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A34877 A supplement to Knowledge and practice wherein the main things necessary to be known and believed in order to salvation are more fully explained, and several new directions given for the promoting of real holiness both of heart and life : to which is added a serious disswasive from some of the reigning and customary sins of the times, viz. swearing, lying, pride, gluttony, drunkenness, uncleanness, discontent, covetousness and earthly-mindedness, anger and malice, idleness / by Samuel Cradock ... useful for the instruction of private families. Cradock, Samuel, 1621?-1706. 1679 (1679) Wing C6756; ESTC R15332 329,893 408

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by the consideration of the high dignity of the Person whom we have offended so the value of Reparation ariseth from the dignity of the Person satisfying And this satisfaction consisteth in the reparation of the honour which by our sin was cclipsed And all honour doth increase proportionably as the person yielding it is more honourable or worthy 2. This may shew us that the more worthy the Person of Christ was before he suffered the greater was his condescention in stooping to such great and unworthy sufferings for our sakes 3. This greatly magnifies the love of God in sending his only begotten Son into the world to die for Sinners This love of God is frequently extolled and admired by the Apostles Rom. 8.32 He that spared n●t his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him freely give us all things 1 John 4.9 10. In this was manifested the love of God towards us because that God sent his only begotten Son into the World that we might live through him Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our Sins What an amazing thing is this love of the Father in sending his only begotten Son to be our Redeemer and what an amazing thing is this condescention of the only Son of God to dy for such worms as we are I come now t● Christs fourth Title Our Lord. Our Lord. After our Sav● 〈◊〉 Relation viz. of the only Son of God founded upon his eternal generation followeth his Dominion as the necessary consequence of his Son-ship because the only Son must of necessity be Heir and Lord of all in his Fathers house and all others which bear the name of Sons whether they be Angels or Men must be looked upon as his servants who is King of Kings and Lord of Lords Acts 10.36 He is Lord of all Mat. 28.18 All power is given unto him both in Heaven and Earth Ephes 1.20 21 22. God hath set him at his own right hand in the Heavenly places far above all principality and power and might and dominion and hath put all things under his feet The word Lord signifies properly Dominion and implies a right of possession and power of disposing This premised let us consider how and in what respects Christ is Lord As there are two natures united in the person of Christ so there are two kinds of dominion belonging respectively to those natures One inherent in his Divinity the other bestowed on his humanity One by which he is Lord maker of all things The other by which he is made Lord of all things Christ as God hath a supreme universal dominion over the Worlp So Thomas acknowledges in those words John 20.28 My Lord and my God But Christ as Mediator has some kind of dominion or Lordship bestowed on him and given unto him And in this sense the Apostle says Acts 2.36 He was made both Lord and Christ And one branch of this his dominion was his power on earth to forgive sins Mat. 9.2 6. He said therefore to the sick of the Palsie thy sins are forgiven thee that they might know that the ●on of Man had power on earth to forgive sins And another is the right of Judicature or Judging the World committed to him Joh. 5.22 The Father hath committed all Judgment to the Son and hath given him authority to execute Judgment because he is the Son of Man He will Judge the World by that man whom he hath ordained Acts 17.31 But let us further consider by what right Christ is Lord. 1. By right of Creation Joh. 1.3 All things were made by him and without him was not any thing made that was made 2. By right of sustentation and preservation of the Creatures he hath made Col. 1.17 And he is before all things and by him all things consist Heb. 1.3 He upholdeth all things by the word of his power 3. By right of donation ordination and the appointment of God Acts 2.36 To him all power is given both in Heaven and Earth 4. By right of Redemption The ransomer of a bondslave was wont to be his Lord. When we were bond-slaves to Sin and Satan Christ paid our ransome No bondage so great as ours was no price so great as that which he paid therefore no service too great for us to pay unto him 5. By right of Covenant In our Baptism we bind our selves and Covenant to be his Thus we see by how many Titles Christ is Lord. If any shall further inquire how he exercises this his dominion I Answer In these particulars 1. In giving Laws to his Subjects and servants 2. In appointing Officers in his Church 3. In providing for and protecting his Family 4. In correcting his servants for their miscarriages 5. In rewarding them according to their Works and Services both here and hereafter The improvement we should make of this Doctrine is in short this We should seriously consider whether we do indeed take Christ for our Lord as well as for our Saviour Many do like Christs Saviourship well enough but do not like his Soveraignty They will not have him rule over them But let us often think by how many Titles Christ is our Lord by right of Creation Sustentation Redemption and Covenant that so we may stir up our hearts to own him as our Lord and humbly to submit to him and to pay him the Homage we owe unto him and heartily chearfully diligently and constantly to obey him even to our lives end SECT II. Of the Person of Christ WE come now to consider what manner of person our Saviour was He was God and Man in the same Person The Eternal Son of God the second person in the Trinity took to himself our humane nature a humane Soul and Body and united it after a wonderful manner to his God-head and so God and Man became one person This I shall labour to make out by these seven following particulars 1. Jesus Christ who was God before by the Divine nature which he had from Eternity was in the fulness of time made Man Gal. 4.4 2. He was made Man by assuming our humane nature unto himself and joyning it to his Divine nature 3. Although our humane nature was joyned with his Divine nature that is with the nature common to the Father Son and Holy Ghost yet was that Union made only in the Person of the Son Not the Father nor the Holy Ghost but it was the Son that was incarnate 4. The Divine nature did not assume an humane person but the Divine Person of the Son did assume our humane nature If Christ had only taken the Person of a man then there must have been two Persons in Christ a Person assuming and a Person assumed Yea then that only Person which Christ had assumed should have been advanced and saved by him He therefore assumed not an humane Person but he assumed the humane
nature common to all the Sons and Daughters of Adam and Eve 5. He took an humane Soul as well as an humane Body For he increased in wisdom and stature Luke 2.52 In the one in respect of his body in the other in respect of his Soul He whose knowledge did increase with his years must have a Subject proper for it which is no other than an humane Soul This was the Seat of his finite understanding and directed will distinct from the will of his Father and consequently of his Divine nature as may appear by that Luke 22.42 Not my Will but thine be done 6. In this union the two natures remain really distinct in Christ without either conversion or transubstantiation of the one into the other and without commixtion or confusion of both into one There was no conversion of the humane nature into the Divine or of the Divine into the humane 7. Though with us the Soul and Body being united make a Person yet in Christ the Soul and Body were so united as to have their subsistence not of themselves as in us but in the God-head No sooner was the Soul united to the Body but both Soul and Body had their subsistence in the Second Person in the Trinity SECT III. How our Saviour became Man THis union between our humane nature and the Deity of the Son of God was wrought in the womb of the Virgin Mary Yea our Saviour was not only made man in her but of her The humane nature which he assumed being made of her substance This I shall clear and make out by these assertions was conceived by the Holy Ghost 1. He was not conceived in her by the help of Man but by the power of the Holy Ghost Her womb was the Bride Chamber where the Holy Ghost did knit this indissoluble knot between the Deity of the Son of God and our humane nature Joseph was only Christs legal Father his Foster-Father Luke 3.23 Being as was supposed the Son of Joseph This conception therefore was wrought by the Holy Ghost He immediately and miraculously inabled the Virgin Mary to conceive our Saviour Luke 1.35 And the Angel said unto her the Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and the power of the highest shall overshadow thee therefore that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God The Holy Ghost did not perform any proper act of Generation such as is the foundation of paternity but framed the humane nature of Christ of the substance of the Virgin 2. The humane nature of Christ was totally sanctified and so fitted for a personal union with the Word John 17.19 For their sakes I sanctified my self Christ out of his infinite love humbled himself and became Man Yet at the same time out of his infinite purity he would not defile himself by becoming sinful man The humane nature in its first original was formed by the Holy Ghost and in its formation sanctified and so united to the Word that as the first Adam was the fountain of our Impurity so the second Adam might be the fountain of our Righteousness 3. Christ took our nature cloathed with sinless infirmities Culpable and sinful infirmities he did not take on him Indeed poenal infirmities such as are common to all the Sons and Daughters of Adam as to be subject to pain grief and sorrow hunger thirst cold c. such he took on him Isa 53. v. 4. Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows But he took not on him poenal infirmities such as are personal He took our sinless infirmities to shew the truth of his humanity He took them on himself that he might pity us and might teach us by his holy example how to bear them 4. As the Virgin Mary conceived our Saviour by the power of the Holy Ghost so she brought him forth into the world He was born of her And under this head these particulars are to be taken into consideration 1. Christ was born of a woman that was a pure Virgin Born of the Virgin Mary untouched by man even when she brought him forth The promised Messias was to be born after a miraculous manner Jer. 31.22 The Lord hath created a new thing in the earth a woman shall incompass or inclose a man It is a new Creation because wrought in a woman without the help of man The Prophesie in Isaiah must be fulfilled Isa 7.14 Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son and shall call his name Immanuel The Messias promised before and under the Law was to be born of a Virgin 2. The Messias was to be of the house and lineage of David Of whom the Apostle says Acts 2.30 that he being a Prophet knew that God had sworn with an oath to him that of the fruit of his loins according to the flesh he would raise up Christ to sit on his Throne And it is from many places of Scripture evident and certain that Mary and so Christ did lineally descend from David 3. Observe the time when Christ was born It was when Augustus was Emperor and taxed the Jews and all Nations under his dominion as we find Luke 2. 4. Observe the place where our Saviour was born It was in Village of Judah called Bethlehem that the Prophesie in Micah might be fullfilled Mich. 5.2 But thou Bethlehem Ephratah though thou be little among the thousands of Judah yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel 5. Let us consider the manner of his Birth which was very mean namely in the Stable of a common Inn. 6. Observe the first tidings or manifestation of his birth which was made by Angels to poor Shepherds Luke 2.10 11. And the Angel said unto them Fear not for behold I bring you good tidings of great joy which shall be to all people For unto you is born this day in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord And thus we have shewed how our Lord and Saviour was born into the World and became man Before I shut up this particular it will be needful that I shew why it was requisite he should be both God and Man 1. It was requisite he should be God for these reasons 1. That by his Divine and mnipotent power he might uphold his Humanity that it should not sink under the weight of Gods wrath l●id upon him for our sins * This s●nne think was shadowed in ●●e Altar ●n which the Sacrifice wa● to be burned which was made of wood but covered with brass to keep it from bei●g co●●umed So Christ was Man but the weakness of the humane nature was covered with 〈◊〉 pow●r o● Divinity so that it might be supported under its sufferings The wrath of God was so heavy that no meer Creature could bear up under it The man-hood of Christ would have sunk under those sufferings had not the Divine power upheld it 2. That he might
pierced Now our Saviour was actually condemned and delivered up to that kind of death by Pilate who gave sentence it should be as the Jews required and they required he should be Crucified There are three things observable concerning Crucifixion 1. 'T was a painful death The hands and feet which of all parts of the body are most nervous and consequently most sensible were pierced through with nailes which caused a lingring and tormenting death 2. 'T was an ignominious * 'T was servile supplicium Thieves and Robbers were usually by the Romans punished with this kind of death death and therefore among the Romans inflicted upon their Slaves and fugitives 3. A cursed death as 't is written Deut. 21.13 Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree Having premised these things let us now consider what are the instructions we should learn from this Article that our Saviour was Crucified 1. Christ hath hereby redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3.13 that is he hath indured that most shameful death of the Cross which was accounted accursed and inglorious 2. Christ hath blotted out the hand-writing of Ordinances that was against us and taken it out of the way nailing it to his Cross One ancient custome as they tell us of Cancelling Bonds was by striking a nail through the writing Our Saviours Crucifixion hath done this for us 3. Seeing Christ was Crucified for us we should in imitation thereof labour to Crucifie sin in our selves Our old man must be Crucified that the body of sin may be destroyed We must remember that those that are Christs must crucifie the flesh with its affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 4. We should often meditate on the bitter Cup our Saviour drank and on those nails that pierced his hands and feet that so we may be the more ready and willing to suffer for him We should consider how he humbled himself and became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross teaching us thereby to humble our selves and with patience to bear the lowest condition for his sake and to imitate him who for the joy that was set before him endured the Cross and despised the shame We come now to the next word in the Creed viz. He Dyed Our Saviour was not only nailed to the Cross but died thereon He suffered upon the Cross a dissolution and died a true and proper death Dead He died for our sins according to the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15.3 He was cut off from the Land of the Living Isa 53.7 8 10. and made his Soul that is his life an offering for sin He said Father into thy hands I commend my Spirit and having said so he gave up the ghost Luke 23.26 'T is true Christ did voluntarily die for he saith no man taketh away my life from me but I lay it down of my self John 10.18 That is He laid not down his life by a necessary compulsion but by a voluntary election He took upon him a necessity of dying for our benefit But the Jews were the causes of his death and by wicked bands crucified him Acts 2.23 and slew him and hanged him on a tree Acts 5.30 They are truly said to have done it because by their incessant importunity they prevailed with Pilate to do it Our Saviour therefore being truly put to death and suffering a real dissolution let us consider what union was dissolved by his death and what continued In Christ there were two different substantial unions One of the parts of his humane nature each to other in which his humanity consisted and by which he was truly man the other of his natures divine and humane by which it came to pass that he was both God and Man in the same person Now the union of the parts of his humane nature was dissolved on the Cross and a real separation made between his Soul and Body But yet there was no disunion of either of them from his Deity The union of the natures remained still nor was the Soul or Body though separated one from the other separated from the Divinity but still remained united unto it When he cried out My God My God why hast thou forsaken me it intimates no more but that he was bereft of those joys and comforts from the Deity which were necessary to asswage the bitterness of his present Agony Having thus shewed that our Saviour did really die Let us now inquire why it was needful he should die 'T was requisite for these reasons 1. That the new Covenant or Testament might be ratified by his blood Where a Testament is there must needs be the death of the Testator Heb. 9.16 2. That he might perform that part of his Priestly Office which required the shedding of his blood For without shedding of blood there is no remission Heb. 9.22 Therefore Christ our Passeover must be Sacrificed for us 1 Cor. 5.7 3. If he would redeem us he must give himself a ransom for us 1 Pet. 1.18 19. For we being enemies could not be reconciled to God but by the death of his Son Col. 1.21 And by his death he hath destroyed him that had the power of death that is the Devil Heb. 2.15 By his death was our redemption wrought as by the price that was paid as by the atonement which was made as by the full satisfaction that was given that God might be reconciled to us who was before offended with us and Buried Thus we have seen what our Saviour died on the Cross And as he really died by the separation of his Soul from his Body so his body was carried and laid up in a Sepulchre hewn out of the Rock in which never man was before laid This the Evangelists do sufficiently testify Now that the Messias was to be buried was typified by Jonas who was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly And accordingly the Son of Man was to be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth * He is said to be three dayes and three nights in the Grave the whole time or space of three dayes being put for a part of it by a synecdoche see my Harm Ch. 6. pag. 266. Mat. 12.40 The Psalmist intimates as much Psal 16.9 My flesh shall rest in hope for thou wilt not leave my Soul in Hell (a) My Soul In Hell that is my dead body in the Grave see the next §. nor suffer thine holy one to see corruption Isay 53.9 He was cut off out of the land of the living He made his Grave with the wicked and with the rich in his death Christ being put to death his body was by Joseph of Arimathea begged of Pilate and by him and Nicodemus one of their great Council taken down and wound in fine linnen with spices as the manner of the Jews was to bury and laid in a new Sepulchre in a Garden nigh the place of his execution and a great
make his obedience and sufferings in the h●mane Nature of infinite value and merit This One-man this God-man was more worthy then all the men of the World put together Th● humane Nature of Christ being Personally united to the God-head is of more worth than all the Race of mankind So that Christs obedience and sufferings do make a full satisfaction to God for all the dishonour done him by our sins 3. That he might do those great things for us after he had laid down his life for us which none but God could do viz. 1. To Baptize us with the Holy Ghost None can send the Spirit of God into the hearts of men but he who is God 2. To repair his Image in us 3. To subdue sin in us 4. To conquer Satan for us 5. To guide and carry his Church to Eternal life through all those hindrances that lie in their way 6. To conquer Death and raise our bodies to a glorious Immortality Secondly It was requisite he should be Man for these reasons 1. Mans Nature had sinned therefore it was requisite mans Nature should suffer It seems fit and requisite in respect of the justice of God that the same Nature should be punish'd which had offended 2. He could not have suffered if he had not been man 3. If our Mediator were only God he could have performed no obedience the God-head being free from all manner of subjection 4. It was fit he should be man that Satan might be vanquish'd in that Nature he had supplanted Gen. 3.15 And I will put enmity between thee and the Woman and between thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heel 5. That he might be a merciful High-Priest For in that in our Nature he experienced temptation he knows how to succour and pity us when we are tempted And lastly He was both God and Man that he might be a meet Mediator to deal between God and Man and to work a Reconciliation between them SECT IV. Of our Saviours Life HAving thus spoken of our Saviours Birth and how he came into the World it will be requisite we should now speak of his Life and how he lived and conversed in this World which the Ancient Creed mentions nothing of but passes immediately from his being conceived by the Holy Ghost and born of the Virgin Mary to his suffering under Pontius Pilat I have in my Harmony of the Four Evangelists fully set forth the History of the Life of our blessed Lord and Saviour Here I shall only give a short Summary of what I have there more largely delivered to which I refer my Reader The Life of our Saviour we have divided into Six Parts and in each Part have taken notice of the Particulars observable The First Part of our Saviours life was from his Birth to his Baptism containing the space of about Thirty Years In which we have these particulars 1 At Eight days old he was Circumcised Luke 2.21 Matth. 1.25 2. Mary the Fortieth day after her delivery goeth up to Jerusalem to the Temple to be purified where she and Joseph present the Child Jesus to the Lord according to the Law Exod. 13.2 12 13. Mary presents the offering for her Purification viz. being a poor Woman a pair of Turtle Doves Levit. 12.6 8. Simeon and Anna here acknowledge him and prophesie of him Luke 2. from 22. to 41. 3. This done Joseph and Mary return with Jesus to Bethlehem and there continue for some time For about Two Years after our Saviours Birth the Magi or Arabian Astronomers who had in their own Country at our Saviours Birth seen a strange Star or extraordinary brightness over Judea and understanding either by some Old Prophesie or New Revelation from God that it signified the Birth of the Messias promised to the Jews they being moved by the Spirit come to Jerusalem to inquire after the place where this New King should be born They are told by Herod and the Priests that the Birth-place of the Messias was to be at Bethlehem Herod bids them go and inquire for him and when they had found him bring him word They come to Bethlehem and there finding him do homage to him and present him with gifts This done being warned of God not to go back to Herod they return into their own Countrey another way Matth. 2. from 1. to 13. 4. After their departure Joseph is warned by God in a Dream to fly into Egypt and so provide for the life of the Child which accordingly he did and there He Mary and the Child remained till Herod was dead But in the mean time Herod finding himself deceived by the Magi and thinking that this young Child had been still at Bethlehem or thereabout that he might be sure to destroy him he commands all the Male Children from Two years old and under that were in Bethlehem or the Coasts thereof to be killed Mat. 2. from the 13. to the 19. 5. Not long after Herod dying Joseph is warned of God in a Dream to return with the young Child unto the Land of Israel which accordingly he did and dwelt in the City of Nazareth Mat. 2 from 19. to the end 6. Christ at Twelve Years old is brought to Jerusalem at the Passover and there disputes with the Doctors in the Temple From hence he went down with his Parents to Nazareth again and there lived privately till his Baptism Luke 2. from 41. to the end .7 John Baptist being newly entred into his publick Ministry preaches Repentance and Baptizes He sharply reprehends some of the Pharisees and Sadduces that came to be Baptized of him He gives particular answers to the questions of the People of the Publicans and of the Soldiers enquiring what every one of them ought to do He gives his first Testimony to Christ preferring him before himself Luke 3. from 1. to the 18. Mat. 3. from 1. to the 13. Mark 1. from 7. to 9. The Second Part of our Saviours life from his Baptism to the Passover next ensuing containing the space of half a Year in which we have these particulars 1. He is Baptiz'd by John in Jordan and witnessed from Heaven to be the Eternal Son of God and a Second Testimony by John given of him Mat. 3. from the 13. to the 18. Mark 1. from 9. to 12. Joh. 1. from 15. to the 19. Luke 3. from 21. to 24. 2. Immediately after his Baptism he goes into the Wilderness and is there assaulted by Satan with a Threefold Temptation Mat. 4. from 1. to 12. Mark 1. from 12. to 14. Luke 4. from 1. to 14. 3. John being now Baptizing in Bathabara some of the Pharisees come from the Sanedrim at Jerusalem to enquire who he was He tells them he was only the Fore-runner of the Messias Joh. 1. from 19. to 29. 4. Christ now comes to John whom John calls the Lamb of God and declares that he was made known unto him to be the
made man after his own Image I come now Secondly to shew what Laws he gave him The Law given to Adam in innocency was t●●fold 1. Naturall which was written or imprinted upon his Soul in his first Creation 2. Positive given as is probable by some external discovery or revelation and imposed on man to try whether he would be obedient to his Creator or no. The Law of Nature as subjected in mans mind consists in certain practical Notions or Rules about good and evil right and wrong true and false just and unjust honest and dishonest And mans will was dispos'd and inclin'd to conform to the Dictates of this Law So that these Natural Laws by which Man was to be governed and which were at first stamped on his Soul were such as were exceeding agreeable to his Reason and sutable to the inclinations of his will and not at all contradicted or opposed by any principle within him which might make him doubtful about his duty or disincline him to the performance of it So that Adam in innocency was indued with sufficient ability to conform to the whole Law of God both Natural and Positive He was furnished with particular Principles inclining him to comply with whatsoever the Law of Nature prescribed and with a general Principle disposing him to yield obedience to whatsoever any positive Law as the declared will of God should injoin Thus much of the Law of Nature I come now to shew what positive Law God gave Adam in innocency Of the Covenant of Works God having placed our first Parents in Paradise besides the Law of Nature which he wrote on their hearts he gave them also a positive command to assert his right and dominion over them as their Creator that they might be obliged to do something because it was their Creators will as well as other things because they appeared in their own Nature reasonable and fit to be done Something 's God commands because they are in themselves and in their own Nature just and fit to be done and other things are therefore fit to be done because God commands them God therefore gave Adam a positive Law as a test or proof of his obedience and to try him how he would behave himself towards his Maker Gen. 2.16 17. And the Lord God commanded the man saying of every Tree of the Garden thou mayest freely eat but of the Tree of Knowledge of good and evil thou shalt not eat of it for in the day that thou eatest thereof of thou shalt surely die In these words is contained the Covenant that God made with man at first and which is commonly called the Covenant of Works or Covenant of Nature being made with man in the time of his innocent Nature And this is contradistinguished to the Covenant of Grace which was made with man after the Fall of which we shall speak more afterwards Now a Covenant between God and man is not to be considered as between man and man where consent is mutually requisite For man was bound to accept the terms God offered him being in themselves exceeding reasonable God is an absolute Lord and hath full power in his hands to give and impose what Laws he pleases on his Creatures and to require what duties and impose what conditions he sees good and man is bound to accept and submit unto the Law or Covenant so propounded and imposed And in a dutiful performance of the conditions on his part required he may expect the benefits promised Here therefore it will be requisite 1. To shew that this was a Covenant 2. To shew the Nature of it Now that the command included in a Covenant may appear 1. Because God promises Adam life if he obey As if he should have said Till the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely live So much must needs be included 2. He threatens him with death if he disobeyed In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely dye 3. We find our first Parents did so understand it by Eve's words to the Serpent Gen. 3.2 3. The woman said unto the Serpent We may eat of the fruit of the Trees in the Garden But of the fruit of the Tree which is in the midst of the Garden God hath said Ye shall not eat of it neither shall ye touch it lest ye die 4. He appointed the Tree of life as a Sacrament * Erat homini in lignis aliis alimentum in hoc v●ro Sacramentum Aug. de Gen. or Symbol of this Covenant Gen. 2.9 Which Tree did signifie to them that they should always enjoy that happy estate in which they were made upon condition of their obedience viz. A most blessed life free from all misery and flowing with all manner of good things that were agreeable to the Soul and Body of man in that perfect state Having thus shewed that those words Gen. 2.16 17. contained a Covenant we come now to consider 1. The Nature and Tenour of this Covenant And for the clearing of that let us observe these particulars 1. The great honour that God put upon man by entring into Covenant with him 'T is a great honour to a mean man to have a King enter into Covenant with him How much greater honour is it unto Man to have the great God of Heaven and Earth to enter into Covenant with him 2. Observe the great goodness of God in laying upon man no harder a command then the forbearing of one Tree which he must needs judge easie and reasonable 3. Ob●erve Mans great advantage by this Covenant Before this God had not engaged himself to man to continue him in that happy estate in which he had made him Nothing hindred but he might have annihilated him But by this Covenant God freely bound himself and gave man a right to expect the things promised in this Covenant God now promises to continue mans life and happiness if man continued his obedience 4. Under this Covenant man was furnished with sufficient ability to stand but was left in the hand of his own counsel He was left in a mutable state he might stand or he might fall 5. Observe Gods great care of man in arming his mutable will against falling both by promises and threatnings He encourages him to obedience by the reward promised he deters him from disobedience by the danger threatned What greater good could man expect than what was here promised What greater evil could he fear than what was here threatned 6. This Covenant required on mans part perfect personal and perpetual obedience as the condition of it It required perfect obedience to the moral Law stamped on mans heart and to this p●sitive precept which God had given him A curse and death was to be the w●ges of the least transgression thereof But if he were obedient he might expect a reward answerable to his works and thereupon it was called a Covenant of works 7. Under the Coven●●t man had no need of a Mediator Till man
to Hell How should we endeavour by our earnest intreaties to keep them from falling into that dismal place of torment 5. We should consider with what extreme folly they are possessed who mind only this present life that live as if there were no other life besides this or none else worth looking after 6. We should above all things endeavour to secure to our selves eternal life in Bliss and Happiness Every man and womans portion must be one of these two either everlasting life in Bliss or everlasting damnation And if we must be either eternally happy or eternally miserable methinks it should make us pass the time of our sojourning here in fear 1 Pet. 1.17 and to give diligence to make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 And to quicken our diligence hereunto leet us consider these things 1. By nature we have no title to everlasting Bliss By nature we are children of Wrath Eph. 2.3 2. We must be united to Christ if ever we intend to obtain it God hath given eternal life and this life is in his Son He that hath the Son hath life he that hath not the Son hath not life 1 Joh. 5.11 12. 3. Holiness of heart and life here is necessary for the obtaining of eternal life in bliss and happiness hereafter 4. As Parents have been instrumental under God of conveying a temporal life to their Children So they should labour as much as possibly they can that they may be so religiously instructed and educated that they may at last obtain an eternal life in bliss and happiness Of Baptism A Sacrament * Vox Sacramentum non occurit in Scriptura quia est Latina Apud veterem Latinum interpretem est pro Graeco nomine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vox autem Graeca generaliter pro omni secreto minus generaliter pro secreto divino specialiori significatione pro secreto divino symbolis signis figurisque externis proposito ac representato In hac significatione respondet ei vox Latina Sacramentum quae deducta est a verbo Sacrare a scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis Latinis a Militia desumpta fuit in qua juramentum quo milites Duci obstringebantur vocabatur Sacramentum Vide Riveti Cathol Orthodox Sacramentum proprie stricte accipitur pro signo sigillo quo res coelestis declaratur obsignatur communicatur is an outward and visible rite instituted by Christ to signifie the benefits of his death and passion and to seal and confirm the promises of Salvation to those who perform the conditions required of them There are two Sacraments of the new Conant or or new Testament viz. 1. Baptism 2. The Supper of the Lord. Being to speak here of Baptism I shall first distinguish of the several kinds of Baptism 1. There is Baptismus fluminis sive aquae the Baptism of water John 1.33 He that sent me to baptize with water the same said unto me upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending and remaining on him the same is he that baptizeth with the Holy Ghost 2. Flaminis sive Spiritus The Baptism of the Holy Ghost Mat. 3.11 I baptize you with water saies John Baptist but he that cometh after me shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost 3. Sanguinis sive Martyrii The Baptism of Sufferings Mat. 20.22 Are ye able sayes our Saviour to the sons of Zebedee to drink of the Cup that I shall drink of and to be Baptized with the Baptism that I am to be Baptized with that is are ye able to partake with me in those sufferings and afflictions which I am shortly to undergo I am to speak of the first of these viz. The Baptism of water Concerning which that I may proceed Methodically I shall speak 1. Of the Institution of it 2. Of the Nature of it 3. Of the excellent uses and ends of it 4. I shall inquire who are the persons that ought to be Baptized 5. Whether Baptism be of absolute necessity to Salvation 6. What improvement those who were baptized in their infancy ought to make of their Baptism when they are grown up and come to years of understanding 7. What are the particular duties of Christian Parents towards their infant Seed and Children 1. I begin with the first The institution 'T is God only who hath authority to appoint Sacraments in the Church 'T is his divine institution which makes a Sacrament The whole Church cannot do it And John 1.33 We read that John Baptist had commission to Baptize with water He that sent me to Baptize with water the same said unto me c. 2. Christ gave Commission to his Apostles in the first year of his publick Ministry to baptize else 't is not imaginable they would have done it John 3.22 After these things came Jesus and his Disciples into the land of Judea and there he tarried with them and baptized that is by the hands of his Apostles for Jesus himself baptized not but his Disciples John 4.12 3. After his Resurrection he enlarged the Commission of his Apostles Matth. 28.19 Go ye therefore and teach all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Here he prescribes the form they should use in the administration of Baptism injoyning them to baptize in the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost And the words in Mark 16.16 He that believes and is baptized shall be saved but he that believeth not shall be damned seem to be an addition to those in Matth. 28. and are not any express direction as to the admitting Infants or not admitting them but a direction how they should go and disciple the Heathen Nations by preaching the Gospel to them and when they had converted any to Christianity they should baptize them and so bring them into Covenant with God and when the Parents were in Covenant their Children could not fail to be so also as God willing we shall shew hereafter 2. We come to consider the Nature of Baptism Baptism in its general notion is an outward visible sign and representation of inward and spiritual blessings and benefits conveyed and made over by Christ unto the persons baptized they performing the conditions required of them In Baptism there are two parts 1. The Outward 2. The Inward In the outward part there are three things considerable 1. The outward Element Water 2. The Action of applying the water by sprinkling or dipping 3. The form of administring or applying the water viz. in the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost The quantity of water which is to be used is not limited by the holy Scriptures Sprinkling * Imm●rsio non est de necessitate baptismi quum non in ea posita sit mysterii hujus vis efficacia Causab in Mat. C. 3. Ablutio est de necessitate baptismi Dom. Soto is as significant as to the main ends of Baptism as dipping Therefore the blood of Christ which is signified
mouth of a strange woman is a deep pit and he that is abhorred of God shall fall therein that is he whom God is highly offended with for some former wickedness shall in a just way of punishment be delivered up to this ruining sin 3. God declares that he himself will judge those that commit this sin Heb. 13.4 Whoremongers and adulterers God will judge God will judge all other sinners but the Apostle seems to intimate that God will judge these in an especial manner 1. Because this sin being usually committed in secret man cannot so easily come to the knowledge of it nor can he prove it by sufficient witnesses 2. Many great and potent men are oftentimes guilty of this sin whom ordinary Magistrates either cannot or dare not or through remisness will not meddle with Therefore God will take the matter into his own hands and he himself will judge it And 't is a dreadful thing to fall into the hand of the living God Crimes among men are oftentimes extenuated by reason of the greatness of the Person that commits them But God will judge every man according to his works 4. 'T is a sin that is usually attended with hardness of heart and very often with final impenitence When once men have so far debauched their consciences that Adultery and Fornication seem small matters to them they are seldom recovered By frequent committing this sin they give their consciences such a dose of Opium that the lowdest threatnings of Gods word cannot awaken them The Prophet tells us Hos 4.11 that whoredom wine and new wine takes away the heart that is besot the understanding Terrible are those words Prov. 2.18.19 The house of the strange woman inclineth unto death and her paths unto the dead None that go unto her return again neither take they hold of the paths of life O the extreme hazard and danger that all Adulterers and Fornicators expose their precious souls unto for a short pleasure Travellers * Doctor Browns travels into Germany p. 111. tell us that at Presburg Metz and some other places in Germany they have a strange way of executing capital offenders which is this They have an Engine made in the form of and finely dressed up like a young maid or Lady with her hands before her The malefactor being brought to the place of execution salutes her first and then retires But at his second salute she opens her hands and cuts his heart asunder Methinks this is a notable emblem and representation of the horrible danger that adulterers expose themselves unto by their lascivious embraces * Cito praeterit quod delectat permanet sine fine quod cruciat Aug. Which if they did but duly consider before-hand they would as much tremble to venture on them as the poor condemned Malefactor does to make his second salute to the fatal Engine 5. Adultery * Adulterium quasi ad alterius thorum accessus is one of the greatest plagues imaginable to private families For thereby a spurious bastardly brood is brought in to inherit and share the estate instead of a legitimate issue Like as the Cuckow layes her filthy eggs in another birds nest making it to hatch and nourish them as if it were its own off-spring So that this sin usually breeds dismal confusion and fatal jars and strifes in those miserable Families where it is found 6. 'T is a great mischief to the Church For by Lawful Wedlock among Christians a seed foederally holy is brought forth but by this sin a spurious and unclean brood 7. 'T is a sin that defiles a Land and provokes God to send down most heavy judgments upon it We read that the Land of Canaan where Israel dwelt spewed out the Nations that were before them for their uncleanness Lev. 18.27 28. And therefore every honest person should have a great zeal for chastity and an utter abhorrence and indignation against uncleanness as that which is a ruiner of a Nation and a mischief to the community by drawing down Gods Judgments upon it 8. 'T is a sin that exceedingly blots the name * A Learned man writing of a great Prince who was also a great Captain sayes of him that he was egregius bellator sed non adversus carnem suam So that great men one would think should be afraid of this sin lest they should be recorded to Posterity under the Characters of fi●thy persons There are few fornicators or adulterers who do not by great and solemn repentance and amendment of life break off that sin but leave an infamous name and memory to posterity Prov. 10.7 The memory of the just is blessed but the name of the wicked shall rot Prov. 6.32 33. He that committeth adultery with a woman lacketh understanding He that doth it destroyeth his own soul A wound and dishonour shall he get and his reproach shall not be wiped away 9. It usually blasts the estate Prov. 6.26 By reason of a whorish woman a man is brought to a morsel of bread Job 13.10 'T is a fire that consumeth to destruction and will root out all their increase I appeal to every wise mans observation whether this be not usually the fruit of uncleanness 10. 'T is a sin that very frequently wasts and destroyes the body The Apostle 1 Cor. 6.28 Exhorts to flee fornication because among other reasons 't is a sin that so much hurts the body In other sins that men commit commonly they abuse something without the the body as the drunkard doth wine but this sin hurteth and abuseth the body it self in a more remarkable manner by an intemperate and excessive exhausting the vital spirits and consuming the natural heat and moisture which are the preservers of health strength and life And besides this sin is frequently attended with that loathsom disease which makes the committers of it to rot and stink above ground So that if there be any men so sottish as not to fear Hell or punishment in another life yet methinks they should resolve to live chastly for fear of rotting their bodies by uncleanness and so shortning this life wherein they expect all their happiness The Apostle indeed in that Chapter before-mentioned uses another argument of another nature to true believers why they should keep themselves from uncleanness Verse 15. Know you not sayes he that your bodies are the members of Christ and will you take the members of Christ and make them the members of an Harlot God forbid For as wedlock makes man and wife one body lawfully so fornication makes the fornicator and the harlot one body unlawfully Further he shews that the bodies of true believers are Temples of the Holy Ghost who is freely given of God to dwell in them and therefore their bodies ought to be kept pure and undefiled The Apostle therefore in this place uses these arguments to true believers and not impure Fornicators For their bodies are not members of Christ nor Temples of the
gladly welcome what he doth afford Not grudging that thy lust hath bounds and stayes Continence hath its joies weigh both and so If rottenness have more let heaven go CHAP. VII Of Discontent IN treating of this Argument I shall speak to these six Particulars 1. I shall shew what Discontent is 2. The great sinfulness of it 3. The Folly of it 4. Shall shew what true Christian Contentment is and wherein the nature of it consists 5. Shall shew the amiableness and excellency of it 6. Shall give some directions and means for the attaining of it For the First Discontent is an unquiet frame of heart under our present condition and expresses it self in murmuring and repining thereat For commonly inward vexing and repining and outward complaining and murmuring go together 2. The great sinfulness of it may appear to us in these Particulars 1. 'T is a quarrelling the wisdom of God and a secret accusing and taxing his Providence * Non judicandum de providentia divina ante quintum actum as if he did not wisely order the Lots and Conditions of his People Holy Job under his great afflictions was far from this temper For though he suffered so deeply yet he charged not God with folly in that severe dispensation towards him But said the Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away blessed be the name of the Lord Job 1.21 22. 2. 'T is a quarrelling his Fatherly care over us as if he had not any love or affection to us or any regard of us 3. 'T is a quarrelling his Faithfulness as if he would not perform the many gracious promises he has made for our good 4. 'T is a secret accusing of his Justice as if he dealt hardly with us and punished us more than our sins deserved * Qui in poenis murmurat ferientis justitiam accusat 5. 'T is a carriage very unworthy of the hope and expectation of a Christian He that hath his Peace made with God in Christ and a title to an heavenly inheritance should endeavour from that consideration to calm and compose his soul under his greatest sufferings 6. 'T is unanswerable to the experience we have had of Gods former gracious dealing with us and helping of us out of straits and difficulties 7. 'T is a great gratification to Satan We cannot gratifie the Devil more who is a Male-contented Spirit than to murmur against our Creator To be of a discontented unquiet Spirit is to be like the Devil He is restless and unquiet always in opposition to God alwayes fretting at his dispensations 8. 'T is a betraying and exposing us to great temptations The Devil scarce ever has so great power over any as over those that are discontented Oh the direful things he draws such persons unto My heart even akes when I think of them and my hand is ready to tremble while I write of them Some of them he draws to make a formal Covenant with himself Others to do such things against themselves that even nature abhors So that all that love themselves should beg of God to keep them and should watch over themselves as to this particular sin For let them assure themselves that nothing betrayes us sooner into the Devils hands than discon●ent It is a stock he uses to graffe his temptations upon The Devil will desire no greater advantage against a soul than to find it in such a temper He is never more busie about any than such persons and usually makes dangerous use of the unquietness and repining of their spirits 9. 'T is such a temper as exceedingly unfits us for holy duties and for the service which otherwise we might do for God And so much of the sinfulness of Discontent 3. I come now in the third place to shew the folly of it 1. 'T is vain and bootless For as one of the Antients well said the miseries and evils we suffer and at which we are so apt to be vexed and troubled are either such as we can remedy or such as we cannot remedy If they be such as we cannot remedy then what a folly is it to vex and fret at them seeing it is impossible to help them Our Lesson then is Patience and Submission * Levius fit patientia quicquid corrigere est nefas But if the evils we suffer be such as are remediable then let us not vex or fret at them but let us use all care and diligence to help our selves and to remedy them And this is good advice though given by a Heathen Philosopher 2. It takes away the comfort of what we enjoy If a man enjoyes a thousand mercies in which he ought to rejoyce and for which he ought to be thankfull yet if his mind be discontented they will all seem as nothing to him So that no one thing bereaves a man more of the comfort he might enjoy in his life than discontent 3. It makes our afflictions worse A discontented person is like a man in a feaver that by his tossing and tumbling more increases his heat Or like a Bird in the lime-twigs which the more it flutters the more it intangles it self 4. It provokes God oftentimes to send new and more afflictions upon us What did the Israelites get by mumuring in the Wilderness but a longer stay in the Wilderness Children that sob and are stomachful after whipping commonly get another another whipping for their pains 5. It makes a mans life very uneasie both to himself and his relations and to all that are about him No body cares to be near such persons as are alwayes murmuring and complaining And so much of this folly of Discontent 4. I come now in the fourth place to shew what Christian Contentment is and wherein the nature of it consists 'T is a sweet quiet gracious frame of Spirit freely submitting to Gods alwise and fatherly disposal of us in every condition There are some things that this gracious frame may consist with and some things that are opposite to it 1. It may consist with a due sensibleness of Gods hand in afflicting of us 'T is not a Stoical apathy or insensibility The Apostle gives us an excellent Rule taken out of the Proverbs of Solomon Prov. 3.11 how we should carry our selves under afflictions Heb. 12.5 My Son despise not thou the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him Some bold and secure sinners are apt to despise and disregard the correcting hand of God the weaker sort of Christians are apt to sink in spirit and faint under their afflictions Now the Apostle advises us to steer between these two namely to be sensible of Gods hand when it is upon us and yet not to faint or despond under it 2. It may consist with an humble complaint to God or man We may groan under our Afflictions but we ought not to grumble 3. It may consist with seeking out for help and ease in a lawful way For that is our duty and