. It is a solemn setting of one apart and ordaining of a person It is not to be rashly or inconsiderably done 1 Tim. 5.22 but in most solemn decent manner ought to be performed Acts 5.6 2. It must be done by prayer and fasting these two at this ordinance go usually together Acts 13.3 For by prayer much may be obtained and by fasting a strong Devil may be cast out 3. For the preaching of the word Acts 13.5 for the opening of the word by way of Doctrine Reason and Use is the proper work for which one is separate to the work of the Ministry 4. Dispencing of the Sacraments 1 Cor. 4.1 as that of Baptism Mat. 28.19 and of the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11.23 these are the seals and evidencies of our reconciliation with God 5. Exercising the power of the keyes whom they bind on earth they are bound in heaven Mat. 18.18 Now they bind by excommunication which is a delivery over unto Sathan a casting them out of the Church making them to have no interest in the ordinances of the Church more then heathens or Publicans 1 Cor. 5.5 1 Tim. 1.20 Whom they loose on earth shall be loosed in heav●n Mat. 18.18 Now they loose by Absolution opening as it were the gate of the Church to him that for his offences was thrust out and receiveing him again upon his repentance to the communion and fellowship of the faithfull 2 Cor. 6.10 6. With laying on of hands this is a grave and ancient ceremony in the Church of God Iacob used it in blessing his grand children Gen. 48.14 By it the Levites were given by the Is●aelites ' o the Lord instead of their first-born Numb 8.10 By it the beasts under the Law were to be set apart by sacrifice Num. 8 12. By it Ioshua was set apart to be Governour of Israel ●ter Moses Numb 27.23 By it did our Saviour bless those children that were brought unto him Mark 10.16 By it was St●phen and his brethren made Deacons Act ● 6. By it Paul and Barnabas Apostles Acts 13.3 And Timot●● made a Priest Minister or Elder 1 Tim. 4.14 for which cause in holy imitation of so ancient and divine a practise the Bishop and his Presbyters lay their hands upon the head of them ●hom they separate for the work of the Ministry 2 Tim. 1.6 being asign of celestial grace which God with an open hand will give to all those who conscionably serve him in that holy imployment SECT II. Let us now see unto whom this ordination is to be given and who it is that ought to be thus separated in a solemn way for the service of God what persons they be that Timothy and Titus the Bishops of Ephesus and Creet must ordain is told us in their Epistles some notes of them are essential and some of them are accidental some are for their being some for their well-being some shew their
the first sight to the carnal Christian but a low and poor device to gather some men together and pray and lay their hands upon anothers head to make a man an Ambassador of Jesus Christ to make him a steward of the Mysteries of God a Planter a Waterer a Builder and a Watchman to the Church by the same kind of Logick the other ordinances of God might be abused What force may the same Creature say hath a Morsel of bread and draught of wine in the Sacramnnt of the Lords Supper to assure men of heaven to foagive their sins to confirm faith to qucken hope to preserve love and so contemn that We ought in those cases to look to the institution and approbation of God and practise of the Apostles and to keep and hold up Gods ordinances in purity is a means of being ever happy This therefore of ordination being one to receive it to come to it may procure much profit to the party that hath it and to the Church for whom it is given him 2. It imboldens him in that imployment by this he may shew both his gifts and commission which two may make his face as brass against the Irony faces of perverse wicked men There may be some whose imprudence may carry them out to preach without this commission yet when they read the Scripture and see this ordinance practised so constantly both in Law and Gospel their conscience if they have one must needs accuse of that of which the Pharisees were by ou● Saviour even for Thieves and Robbers Iohn 10. by entring th● Church not by the door of ordination for of the Pharisee preaching God gave no commission 3. The solemn prayers of the Church with which that exercise is attended may bring the holy spirit to him that is ordained The gift of utterance Gal. 4.3 The gift of Wisdom 2 Tim. 1.7 being asked God may send them down Prayes availeth much and in an act of so high concernment both to Christ and to his Church it is not Christian like to suppose those prayers to be barred from the ears of God he that is ordained may be a prophane sinner yet as men will give the Nurse good things for love of the Children God may give him gi●ts for the good of his Church Iudas bore the Bag by which Christ relieved the poor 4. It binds him to that function he that is once brought to the plow of the Scriptures and hath put his hand to it to till the ground of the hearts of men is not through the unevenness of the path or hardness of the soil to forsake that imployment knowing that what ever happen however the world go this must be his work it may and without question doth make him set himself to his work and study how to go through bad report and good report c. but this leads us to the Quest. 2. Whether a Minister may renounce his Ordination It hath been the practise of some persons for the pleasing of a factions generation of late years to contemn quit deny or renounce their ordination but it savoured not of godliness 1. The nature of Ordination is against it That is a setting a man apart by the Church for that peculiar exercise and office he is separate from othe● imployments to follow this and therefore it is not in his own power to renounce it at his pleasure or for any cause whatsoever 2. That Assertion of our Saviour ● Luke 9.62 condemns it He is not fit for the kingdome of God that puts his hand to the plough and looketh back he that makes an entry either upon the preaching of Christ or professing of him must never come back to the world for the renouncing of either 3. The Ministerial office should fail if this were granted It is unknow what the thoughts of a Minister are in his troublesome going through the parts of his office and allow him power to forsake his calling in a few years we might see Pulpits empty the least cross affront persecution might be arguments strong enough to induce him for the forsaking of his people study calling and betake himself to some other honourable profession or whatever seemed good in their own eyes 4. The Laws of the Church will not suffer it to go unpunished if it be done Those that are Church-officers themselves know what strong reasons may induce men to forsake and quit their callings to put a chain to them that are otherwise without conscience the Church of England orders No man being admitted a Deacon or Minister shall from henceforth voluntarily relinquish the same nor afterward use himself in the course of his life as a Lay-man upon pain of excommunication c. Quest. 3. Whether the Ministerial Office be to continue alwayes in the World There are spirits gone out amongst us crying down the Ministry as Antichristian affirming th light within or the witness within is only now to be heard but these spirits when tryed are not of God for that office must and shall continue 1. For Christ hath promised to be with it unto the end of the world Mat. 28.20 Unto that time therefore it must endure It is spoken to the Apostles the first Teachers who are dead it must therefore be understood with them that are their successors in that office which are now in being and those that shall come after us who are not yet born 2 From the imperfection of the Church Eph. 4 11 12. Untill all the members of the Church come in the unity of the Faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a p●rfect man unto the measure of the s●ature of the fulnesse of Christ God will give Pastours and Teachers admit that many were now perfect that were of age yet for them that are young the ministry is necessary there is dayly a young generation coming up belonging to the Election of grace and therefore the Church is not pe●fect and therefore the Ministery must abide that this Scripture might be fulfilled 3 God hath appointed this office to be the ordinary meanes of salvation so long as their soules on Earth this office must remain there being no way shown by God since the fall but this that can bring a man to glory repentance faith and good workes must be tau●ht by them and while ●he world stands this d●ctrine will be necessary 4 The Sacraments must be received by the members of the Church untill Christs second coming Mat. 28.19 1 Cor. 11.26 It is these men that have this power derived from the Apostles to administer the seales of the word which seales untill the end of all things and un●ill the coming of the Lord by the whole body of the Church must be received by consequence therefore there must be Church-officers to deliver the same untill the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. 5 From the practise of the holy Apostles and disciples of the Lord They constantly
brain they can lay it aside and flee to the Penthouse of the light within but Scripture is the l●st Expounder of it self for as it is the mind of the Spirit that is written it is the tongue of the Spirit that must interpret Isa. 8.20 The Scripture that is dark in one place must be opened by the Scripture that is light in another place otherwise it is not preaching but seducing 2 Tim. 4.3 3. Applying it for the edification of the Church This is the great end of preaching and the end of Gods sending Preachers into the world Ephes. 4.12 and in this this ordinance differs chiefly from that of Catechising Paul having spoken much of the doctrine of faith Heb. 11. makes application thereof Hebrews 12. having treated of judgement makes application thereof 1 Thes. 5.14 When a Preacher hath opened the sence and meaning of the holy Ghost in a portion of Scripture by Exhortation Reprehension Confutation Consolation he ought to set it home to the hearts of his hearers For the edifying of the body of Christ Ephes. 4.12 SECT II. This ordinance of preaching ought to be performed according to the will of God in this manner 1. Orderly God is a God of order and all his works are orderly he will have his word orderly every one is not to assume the office of a Preacher in the congregation of the Elders Every man must keep in that Calling wherein God hath put him and he that presumeth to preach without his call of which we have spoken before breaks order 2. Plainly He that preacheth must condescend to his hearers capacity Our Saviour when he preached was often plain that we might understand his meaning as easily as we understand a hens call when she would gather her young ones under her wings yet sometimes as a judgement God may give a commission to a Preacher to speak things not easie to be understood Isa. 6.9 For this reason our Saviour sometimes preached in dark parables Now preaching is plain 1. When it is sent home to the heart and conscience 2. When it is without flattery 3. When it is without deceit 3. Impartially The Scribes scape not the lash of Iohns Doctrine let the soul be afraid that his Maker will cut him off that Accepts any mans person or that gives flattering title unto any Job 32.22 4. Authoritatively Let their words be such as command attention who ascends the Pulpit stairs whatever they say let it be in the Lord Thus saith the Lord ought to be the preface and close of a Sermon 5. Freely Courage and spirit ought to be in his bosome that undertakes to deliver the Lords mind Men naturaly have hard hearts and he that would preach savingly must have an hard brow Ezek. 3.9 Ephes. 6.19 20. 6. Zealously he must so preach that it may appear he desires in soul his people to shun what he reproves to perform what he exhorts he ought to be jealous over Gods people that is a shepherd of the flock of Christ 2 Cor. 11.2 7. In the power and demonstration of the spirit he ought so to reason the case with sinners to convince the Gain-sayer to reprove the unruly to open the Scripture so sincerely and comfort so strongly that men may see and know the spirit of God to be with him of a truth 1 Cor. 2.3 SECT III. Touching the necessity of submitting to this ordinance much might be said we shall confine our discourse to these few things 1. It is the Soveraign means appointed by God to save them that believe 1 Cor. 1.21 There are some who hold it necessary to convert heathens but will not admit it usual for the confirming of Saints but it is otherwise It is needfull to beget a Saint to uphold a Saint to perfect a Saint They may account it foolishness as they do yet such as it is the wisdome of God hath appointed us to hear it Rev. 1.3 2. It is necessary for Preachers to be at all times preaching 2 Tim. 4.1 Wo unto them if they preach not which declares wo shall befall the people if they hear not 3. The people is lost and is known to perish that have it not Prov. 29.8 They are as it were made naked to their shame they have nothing to shield them or shelter them from the stormy blasts of divine wrath where this Candlestick of preaching is removed or where it was never placed there is no place for Christ. Gods presence is with his Church and his walk only among his Candlesticks All other places are in darkness and he that walketh in darkness stumbleth and perisheth 4. There is a special charge not to despise it 1 Thes. 5.20 and therefore it is much to be regarded he that contemneth it contemns him that appointeth it which is God he is not to be cast our irreverently that preaches it lest the dust of the earth judge them and therefere it is to be reverenced of all such as would believe for the saving of the soul. 5. It is effectual for the bringing of future and present generations nigher and nigher unto God Ephes. 2.17 there are still young coming into the world who by nature are children of wrath Whose fathers being Amorites and whose mothers being Hittites are aliens from the spiritual Common-wealth of Israel now this ordinance of preaching is a proper instrument for the circumcising of the heart by which they are made Citizens of the New Ierusalem and by faith made sons and daughters of the faithful Abraham SECT IV. As to every purpose under heaven there is a time there is an end for every thing under the Sun All Gods ordinances are designed for some end or other besides his own glory the end of all his purposes designs and undertakings Preaching he hath ordained for these ends viz. 1. That sinne might be discovered more convinceingly the whole Law or Word of God reproves and holds out sin but preaching by mustering and collecting all Gods threatnings together and laying them in the sinners sight holding them to his face seems to make him startle and really to tremble Acts 24.25 Mat. 3.5 2. That they may be condemned more inexcusably Sinners might plead their ignorance at the barr of Justice and excuse their sin in regard of the Scriptures deepness God therefore to clear himself from the least imputation of injustice stirs up his servants to open expound reveal and apply his Word giving by them unto his people line upon line precept upon precept shewing them their sin and making them know their transgression whereby their condemnation is the more just and their ignorance the less inexcusable 3. To set out the freeness of Gods grace the more effectually the grace of God appears in every line of the Scripture and each line may lead us to admiration yet this of preaching laying mans sinne before him with all just heightning circumstances discovering mans nature with its abomination opening hell with all its torments and then making known
mans inability weakness and unworthiness and withal shewing the grace of God freeing a soul from all doth very much tend to the advancement of free grace and the love of God 4. To set home the cross of Christ more powerfully In reading the history of our Saviours passion what soul can but be affected yet when the Preacher cloathed with a commission overshadowed by a divine ray in the congregation and his tongue made like the pen of a ready Writer declares his agony in its order time causes parts nature greatness and effects what heart can be so rocky as not to break 5. To keep down pride in man the more strongly Scripture shews man that originally he is but dust as the wild Asses Colt that he is worse then the beast that perish that he is as water spilt upon the earth that his days are swifter then a weavers shuttle and that his life is but as a vapour these being set forth in popular Sermons with the advantages of Oratory judgement and invention makes the eyes of the poor mortal to see the face of his nativity the clearer yea on his eye lids to behold the shadow of death SECT V. Questions resolved Quest. 1. Whether Gospel-Preachers ought to have a se●led maintenance Quest. 2. Whether an Heretical or upstart Teacher may be known from the true Quest. 3. Whether a Preacher once setled in a place may leave that place Quest. 4. Whether it be expedient to permit one to preach constantly in a place that hath neither order from the Church nor charge of the people Quest. 5. Whether he that is a Gospel-preacher may lawfully own civil Titles of honour Quest 1 Whether Gospel Preachers or Ministers ought to have a setled maintenance There is a crew or company in this age who either through ignorance or malice or both cryes down and speakes against a setled maintenance for the body of the Ministry affirming that they are purely to live upon charity and depend upon the good will of the people but not to ● and longer upon a Preface this Tenant seems to be unjust 1. From that certain and competent allowance given to the Ministers of the Jewish Church God took a special care that they that waited at his Altar and served him in his Temple should have certain and honourable maintenance for so doing what by first fruits by tithes c. the Levites had a liberal subs●●tence nay as it is recorded from Scripture out of an hundred bushels of corn the Levites were to have nineteen besides their forty eight Cities with the fields about them which in the land of Israel was no small portion he that appointed so liberally and provided so certainly for his servants under the Law did without question never design those under the Gospel should be beggers 2. From that certain and unavoidable charge that dayly he is put to what Ministers buy they pay for as other men ●they are at the same charge and expence as others are which to do and in the mean time be at an uncertainty how to clear that charge is in reason not to be admitted Except the world were free to them reason not to say religion would never leave them to be free to the world 5. From that uncertainty yea probability that he might have of having nothing Charitas as of old Astrea hath took her leave of the earth there are Nabals that would give none of their earthly goods to him that gave them heavenly food They would not buy heaven for a certain act of charity and rather then they would be at any charges they would go without a Teacher which thing being known to the Minister we may know what the issue of it would be 4. From that snare and temptation that it might lay before men Ministers though they be Angels in office yet they are but men in nature though they be chosen vessels yet they are but earthen ones Now for them to live at the good will and by the charity of others might keep their tongues from speaking the word of the Lord in that bold sincere upright manner wherein they ought to speak it for fear of displeasing their people or angering their hearers lest they should as Laban either change their wages for the less or take from them their wonted charity altogether the very thoughts of which ought not to come within the compass of a Ministers soul and therefore the occasion of them to be farre away 5. From the ends of those men that affirm such Doctrine it is not so much for the ease of themselves as for the rooting out of the Ministry they know what a few years would produce in the Nation where this should be practised i● which though conscience might make the Ministery that now is to go through their callings in fastings and watchings or else go and exercise their gifts among the heathen who with the Aegyptians have given lands to their Priests yet men might have no encouragement to bring up their sons to learning and therefore put them to other callings which in time would bring Ignorance and Atheism upon them The end these men propose to themselves in crying down a setled maintenance that their ignorance might be thought learning their impudence might pass for zeal and their errors for Orthodox Tenents but before they obtain this end Let them grin like dogs and grudge that they are not satisfied Let them howl like Bears and eat up their flesh with envy 6. From the practise of all civilized Nations whether Heathens Turks Jewes or Christians who alwayes had a care to mantaine the honour and dignity of their priests particularly Pharoah who would furnish the priests from his own table rather then for want when the whole world wanted they should sell their lands Exod. 47.22 What God under the law appointed for his priests cannot be unknown to them that know the Scripture They had citys and suburbs tithes free-will offerings first ruits and their part in sacrifices of all sorts that swere to be parted And under the Gospel in which time as God appointed that they which minister about holy things should live of the things of the temple and they that wait at the altar are pertakers with the altar even so hath the Lord ordained that thy which preach the Gospel should live of the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.13 Now God appointed certaine mantainence to them that served at the Altar even so hath he ordained that they who preach the Gospel should have certaine subsistance And where ever the Gospel got footing and Christ preached there was a certain allowance for the ministry throughout the whole Christian world 7 From that dampnesse that would fall upon the active Spirit were it not so what man is there but would have encouragment in his work to go throw it with joy and truly when it is considered ministers would have some encouragment too The Priests and Levits who had been scattered in the Idolatrous reign
and Elijah Ahab and severall others but Kings being Gods immediate deputies upon earth who call them in question though rage universal as to punish him for this faults or correct him for his crimes who first even the Pope upon the one hand and Guisel upon the other These two though at odds between themselves yet ever agree and goe and in hand for the takeing away of that honour annexed by the King of Kings to his vicegerents upon this inferiour world before which be done let them goe about day by day and grudge that they be not satisfied That distinction of the moderate and rigid Presbyterians may be by this time may come into the readers mind a distinction that hides many an ugly face and treacherous heart possibly the moderate Pre● will with more gravity and deliberation pronounce the sentence of excommunication against the chief magistrate then the other and comes to it with more sorrow of heart through the greatnesse of the crime then the other but yet he will do it being a principle with the Pres. that is the factious one or the Antiepiscopal on for otherwise Pres. is an honorable title and catholical as such and touching the distinction it is as a just one and grounded on nature there being as great difference betwixt these two as there is between staring and stark mad the one drives like Iehu furiously the other like the Spaniard is more grave stayed slye and cunning Quest. 2. Whether excommunication debarres from all society of the Church In regard that we are exacted to withdraw our selves from such and not so much as to eare with them thi● 〈◊〉 on is not to be passed over It is said then that ex●o●munication hinders not 1 The practise of those dut●s that are grounded on the Laws of nature as the duties of Husbands and Wives Fathers and Children Masters and Servants Princes and People 2 Nor the practise of those dutys that are grounded on the law of nations as traffique and commerce An Excommunicated person must be to us as an Heathen and with these we may have trade 3 Nor the practise of such that are grounded upon the law of Common charity For we are bound to feed the hungry cloath the naked though they be or should be as Heathens 4 It debars not but in some cases from the hearing of the word Unlesse they be scoffers it being the meanes for converting of very heathens they are admitted to it and ought to be exorted to it but in no other ordinance do they enjoy any society with the Church and in no familiar or unnecessary dealing have we any thing to do with them but are bound to avoyd them that they may be ashamed and returne to the Church by repentance from which they were cast out through obstinacy CHAP. 15. Of Singing THis is the fourth and last direction given above for the words in dwelling and one end why the Apostle would have the word of Christ to dwell richly in the believing Colossians though some who would be thought unbl●meable before God in love blames the Church for her keeping up this holy practise of singing Psalmes This gospell ordinance being set aside with others by some of this generation we come in the last place to defend and let us see 1. The nature of it 2. Some arguments for it 3. The manner of performing it 4. Resolve some questions SECT I. The nature of this ordinance is better known by practise then it is or can be by art which might be the reason why so many have handled it and few or none define it we shall give some description of it for methods sake and because motus naturae velocior est in fine we shall be the briefer It is a calling upon God by prayer or praise with an elevavation of the voice and prolongation of the words Davi● sung unto God by prayer and emptied his mind unto him by confession of sin this way Psal. 51. and again praised and magnified his name for all his mercyes Psal. 18. The same words wee utter quickly and expresse suddenly in praying or reading by keeping them upon our tongue and pronouncing them in parts with an height●ned voice gives a being to that ordinance we call singing suppose we were to read and sing Psal. 35. Lord plead my cause a●ainst my foes confound their force and might Fight on my part against all those that seek with me to fight The same words being quickly read over and the letters joyned hastily together makes it a prayer read which deliberally uttered with a separation of the letters through the striking of the tounge and teeth makes it a prayer sung That of Saint Iames. 5. Iames. 13. contradicts not what hath been sayd the words not being preceptive but declarative showing only that in times of mirth the heart is better disposed to sing then otherwise and in times of trouble it is more apt or fit to pray then for any other duty SECT II. Were it not that there were some unreasonable men who want faith this practise need not now to have been disputed but without question used for 1 God hath shown himself eminently well pleased with it 2 Chro. 20.22 he declared his mind and pleasure touching this ordinances when in the celebration of it he sent destruction to his peoples enemys he may give us victory now over our sins as well as them over their foes then 2 Scripture commands it and calls for it Eph. 5.18 19. 〈◊〉 5.13 it is not an ordinance of humane or mans invention but is enjoyned us of God and we cannot find that ever those precepts was revealled and therefore they are now binding 3 The spirits and affections need it this ordinance by experience doth warme the blood and raises the heart in a holy quite to perform divine service men are sometimes dull in there devotion and crosses oftentimes damps their zeale which this act of singing helps and stirrs up 4 The Church of Christ had a promise of it Rom. 15.9 of the times we live in was it promised that this should by us be performed and therfore what ever fond people say against it it is not to be neglected 5 The Church of God in all age hath used it we read of it under Moses Exod. 15.1 and under the judges Iudg. 51. under the Kings under the gospell Mat. 26.30 Acts 16.25 no time can we find that ever had a Church but in and by that Church was this ordinance upheld 6 To no age did God ever limit it It was appointed practised to and in all ages when or where it was to cease was never made known or divulged by which we are as much engaged to sing Psalmes with grace in our hearts in England as ever the Collossians Phrigia 7 The Church militant above all other ordinances comes nearest to the Church triumphant by it In heaven thereis nothing but a continuall singing and praising God both by the Angels and spirits of
she may be made clean Ierem. 13.27 7. The Saints practises that are recorded therein What ever we find the Saints prayed for and were answered ether ad voluntatem or ad utilitatem whether to their will or to their well may be a rule for us to pray by and therefore we may pray to be delivered from unreasonable men 2 Thes. 3.2 or the buffetings of Satan 2 Cor. 12.8 2. We come now to the particular rule Which is that prayer composed by Christ and recommended to his Apostles as a prayer Luk. 11.2 and to be a rule and standard of all other prayers Mat. 6.9 Unto which rule scale or ballance should we bring most of their prayers and petitions who refused this form and rule especialy those that had reference to things lately acted upon the stage of these Kingdomes and the reason why they did so pray we might write over them and upon them MENE TEKEL Dan. 5.25 26. In this rule or pattern of prayer their are four things to be observed 1. The Preface or Introduction to the whole prayer In these words Our Father which art in heaven 2. The substance or the petitions themselves which are asked in that prayer In these words Hallowed be thy name c. 3. the greatnesse or excellency of the person unto whom that prayer is directed In these words For thine is the kingdome c. 4. The confidence of the petitioner to be heard in the things prayed for In this word Amen All which in generall shews 1. That we are to make a holy decent and honourable entrance or preface unto our prayers It is but blunt to hear men bolt forth thir petitions without giving God some holy title as Almighty God or holy and gracious Lord or Eternal God A Centurion beseeched him saying Lord I have a servant lieth at home sick of the palsie c. Math. 8.6 2. That when we come and appear before God we are not alwayes to be swelling in titles but have some enlargement by way of request contrary to the practise of some in our days that pretend they do appeare before God and speake of high things yet as if it were below them they will aske nothing of him but let us do otherwise for we have not been so learned by Christ. 3. That when we come to God to receive from him we are not to go from his presence except something be given to him from us we are at least to be thankfull unto him which is done when we divest our selves of all power worth and merit ascribing all the glory unto him 4. He that prays ought not to waver or be regardlesse but full of faith and desire to obtaine the things he openeth his mouth unto the Lord for and faithfully as well as heartily say Amen But to be more particular In the preface there are two things by which our prayers are to be ruled 1. What God is Our Father 2. Where God is which art in heaven He that comes to God must not only know that God is that is that there is a God of himself but also what God is to him as that he is his Father which is by Christ and neither can he so call him but by the spirit So that the three persons in the Trinity must be all believed by him that would pray as he ought Again God being our Father teacheth us 1. To love him 2. To fear him 3. To obey him 4. To honour him 5. To depend upon him 6. To love and pray for each other 2. Though it be said he is in heaven we are no to suppose he is confined there as if he were not upon the Earth for as a King though he be in all parts of all dominions by vertue of his laws and officers yet chiefly and in a more eminent and majestick way he is at the Court. So is God our Father said to be in heaven being there in his greatest glory Majesty and Dignity From this we learn 1. That we pray to none but to them whom we are assured to be in heaven It is foolish to pray to them of whom we have no certainty that ever they were and dangerous to pray to them of whom we have no great hopes that they are in heaven In both these respects therefore the Church of Rome had better reforme her self that her prayers may be answered 2. That we pray to none in heaven but to them that begat us to our Father only are we to pray now all others that are therein both Angels and men acknowledged themselves to be our fellow servants and therefore though in heaven not to be prayed unto 3. To have no earthly Imagination or thought in our heart in the time of prayer whether in respect of the glorious Trinity whom we pray to or of our selves or others whom we pray for As heaven is in our mouth so it ought to be in our affections 4. To have raised desires lifted up hearts all the time of prayer Heaven is high above us and we must lift up the voyce of our soul to be heard by our Father there and truly men ought so to compose their prayers in the length of them as not to destroy their own or their peoples fervency a thing not much noted and observed in our days 5. To be ever disposed and and fitted for prayer where ever we are in what place or dungeon we be God is above and heaven is above our fathers mansion house so that no time shall we misse of him nor no time shall he be from home 6. To have ever a strong confidence and faith to be heard in prayer Men may hinder much good doing upon the earth and may encompasse the Saint like bees then his hope is this that their hands are but short they cannot keep his prayers from ascending and therefore with confidence he may send them up 2 The next considerable thing in this prayer are the petitions that are in it In number they are six as Hallowed be thy name c. From them in generall we learn 1. To pray for things of moment and of weight All the petitions are of great concernment and indeed necessary to come to God begging trifles is below his Majesty and Grandour a D●is nihil pretendum nisi bona simpliciter 2. To pray for nothing but what is good There is nothing in the petitions that is hurtfull either for the soul or body of man this should learn us to be farre from cursing or wishing evill to any person and indeed the curse may fall upon them that makes it he whom thou art so cursing may be praying Let him curse O Lord but blesse thou If this part of prayer had been eyed by many there had not been so many uncharitable petitions put up as there was These six petitions divide themselves into two parts Three of them concerns God Hallowed be thy name c. Three of them concerns man Give us this day our
dayly bread c. Those petitions that concern God goeth before the other shewing that before all things we ought to seek the things concerning the Kingdome of God and of all those things the Glory of God ought to be most and first in our eye H●llowed be thy name being the first petition God being above all things most Jealous of that and will have it hallowed 1. Over all 2. By all 3. In all That it may be hallowed by us we pray next for the coming of his Kingdome 1. Of grace in our hearts 2. Of glory in the clouds He had need have a good cause that prayes for the coming of the Judge we must have his Kingdome to come in our hearts by grace or then that in the clouds will never come to our souls in comfort and without these his name by us shall never be hallowed But grace inwardly tends not much to edification if it be not acted outwardly and therefore we pray againe that his will might be done in earth as it is done in heaven Obedience is better then sacrifice and what better pattern can we have before us then heaven Now there is a twofold heaven 1. A sensible or visible heaven wherein he hath put a tabernacle for the Sun which keeps the ordinances he gave it from the beginning 2. A rational or invisible heaven this is the Saints and Angels though cheifly the Angels be here understood who spends their eternity in doing the will of God 1. Fully 2. Freely 3. Cheerfully 4. Speedily 5. Satisfactorily 6. Unweariedly And in all these things we ought to indeavor to be like the Angels of God by which meanes it will appeare that his Kingdome of grace is established in us and therefore his kingdom of glory shall be hastened for us and then his name to all eternity shall be hallowed by us Those petitions that concern man are either to his body as give us this day our dayly bread or his soul Forgive us our trespasses c. In which this number is observable that there is but one petition for the things of the body and two for the soul shewing that in prayer our care labour zeale for the good of the soul should at least be double to that of the body Two of these are for the obtaining of good give us this day our daily bread c. and one for the avoiding of evill lead us not into temptation shewing that if we by faith struggle hard for grace though it be but like a mustard seed yet it shall prove effectuall to keep us from a great deal of evill and by consequence prevent a great deal of sorrow That for the body shews that in prayer we should aske nothing but what is necessary for us as bread in which is included drink sleep rayment and what is necessary for the life of man Yet we must understand that according to mens states and conditions their necessities are either more or lesse It is necessary for a King a General of an Army or for a Judge what is not for me and according to that state and quality they may pray for a supply of their necessity From the body by a short transition or cut we are brought by our Saviour to look upon the soul upon which we are bound to dwell longer by one petition at least for a●ter our dayly bread we presently pray for forgivenesse of sinnes c. noting 1 That there may be danger in long feasting 2 That there may be sin committed in a short meale Indeed when men have eaten and are full they are in danger of sin and to prevent judgment it is fit to pray forgive us our trespasses or debts as we forgive them that trespasse against us In which there is 1 A petition Forgive us c. 2 The rule of that petition as we forgive c. Which shews that in our prayers we are to be full of love and charity as Sons of consolation not of wrath and hatred as was in those sons of thunder But we must know that our forgiving others is not the meritorious cause of Gods forgiving us but a declarative sign of it a certain condition of our part cause sine qua non of our forgivenesse It is a very mocking of Almighty God to beg forgivenesse for sin after we have eaten except the bread be our own he in this case of rape requiring restitution which some in this age refusing to do laid aside this prayer they eating that bread which to enjoy they had possibly banished the owner murthered the Parent and made the Child an exile Through the fraily of nature and subtilty of the tempter God becomes no sooner mercifull then man becomes sinfull which makes our Saviour next to forgivenesse of sin shew that we must pray for Deliverance from it for time to come as we have forgivenesse for the time past in these words lead us not into temptation c. In the former petition we pray for the justifying gift of God that our sins be not imputed in this for the sanctifying grace of God that our natures may be purified before which can be had the former must be obtained Now 1. Satan tempts us to evill 2. Wicked men tempts us to evil From both which we are shewed it is our wisdom to be freed that God might not leave us to our selves nor we be drawn from the simplicity that is in Christ by our inadvertancy yet if God suffer either the one or the other to tempt us as he did Iob we are to pray againe deliver us from evill That neither the one nor the other make us to sin or charge God foolishly but stand through his assisting grace 1 Against the tempters 2 Against the temptation 3 Against above all others the evill One that is Satan the other being but his instruments This notes that what ever grace or blessing we have asked obtain'd we ought to sue for the grace of perseverance that we may bear up against all temptations that are cast before us to destroy that grace given And as Gods glory or the Hallowing of his name is toward him the chief thing to be asked so our own eternal happinesse in a constant perseverance of the truth is to be the end of all our petitions towards our selves And not to our selves only but as this prayer is divided between God and man so our prayers are to eye the honour and glory of God and the good and prosperity of all men and then our petitions are according to our Saviours rule and institution not otherwise 3 The third considerable in this prayer is the greatnesse or excellency of the person unto whom this prayer is directed In these words For thine is the Kingdom c. Which words both for matter and form are a thanksgiving ascribing all wisdom power and glory might majesty and dominion to be in our Father nothing to be in our selves and these to be the Lords peculiar property
and sole prerogative shewing that having come to God with some honourable and glorious tittle at our entry we are to give an honorable respect unto him at our close both in private and publick addresses The body of our prayers are not to be without some gratulatory expressions but thanks to be returned to his name 1 For his spirit that teacheth us to pray 2 For his patience in the time of our prayer 3 For his mercy in answering our prayer 4 For his Son in whom he hath accepted our prayer 5 For all his favours given without our prayer And as this glory is his due for ever so must we ascribe it unto him for ever that is 1 When ever we pray 2 Where ever we are 3 What ever we suffer 4 When we shall be for ever with him For though the Kingdome may be ours by gift and donation yet we must ever acknowledge it to be his and his Christs 1 By nature 2 By inheritance 3 By dominion This form of thanksgiving being ushered in by an illative practice For shews that we must in prayer reason with the almighty and give arguments to move him to mercy the Kingdome is craved of him for all power is his his name is to be hallowed for the glory is his We shall frequently see the Saints pressing God with argument and reason sometimes drawn from the Topick of his own glory as Help us O God of our salvation why should God help them Deliver us for thy name sake 79.9 and sometimes from the common place of their own misery as turn thee unto me and have mercy upon me Why for I am desolate and afflicted Psal. 25.16 And againe O keep my soul and deliver me and let me not be ashamed for I put my trust in thee Psal. 25.20 From this clause the Church of Rome may perceive her errour in making prayers to St. Peter Paul Mary Ioseph or B●cket in regard that neither the Kingdome nor the power nor the glory is theirs for ever nor only as the word ever eyes the eternity past if we may so speak which she will grant but as it eyes that which is to come Peter and Paul yea all the holy Apostles evergiving to the only wise God even our Father and the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ the Kingdome the power and the glory Yea admit that prayers might be made unto them as Fathers of the Church now glorified in heaven yet is it not a strange solecisme to call upon the Virgin Mary or any other female Saint Our Father c. Ave Maria may and doth suit better with her being a woman then Pater noster except it can be proved than since her assumption she hath altered her sex as well as her condition 4 The last considerable in this prayer is confidence of the petitioner to be heard in things prayed for in this word Amen This word is a mother word in all languages and as Jesus a Greek word is understood by all hearers so this though Hebrew is used by all people and in Scripture notes two things 1. A wish that it may be so 1 King 13.6 2. A confidence that it shall be so Rev. 22.20 He that says Amen consents to the Petition offered up in affection saying Amen or so be it as Benajah or Amen so shall it be as the Church in those places above cited what care therefore ought men to have of the nature of those petitions they put up especially in publick nonsence blasphemy heresie fury might have been written upon the prayers of many in these late yeares unto which no true Christian could say and we know God did not lay Amen that ever requiring a full assent and consent to the prayer made Let this inform● Rome and other Hereticks of their error in making the people say Amen 1 To those prayers they understand not in regard they are made in an unknown tongue a language of which the people hath no understanding 2 To those prayers which people apprehend not through the confusion disodrer discontinuing and rawnesse of the prayer made arising from the ignorance presumption and wilfulness of the prayer-maker that they who hears can no more remember what they have sayd Amen unto then Nebuchadnezer remembered his dream This is not written against any that hath parts and abilities fluently as the modern phrase is extempore to express themselves unto God for the people in prayer but to check some presumptuous pretenders to the same gift who are usually so much in the spirit to speak in their own language that they are without understanding Yet these were the men by whom this prayer of our Lord was undervalued in every respect for which it was composed they using it neither as a form of prayer nor for a rule of prayer and not being content with that blasted their verdure with the breath of malignancy who used it to any of these ends but some there were to glory be it spoken that were neither ashamed to use it in their closets nor affraid to carry it to their Pulpits both as a rule and as a form Blessed be the Lord who hath not given us as a prey to their teeth our soul is escaped as a bird out of the snare of the Fowlers the snare is broken and we are escaped Amen and Amen Psalm 124.6 7. SECT 5. We are now to proceed in discovering what must be shuned and avoided in prayer in which we shall not barely shew the things but the causes and the cures of them We are chiefly to beware of these particulars as great hinderances of Prayer 1 Sinfull distractions Math. 6.6 which are of two sorts 1 Brought upon us by others whether Satan or wicked men these are our affections 2 Brought upon us by ourselves these are our sins and of them chiefly we are to take care They proceed from these grounds primarily 1 By thinking too little of heaven or of God they are so seldome in the thoughts of men that it is a hard matter in prayer to keep our hearts upon them but a few minutes 2 By thinking too much on the earth or world The picture of the world is so lively upon some mens spirits that when they go to pray it fares with them as he that goes to bed who dreams usually of those things that most possesse his mind so they when before God are distracted with those thoughts they are more conversant withal c. To cure which disease or remove this kind of distraction consider 1 That nothing is more against the goodnesse of God he is hearty and real and serious in all his dealings and carriages towards us therefore we ought to be upright in our speeches towards him c. 2 That nothing is more against that reverence we owe God he knows the wanderings and aberrations of the heart and seeth the contradiction between our lips and affections which knowing we are to come before him with sutable carriage least we
onely in respect of giving cause of offence to others is things sacrificed to idols not to be eaten and by consequence eating of blood is no more necessary the cause therefore of that forbearance being removed viz. the reading of Moses Law and the tenderness or ignorance of new converted Iews through the establishment of the gospel being also taken away that the consciences of few or none that are Christians are wounded for useing our liberty in that particular we may without sinning against our own souls eat blood as safely as ever the Corinthians might eat things sacrificed to idols or in an idols Temple since both these by the Canon of the Council were esteemed necessary not in themselves but in respect of weak consciences peace of the Church which now in these two particulars is in no danger for had things sacrificed to idols been in it self necessary to prevent sinning against a mans own soul then meat had commended us unto God which it doth not 1 Cor. 8.8 Nay our Apostle would have urged it and pressed the not doing of it upon that account but contrary he yields and would have them to abstain for the consciences of their weak brethren onely witho●t once mentioning any other cause 2. From the holy Apostles attestation speaking of things indifferent and of meats Rom. 14.2 3. Commands that be that eateth meats forbidden in the Law despise not him that eateth not viz. for conscience of the Law Every man living not to himself only ought to have a care of his Brother or not judge him Or put no stumbling block in his Brothers way v. 13. But why must not one judge another in eating or not eating meats forbidden in the Law the Reason he gives v. 14. I know and am perswaded by the Lord Iesus that there is nothing unclean of it self but to him that estesmeth any thing to be unclean to him it is unclean the Apostle is speaking of meats of which not by Moses but by the Lord Iesus he knows none unclean in it self therefore not blood but if a man be conceited through ignorance or conscience to that man any thing were it bread it is unclean He perswades therefore that though men by Christ may eat any thing yet if any Brother be grieved for his eating any meat forbidden by the Law he would not have him cause his Brother to sin For the kingdom of God is not in meat and drink but righteousness peace and joy in the Holy Ghost For he that in these things serveth Christ is acceptable to God and approved by him Now if it were so that that Law touching eating of blood were necessary then a part of the kingdom of God should consist in meat and though we followed after peace righteousness yet could we not neither should we be acceptable to God without abstaining from meats or something that were in it self edible for what is such is meat What ever therefore is forbidden as eating of blood is not to be forborn upon any account but onely upon the weak consciences of our brethren and in eating or forbearing none ought to judge the other for God hath received both him that eats and him that eateth not vers 3. Which God would not do if abstaining from or eating things edible had in it self been either a grace or duty 3 From the Apostles unlimited proposition 1 Tim. 4. where warning Timothy of some that in the latter days should fall from the faith and teach the doctrine of Devils Forbidding to mary and commanding to abstain from meats which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which beleeve and know th● truth v. 3. Blood is a creature that God hath created for the use and service of man is in it self edible and therefore meat God was pleased for a time to forbid the eating of blood having appointed it for his own Altar to make an atonement for the sin of the soul but now Christ being come and his blood shed which was Typified by that No man is now to judge us in respect of meat Col. 2.16 The time is expired and he that under the Gospel preacheth up the use of forbearing meat as a point of Doctrine binding the consciences of men under what seeming purity soever is but a messenger of Sathan and his doctrine the doctrine of Devils c. To prevent an Objection which might have been raisd against that which the Apostle is asserting suppose blood eating he affirmes that every creature of God is good and nothing to be refused if it be received with thanksgiving v. 14. But are there not some creatures that are in themselves good yet for us to eat them it is a sin and a part of unholiness No says the Apostle Every creaturo is good none is to be refused for it is sanctified by the Word of God and Prayer v. 5. Suppose S. Paul to have blood before him he is not afraid to eat he hath craved a blessing by which it is Sanctified and he wil eat for no creature is to be refused and these things if Timothy teach he shall be a good Minister of Iesus Christ v. 6. He is not a Minister of the Law and therefore he is not to look to that but of Christ and what the Word of God and Prayer hath sanctified and they sanctifie every creature let no man call it impure unlawfull and if they do as what will not some men do we are to avoid them they are seducing Spirits and teachers of lyes not apprehending the Law of the Counsel and the reason of that Law nor comparing it also with other Scriptures makes the ignorant and unlearned wrest this as wel as other Scriptures to their own hurt and the Churches disturbance making this not eating blood to be a standing law in the Gospel upon the account of sin when by the Apostles themselves it is made no more necessary then that of not eating what was Sacrificed to Idols a thing by that faithfull Labourer in the Gospel Saint Paul in it self lawful enough to be done but to be forhorn for the sake of the consciences of others and yet that very forbearance but for a time till ignorance did turn to perverseness and the Iiws weakness became stubornness then other doctrine was taught but still having a regard to the peace of the Church the ground of Iames his determination which otherwise in point of Doctrine did agree to Paul and Peter in opposing every part of the Ceremonial Law yet it seemed good in regard the Iewes in a great measure were not yet unchurched nor wholy cast off for their sakes to forbear meats in themselves lawful enough as blood was since Christs was shed But to teach now as a matter of faith the forbearance of any thing edible particularly blood the Iews being wholly unchurched and the Gospel confirmed is not of God but of Satan For every creature and therefore this is Sanctified by the Word of