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A60361 The compleat Christian, and compleat armour and armoury of a Christian, fitting him with all necessary furniture for that his holy profession, or, The doctrine of salvation delivered in a plain and familiar explication of the common catechisme, for the benefit of the younger sort, and others : wherein summarily comprehended is generally represented the truly orthodox and constant doctrine of the Church of England, especially in all points necessary to salvation / by W.S., D.D. Slatyer, William, 1587-1647. 1643 (1643) Wing S3983; ESTC R38256 385,949 1,566

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Yes but not beyond the intent of the Law which willeth absolute righteousnesse both in our soules and bodies or actions and most inward affections and is hereby a Schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ and when wee are not able to doe it to send us to him that hath done it for us if wee shew our love and obedience by our willingnesse 23. How may our willingnesse be seene 1. By our hate of the things of the flesh 2. By our delight in the Law of the Lord Rom. 7. 16. 3. By our stirring or striving and moving in holy duties 4. By our desire to bee instructed and directed 5. By our growing up in godlinesse and these are also assigned as tokens of our new birth proceeding by degrees in grace directed by the Law profiting and perfected in Christ. 24. What generally commanded here Contentednesse with our estate in not covetting our neighbors goods but submitting our souls to the good will and pleasure of God and his holy Spirit and ordering our selves with thankfulnesse according to the direction of the same in which contentednesse all vertues seeme to shine forth and to be comprehended as Prudence justice temperance fortitude constancy c. both in generall and in particular of all vertues as in their severall kindes and branches is to bee seene as what Christian prudence and heavenly wisedome sheweth it selfe where wee are graciously contented with Gods providence over us and appointment of us in that our estate and condition to doe him such service as therein required what justice towards God and men shineth forth in our readinesse so contentedly to doe our duties what Christian moderation and temperance to be seene above all turbulent affections of vainglory pride or covetousnesse so to submit our selves to Gods will and command and our fortitude and constancy so to continue and persevere as indeed where any virtue is actually there habitually are all the rest virtues and graces goe concatenate there is such mutuall league of love and tye of affinity betweene and among them as no virtue without prudence to gurde it justice the soule and substance of it in the duty whether to God or man our selves or others temperance the mediocrity and moderation of it fortitude the strength of it and courage to proceed constancy the continuance and so the rest humility the ground continency the girdle love the comfort chastity the ornament piety the crowne of them all and each adding a lustre to other and where any deficient the rest blemished by it but in this one contentednesse all generally entertained and every one particularly illustrated by it 25. What are the fruits hereof True blessednesse here and hereafter the promise annexed to the performance of good duties 26. What the whole duty man To feare God and keepe his Commandements 27. VVhat the sum of the Commandements Love 28. VVhat followeth in the Catechisme The explication of that love the summe of the Commandements as it extendeth it selfe to the performance of duties both towards God and men and so to shew what we learne in them SECT 13. The ninth and next Questions Love the sum and substance or root and fountaine of the Law and all good duties therein comprised whether to God or man pertaining so called the royall law of love or fulfilling of the law whose degrees in our duty to God to superiours to equals and inferiors in their severall orders and kindes to be exercised how to love the neighbour as ones owne selfe and what by the Talion law to doe as we would be don● to is required our giving hon●● to superiours love of equalls all else shewn by hurting none by breach of any the Commandements as 〈…〉 or 〈…〉 incontinency picking and stealing evill speaking lying or slandering or coveting other mens goods and so consequently to use the honest meanes whereby to be better able to perform this to learne to labour in some lawfull calling as God appointeth us with thankefulnesse and contentednesse 1. VVHat doe you chiefly learne in these Commandements Two things my duty towards God and my duty towards my neighbour or the root and fountaine whence these duties doe slow love extending it selfe to God Men. 2. How is love the fountaine of these duties or sum of the Law 1. It is the summe of the Law as it is the whole scope of all good duties and intention of the law and inward forme of that spirituall life we live by grace ready to performe all good duties and so called the royall law of love 2. It is the fountaine and root of his double duty as the love of God produceth the zeale of his glory seeking his honour and so obedience to all the Commandements and thereby performance of duties both to God and men 3. What is thy duty towards God To beleeve in him To feare him and to love him with all my heart minde soule strength as Luke 10. 27. Deut. 6. 5. Mat. 22 28. Marke 12. 30. Whence sloweth the performance of all other services of his and honor done unto him as from the first Commandement all the rest 4. VVhat meane you by this A faith in God producing his feare in love and filiall observance the feare of God the beginning of wisedome performing obedience and love in hearty affection adhering unto him and trusting in him with minde unfainedly seeking knowing and remembring him and soule wholly addicted to his honour and service to the utmost strength and power of both bodily and spirituall faculties persevering therein the substance of the first Commandement and so performing all parts of his service in the rest of the Commandements 5. In what wanner 1. Both to worship him after his will 2. Give him thankes and praise him for his benefits 3. Put my trust in him in distresse 4. Call upon him in all my needs as in the second Commandement 5. Honour his holy name and his word as in the third Commandement 6. Serve him truly all the dayes of my life and especially his Sabbaths as the fourth Commandement 6. VVhat is love to these duties The very foundation of them for if I doe love Cod With all my heart sincerely With all my minde understandingly With all my soule affectionately With all my strength effectually I will assuredly also strive to perform these things and continue in them all the dayes of my life 7. VVhat is thy duty to thy neighbour I. In generall 1. As by our Saviour Christ is taught to love him as my selfe so reade Math. 22. 39. Luke 10. 27. Marke 12. 31. so Lev 19. 18. 2. According to talion Law to doe to all men as we would they should doe unto us by our Saviour taught Math. 7. 12. Luke 6. 31. so Tob. 4. 15. II. Speciall to First superiours as in the fifth Commandement to 1. To love honour and succour father c. 2. Honour and obey King and his c. 3. Submit my selfe to c. 4. Order my selfe lowly c. Secondly all
shalt have no other Gods but me SECT 3. The first Commandement The division of the two Tables and how many Commandements comprised in the first Table and divers opinions concerning the same and foure Commandements proved properly to be in the first Table the first Commandement and full Analysis of it amply expounding the duties and opposite abuses therein literally or else intimated or expressed what it is to have the Lord for our God and the opposite Atheisme or having no God what also to have him alone and the opposite Polytheisme and Idolatry of divers sorts both among the Heathens and other carnall professors and false Christians making Religion but a cloake for their villany or maske for their sin and folly what it is to love know and honour God with the opposite thereof ignorance errors and prophanenes of all sorts springing from ignorance nothing rightly stiled the mother of devotion other malignant sins bordering on prophanenes And the love of God if with all the minde heart soule and strength seen in divers good Christians vertues and duties that with their opposites are here described as in knowledge beleeving 〈◊〉 and 〈…〉 feare and rejoycing in him humility and mecknesse patience and constancy with perseverance and without murmuring obedience and thankefulfulnesse with a zeale of his glory and holy and godly life the branches and fruits of his love the very ground-worke of all the rest of the Commandements 1. VVHat is contained in the first Table By all confessed our duty towards God as in the second our duty towards our neighbour 2. How many Commandements are there in the first Table Though by some controverted yet as may most plainly appeare both by the words of command as well as the substance of the matter foure Commandements 3. What difference then is there of opinions Some distinguishing the first Table into three the second into seven Commandements as Saint Augustine sometimes did the Lutherans and Church of Rome doe others as we and generally all the Fathers the Jews themselves and the matter it self shewes properly dividing the first Table into foure the second into six Commandements 4. What reasons had they for the first Saint Augustine as it seems in holy and reverend respect to the Trinity and that sacred number three so in that comprising the Commandements pertaining to the honour of the Trinity as in that other sacred number seven the rest of the Commandements comprehending the duties to men in this septimana or weeke of the world the others insisting in his steps and for private reasons of their owne and in defence or at least respect of Images 5. What pretence for leaving out a Commandment As in the first Commandement including the second and proposing the second but an exposition of the first so by the first Commandement understanding all Atheisme Idolatry both internall and externall forbidden and true worship commanded and the second Commandement an explication of the former concerning that part chiefly externall Idolatry and worship and so are faine to divide concupisence in the last Commandement according to the severall objects of lust or covetousnesse and make two Commandements out of one so to supply the defect of this second Commandement thus lost or imbezled 6. How prove you rather foure Commandements in the first Table 1. By the foure words of absolute command set downe as in the 1. Commandement Thou shalt have none c. 2. Thou shalt not make c. 3. Thou shalt not take c. 4. Remember that thou sanctifie c. 2. By the things therein commanded viz. Who is to be worshipped the Lord Jehovah in the first Commandement How his solemne worship his owne prescript not Idolatrously second Commandement How far in our lives to honour him to glorifie his name third Commandement When to worship him solemnly on his Sabbath fourth Commandement 7. What the first Commandement Thou shalt have no other Gods but me 8. What Commandement is it A negative Commandement under it according to the first rule comprehending an affirmative so to have no other or strange gods but Jehovah for our God and him alone 9. What the negative part In the prohibition of these five things as forbidding 1. All Atheisme having no God 2. All Polytheisme having many gods 3. All Idolatry having strange gods or idols 4. All Ignorance no knowledge of the true God in the mind 5. All Prophanenesse no honour or expression of it in the life 10. What the affirmative part In these three things commanded 1. To have Jehovah for our God 2. To have him alone for our Lord and God 3. To honour and love him by all meanes in soule and mind as we ought or as agreeable to our duty and his Majesty or in these five parts 1. To have Jehovah and 2. Him alone 3. To Abhorre Idolls 4. Seek to know him faith 5. Seeke to honour him love and duty 11. How are the positive and opposite parts seene or opposed To 1. To have Jehovah for our God 2. Have him alone 3. Honour and love him opposite to 1. Atheisme having no God 2. both 1. Polytheisme many gods 2. Idolatry idols and strange gods 3. both 1. Ignorāce not knowing or loving him 2. Prophanenesse not honouring him 12 How is this further demonstrated 1. As to have Jehovah opposite to having no God 2. As to have him alone so not many gods 3. As to have no other god or strange gods so no idols 4. And if we have him need must it be if in minde to know and love him 5. And so as internall love externall honour opposite to Ignorance and Prophanenesse 13. What is it to have the Lord for our God 1. To set him up in our hearts who is Jehovah the Lord. 2. To set our hearts on him to honour love and feare him as the Lord. 3. To set and apply our whole selves to his worship 14. What the opposite of this Atheisme the not having the Lord and in effect having no God 15. How many sorts of Atheisme 1. Either open Atheisme as of ungratious reprobates 2. Or secret heart Atheisme in any 1. Doubting and questioning the divine Majejesty and his truth by whom they are and subsist 2. Conceiving otherwise of God then wee ought either of his Essence or Persons as Infidels or Hereticks 3. Denying him by prophane life 16. What is it to have him alone Setting him onely and him alone in our hearts and his honour before our eyes denying both our selves and all other things that shall offer to put him out of our hearts or obscure his honour 17. What opposite to this 1. Both Polytheisme having many or any other gods with him or besides him to his dishonour 2. Idolatry setting up other gods Idols or vanities in our hearts to worship them in his stead 18. What Polytheisme With God to joyne any other as those that 1. Either made two Gods one the beginning of all good the other of all ill 2. With God
yet imparity of sins may be and one offence greater then another in many respects as 1. Some lesse offences against the neighbour then others as lying then adultery and murder and so the smaller offences compared with bloudy and crying sins as Peters denyall or Eutiches sleeping with Davids adultery or Noahs drunkennesse with Cains murder 2. Sins against the second Table and against the creature lesse in regard of the object then those against the first being immediately against Gods infinite Majesty 3. Sins also of infirmity and ignorance and the like though not the lesse able to damne us yet lesse accounted then those of malice and contempt or presumptuous sins so all those other sins in comparison of those perverse haynous and stubborne sins against the holy Ghost whereby the difference and degrees of sin and offences is apparant 7. How is the fourth rule to be understood That though the sins against the first Table simply and absolutely in themselves considered as immediately against the infinite Majesty of God are more heynous then the sins against the second Table where the offence is but against the finite creature immediately though secondarily against the divine Majesty contemned yet such may the aggravation be on the one side by extreame malice perversnesse presumption supine negligence and the like and the extenuation on the other side by infirmity ignorance feare or other humane passion or frailty that may quite alter and weigh downe or over balance the former respect that as in the same first Tables offences compared among themselves there is no comparison of Sarahs infidelity when she laughed and for which she was reproved with Lots wives looking back Achans sacriledge or the gainsaying of Korah so neither in the second Tables offences compared with the first or first with the second that infidelity of Sarahs or Eutiches sleeping at Pauls Sermon both of infirmity though against God or such like negligence on the Sabbath to be thought equall to Cains murder Davids adultery backed with murder or such other crying sins of oppression and blood though against men onely immediately since so aggravated by perversnesse malice and presumption or security as well as secondarily also redounding to the dishonour of God and contempt of the divine Majesty 8. How the fifth rule explained That there is so near a tye and relation between the Commandements all of them having one rule the love of God one end the honour of God one author of them all God and one authority commanding all and so binding to every one of them in particular as to all of them and the whole Law in generall saying thou shalt observe all these Lawes to doe them and Cursed is he who walketh not in all these Lawes to doe them that one of them not performed the whole Law is broken and the disobedience manifest requiring punishment as the guilt also shewing it selfe 1. Against the Author of them all 2. Against the authority of his command 3. Against the royall Law of love 4 In contempt of that divine Majesty so that though there are degrees of offences and some are to be more earnestly and carefully avoyded as more haynous ones yet simply none are to bee chosen as inter mala culpae omnino non datur electio 9. What is the summe of the second Table To love thy neighbour as thy selfe Levit. 19. 18 Math. 22. 39. Rom 13. 8. 10. What is thereby expressed The duty love which in the first place God in the next place respectively the neighbour The object the neighbour as neare to us of the same flesh and blood viz. all mankinde The manner as thy selfe both in regard of the love First naturall whereby thou desirest the preservation of thy life goods c. Secondly spirituall whereby thou desirest thy soules good and salvation and expressed either I. To superiours in the 5. Commandement here expressed II. To allmen by not onely not hurting or wishing but even not consenting to the hurt of his 1. Person by murder 6. Commandement 2. Second selfe wife by adultery 7. Commandement 3. Goods by stealth 8. Commandement 4. Good name by lying 9. Commandement Or 11. even without consent by any concupiseence whatsoever in the 10. Commandement the first motions of sin forbidden 11. Why have all the Commandements of the first Table their reason annexed and so not the second 1. To shew how especiall care ought to be had of the honour of God whence all other duties depend 2. To shew that the first Table the foundation of the second and the duties therein contained thence depending 3. To shew our backwardnesse in the honour of God and ingratitude needing such spurres and remembrances as more prone to wrong God then men the Creator and giver of all good then the creature though too mischievous and malicious to all but in imitation of the first Table this first Commandement of the second and this onely hath a reason or promise annexed 12. Why hath this onely the promise Because as from the first Table the second and the duties thereof depend and from the first Commandement of the first Table the rest of the Commandements there so from this 1. Commandment of the second Table concerning duties to superiours the rest of the Commandements doe also seeme to depend in regard of the due observation of them by their authority and command and also in the superiours doth more especially shine the image of Divinity so as next to the first Table in place and first of the second graced also with a reason or promise 13. How is the image of the divine Majesty more particularly expressed in superiours 1. As in the King represented majestie power and soveraigne authority 2. As in the Magistrates the image of his government and justice 3. As in the ancient in yeares image of that Ancient of dayes in eternity 4. As in the Parents image of his goodnesse our Father and Creator 5. As in the Tutors Ministers and Teachers bearing the image of his divine Majestie wisdome and knowledge whose honour in his image is thus attended with the promise in this first Commandment with promise the first of the second Table 14. What is therein contained 1. The Commandement Honour thy father and mother 2. The promise That thy dayes may bee long c. What manner of Commandement is it An affirmative and thereby inferring his opposite negative viz. commanding to exhibit all love honour and obedience to our superiours and to avoid all unreverence disobedience and dishonour of them 15. What is the affirmative part Commanding respect of Inferiours their exhibition of 1. Honour and reverence 2. Duty and obedience 3. Love humility with the signes 4. Thereof to be exhibited to all superiours Superiours to be worthy of that honour by their 1. Gravity and good example 2. Mercy and bounty 3. Justice moderation and 4. Benevolence to all inferiours 16. What the negative part Forbidding in respect of Superiours their offences in shewing
are either 1. Simply and absolutely evill and wicked as the stewes bawdes and whoring theeves and such lewdnesse witchcraft c. 2. Or fouly abused as judiciary Astrology Palmestry next doore to witchcraft and fortune telling jugling and common lotterers which is a kinde of cousenage and the divell therein sought to rather then Gods providence only 3. Unprofitable to Church and Common-wealth and serving onely to pride and vanity as making painting for womens faces monstrous attires uncivill and immodest apparrell and the like blasons of sinne as also these superfluous gentlemen beggars rogues and vagabonds the spaune of idlenesse bane of vertue and goodnesse to which unlawfull trades may be added sacriledge 33. What is sacriledge A robbing of God Mal. 3. 8. or the ungodly and perfiduous taking away of things dedicate to God and his service for the maintenance thereof and converting them to other private uses so prophaning them whereby Gods Kingdome and honour so much as in them lies is pulled downe and the kingdome and power of Satan advanced tending to the overthrow of all vertue and godlinesse and ruine of Church and Common-wealth 34. How is it then tollerated By the subtilty of Satan and his wicked instruments that dare even to oppose and dispute with God in this kinde about the authority and lawfulnesse of his acts and the establishing thereof from all antiquity compared with their wretch d doings contrary to the same in disparagement of his sacred truth and ordinances whom whiles God suffereth in this their malice it must needs be to their greater damnation this being so heynous and crying a sinne and so the opposition and defiance of the Majesty of God the pulling downe of his honour and Kingdome bloud and destruction of soules for want of his honour duly promoted by this meanes defaced and they so deprived of better instruction 35. What are the branches of this sin The talling away of any things consecrated to God and especially the diminution of tythes and imbezling Church Patrimony by taking away all or the greatest part where there might be sufficient to maintaine good and ablemen for Gods service and meat in Gods house Mal. 3. 9. now searce the seraps left to the starving of the Minister that must so needs be some silly unsufficient person to discharge so great an office as to stand between God and the people and so consequently the soules starved and perlshing for want of spirituall food and direction 36. What other sorts before remembred Prodigality covetousnesse and unmercifulnesse most seen in the unlawfull and undue use of our owne estate robbing our selves and others of those parts there of which doe of due and right to them appertaine 37. How is prodigality a theft As by profuse riotous and vaine expence we spend not onely our owne but even more then our owne and so rob our posterity and bring wife and children heires and family to beggery and so rob himselfe and his of all necessary sustenance and rellese exposed to cold famine and poverty his unthrifty theft and prodigality hereby proving worse then an infidell 1 Tim. 5. 8. 37. How is covetousnesse theft As a theft of heart and divers waies robbing God and men of their dues and so I. The covetous heart seen to God and desiring the neighbours goods and estate II. The covetous hand oppressing and cousening his brother and neighbour III. Covetous desires set upon the world leaving God and godlinesse so the covetous mans 1. Minde and soule serveth mammon and robbeth God of his service ye cannot serve God and mammon Matth. 6. 24. 2. Soule adoreth the wedge or purse of gold so Iolatry 3. Eye robbeth himselfe and others of necessary things and so he not onely robbeth God his neighbour and brother but his own soule also of necessary things for this life and finally of eternall happinesse so well esteemed a great theft and root of all evill since who thus loveth the world the love of God is not in him 1 John 2. 15. 38. How unmercifulnesse theft As a branch of covetousnesse extending it self in not extending charity to the poore so robbing them of their dues in charity and Christ in them Matth. 25. as Christ himselfe acknowledgeth and miserable the theft from God and the Church the poor and Christ in the benummedneffe of soule dealing falsely with God the giver of all goodnesse and Christs poore members and for this Dives in hell whom wee read not to have robbed others but only not to have given to poore Lazarus and therefore frying in hell flames when Lazarus was comforted whom hee robbed of his due in charity and consequently of life by not reliefe and thus a wretched theefe and which may be gathered who are so hard hearted to the poore will not sticke if occasion be offered to rob God and others also in another or any other sort and thus unmercifulnesse theft 39. What is on the contrary here commanded Partly intimated already and else easily to bee gathered from the premises the duties opposite to the said forbidden vices or the extirpation of the vices aforesaid and so the 1. Restitution of things unjustly taken or recompence of wrong 2. Justice and equity in the mighty 3. Faire dealing in buying selling and contracts 4. Lawfull trades and meanes of getting goods and preserving the same 5. Due use of our goods with persimony and frugality 6. Liberality and bounty where honest occasions require 7. Mercie and charity where need and necessity and so a generall justice or disposition to this honesty equity and humanity 40. How restitution to be made Of all other mens goods either unlawfully gotten or that may not be lawfully detained whether found received by contract or committed in trust and so in trust and so to restore that to the party whose due or who damnified by detaining it to the full value or recompence at least so much or neere as able So soone as may be or so soone as we seeke forgivenesse at their hands of the wrong or at Gods hands of the sin whose opposite is persisting in wrong and robbery 41. How equity and justice commanded Both in generall generall justice and inclination to equity in all and especially in the more potent as more able and so more apt to oppression in opposition to all acts of injustice and robbery committed by might and tyranny of Rulers in seeking gaine or respect or of the rich by cruelty and unmercifulnesse oppressing the poore 42. How faire dealing in buying and selling and contracts As the rule whereby all contracts ought to bee squared in truth of words faithfulnesse in promises and justice in deeds uprightly and without dissimulation as before God whether in I. Buying or selling 1. The things that may be bought or sold. 2. Without fraud or any sinister respect 3. For honest and due prices not desiring to live by other mens losses II. Borrowing and lending without cousenage usury extortion or other ungracious or unconscionable
others I. In generall being true and just c. II. In particular as in 6. Commandement to beare no malice c. 7. Commandement keeping body in c. 8. Commandement keepe hands from picking c. 9. Commandement tongue from evill c. 10. Commandement not to covet c. 8. How is that to love my neighbour as my selfe To love him as my selfe in that true sincere and hearty affection that I wish well unto my selfe withall and not hypocritically and fainedly and coldly or dissemblingly but truly for his good and unfainedly for his soules health 9. VVho can love his neighbour so Every good Christian that hath but learned what charity and the love of God is for if he doe not love his brother thus whom hee hath seene neither doth he love God whom he hath not seen but if he say he doth he is a lyar because the truth of God is not in him since truth of love is wanting and God is love and the truth and so hee loveth us in truth and commandeth us so to love one another and seeth the heart and by this showeth who are his children that in truth love him and their neighbour 10. But we see none doe love other so much as themselves Neither is it so set downe so great a love in the quantity but as true a love in the quality and a second in order my selfe the rule my neighbour as my selfe and both in God and for his love else all love of my selfe and others is vaine that is in any other respect such as worldly or carnall and fleshly love is 11 How meane you it then To love him even as my selfe for 1. The manner in true and hearty love though not in that measure and extent in every respect of it or Quoad qualitatem veritatis though not quoad quantitatem magnitudinis so true though not so great alone Quoad modum though not gradum to the utmost degree that I must care and provide for my selfe 12. How then shall this love be Sicut meipsum or as my selfe both in respect of 1. Quod in meipso my soul and his Gods Image 2. Ad quod meipsum for grace here and glory hereafter 3. Propter quod meipsum for Gods glory and the soules good 4. In quo meipsum in God and goodnesse 5. Quosque meipsum to the end and this to love him truly and Christianly as my selfe 13. What will the effect of this be That I will then wish no more hurt to him then to mine owne soule loving him so truly and sincerely as my selfe and for Gods sake and will wish to receive from all men as I would do unto them 14. How is that to doe to all men as I would c. According to the true effect of the Talion law in love not revenge but doing so well by them that I would not wish better from them and so wish as well to them as to my selfe or my owne soule which could not be amisse for who hateth or wisheth ill to himselfe that is but honest or in his right minde and so love the fulfilling of the law seene in all these particulars 15. How towards superiours By doing to them as I would wish them or others to doe by me if I were a superiour and in their place which is the summe and substance of the fifth Commandement whereby 1. To love honour and succour my father and mother 2. To honour and obey the King and his Ministers 3. To submit my selfe to all my governours c. 4 To order my selfe lowly and reverently to all my betters which is the love and effects thereof in honour and obedience and submission and well ordering my selfe in duty and humility that I owe 1. To my naturall parents father and mother 2. To politicall parents King and Magistrates 3. To spirituall parents Pastors and Ministers 4. Oeconomicall and other parents superiours or betters as Masters Teachers ancient rich or noble persons in any degree better or above my selfe and in modesty extended my very equalls 16. How towards others In generall to hurt no body by word nor deed but to be true and just in all my dealing the sum and substance of all the five last Commandments as not hurting any body I. By word contrary to the ninth Commandement by lying slandering false witnesse c. II. By deeds by 1. murder slander malice or the like contrary to the sixth Commandement 2. Adultery fornication or other uncleannesse in tempting others or attempting or wronging others chastity or mine owne contrary to the seventh Commandement 3. Stealing in oppressing fraud or the like contrary to the eight Commandement and so consequently being true and just in all my dealings in all these respects and even not contrary to truth or honesty to cover or desire other mens goods or make any lewd or evill pretences to the same so contrary to the tenth Commandement as more particularly expressed in the words following 17. What is it to bear nomclice or hatred in my To be free from murder and all inducements to the same since who hateth his brother is a man-slayer before God and of malice and hatred sprung contentions quarrells and unquietnesse and so consequently blood-sucking if not blood-shedding so this the effect and substance of the sixth Commandement on the contrary enjoyning and commanding love and the preservation of our neighbours life and person 18. What is it to keepe my body in temperance sobernesse and chastity The substance of the seventh Commandement where these vertues of temperance in our mindes affections and actions enjoyed sobriety in our speech gestures attires actions and behaviour and chastity both of body and soule though as most seen in the actions and body so for good example sake intimated and most required and on the contrary in that Commandement all adultery fornication and acts of uncleannesse with all intemperance and unchastity and signes or meanes of the same forbidden 19. What to keepe my hands from picking and stealing The plaine sense of the eight Commandement forbidding all stealth whether by covert fraud cousenage or secret purloyning or overt oppression in robbery and other unjust and ungodly courses getting others goods or encreasing our owne as on the contrary in that Commandement the preservation of our neighbours estate restoring of goods unlawfully gotten and lawfull getting and using yea laying out of our owne goods to pious and charitable uses enjoyned if as we are but stewards we will not be accounted theeves and usurpers before God 20. What by keeping the tongue from evill speaking lying and slandering The substance of the ninth Commandement where all untruth and uncharity by untrue and undue testimony publicke or private in place of judgement or else by lyes slanders or false reports to the wrong of the neighbour and his or our owne good name and breach of love and charity are forbidden and so on the contrary truth and charity in all these respects to the preservation
for some temporary or other respects more servent and faire in outward appearance to the world then the weaker faith though a true faith of the elect but for the most part discovered at last by the want of the Root love Fruit good workes Continuance to the end 37. How may wee know the true though weake faith By many good signes in ones selfe longing after God and proficiency in grace and especially by this one grace of God of unfained desire not onely of salvation which the wicked and gracelesse may desire but of reconciliation with God in Christ. 38. Is this a true signe of true faith It is and onely peculiar to the elect proceeding out of a touched and humbled heart for sinne and whosoever have it have in themselves the ground and substance of true and saving faith which afterwards may grow to greater strength and so Blessed are they that hunger and thirst c. Matth. 5. 6. 39. How many wayes may faith be weake Either by want of due Knowledge of the Gospell Application to the soule Though in that measure of knowledge that may else seeme sufficient 40. How is it to be strengthened By using diligently the meanes appointed of God the Word and Sacraments so humbly walking before God it is knowne to bee a true faith and daily encreased 41. What is a strong faith That whereby a man so apprehendeth and applieth the promises of God in the Gospell that hee can distinctly and truly say of himselfe hee is fully resolved in conscience that hee is reconciled to God in Christ and so not neglecteth to finde all godly signes and shew the fruits of the same in his cheerfull service of God 42. Js there any faith perfect No for howsoever it may be strong and stronger then others yet it is alwayes imperfect and requiring encrease and confirmation for which we must pray and strive for so also our knowledge is and will bee so long as wee live in this world as mingled with ignorance unbeleefe and sundry sorts of doubting 43. Have not all sorts of saving faith their fruit following Yes according to their degrees more or better all in some acceptable degree obedience to the will of God and willing profession of the truth and more particularly confession of the faith of Christ. 44. Why must we confesse it For divers reasons these especially that 1. With the mouth outwardly confessing wee may glorifie God and doe him service both in body and soule 2. By confessing of the faith we may sever our selves from all false Christians hypocrites and seducers whatsoever 3. We may incite confirme and strengthen others in the same 45. Js there any other acceptation of this word faith It is sometimes taken for the doctrine of the truth as 1 Tim. 3. 9. and 4. 1. as well as that habit or Theologicall vertue thence and by the gift of God produced in the minde of which wee spake before also where a dead faith false and fained faith hypocriticall faith and the like they are understood to be want of faith or a temporary onely or historicall faith as faith to be healed Matth. 8. under faith working miracles 1 Corinth 18. of all which before 46. What is else necessary to be knowne concerning faith To observe the causes and effects of this true faith 47. What causes The Efficient cause matter form and end of this true faith how wrought and formed in us 48. What efficient cause Either principall or instrumentall What principall God 1. The Father Ioh. 6. 29. this the work of God that ye beleeve in him whom he hath sent 2. The Son Heb. 12. 2. the author and finisher of our faith Jesus 3. The holy Ghost 2 Cor. 4. 14. the Spirit of faith and former of it in us without our preparation or workes 49. What the instrumentall cause The word of God and Sacraments and comfortable learning and using of them What the matter of faith In respect of the Subject Understanding to apprehend Will to assent and apply Conscience to make use of the promise and grace of God Object referred to the 1. Understanding the truth of Gods promise 2. Will grace of God manifested in Christ. 3. Conscience joy and comfort in the holy Ghost 50. What is the forme of faith 1. To beleeve or to seeke to apprehend and know the mercies of God with our best understanding 2. Receive and apply to our soules the free mercies of God in Christ with our whole heart and will 3. Make use of it in our conscience to the Purging and rooting out of dead workes and sin Bringing forth good workes fruits of a living faith 51. What the end of faith In regard of God his glory in his mercies Us our justification by his free mercies in Christ. 52. What is justifying or our justification To be Discharged before God of our guilt Approved before him free and innocent Accepted of God and allowed his favour and presence 53. Doth faith doe this Faith is said to doe it as the instrument whereby we apprehend apply and take benefit of Christ and his merits the very originall and principall cause of this as in whom only and alone we are Discharged and acquitted Approved innocent and accepted God is well pleased and reconciled 54. But Saint James saith we are justified by workes Saint James doth not there speake of our justification as the cause whereby we are justified inwardly before God which is only faith in Christ but of the outward justification as the testification approving thereof to our consciences to the world that we have faith seen by the fruits thereof 55. What of the distinction of generall and speciall explicite and implicite faith Generall and implicite faith are indeed no faith or not true faith explicite and speciall may be as they may be rightly understood the same with our faith and the saving and true faith 56. What are the effects of faith Many or at least by many names stiled and called in holy Scripture and may be reduced to These two 1. Putting off the old 2. Putting on the new Man or this one word encluding both repentance 57. How else called or described Either Workes of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22. death to sin and life to righteousnesse Rom. 6. walking not in the flesh but the spirit Rom. 8. Renewing the minde Ephes. 4. 22. True holinesse and righteousnesse ibid. 23. A new creature Gal. 6. 15. Generally good works Jam. 2. Tit. 2. c. 58. But if these workes doe not justifie us what need we doe them and why For divers reasons especially these 1. Because they are good and so to be done 2. They are for the glory of God and his Gospel and nothing more against God then the works of sin 3. They are to the good of the Church and faithful 4. They testifie our faith James the 2. 5. They confirme our election Jo. 4. 12 13. 6. They win others to the Gospel 1 Pet. 3. 7. They
heaven of the Son and the holy Spirit descendeth in the visible forme of a Dove and resting on him 28. How else demonstrated So Mat. 28. 19. Goe teach baptize in the name c. 1 Joh. 5. 7. In heaven three beare witnesse the Father VVord and Spirit Psal. 33. 6. By the word of the Lord the heavens were made and their heasts by the breath or Spirit of his mouth So in the 1. Gen. Elohim the Trinity and the Lord his Wisedome and Word and Spirit mentioned the like Jo. 1. and divers other places 29. How by other reasons and similitudes By many similitudes and reasons urged by some but most especially of man created in Gods Image in respect of his soule 1. The soule the fountaine of all the faculties as the Father 2. Understanding as the wisedome and eterternall word or truth and character of the Father 3. Will or love whereby God loveth himselfe and image essentiall in himselfe loved of it and for it and his owne sake all things else so God by his wisedome or word or truth his eternall Son one with himselfe in Essence created the world and his holy Spirit moved on the waters his will and love comforting and preserving as still guiding and governing the workes of his creation 30. How are all three persons called God Because they are all one in Essence infinite and so God 31. Are there not rather as three persons three Gods No for all truth confesseth one God infinite and eternall and besides him none other but divine revelation manifesteth a Trinity of persons or manner of existence in relation to all creatures in that unity and one divine essence 32. Is it onely then in relation to the creature Not so neither but the foundation thereof is in the nature of the Godhead it selfe which as infinitely wise and powerfull knowing it selfe and in his minde producing his owne likenesse that character or image of that divine Essence knowing it selfe is in the minde and brest of God the Father forming that image the Sonne so begotten from eternity and as infinitely happy blessed and good loving it selfe that love of the Father to his Image and Son or Wisedome or Truth and of the Son to the Father the holy Spirit of God is from them both proceeding from all eternity by which Wisedome or Truth and Love his Son and holy Spirit God the Father createth guideth and governeth all things 33. Js this the foundation of that relation to the creatures It is And for his owne sake hee produceth all good and so loveth it as good and both by creation governance guiding and preservation directeth all to eternall good his alone glory which what creature soever seeketh is therein happy and in his grace and thereby apparantly good and consequently shall be thereby eternally blessed 34. How is the unity of the Godhead further manifested By the unity of the actions undivided in their operations towards all creatures the Father creating by the Son and holy Spirit the Son and holy Spirit with and from the Father exercising the power of the Father and Godhead so God created the world by his Wisedome or Son in his Love or holy Spirit 35. How the Trinitie of the persons therein distinguished By their personall proprieties and determination of the joynt actions of the Godhead according to that propriety 36. How are the proprieties The Father begetting the Sonne begotten and the Holy Ghost proceeding 37. How the joint actions determined Creation to the Father redemption to the Son sanctification to the Holy Ghost so the Father stiled Creator the Sonne Redemer and the Holy Ghost Sanctifier 38. How is this to be understood Creation attributed to the Father though effected by the Sonne in the Holy Ghost Redemption from the Father by the Sonne in the Holy Ghost Sanctification from the Father and the Son by the Holy Ghost and to that third person attributed 39. How to reason further manifested Faith is above reason more then reason above sense and hence many have fame into heresie by striving to subject to humane reason such high and divine mysteries yet as not contrary but excelling reason they may in some sort be illustrated by reason unto some measure of humane capacity 40. How this mystery That though three persons yet but one onely God in substance or essence one infinite in power majesty and eternity as that one soule of man having these three excellent powers or faculties of understanding will and memory so distinct in that one and individuall soule 41. How else illustrated By Saint Augustine also intimated as the light of the Sun or Moone and in the Aire all but one light and of that one Sun how much more Trinitie so in unity in that Lo. of Nature whose high nature workes and essence are above the lawes of our low nature or reason being the Creator Lord and Commander of all 42. Are not then comparisons to be made hereof Not in way of equality or simply for that were to the derogation of that infinite Majesty since infiniti ad finitum nulla est proportio there is no proportion or comparison but onely in assistance of our weake capacities ex parte as it were and imperfecte with this notion moreover that acknowledging our weaknesse to apprehend or comprehend such things and their disproportion we proceed with Christian modesty and moderation not proudly or peremptorily to the derogation of divine Majesty 43. How meane you this In such divine mysteries the true objects of faith rather then humane reason not to tye him who is Lord of Nature to the limits or rules of poore weake Nature his vassall and creature and to whom had he pleased he could have given other lawes then are now prescribed so not to say or thinke this cannot be in earth or nature and therefore neither in heaven or Divinity which were a poore and absurd conclusion 44. Explaine it further As to say or thinke a man cannot beget a son sibi contemporaneum or of essence and time with him therefore God cannot which were to make the Lord onely like man to whom the whole world is but as a drop of a bucket and lesse being in comparison nothing to him who inhabiteth eternity and of his Almighty and infinite power may doe what he please and so have his Son and Holy Spirit blessed persons in one essence with him from all eternity 45. How can reason comprehend this It may after a sort but faith is the sitter instrument of the soule to apprehend these mysteries And it shall be enough for reason if she can but apprehend and have a sight of her owne weaknesse and faith shall thereby have the better perfection 46. How shall reason with reason be humbled If she consider how many and small things as wormes and flyes and some so neere as her owne selfe and soule there are even before our feet in the world such things whereof shee is ignorant and can hardly or
the Father God the Son God and the holy Ghost God and Lord and Almighty and the rest But these are only attributed to one of the three persons and not to the others so the Son only is begotten and not the Father nor the holy Ghost and the like of the rest 26. Is there any precedency or priority in the Trinity None for in the Trinity none is a fore or after other none greater or lesse then another but all three co-essentiall co-eternall and co-equall 27. VVhy is the Father first mentioned For orders sake only for in the Deity is no imparity but the Son was from all eternity and before all worlds with the Father God of God Light of light and the Wisedome Word Truth and Councell of God and so was the holy Ghost 28. But is not the Son said under and inferiour to the Father Not as touching his Godhead for so he is equal only inferiour as touching his Man-hood when for our sakes he would assume our nature in the flesh and be humbled 29. But were not the Son and the holy Ghost sent after a certaine time At the fulnesse of time God sent his Son yet his Son eternally was willing and from eternity with the Father decreed and did consent and came voluntarily one God and one with God before all worlds only in his humility and humanity after a time manifested in the flesh so the holy Ghost eternally God yet said after a certain time sent and yet coming himselfe and so more visible apparant to the Church who before all time was God and with God coequall in power and majesty 30. How explaine you further your beleefe in God I beleeve with my heart and professe with my mouth this one God and so I put my whole trust and confidence in him and his mercy grace and truth 31. How expresse you what you conceive in this word I beleeve I beleeve not onely 1. That there is a God which is credere Deum 2. His words are true credere Dei verba esse firma certa vera stabilia 3. God in his promises and words is true which is credere Deo all which the Divels doe beleeve even beyond and better then some reprobates and any reprobates may doe this But which is more I beleeve in God which is credere in Deum to put my trust affiance and confidence in him And confesse it a Deo as the gift of God whence invocation obedience all good works and good life in Deo propter Deum ejus Christum doe proceed which is and ought to be the fruit of faith so shewing it a true saving and justifying faith and whereby the Soule is purified Life sanctified Conscience pacified of a good Christan 32. How apply you this faith To my soule as the subject as it is to bee saved justified sanctified purified and pacified by the same To God as the object and authour of it almighty alsufficient and able to performe this in me 33. How to God referred Both in the Unity of Essence and Trinity of Persons Father Son and Holy Ghost the author and finisher of this faith and object of the same 34. How is this generall Confession first applyed here To the first Person in Trinity the Father so I say I beleeve in God the Father 35. How is the Father here described By his Title of personality Father Attribute of omnipotency Almighty Action of creation Maker of heaven and earth 36. How is the title of Father attributed to God 1. Either indefinitely as creator and producer of all things and so in some sort attributed to the all three persons Esa. 9. 2. Or respectively as the first person is Father by nature of the second and in him by adoption of all his Elect. 37. How many wayes is he Father Three wayes principally Generally of all creatures by creation so Father of light and Spirits Specially by adoption and grace so Father of all the Elect in Christ. Particularly by nature of Christ his Son by eternall generation 38. How is Father understood here All these three wayes though most particularly and as foundation of the rest as Father of his owne and onely Son by nature 39. What note you in that especially Three most observable and wonderfull concurrents in that eternall generation beyond all others 1. That the Father communicates his whole essence to the Sonne who is very God of very God 2. Produceth him within himselfe for without him is no place 3. Hath his Sonne equall to himselfe in being and beginning as equall in essence and majesty so in time and co-eternity that there was no time nor durance when the Father had not this Sonne equall so to himselfe in time by eternall generation 40. What profit to us in this That for his sake his eternall Sonne whom hee loveth so dearly we having his love shall bee saved so as sonnes by creation wee have his power and providence but as Sonnes by adoption in Christ wee have his grace and goodnesse attending over us 41. What speciall comfort therein That as he is our Father and wee are his children wee shall want no manner of thing that is good either for body or soule for this life or the life to come 42. What duty are we hereby obliged unto The duty of sonnes to love honour and obey our Father to strive to be like him or to resemble our Father and beare his image and as our heavenly Father trust in him and cast our cares on him 43. What image of him Of righteousnesse and true holinesse 44. How shall we resemble him 1. By holinesse as he commandeth Be ye holy as I am holy 2. By mercy as be ye mercifull as your heavenly Father is mercifull 3. By love for God is love and so both to love one another and even our enemies doing good to all after his example who raineth and whose Sun shineth on the just and unjust 44. Why or how should we cast our care on him Because as our Father he careth for us and who feedeth the Ravens and clotheth the Lillies will doe much more for his children if they serve him 45. Js all care to be abandoned All superfluous and excessive care of worldly things for if we seeke heavenly things chiefly all other things shall be given sufficiently 46. How may this be further illustrated By the example of Kings children or heyres who having great provision of Kingdome and best things what should they carke for pinnes or trifles and if heaven be provided why carke and care for earth and earthly vanities and if Christ be theirs what can be wanting or withheld 47. What of the attribute Almighty To learne that he is able and can doe al things 1. Whatsoever hee pleaseth his will onely the bound of his active power 2. More then he will by his supreame and absolute power and so nothing is impossible with God 48. Is the Father onely omnipotent No for every attribute saving the
Fast preparing us to true 〈◊〉 humiliation penitence and contrition The 〈◊〉 holy Feasts preparing us to sing praise to God in voice of joy and thanksgiving opposite to which is irreligious fasting or feesting of prophane and vaine persons 50. To whom 〈…〉 worship do●cted To God an● him alone as that inward honour expressed in the first Commandement so all outward worship set forth in this opposite to which is to direct is to idols or idolatrize in it not doing it carefully and religiously 51. How is it then to be done In all uprightnesse and singlenesse of heart as done to him that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and tryer of the reynes and inward parts and without all hypocrisie which hee seeth and hateth and so consequently in spirit and truth inwardly in the soule so in spirit as he is a spirit and seeth our spirits after a spirituall manner the best So in truth as he is true and the truth his word the truth teacheth us and outwardly in all good order decent manner and convenient rites and ceremonies fitting his worship 52. How is that best seene If all things be done in 1. Order not confufedly for God is the author of order and not confusion 2. Decency that is well pleasing to the eyes of God and men and springing from good order 3. Humility and reverence for that is best beseeming his Saints and congregation 4. Uniformity for that betokeneth unity and God is the author of all peace and unity as who maketh brethren to be of one minde in a house and by these it will shew it selfe to all to be done 1. In the feare of God 2. For the honour of his name 3. Tending to the edification of his people as it is 1. accompanied with 1. Love to our neighbour 2. Zeale of Gods glory 2. Performed without show of 1. Hypocrisie vainglory 2. Affecting singularity or 3. Idolatry or appearance of evill opposite to all which is disorder confusion unreverence uncharity pharisaicall pride hypocrisie and singularity inclining all to will-worship superstition and idolatry 53. Whence are the reasons of this Commandement Drawne from Gods 1. Justice jealousie Punishing the delinquents Hating their delinquency 2. Mercy and truth Prospering the faithfull and their service Loving them and their fidelity 53. How this punishment set forth In visiting the sinnes of the fathers upon the children to the third and fourth generation 54. Shall the children beare the fathers iniquity No but the soule onely that sinneth shall dye but here it is meant of wicked children treading in the steps of the fathers as commonly they doe because they were no better taught so it is a double punishment to have wicked children and to be punished in and with their children as their children with them 55. How are they said to hate God As they continue or neglect this honour then which if they did their worst in hate they could doe no more to displease him as hee is jealous of his honour which hee onely requireth for all his blessings and will not give it or part with it to any other and for which he hateth them and their doings 56. Why is the Lord said to hate them or jealous Because as adultery is a most hainous sin causing jealousie and the adulterer and murderer most worthy hate of God and men the Lord in detestation of that unnaturall sinne of idolatry expresseth it as a kinde of adultery to goe a whoring after idols and consequently his hate by their punishments that so hate and contemne him by adulterating his worship and committing spirituall fornication with idols and divels 57. How are his blessings to the faithfull described By his shewing mercy unto thousands in them that love him and keepe his Commandements extended to the bodies and soules of his service 58. Why said to thousands To shew the abundance of his mercy and goodnesse who though his jealousie burne like fire and justice punish to the third and fourth generation yet his mercy is greater his goodnesse is above it yea his mercy is over all his workes reaching to thousands and endureth for ever 59. But we see the righteous often troubled Yea but it may be in mercy too as a chastisement of the childe he loveth so the crosse bringeth forth patience and other graces yea sometimes more profitable farre then prosperity and God knoweth what is best for his for Removing of worldly confidence Confirming them to himselfe Renewing and perfecting grace in them 60. How are they said to love him In opposition to those haters and contemners of God whom God so also hateth and abhorreth these shewing their love by their fidelity and obedience to his Commandements whom God also therefore loveth shewing them mercies to them and their seed and giving them his graces and plentifully rewarding their love and obedience 61. To what end these reasons That since thou canst give him no more for all his blessings then thy love and obedience and thou oughtest to give him no lesse for else thou givest him nothing that his judgements and jealousie may terrifie thee or love and mercy may allure thee and so bring thee to this duty for thy good and his honour 62. What followeth The third Commandement concerning the honouring of Gods most holy name SECT 5. The third Commandement The Analysis of the third Commandement declaring the severall parts duties and opposite abuses therein forbidden or commanded with the reasons of the same What Gods name and how diversly to be understood and how honored or dishonored in his name or tytles attributes holy word and religion aswell as workes of creation gubernation povidence bl●ssings an● judgements 〈◊〉 thelike in g●nerall and in pa●ticular his dishonour by blasphemy against God in any sort whatsoever as well as all fro● of evill and prophanenes also cursing and banning swearing vainely and lewdly in presumptuous and execrable impiety the false prophets in that matter not so wicked but as it were with us acknowledge it to belong to God or the Church to denounce or send cursing or blessing or we only to blesse God and men in his name The Abuses of swearing and vaine or rash oaths in common swearers and the heinousnesse thereof with the folly and vanity or rather blasphemy and impiety of such hel-hounds or hellish and damned swearers and swearing worse then the Heathen or Pagans and more like Atheists then Christians and so such also the odiousnesse of perjury the opposite whereof the true and lawfull use of oathes and swearing for just and godly ends whereby the way of promissory oathes or vowes and their nature sorts and holy use in the Church towards God especially and be fore him if among men the reasons of this Command ement from the Lords mighty power and majesty intimated as well the most fearfull commination and judgement so expresly there threatned 1. VVHich is the third Commandement Thou shalt not take the name of c. What contained in these words The
supply of grace 23. How is he said to be in heaven As in his Throne and Palace of Glory and whence he is seen especially to manifest the same both in mercy and judgements 24 How his glory seen or manifested there 1. In the inferiour heavens by whose excellent creatures sunne and hoasts there as the heavens declare the glory c. Psal. 19. 2. In the third heaven where is manifest his blessed vision and fruition to the Saints and holy Angels 3. In the heaven of his Church where manifested to his Saints on earth and those that excell in vertue 25. How else is it manifested thence 1. As his Almighty power is chiefly seene by his great works and influence of goodnesse thence 2. As his Al-presence shadowed in the alcovering heavens universall architecture 3. As his al-sufficiency to himselfe and all his creatures signified by that universall covering 4. As his Al-seeing knowledge by that universall compasse of the curtaines or canopie and light of heaven and so 5. His Omniscence Omnisufficiencie Omnipresence and Omnipotence lively shadowed and represented in the heavens and as his purity holinesse represented in the purity and brightnesse of them and his mercies and judgements also from thence 26. How his mercies and judgements manifested thence 1. In the signes and wonders shewed thence to the terrour of the inhabitants of the earth 2. In the lightning and thunder storme and tempest causing feare and amazement and often distruction 3. In the clouds and raine as in Noahs flood sometimes bringing and threatning devastation 4. In the distinguishing dayes and nights times and seasons by the lights and revolution of heaven 5. In the influence of goodnesse into inferiour things as gracious dewes from heaven 27. How is he then by us conceived to be in heaven 1. In the heaven of sanctified soules by his grace 2. In the heaven of his Church by his mercy and goodnesse 3. In the heaven of visible heavens by his power and declarations of his glory 4. In the heaven of superiour heavens his Court and Palace in excellent glory with his heavenly Courtiers Saints and Angels 5. In the heaven of highest heavens dwelling in inaccessible light and glory 28. Is he not then on earth Not to be thought that he is absent any where that filleth all places by his powerfull presence in whom we live and move and have our being and though heaven his Throne yet earth his footstoole and both heaven and earth filled with his goodnesse and glory who both here and in heaven guideth and governeth all things 29. Why say we then so particularly in heaven Because that in most eminencie the heaven is his Throne or seat and Palace of glory and for our understanding as earthly Kings his image have Palaces of State to shew their magnificence so this heavenly Emperour hath that his celestiall Palace wherein is most perspicuously above all other places manifested his glorious Majesty 30. What more learne we hence 1. The greatnesse of comfort and considence that we should have in our heavenly Father 2. The height of our godly ambition to be worthy sonnes of this our heavenly heavens Father 3. The fulnesse of joy and gladnesse from consideration of the excellencies of this our heavenly father above all earthly fathers and this our King above all other earthly Kings and Emperours 31. How is this especiall comfort confidence or joy As our heavenly Father hath heavenly blessings and inheritance to give us and doth love his above all earthly fathers love who love but blindly ignorantly and imperfectly and he eternally without end or imperfection he hath all power and all Kings but wormes in comparison of him and like the dust under his feet yea Satan and all enemies tremble before him who is able to defend his from all adversaries and this our prayer is our speech to salute this our Father who is thereby assuredly knowne our God and Father as we more familiarly admitted into his presence to speake to him and so often to salute him in that heavenly language 32. But if we be his what need we often pray So much the more 1. To shew our duty and love to his honour 2. To approve our selves thereby in his favour so often and ordinarily even here admitted into his presence 3. To pay our duties that we owe of blessing praise and thankfulnesse the tribute of our soules 4. To renew the covenant of grace and cloath us in Christs garments and justice more fully 5. To reach out the hand of faith thereby continually to receive new blessings 33. What if we neglect it We not only shew our selves unworthy of blessings but to have no faith and not to be sonnes that desire not our fathers honour nor to receive blessings from him for if we will not 1. Offer our selves in his presence 2. Speake to him by confession 3. Aske him blessing by prayer 4. Salute him in praises 5. Reach out the hand of faith to receive blessings 6. Aske or speake for cloathing or meat Medicines or help Cordialls or other comforts in our fathers hand and gift shall we not shew our selves most unworthy of any blessings and worthy to be blotted out of his favour in consideration of which we ought often thus to pray as we are taught Our Father which art in heaven 34. What farther expositions may you make hereof In consideration how this Preface is applied to the whole Trinity not only in generall as one God in essence but in particular intimated according to their persons as by 1. Father remember the first Person in Trinity both to Christ and all us a Father 2. Our representing him in whom God is made our Father Christ our Brother Mediator Judge Saviour and redeemer 3. Which art in heaven intimating the holy Ghost inhabiting the Saints or Gods presence by his holy Spirit in his holy heaven both his 1. Saints and their soules by his graces Conscience by sanctification 2. His Church on earth by his mercies and consolations 3. His Church above by his glorious visitation and continuall comfort thus understanding particularly one God in three Persons Father Son and holy Ghost by these words Our Father which art in heaven 35. What followeth After this Preface in the second place the petitions of the Lords Prayer SECT 4. The three former Petitions of c. The Analysis and generall distinction of all the six petitions with the order of them and reason of the same this prayer is so excellent as in it comprehending the substance of all prayers and all the sorts and parts of them the number of the petitions and quality thereof the 1. petition for Gods glory why fittest so first to be paced The parts of this petition what meant by the name of God expressed in the third Commandement and what also by sanctifying his name and how to be performed by us in all our thoughts words and workes respectively all of them and so to be hallowed