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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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out for his Glory and how can they or what means can be imagined that they can glorifie God more by than by seeing his Word and Ordinances kept in that Dignity and used with reverence and received in that form that may most conduce to the Honour of God and keep up the Dignity of his Institution 9. The very Being and Power of Magistrates is erdained of God Rom. 13.1 Now shall we suppose that God would constitute a Power on Earth which in no age time nor place he would have to meddle with the great Concernments of his own Glory and to have nothing to do to preserve his Name from blasphemy his Ordinances from indignity and his Worship from contempt When I see a Text that holds out that limitation I assure them I shall believe it but not before 10. Kings have been accounted and ought to be esteemed C●stodes utriusque Tabulae Decalogi keepers of both Tables of the Law They are not onely to keep down murtherers adulterers stealers which belongs to the second Table but swearers Sabbath-breakers which are sins against the first Table For where is the Magistrate limited that he may meddle with the fifth or sixth Commandment and forbid to meddle with the third or fourth or if he be not limited to the third or fourth but he must see to the keeping of them where is he forbid to meddle with the second which is the Precept for the whole Body and Substance of his Worship We are sure it hath been the practice of all pious Princes since the Creation if not hindred by Rebellion within or from Invasion abroad to make good Laws for the preservation of the Churches Honour and as a means to it to have care of Schools and Universities which are Nurseries out of which to take Plants to put into the Garden of God which is the Church as God was pleased to gather old into his Garner which is Heaven 11. We shall scarce reade of any or talk with any that denie this Question but in other points are either Schismatick● Hereticks or Rebels who to justifie their Heresi● or maintain their Rebellion sound their Trumpet with Sheba that man of Belial saying We have no part in David 2 Sam. 20.1 12. It is the judgement of all the Reformed Churches in the Christian World Confession of the Church of France Art 39. of the Church of Belg. Art 36. of Sax Art 23. of the four Cities Art 23. of Bohem. Art 16. of Basil Art 7. of Helvet Art 30. of Scotland Art 24. Church of England Art 37. Generally the Anabaptists by name in the several Confessions are condemned for denying of it By this Jury of Witnesses let this pass for truth they are so unspotted in their natures that I can imagine no knowing nor loyal Christian will except against one of them Rebels will except all for if they stand they know that they shall be condemned and fa●l Let that be written maugre Rebels upon the Gates of our Soveraign Lord the King wh● was written upon the Sword of that famous Prince Charles the Great Custos utriusque Tabulae est CAROLUS And now we come to the second part of the question viz whether the Laws made by the civil Magistrate for governing of the Church be binding to the consciences of men Notwithstanding it hath been above proved that Magistrates have power given them by God by which without more trouble we must urge obedience yet we shall spend some words touching this and in order to it shall premise 1. That the Consciences of men directly properly and immediately are not neither can be tyed to any Laws but those of Almighty God The Lawes that flow from his eternall reason are prope●ly the tye of Conscience 2. So far as Law urgeth and enjoynes those things that make for the better conservation of Divine Laws as that Let every thing be done in decency and in order they do indirectly and secundarily bind and tye the conscience and the reason is not because such Laws are made by the lawfull Magistrate only but chiefly because such Laws as such do participate of the nature of divine Laws which are absolutely binding We answer then in the Affirmative whatever Laws are made by the Christian Magistrate for the better conservation of Divine Tyes and Binds the Conscience of their Subjects This appears upon these grounds 1. God hath absolutely commanded obedience to be given by every soul to the higher powers sor conscience sake Rom. 13.5 He hath not left it as a thing indifferent to obey or not to say that this is in temporal things onely is to say nothing except the ground of this distinction be holy for as I finde no limitation of the Magistrates power but it reaches the first as well as the second Table so I can finde no restriction of my obedience but it is to be given to Lawes of either kind know then where Laws are not contrary to Gods Law and by me resisted I resist the power not personall but authoritative for which I shall receive damnation Rom. 13.2 So that the ●●w of God this Law that you presume you keep through your resisting the power condemns you for so doing Let every soul and therefore let thy soul submit to the Higher Power and make no distiction where God hath made none left when he comes to distinguish the Sheep which is tractable to the Shepherd from the Goates a nature apt to wander thou stand at his left hand There is no minutula legis until thou finde a little God and a little or tolerable Hell never act wilfully a little sin It is a Text that Titus must preach upon to his hearers that they forget not to be subject to powers they might think that Christian Religion freed them from subjection but it is nothing so that plucks not the Scepter out of the hand of the Rulers but keeps it in and and to be ready to every good work Tit. 3.1 i.e. be prompt and cheerfull for every thing that hath a tendency to good or that may be good to others though in all points we stand in no need of it our selves It is part of that honour that God hath engaged us to give Princes for honour is their due Rom. 13.7 They are Ministers Rulers Kings Powers Nay they be Gods Psal. 82.1 Hence it is that Fear God Honour the King goas together in the Scripture Then next God I am to honour my King Sure unto whom God hath given such Honourable Titles I am to give sutable respect and of that this Obedience is a great part and to do it not out of a civil choice but for conscience sake but possibly this may be no great Argument Therefore 2. We are to yield obedience to the Civill Magistrate in all things lawfull or expedient for the Lords sake 1 Pet. 2.5 Where a duty is pressed upon the sake of our Lord it both shews how much we are concerned to do it how
him but such doth the spirit that in this Age is pretended It calls down prayer it will not be guided by Scripture not live of the Gospel nor according to Law they will have no ordained Ministers they will not own Magistrates thrust Sacraments out of the Church make Ordinances in their power depend upon the merits of men take singing out of our Christian Temples preaching up new revelations and that they only are the Saints that heed least the Scriptures that it is only formal or Antichristian to crave a blessing before meat that none are baptized but such as are dipped to curse revile slander those that are set apart by Apostolical Tradition for the preaching of the Gospel c. This is that that Christ never taught and therefore it is not his Spirit that brings them to our remembrance 2. The Holy Spirit of God was to glorifie Christ Iohn 16.14 that Christ that was then with his Discsples that was born of the Virgin Mary that Christ that was to suffer at Ierusalem was he to make glorious that Spirit now amongst us casts contumelies and scornfully speaks of that Christ under the notion of a Christ without us Its seeks its own glory and bears witness of it self its whole aym is to invert the Divine dispensations by slighting that Christ crucified upon the account of being without 3. He was to shed abroad the love of God in the hearts of Believers Rom. 5.5 that is the apprehension of the love of God a sense of it a feeling of it from whence comes love joy and peace Now the spirit that some pretenders have is a contradistinct spirit from this for by their trembling quaking foaming it appears that the sense of the love of God is not shed abroad in their hearts but of his wrath those strange and monstrous actings proceed rather from wrath indignation and anguish and indeed if gnashing of teeth be a picture or fruit of Hell we may know whence that spirit comes that carries men forth into those distempers 2. The Spirit of God is a Spirit of Union and of Agreement that ever speaks and agrees with it self In no place doth it really oppose or contradict it self it leads all men into one kind and way of truth how distant soever they be from one another but this spirit that goes abroad in our Age never appears in one shape it speaks this in this mans mouth and contradicts is again next day In this mans mouth it threatens hell in that mans mouth it says there is no hell it says that it is a decent thing for a woman to preach the same spirit calls down all preaching in another here it throws aside the Law there it throws away the Gospel there it throws away both here it is for a Christ within there it affirms there is no Christ at all by its cloven foot you may discern whence it came 3. The Spirit of God teacheth honourable and glorious Doctrine such Doctrine as made the highest in the earth bow their necks to receive the same the whole Army of the Philist●ms even of those Heathens that persecuted the Doctrine of the Spirit of God was overcome by the noble Army of the Martyrs the more it was afflicted the more it grew and went over the world like a Sea overflowing the banks of all Penal Laws Kings became its nursing Fathers and Queens its nursing mothers The Doctrine that this Spirit teacheth is a Doctrine of Reprobation Reprobated silver hath God called it his providence and power hath crushed it always suppressed it and hath only given Satan a little power for the Tryall of his Church but never gave him all his chain to destroy Their Doctrine was never on a Candlestick their house was never on a mountain to bring all Nations in into it God kept it under that it never yet said So would I have it How hath the same Gospel we teach run over the world and that without garments rolled in blood and hath been beautifull and glorious But this spirit hath attempted indeed but stopped tryed condemned cast out Never was there a Kingdom Country Parish nay scarce a house that this spirits Doctrine or Doctrines rather was ever received in These things considered let not the Professors of Christ depend upon those seducing revelations but to the Scriptures the foundation of the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles But 2. If the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament be the word of Christ let none of the people sleight it it is that which Christ hath spoken to be the Rule of their lives tryers of their thoughts and measure of their actions if thou be of the houshold of faith thou art upon that foundation whereof Jesus Christ is the chief Corner-stone Eph. 2.20 All you that build must be squared fitted and proportionated to this Corner stone which can only be done by this Word of Christ and therefore it is not to be slighted Now the Scripture may be slighted divers ways 1. When it is regardlessely heard when Gods message is delivering for the good of a mans soul by Gods servant thereunto appointed to have an irreverend or unseemly carriage shows they put no high valuation upon it to be drowzy or sleepy when God is holding forth our duty or his own greatnesse our sins and his Justice is a great sign of irreverence and may provoke him to thrust us out of his presence for it is not a slighting or contemning of man who reads it or speaks it but of God who made it and enjoyned it 2. When it is scoffingly used when men make Scripture to be the bottome of Jests and Jears the Subject of their profanenesse or Object of their mirth When the Prophet called the Burthen of the Lord the people answered him in scorn the Burthen of the Lord the Burthen of the Lord. Ier. 23.33 34 35. or as Iulian that would smite a Christian on the one cheek und then bid him turn the other as his Lord and Master directed The Scriptures were not written to make men laugh but to make men wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 they were sent into the word by God to instruct men how to demean themselvs without offence towards God man Act. 24.16 it ought only to be imployed to that end It is not safe jesting with edged Tools so neither is it safe to sport with the two edged sword of the word of God This is holy ground let us be afraid to sin upon it least the owner of it Mock when eur fear cometh and laught at our calamity Prov. 1.26 It is in it self a high provocation of his Majesty contempt of his honour and a diminishing of his greatnesse in the sight of men 3. When it is heedlessely forgot if a mans servant should not do the thing commanded und excuse himself from his forgetfulness it would not reprieve him from his masters anger How shall God be patient when his precepts and word are
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
answer was Christianus sum intermittere non possum I am a Christian I must keep it and that day being commonly so called Saint John calls it so likewise as either set apart for him or instituted of him which brings us to the next thing to be considered vi● 2. The Authors of that change The keeping of the Christian sabbath or the observing of the first day of the week for the day of rest in the Church of Christ whence was it from heaven or of men it is answered from heaven by Heavens great Trumpeter we are freed from any duty to the Jewish feasts or sabbaths from Heaven therefore doth our liberty come but whether first appointed by Gods Son or by Christs Apostles the Scripture is silent but that it was done by the spirit of God in one of them is certain We read that Christ carried forty dayes with his Disciples after his resurrection speaking of the things pertaining to the Kingdom of God What things conduced to the honour and glory of God how the Church should be ruled ordered and guided did our Saviour without question speak of there is written enough for us to believe but all that he spoke is not written Iohn 20.30 Now among those things this circumstance of time for publick worship might be treated on and spoken off Christ is Lord of the sabbath and he might remove it from the last unto the first day of the week If not changed by him then without doubt by his Apostles who were in points of such high concernment guided by the infallible spirit of God they durst not of their own accord teach any thing to any nation but what he gave them a commandement for Math. 28.18 And in this case what he spoke to them in the closet they might reveale on the house top and by their preaching administring the sacraments Laws touching gathering of collections upon the first day we are to conclude that that spirit that led them into all truth led them also to this practice and according to them in this hath the Church of Christ directly constantly holily set apart the first day of the week for the worship not by its own authority it being not in the power of the Church Men or Angels to alter the day but in him only who is Lord of it or them who are immediately and infallibly guided by the spirit sent from him but by example from the practise of the Holy Apostles this day viz. the first of the week is kept for the Lords service and because of that not unfitly called now as it was of old the Lords day as instituted by him or by his Disciples It is time to see the third thing viz. 3. The reason of the change Go● n●ver changes his will but he of●en wills a change darkly it seems to be his will that a change be made in some time of the world of the circumstance of time required for his own worship in giving the Law but to come to the reason of that change from the last to the first day of the week it might be made 1. From the indifferency of the Law at the Creation God blessed the seventh day and hallowed it now while the people were in bondage it may be questioned whether the Aegyptians would suffer them to rest since they were denied three days to sacrifice God at the establishing of his Law upon the Mount Exo. 20.2453 years after the Creation before which time the doctrine of the sabbath was never written God in the Law makes it moral that men shall for ever work six dayes and the seventh day they shall rest says not precisely the seventh from the Creation but in general one day in seventh now by this the time might be changed and the Law not at all altered since m●n even under the Gospel gives God one in seven which is that onely the Law requires 2. From the proportion of the Law the Law of the sabbath is because God rested from his work of Creation the change might be because God the Son rested from his work of redemption God the Father sanctified the beginning of the seventh day because he then ceased working God the Son might have the d●wning of the first day sanctified because he then ceased suffering This is by some tho●ght to be darkly mean by that Text H●b 47.8.9 The work of redemption was greater then that of Creation being done by the blood of God and the sabbath day being not precisely commanded on the seventh from the Creaation he that is Lord of the sabbath might command it to be kept in memorial of his resurrection which is ● new Creation unto Holiness and good works whence it might be called the Lords day 3. From the power that the Lord hath over the 〈◊〉 This might be done that we might know the Son of Man is Lord also of the sabsath Mark 2.28 He hath power over and he can say to the seventh day from the Creation Go and it goes and he can say to the first day of the week Come and it comes if the sabbath hasten to come abroad the seventh day shewing it self to be a day to be rested in he hath power to forbid its out going until to morrow he spake to his Disciples of things pertaining to the kingdom of God which are not written and the change of this might be one however the Spirit that guided the Church by the Apostles did not erre Christ having all power given unto him he gave them a power to change the day none durst presume to have altered a sabbath that had been instituted of God Laws made by him can onely be altered by him a change there was we know It must be by some that had power given them and that was the Apostles who had not the power of themselves but it was given them by one that had all power and was Lord particularly of the sabbath who bound it up in the Napkin that was about his head with the sacrifices that did attend it and left them both in a place by themselves in his sepulchre Col. 2.16 17. 4. From the change of that outward worship enjoyned by the Law the old sabbath had oblations circumcisions sacrifices washings c. All which were now to be abolished as to their outward act no circumcision now but that of the heart no sacrifice but that of prayer and praise these things being these things being removed God would also have the day removed they might dote upon those things still and to wean them from it another day is appointed and a new time set for that worship now to be per formed for though some of those parts of worship were continued after Christs death yet they were languishing dying and giving up the Ghost and in a few dayes were quite buried which though some amongst us would breath life into again and make them rise and appear in the Holy City shall never be seen to live more since
that working distracts the soul and will not suffer the heart of man to close in a spiritual way to bless and praise the Lord now who knows not carding diceing bowling cocking stage-playes may-games wakes do wholly pull back the soul and indeed who follows those things cannot be said to rest so much as his horse 2. The very end of instituting the sabbath is against these things that men might in a publick solemn way entertain Communion with God that they might meditate in his word read on his Scriptures that they might be Holy is the sabbath designed now these sports and their attendants are so far from conducing to this end that many of them that so do appear rather to have Communion and fellowship with Sathan then with the Father the Son lying swearing coveting quarrelling and often times murdering is the issue of some of them and snares traps and temptations to sins are in the bowels of them all 3. Some of these sports in their own nature seem to many knowing men to be unlawful at any time particularly that bru●ish and undelightful spectacle of Cock-fighting for man who is a rational creature to sit and behold more usually for covetousness then for delight these poor creatures destroy one another through that enmity which he put in them is unworthy but possibly the young Gentleman is of another judgement his conscience assures him it is no sin to behold that spectale I will not question his judgement but doing it that day makes it clear he hath no conscience For 4. It lays a platform and foundation for future prophaness the young usually are the persons subject to those extravagant vanities and he that follows them in this tender years may rather surfeit of them then willingly lay them down in age these pleasures may leave him not he them for pleasure is alwaies upon its young legs and desires to be sporting It loves not the company of old men so well as of their Sons Now by this there is a root of prophaneness planted and it may go from generation to generation he that is allowed or can allow himself any part of the sabbath to sport in may in time take half the day and afterward the whole Day he may not value the fourth Commandement and that may make him break the third which may provoke him to break the sixth and by a strange progression doibling his sins he may grow a Devil incarnate It is easie to be observed that the Apostacy of this age usually begins at the sabbath they often quarrel with this first doubting of its Authority they are in time resolved then they doubt of the Assembly then of the place of worship then of the parts of worship then of the God who is worshipped c. Let us therefore of our spending the sabbath have care and serious thoughts that sin and iniquity grow not upon us and the root of prophaneness overspread not our families 5. It put ● a reproach upon Christ and casts a scandal upon that Religion we profess There are but two Religions that keep a sabbath beside the Christian that is the Turk and Iew the former keeping Fryday the other keeping Saturnday for set times of worship who are most precise and strict in their service refusing to do many things wherein even necessity might excuse them Shall the Christian therefore that would be thought to serve God after a more true manner and pretends his sabbath is more Holy then theirs as it is give himself to those pleasures and vanities upon his time of worship this must needs make those Infidels to deride Christ and by such practises to abhor our profession and mock at all the other parts of our religion Quest. 4. Why did God give charge concerning the resting of beasts upon the sabbath God takes care for Oxen we may in some sense affirm since in his own Law out of his mouth he gives charge concerning them the reasons may be such as these 1. From that tender care that he bears to all his creatures the Ox and the Ass creatures that man useth are in some sort looked after by God for that life that they lead they have it from him and he would have their life 's as comfortable to them as their nature and being is capable of he hears the young ravens that cry Psal. 147.9 and therefore the Ox when he lows for need or the Asse when he groans underneath his burthen 2. From that tender care that God would have us bear towards the creatures He would have us to regard the life of our beast Prov. 12.10 God provides food for the beasts and gives them life and gives them to us as our servants and we are not cruelly to use them to teach us to pitey that poor Creature that onely in groans calls to its maker God put the 〈◊〉 the number of his Commandements whereby we ought to let them rest for their refreshment and comfort 3. From that power and authority that God had given man over the creatures he hath dominion over them and by vertue of that might in violating the Law it self Command his beast to do so to which this precept prevents and will not have his beast to work he therefore that labours commits a double sin in forcing the beast and working himself yet the poor creature being forced against its will and against the Law man must at the bar of Justice Answer for the offence yea he may fear that his beast though no body should know it should rise up in judgement against him and condemn him for violating the Law himself and compelling it to do so likewise to send therefore Horse and Cart to and fro upon the Lords Day is a most wicked custome and will have a smarting recompence in the end 4. From that type the sabbath bears of that eternal rest wherein bondage shall be taken from every creature The whole Creation groaneth under that bondage of corruption which lies upon ●it Rm. 8.20 21 22. and it longs to be delivered that it may be at liberty now as a type of that rest which it shall injoy after the resurrection God will have the creatures rest on the weekly sabbath as well as man Quest. 5. Why did not God give charge concerning a wifes resting upon the Sabbath The Person that is spoken to in the fourth Commandement especially is spoken unto in a triple capacity first as a Father and so there is mention made of his Son and or his Daughter secondly as a Master and so there is mention of his man servant and maid-servant and his Cattle thirdly as a Magistrate and so there is mention made of the stranger within his gates no mention made at all of his relation as a husband or of any care that he hath to see his wife if he have one keep the sabbath the reasons may be such as these 1. The party spoken to may be a wife and she is to take care 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
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
ordained Elders and left them in Churches which they had planted And sure to the end there shall be as much need of o●dained Priests or Elders for they are one as then men will be perverse wicked sinfull Impenitent unruly ignorant despisers of dignityes ununregenerate unholy and still there will be some ignorant of the Misteries of God therefore care must be taken to plant and leave Elders in every City and in every country for the cure of those evills It is easie to behold how soon a parish or a village will grow loose disorderly and indeed loose the very face of religion if they want a setled Minister but a few moneths the like we may judge what would befall the world should it want Church officers Though people were wicked yet an orderly keeping of the Sabbath c. conscience in some sort will bring them to it but in unsetlement they have arguments to stop consciences mouth which by degrees brings them quickly to be Heathens the Principles of religion not taught them that are young makes them regardlesse of God or his word either when they come to years of maturity and so their profession comes to be prophane and their conversation to be Ungodly which in a great measure is prevented by a setled Minister though but of weak parts or abilities Quest. 4. Whether it be lawfull to hear an unordained man Preach We must stand at the doore of this question avoid errour and distinguish of Unordained Preachers before we go forward 1. There is a preaching by way of tryall to ordination their gifts their knowledge their uprightnesse their utterance cannot be known but by preaching the Church generally will have a tryall of their parts before she separate any for that worke thus Paul preached before his ordination 2 There is a preaching by way of opposition to ordination so there are some that will presumptuously execute all the offices of a minister and slight ordination desiring possibly not to be bound nor tyed to that calling that though their errours might be detected yet their irregularity might passe unpunished of these latter sort the Question is to be understood and that it is unlawful appeares 1 Because to hear such is to goe out of Gods way and practise the Pharises that taught sound doctrin in some points yet were but theeves and robbers coming not in at the door but climbing up some other way these the sheep hear not Never did God give a power to any to ordain themselves Stewards in his house and therefore we are not to go to them for bread left we be thought strivers against him he never intrusted them with his broad seale and therefore we are not to receive the seales from them Christs knows Paul and Stephen and Timothy but these he knows not therefore his people are bound to esteem them not as Ministers of God 2 It encourages them in their irregular proceedings when they behold giddy heads ignorant persons curious spirits flocking after them imboldens them and hardens them in their errour whereas to withdraw from them might in time make them ashamed of their doings 3 It gives an evill example when the weake Christian seeth one that is strong going to those upstart teachers the weak may follow him he may go out of wantonnesse or curiosity and the other may go out of conscience and frailty 4 Errour is ever sooner believed then truth It is experimentally known that an Heretick may broach that doctrine in a day which truth cannot overcome in a year there is a certain connaturality between the nature of man and falsehood It is best therefore to withdraw from them the very foundation of whose teaching is erroneous in as a much as the authority they pretend to have goes contrary to that authority that ever God invested his Church withall 5 Experience shews that God is offended with mans hearing or following of them for we shall seldome see men giving eares to their doctrines but what through ignorance of justice they are brought to believe a lye which mkes them hop from one opinion to another untill faith and religion be lost and conscience it self be baffled or stifled that they sit down in the seat of the scornful and mock at laws established by either God or man Quest. 5. Whether an ordained person may have an office in the Common wealth There are that maintaine this Popish tenet and yet would be thought no Papists that the Church hath nothing to do with the state or that the government of the Church is a distinct thing from that of the state a distinction framed upon his holinesse anvil at Rome and received here by them that are no good willers to the Catholick clergy to be short an ordained person that is a man separate for spirituall offices may exercise judiciall offices in the Common-wealth and state 1 From the practises of those that were of old separate for the Lord Melchizedek was both a Priest and a King Gen. 14.18 a great part of the government of Israel was in the hands of the Levits we find them judges In all the businesse of the Lord and in the service of the King 1 Chron. 26.29 and ver 19. Zecharia is a wise counsellour They are also appointed together with the Princes For judgement of the Lord and for controversies in Jerusalem between blood and blood c. 2 Chron. 18.8 9. so also Samuel a Levit was both judge and priest in Israel 1 Sam 7.15 and if ignorance make any boast of Samuels being a prophet It may be answered that his sonnes were Levits set a part by God for the service of the Tabernacle Yet their Father made them judges in Israel 1 Sam 8.1 his own circuit was yearly while he had strength and failing he allotted circuits to his three sonnes throughout Israel Who by reason of perverting judgement through bribes are complained of by the people ver 5. by the same rule it will follow that those that are separate now for the work of the gospel may be in businesse of the Lord and also of the King 2 From the abilityes of some persons that are ordained It may be known that in all matters of controvesie in both kindes of the Law the Clergy may have more understanding then many Gentlemen that are justices in the Country and the presence of the Clergy may be helpful in that respect to the most judicious judge 3 From that apparent necessity that there seems to be of it the ordained person is not free from trouble from Law-suits from warrants taxations in which he may receive much wrong if there be none but Lay-persons there who usually may look over the inferiour sort of the Clergy with an unregardfull aspect nay possibly the gentleman may be both judge and harry of himselfe A minister may have stronger presumptions to be redressed of his wrongs which are seldome of the smallest magnitude when he hath some of his own function upon the bench 4.
we defend that baptisme can only lawfully be Administred by the Gospel Minister thereunto appointed by Apopostolical Ordination For 1. Those only have a commission to baptize who have a visible commission to teach Matth. 28.19 Go ye and teach all nations baptizing them or as it is in the Original Disciple all nations batizing them c. teaching them That the Apostles were outwardly visibly called by Christ though extraordinarily to preach to the world the things concerning the Kingdom of God whereof baptisme is one and after their call that Christ called no other in that exordinary way is clear from Scripture whereof Paul is an eminent instance And that the Apostles might be encouraged in this great work he goeth on saying I am with you alway even unto the end of the world Now the world is not yet ended and Peter and Iames are gone with you therefore must be understood to be meant not of the whole multitude of believers but of them that are outwardly visibly called to preach all things that Christ had commanded in an authoritative way as the Apostles were And as it is said that Kings never dye that is regally and successively though personally they do so the Apostles never dye that is successively though personally they do for to the end of the world so oft as any is visibly and outwardly ordained and commissioned to teach and baptize the Apostles are not dead but alive and Christ prospering and blessing the doctrine of any so ordained in his being with his Apostles that is with them who are outwardly commissioned to teach to the end of the world To the multitude of belevers then was never the power to baptize given because not the power of teaching because not thereunto ordained as hath at large been discovered above unto which for brevity sake the Reader at present is referred 2. The nature of the Ordinance is against it baptisme is a declarative sign of the parties admission into the Church and not only so but an outward sign of the parties inward regeneration and a seal of the covenant of promise a manifestation of the forgiveness of sin Heb. 10.22 Acts 2.38 39. Tit. 3.5 And therefore to be given by none but by them unto whom the power of keeping the seals are given and in no age in no time in no place in no Text did ever God give the power of his seals to a multitude or appointed them to be used by any that ●●d indeed real gifts without an ordinary call even outwardly after the constituting of the Church Stephen Nicanor c. Acts 6.3 though full of the Holy Ghost presume not to exercise the office of Deacons without an ordinary call from the Apostles by imposition of hands the Church being constituted in their Election So Paul and Barnabas though full of worth and eminent in gifts yet must be set apart having given testimony of their abilities by ordination for teaching and baptizing by the Church Acts 13.13 2. Thus also was Timothy set apart for the same work by a Presbytery 1 Tim. 4.14 The baptisme therefore of these Lay persons or gifted brethren whence is it From Heaven or of men if from Heaven shew it from the Apostles for since them Christ ordained and set apart none and we shall believe it if of men let them Repent for the Kingdom of God is at hand or produce the Text that gives power to uncommissioned men purely upon the account of their gifts to exercise the power of the keyes and Administer the seals of the Church and that constantly and then their baptisme shall not be speak against The ability that a man hath to be a Minister is one thing and his putting into the office of the Ministry is another thing Saint Paul thanks God that he had both 1 Tim. 1.12 and we know by the Scriptures he had both by inspiration was he inwardly qualified and by ordination outwardly called he was separated unto the Gospel Rom. 1.1 by fasting prayer with laying on of hands Acts 13.2 3. 3. It is not to be found in all the New Testament implicitely or explicitely that ever any baptized upon the account of their gifts without an outward call from Church officers when those of this perswasion produce a man baptizing in the Church allowed of by the Church upon the account of his gifts then it may be a good argument for him that hath gifts to baptize without a visible commission 4. It would open a door to all irregularity and to all confusion imaginable Once make it lawful for any to baptize upon the account of his gifts we should find that Sacrament to be attempted by many that have no gifts at all what will not arrogance and pride puss men to what will nor ambition cause men to act this doctrine hath taken grace away from some and shame from many each Heretick laying a foundation for a new heresie by this man we are taught that preaching is not tyed to the Gospel Ministery and therefore not baptisme but the spirit that bloweth where it lifteth makes men sitted for that work and by it sufficiently called This being granted by another teaching is not tyed to men but common also with them to women since in Christ there is neither male nor female c. It is time for thee O Lord to work for they have made void thy Law Psal. 119.126 5. It is against the Doctrine of the Reformed Churches of Helv. Art 24. Of Bohe. Art 9. Of Pran Art 23. Of Belg Art 30. Of Ausp Art 14. Of Wirtem Art 21. Of Irel. Art 71. Of Scot. Art 22. and of Eng. Art 23. The Article it self is this Article 23. Of the Church of England IT is not lawful for any man to take upon him the Office of publicke Preaching or Ministring the Sacraments in the Congregation before he be lawfully called and sent to execute the same And those we ought to judge Lawfully called and sent which be chosen and called to this work by men who have publicke Authority given unto them in the Congregation to call and send Ministers into the Lords Vineyard SECT VI. Questions Resolved Quest. 1. VVHether Dipping be essential unto Baptisme Quest. 2. Whether Infants ought to be be baptized Quest. 3. Whether Baptisme is or ought to be readministred Quest. 4. Whether witnesses at Baptisme according to the Law of the Church of England be to be approved Quest. 5. Whether the Cross at Baptisme according to the Law of the Church of England be to be approved Quest. 1. Whether Dipping be essential unto Baptisme That dipping is lawful is not questioned by the Church of Christ but whether it be essential that is If Baptisme be not Baptisme without it or whether none is or cannot be baptized without he be dipped is the ground of our Quere It is to be denied Dipping is not essential to that Sacrament for 1. The word baptize used in the Scripture for that Sacrament signifies not
because the most fresh colour is soonest apt to fade we must pray that they may be alwayes plump and wel-favoured For 1 They pray for us to be sure they make supplication and prayer for all men knowing that it is acceptable in the sight of God our Father 1 Tim. 2.1 3. And if there be anything pure lovely or of good report as this is they think on these things Let us therefore shew so much kindnesse to our friends as to Pray for them again and love them in some degree at least that loveth us so much left the Publicans come and take our reward from us 2 They are the very pillars of the world Psal. 753. In some sence the earth is not hanged upon nothing and in another heaven moves not by intelligences the Saint keeps all up take them out of the world then it is like Lot out of Sodome remove them from the earth then it is like Moses separate from the congregation of Cora when these are gathered together then comes the end let prayers therfore be made that that they may be strong in the faith strengthened with all might That they may be stedfast unmoveable alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord 1 Cor. 15.58 That they may be filled with the fulnesse of God Eph. 3.19 And that they may be perfect and compleat in all the will of God Gal. 4.12 3 They are the Teachers and Doctors of the world It is they that teach their Children what the Lord hath done for them they are Schoolmasters leading the age wherein they are to Christ by the word of his grace and washing with water It is they that speakes of the Law when they rise up and when they lye down and are ever mindfull of his Covenant we are therefore to pray That as strangers and Pilgrims they would abstaine from fleshly lusts 1 Pet. 2.11 That the manifestation of the spirit might be given to every man to profit withall 1 Cor. 12.7 And that they might seek to excell to the edifying of the Church 1 Cor. 14.12 And grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ. 4 They are not without their faillings they see but in part and known but in part and their unbelief would be helped The time is not yet come wherein they shall know as they are known feares passions troubles sometimes interposeth themselves between them and ●aven and their graces suffers an Ecclipse and this ●● to be observed and prayer offered up that they might have life more abundantly Iohn 10.10 That they might be enriched by him in all utterance and in all knowledge and that they might come behind in no gift 1 Cor 1.5 7. And that their faith might grow exceedingly and that the Charity of everyone towards each other might abound 2 Thes. 1.3 For these several kind of persons ought prayers to be put up whether they be our friends or foes whether good or bad whether tyrants or scandelous their office their danger their condition requires it Yet in supplication against evil we must not forget to justifie God in sending that evil but must confesse that we have sinned and have committed iniquty and have done wickedly and have rebelled Dan. 9.5 And in postulation to obtain mercy alwayes remember with Josephs Brethren to bring double money in our hands thanks to pay for the last mercy we did receive and faith to obtaine that me cy that for the present we come to crave For know in every thing therefore in prayer We are to give thanks 1 Thes. 5.18 SECT VI. When God brought his people out of Egypt he gave them a cloudy pillar to be their guide to prevent their wandering Neb. 9.19 In our passing unto heaven we are to observe a rule or we shall easily loose our way It is not our own good meaning that will defend or justifie evill practises though a string much harped upon in our dayes for the case in hand we are not only to pray but to pray ●fter this manner John 6.9 For as good intentions never justifie bad actions so unsavory or uncharitable petitions will never be tollerated or allowed through a good meaning The rule o● prayer is twofold 1 More generall that is the whole Scriptures of God 2 More particular the prayer composed by the Son of God commonly called the Lords prayer and commonly refused by the ungodly Saints of this generation and not without reason as by and by shall be seen 1. We shall first speake of the generall rule which is the scriptures and in them we have seven things which may be our rule in prayer 1. The precepts that are enjoyned therein what ever duty we find God obliging his people to performe whether moral or ceremonial we may make either of them rules for our prayers and what ever grace tends to the right performing of it or quickening up the he●rts of men to do it may be lawfully called for if morall for the thing it self directly as for knowledge that we may love him or if Ceremonial for the thing signified as circumcised eares and hearts that we may be his people 2. The promises that are made therein what ever God promised to give his people or his Church in generall or whatever concerned the soul in particular or the body in things necessary for his promising David a Kingdome in special is no rule to us we may pray for the same thing as for raine in its season Zac. 10.1 and for a new heart and new spirit Ezek. 36.26 3. The threatenings that are denounced therein what ever judgment God threatens for sin in general or for any sin in particular it is lawfull for us to pray against that punishment in the commission of that particular sin It is therefore agreeable to the Scriptures to beg that God would not dispise our feast dayes not our solemn assemblies though we have sinned against him Amos 5.21 4. The providence observed therein when we see God in out-goings giving to this or that Saint such a particular grace sutable to the place wherein he put him or drawing him out of that misery this or that way wherein he was pleased to cast him this may be a rule for us to pray accordingly so Magistrates may pray for wisdome 1 King 3.9 and subjects to be delivered from all that oppresse them 5. The protestations that are declared therein what ever it be that God for the vindication of his honour or exaltation of his grace hath declared to the sonnes of men in reference to their sins or soules to there temporall or eternall estate may be eyed by us in our prayers and therefore boldly may we aske that we dye not the death though we be sinners Ezek. 33.11 6. The expostulations that are found therein We find the Almighty chiding and checking men for their wilfulnesse lazinesse idlenesse and prophannesse which humbly we may make use of in our pleadings with God thus Ierusalem may pray that suddenly
the Church is founded on a rock and neither Iew nor Greek T●ik nor Infidel shall be able to prevaile against her c. 5. For the greater honour fo the Lord Iesus Christ the Iews kept the Law that was given by Moses but behold one greater then Moses is here who hath altered the day by which there is more inquiry made of him his power his person who thus alters the Law who thus changeth the sabbath had the Gentiles come in to the Iewis sabbath Christ had not been so much magnified by it as he is when both Iew and Gentile come into a sabbath never known before and that upon the authority of Christ it tends to his honour much and respect among the people of both sorts It follows therefore that we in this age are to keep that sabbath kept by the Apostles inspired thereunto by the Spirit of God and approved of by the Prophets and people of GOd that then were and blessed by God in all ages of the Church that hath been since what ever ignornant factious Spirits say to the contrary c. SECT V. Questions resolved Quest. 1. Whether the keeping of a sabbath be a Ceremony and so abolished by Christ Quest. 2. Whether it be lawful to make feasts on the sabbath Quest. 3. Whether sporting or gaming are to be done upon the sabbath Quest. 4. Why did God give charge concerning the resting of beasts upon the sabbath Quest. 5. Why did not God give charge concerning a wifes resting upon the sabbath Quest. 6. Why is not the change of the sabbath mentioned in Scripture Quest. 7. Whether the Church may command any other day to be rested on beside the sabbath Quest. 8. Why doth God put a Remember before the commandement of the sabbath Quest. 9. Whether the first day of the week may be termed ●●●bath or sunday Quest. 10. Why is the sabbath called Holy Quest. 1. Whether the keeping of a Sabbath be a Ceremony and so abolished by Christ. This age fruitful in nothing more then in false doctrine hath brought forth them that affirm it is purely Iewish to keep a sabbath at all it being a pure Ceremony abolished by Christ since whose death every day is Holy and to be kept alike but we have no such custome neither the Churches of God the keeping of a sabbath being moral and for ever binding and therefore not ceremonial For 1. It was instituted and appointed before sin●it came not upon neither was it imposed to man by reason of transgression therefore was no bondage that he should be freed from it by Christ fin never brought it on for which he wanted no Redeemer to take it off 2. It is one of the ten Commandements written in Tables of stone it is equally moral with the Law against Idolatry with the Law against Adultery they were equally pronounced from the mouth of God Deut. 4.13 14. Now Ceremonies were all of them instituted by Moses as sent of God 3. It is not a Ceremony for it was established or ratified by Christ which no Ceremony was for Matth. 24.20 speaking of Ierusalems visitation he bids them Pray that their flight be not on the sabbath day so that there must needs be a sabbath that is a day of rest after Christs death 4. Ceremonies were as a partition wall between Iews and Gentile to difference the one from the other but now in this there is no difference but equally binding all as is manifest in the Particle Thou in all the Commandements 5. Ceremonies were abrogated not changed but now this Law of the sabbath is changed only nor abrogated for what we finde the people of God under the Law doing or what they ought to have done by vertue of that Law given upon the Mount upon the seventh day we finde the people of God doing under the Gospel by vertue of that Law given either by Christ or by his Apostles through the Spirit upon the first day of the week so there is no abrogation but a change which is to be seen in no pure Ceremony Quest. 2. Whether it be Lawful to make feasts on the sabbath The Disciples going through corn fields upon the sabbath day being hungry rubbed some of the corn and did eat Matth. 12.2 if they could have dined better they would and it is hard to say that a man is onely to supply the necessities of nature since the day is Holy to the Lord he may eat of the fat and drink of the sweet he may refresh himself 1. With the society of good and godly people he may be in that multitude at the Table as well as go with that multitude that keeps Holy day Psal. 42.4 2. With a more enlarged receiving of the creature comforts God gave man wine which makes glad his heart oyl to make his face shine and bread to strengthen his heart Psal. 104.15 He may therefore dayly drink that wine eat that bread that new kinde of religion that holds the necessity fasting upon the sabbath in our days hath no ground in Scripture in spite yea rather in sight of these may the Christian spread his Table he is this day to meditate upon the works of God chearfully to praise him the comforts of the choicest food may be therefore used of him if he see his cup run over let him abound in thankfulness the 92 Psalm is a Psalm or song for the sabbath and in a natural way it is no heresie to say Thou Lord hast made me glad through thy work I will triumph in the work of thy hands vers 4. yet never use the creature so As 1. To be hindered from any part of worship set not the length of thy feast keep thy seat empty in the house of God 2. To be indisposed in any act of devotion wine was made to make the heart of man'glad but not to make him lumpish beware then of drouziness through immoderate feasting Remember that of Solomon hast thou found honey eat so much as is sufficient 3. To forget any act of charity when thou ar● fareing well remember poor Lazarus at thy door when he calls know thou hast good things which he wants eat not therefore thy morsel alone It is a day wherein God hath blessed thee by thy charity bless thou him it is good husbandry and not impiety this day to cast thy seed upon the furrows of the faces of the poor that with the fields of the earth they may clap their hands shout yea also sing Quest. 3. Whether sporting or gameing is to be followed upon the sabbath The sabbath is appointed for the service of God and not for the pleasuring of men by denying sports is not here meant that men should be sour sullen or peevish but whether or no plays wrestling bowling fouling or fishing and the like be to be used this day or any thing in the like nature it is denyed it is unlawfull so to do For. 1. The Scripture forbids all manner of works in regard
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