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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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before the promulgation of it in that forme at Mount Sinai as well as since and how far in force still with us Christians who though we are freed from the curse bare letter and slavish feare are yet bound to the duties and effect thereof by the Law of Grace that so agree Christ being the scope and end of both how and why it was written in the two Tables and that twice and how divided 1. YOu said that your Godfathers and Godmothers did promise that you should keepe Gods Commandements Yes in that third part of the vow and promise in Baptisme whence we come to consider in this third place the Commandements of God 2. Tell me how many there be Ten. 3. How appeareth that By the prescript word of God himselfe and his servant Moses by whom they are named the ten Commandements the ten words or decalogue signifying as much 4. What doe they containe The whole Will or Law of God or duty of man 5. What Law The morall Law binding the soule and conscience to the performance of such duties as are perpetuall and so this Law above all others perpetuall 6. What other differences of Lawes are there 1. Both Laws humane politique and municipall of divers formes according to the customes and manners of divers peoples and Countries 2. Divine or given by God himselfe of divers sorts Which are they Not onely that Law of nature written by God himselfe in the heart of all creatures but also other positive and written Lawes both the Law of workes doe this and live to the first Adam and all his posterity Of Grace beleeve and have life by the second Adam to all Saints 7. How was the first Law of works promulgated By God himselfe in Paradise to Adam onely abstaine or eat not of the forbidden tree By God himselfe to the Jewes upon mount Sinai the morall Law or ten Commandements 8. What was the event Both brake the Law and none was able to keep it wholly whence was need of the Messiah the promised seed who should satisfie for their misdeeds and breach of the Law of workes by their taking hold of the Covenant and Law of Grace 9. How was that shewed In the promises to Adam thy seed shall break the Serpents head or power of Sinne and the Divell and to all the Fathers consequently made of Christ as likewise by those many sacrifices and types and shadows of the Messiah and his offering sacrifice as well as those other Laws of the Jews to the talsing notice of punishing of sin offences thus entred into the world by Adams offence and hence that other division of the law springeth 10. What division Of the Jewes Law which was thence accordingly divided into The morall Law The ceremoniall Law The judiciall Law 11. Why are we to take notice of the Jews or their Lawes As they were the true Israelites the Church of God to whom both the Law and Testimonies the Arke and Temple of God and all tokens of his grace and favour were committed yea all the priviledges that belong to the whole Church once appropriated to that holy elect and chosen people as from whom the Messiah according to the flesh should spring to be the joy and light of all Nations and in whom all Adams posterity should be blessed 12. Was the whole Church straitned in so narrow limits as one little people It seems so to the good providence of God as once in one Adam and since in one Arke onely eight persons the whole Church yet cursed Cha● also among them and then one Abrahams family and one people of the Jewes and among them many unbeleevers to shew the few number of the truly faithfull and now though all Nations admitted yet but one Church a little flocke guided also by one rule and Law the Covenant of Grace 13. What were those Laws then of that Church of God among the Jews 1. The morall Law binding to performance of all good duties towards God and man 2. The ceremoniall setting forth the sacrifices for sinnes in the breaches of the former and directions in Gods house and service 3. Judiciall deciding controversies about politicall and temporall matters and inflicting punishments upon offenders against the same or the former which punishments of offences or sacrifices for sinne the greater part of these latter Lawes had beene of no use if the morall Law could have been performed and breaches thereof whether by ignorance uncharity and contentions or else could have been avoided 14. How long were these Laws to continue The judiciall Law so long as the State or Common-wealth of the Jewes as fitted to their state manner or customes the ceremoniall Law during the time of that their Temple or Tabernacle whose ceremonies and sacrifices as types and shadowes were referted to the substance and ended in Christ and the revelation of the Messiah who opened the second Tabernacle his Church but the morall Law binding to the duty of vertue and godlinesse abideth and standeth fast for ever 15. How then was it said a Law of the Jews As they were then accepted and were indeed the true Church of God for as considering 1. The letter it was delivered to them as Gods owne and peculiar people having such priviledges as no other people ever had and but the same or such as the Church hath now 2. The substance it was delivered to the Church in generall then in them and so to all people who must serve God in holinesse and righteousnesse and so standeth firme in that point for ever 16. What the difference between the judiciall and morall Law 1. The judiciall was chiefly in foro exteriori judiciae the morall in foro interiori conscientiae exercised and appointed 2. Judiciall was founded on the morall to certifie the outward breaches of the same 3. Judiciall was fitted to divers manners and customes of the people the morall to the heart and soule of all people in obedience to God 4. Judiciall is more particular and the morall more generall and divers such other respects from these flowing for difference may be seen 17. Why should the judiciall so soone end 1. Because the Common-wealth of the Jews to which it was particularly referred and to whose customes appropriated is ended 2. The ceremoniall to which it was also tied and allied as concerning manumission in the year of Jubilee and the like is also vanished 3. Diversity of manners and customes in other peoples and propensity to particular vices and diversified by divers respects doe often require divers and other Lawes and punishments 18. But are we no more then tyed to obey or respect it then any other strange Law whatsoever Though we be not tyed to the observation of it as abrogated yet we may therein see and respect the equity and excellency of it and wisdome of the Law-giver above all other lawes whatsoever and though we leave it in the very letter or circumstances yet in the substance we observe it
in the obedience to the morall law out of which it seemes taken and we may judge other lawes of most equity and excellency that come neerest unto it onely such variation of due circumstances observed 19. What the difference betweene the Ceremoniall and Morall Law 1. In that the Morall Law was about in ward obedience and duties of the soule the Ceremoniall about outward service and ceremonies 2. The morall delivered by God himselfe the ceremoniall and judiciall onely by Moses instructed of God 3. The morall first given the other in consequence depending from some parts of that 4. The morall law neglected made worse then infidels that did by nature the things of the Law when the ceremoniall onely a confusion in order among Gods people 5. The morall broken was a hainous sin alwaies reputed the ceremoniall not so as in the wildernesse Circumcision except with perversenesse as in Zipporah Uzzahs presumption and Aarons sons to offer strange fire in alteration of the ceremony 6. The morall without cost the ceremoniall not without great cost and chargeably performed 7. The morall law laid in the Arke in regard of the perpetuity thereof signified the ceremoniall not so 20. Why was the ceremoniall to end 1. Because the first Temple unto which fitted was to take end by succession of a second in stead thereof 2. Because the sacrifices the shadowes of Christs one eternall sacrifice were in him the substance to end 3. Because the other ceremonies types of him or some divine actions of his had in his exhibition ended their typicall signification 4. Because sacraments of theirs were now to give place to the new so the lawes concerning these this must needs be antiquated and ended 21. How learne we that ceremonies should end 1. By Christs entrance a new High Priest after the order of Melchisedee and so Aaron and his with their types to end 2. By the renting of the vaile of the Temple at Christs death shewing as it were their dissolution and those former reasons urged excellently by the author to the Hebrewes Heb. 7. c. 22. And are all ceremonies then ended Al that have relation to Christ to come are now vanished and out of use because the thing they shadowed and signified to come is now exhibited so no further use of them 23. How doe Christians use ceremonies then Not any of this sort but of another for ornament and decency in the service of God not so much in imitation of these as founded upon the morall law in exhibition of externall worship to God and sanctification of the Sabbath in decent manner and by the institution doctrine and example of Christ and his Apostles who did both write how some things should bee and promised to set other things in decent order when they come 24. How is the morall law perpetuall Though given onely to the Jews yet as they Gods people so in generall by them to the whose Church and though in the letter of the Commandements they 1. Are expresly to that their state and time of the Jewes 2. Yet in effect to all Gods servants before that time that acknowledged the force and truth both generally of the whole morall law and particularly of every Commandement to all since who according to the same direct their wayes in righteousnesse and walke not according to the flesh but the spirit in newnesse of life and obedience to this law of God 25. How was the law in effect before In generall not onely Gods people Noah Abraham and the holy men but the law of nature in the heathen written in their hearts made them doe and acknowledge the workes of the Law Rom. 2. 26. How in particular the Commandements For the first Table the service of God his honour and sacrifices and Sabbaths recorded before the Flood and no idolatry recorded or found till long after yea most of the heathen gods and greatest too even after Moses time and for the second Table morall duties and honest dealings none can deny in Noahs and Abrahams families yea and in divers governments footsteps thereof as in the Assyrian monarchy and other kingdomes 27. How the first Commandement To Abraham God saith I am God alsufficient stand before me and be upright Gen. 17. 1. so by Adam Enoch Noah and those other Patriarkes it appeares they had no other God but him 28 How the second Commandement In that Jacob purged his house of Idols when he built Gods Altar in Bethel Gen. 35. 2. thereby acknowledging the abhomination of them 29. How the third Commandement The true use of Gods name by their prayers and so just oath by the true God as Abraham to Abimelech Gen. 21. 23. and Jacob to Laban Gen. 31. 53. and others the like 30. How the fourth Commandement By God in Paradise and no doubt by Adam and holy men afterwards either punctually or equivalently 31. How the fifth Commandement By all the godly Sons of holy Fathers and Patriarkes honouring and obeying their Fathers and Superiours in all reverence and humility 32. How the sixth Commandement Seen a spectacle in abhorred Cain confessing the crime of murther and guilt of conscience for it so condemned and detested of all 33. How the seventh Commandement Seene in Joseph flying his Mistresse temptations and the rest of Jacobs sonnes taking to heart the shame done to their sister Dianah Gen. 34. 34. How the eight Commandement Acknowledged by Jacob to Laban if any had stolne let them die Gen. 31. 30. and by his sonnes to Pharaohs Steward or Josephs if any had stolne the cuppe to bee his bondmen Gen. 44. 5. 35. How the ninth Commandement In Abraham Gen. 20. and Isaac Gen. 26. reproved by Abimelec for telling a lie or false testimony and Jacob feared to be found or counted a liar or deceiver in counterfeiting Esau. 36. How the tenth Commandement In the uprightnesse of heart required in Abraham Gen. 17. 1. and seen in him and Enoch who walked with God Lot Melchisedec and all the just 37. How is this Law in effect with us As we are exhorted to these duties still and to shew our faith by obedience to them willingly and readily according to them to undergoe our duty and service to God in holinesse and uprightnesse to the world in godly conversation 38. How is it then said we are not under the Law but under Grace This and the like sayings that wee are freed from the Law and that Christ hath freed us Rom. 7. Gal. 8. 18. and 4. 1. c. and other places are to be understood 1. Either absolutely of the ceremoniall Law which is abrogated and vanished in Christ as in that to the Gal. and Heb. especially appeareth 2. Respectively of the morall as it should bee conceived to be unable to justifie and hath need of Christ to be the end of it for its perfection To be performed by Christ for us who striving to the uttermost are never able to performe it but onely in him To be made more
no more now safe to alter it and shew such lenity nor well indifferent having been already so solemnly chosen concluded on and decreed on though absolutâ potestate they may or with more shew of reason they might have done it yet thus limitatâ dispensatione and congruè they may not with which we may well stop the mouth of inconstant curiosity and hold our selves relgiously and christianly resolved 35. This is then your resolution It is and of all the gravest Divines moderne or ancient keeping the morality of the Commandement and letting the ceremony passe or so much of it as not concerneth us and had a rollish of the legall pedagogie and servitude so whereas the morall law was written in the tables of our hearts in more plaine characters at the creation but by the fall was so defaced that we now want discipline in most things or divine revelation to instruct us yet thus farre even depraved nature straight sees the morality of this Commandement that as God is to be worshipped so a time as well as place is due unto it but then that it should be on the seventh day onely divine revelation or Gods instruction can shew us wherefore as not else knowne God addes that reason from the creation which now by his will revealed is the secondarily morall and positive part of the Commandement with the sanctification of it and the rest so far as serves to the sanctification of it the rest of it involved in ceremony with the particularity of that seventh examplar'd by the creation the greatest benefit then to be remembred and God praised for it though a greater our restauration by Christ in expectation and promised and now chiefly to be remembred on it and the no small cause or reason of the change which thus followes on the former reasons for that when God had so portion'd it nature enformed by grace cannot but acknowledge God the wisest and his wisdom best so follow his choise of the seventh rather then any other number and Christs honouring and so demonstrating this seventh by his blessed actions performance of that our restauration resurrection preaching and apparitions on it even shewed his election and confirmed the change which his Church by such directions of him and his holy Spirit stedfastly embraced so the first seventh with the strictnesse pedagogie and servitude under legall ceremonies as the ceremoniall part of it expiring the morall part remaining that second seventh our Christian Sabbath was so chosen and decreed in imitation of the former as many things else corresponding in the Christians and Jewes pollicy conveniently enough acknowledging Gods instruction by patterne where expresse precept not found or plaine and punctually existent which so now decreed many offences in the breach of it for Gods precept is wrapt up in the precept of the Church which if broken both Gods fourth Commandement and his precept to obey the Church and i withall the Churches precept and power are with t in breach of the Sunday despised broken and contemned 36. It seems then as strict if not stricter and heavier then the Jewes Sabbath In the offence as heavie at least though in the performance easier as the burthen of ceremonies vanished with which it was overrated and that strictly to the letter that even no workes might be done as they interpreted it and the rest as scrupulously burdened by their traditions whereas now the rest is fitted to the service and sanctification of the day more then to the ceremony and the workes more spirituall in prayses that then in sacrifices and for the scrupulosity of other works even good workes by them as they by our Saviour reproved we are so allowed works of 1. Necessity of our selves 2. Charity or mercy for the necessity of our poore brother 3. Piety in the sanctification of it for God or workes of Necessity for our selves though not of our callings but fitting us to the better sanctification of the day Mercy and charity for the necessity of our poor brethren fitting the day and our devotion as honouring God with our substance Piety proper to the day for God and sanctification of it to God as honouring him with our selves and soules and with all such laudable recreations allowed by the Church and Christian Magistrates as may make it a joyfull feast not sorrowfull fast which is not the nature of it or a festivall of rejoycing before the Lord wherein to be seene a Christian liberty from the legall servitude and burden of the ceremonies as well as the threats and curse laid on it and other traditions like those of Touch not taste not handle not not to kindle fires dresse meat and many more like cumbring it but now removed besides allowance of more comfort in gracious manner to celebrate it as a joyfull and solemne festivall to the Lord and so a liberty of grace to more alacrity in piety not out of licentiousnesse to prophanenesse though moderate recreations approved in the eye and judgement of the Church and State to avoid some else worse inconveniences are allowed that yet shall not hinder the duties of the day required of which more hereafter And whereas some object why then is the Epiphona or prayer for enclining our hearts to the keeping of it added to the end of it as well as of the other Commandements if it be not punctually in all respects as they to bee understood The answer is plaine from that before taught that it is so added for that part of it that it agreeth in with them for the morality of it so far as that extends which is as it is now by the Church enjoyned it being as we see in all points so fully by the Church delivered demonstrated and explained how farre it is morall and how and in what manner it is in force and by us to be observed Nor boots it them to say Why was the time so punctually commanded and determined more then the place both circumstances being equally materiall to the worship if not wholly morall in the Commandement and so precisely and punctually to be observed for that it appeares the time was present and in their power to observe it and so determined besides that that it was a signe to difference them from other nations then appointed whereas the place that was to be appointed was not yet attained unto as appeares by that so often repeated in the Law When you shall come to the place which the Lord your God shall chuse to put his name there viz. the Temple at Jerusalem in Canaan they being then in the wildernesse or at most the plaines of Moab but had the Temple as well as the Sabbath beene there expresly mentioned and determined yet both Temple and Sabbath being in effect for that particular but types and shadowes of better things to come with other ceremonies of servitude and legall observances then and there to be performed were to expire in the Messias so farre as they were types
is of the power and by the finger of God effected so every evill thought word and act the workes of the Divell perpetrated by his lend agents and instruments 41. In the second place what meane you by the wicked world All that is not of God produced in the world viz. all the corruptions and as it is called the covetousnesse and concupiscience and pompes and vanities of the same 42. But are not these the workes of the Divell Yes and so with him and in him considered as the author in the world as the subject place and matter where seene and acted in the slesh as the agent and instrument the Divell useth in effecting them 43. VVhat is meant by pompes All unnecessary proud and superfluous excesses in the world exceeding that Christian measure and moderation becomming the servants of God whether in meat drink apparell or other vaine ostentation 44. Are all pompous showes pageants and solemnities then unlawfull By no meanes if within measure and moderation prescribed in comparison of the estate or persons to whom they appertaine 45. How meane you that All the solemnities in the publique service of God fitting the magnificence of him and his Temple all ornaments of estate belonging to King Magistrate City or University for the better administration of the government of the Church and Common-wealth all ensignes of honour and the like on lawfull and honest occasions used and worne Publique triumphs and shows in honour of Prince Countrey City or Common-wealth or any member thereof by law of God and man approved and allowed or for some good end ordained 46. VVhat doe these profit To the well and orderly government and apparant honour and decency of Church and Common-wealth yea to the advancement of vertue and so encouragement of good and vertuous mindes 47. How may it be By the fitting splendor and glory of Gods House the Kings Court City or University eminently advanced in such manner testifying the flourishing estate and prosperity of the same which every good man is glad to behold 48. Doe any envy them this If any doe as loath either Kingly Courtly or other robe of decent ornament should exceed the size of the Millers or Weavers jacket that may be apparantly seen such more precise then wise little respect the decency and comelinesse fitting a well ordered estate the honour of God and his Church or Majesty of the Prince 49. What is then here renounced Unnecessary proud vaine and superfluous pompe beyond those rules of decency ornament or honour by law and wisdome prescribed 50. VVhat are the vanities of the world All these superfluous excesses and whatsoever else savoureth of the nature of sin which is vaine 51. How is sin vaine As empty of all goodnesse and making the soule empty of grace and worse then nothing so both vaine the use not satisfying and in the end extreame vanity and vexation of spirit 52. How saith the wise man all is vanity In two respects 1. As all things in the world are but momentary and soone fading 2. As they are too much infected with sin the just sinning seven times a day and so all his actions and all things else even vanitie of vanities 53. VVhat are the sinfull lusts of the flesh Our homebred corruptions our sins and lusts traitours to our selves and owne soules by which the Divell working taketh us his captives and so we become servants to sin and him whom by his meanes we obey 53. VVhat meane you by the flesh The worse part of man the house of clay the body of death or prison of the soule as rebellion against God 54 VVhat the lusts All evill concupiscence tyrannizing over the soule by the meanes of the flesh so drawing both captive to sin and death 55. How sinfull lusts 1. By the subtilty of the Divel suggesting them 2. By the maliguity of the world fostring them 3. By the frailty of the flesh breeding them And by whom the soule infected the whole man becommeth exceedingly sinfull if we doe not resist and strive against them 56. How are we to resist them By faith and continuall and hearty prayer to God to give us his grace whereby it commeth to passe the life of a good Christian is a continuall warfare or combat against these three spirituall enemies fighting against the soule the Divell the World the Flesh. 57. In the second place how is faith here described By beleeving all the Articles of our Christian confession 58. VVhich are they Expressed hereafter in the Creed 59. VVhom doe they concerne God and his Church whereof we are made visible members of the baptisme so received into that society 60. VVhy doe we professe or learne them That we may know God and our owne estate 61. VVhat of God How he is a most powerfull eternall wise glorious and gracious God and our Creator and father in Jesus Christ. Redeemer delivering us from all our enemies Sanctifier comforting and preserving us in all our necessities 60. VVhat of our selves That though by nature we are sons of wrath in Adam yet in Christ adopted sons and made members of the Catholique Church and communion of Saints have blessed hope of forgivenesse of sins resurrection of the body and life everlasting 61. To what end are we taught this That we may both conscionably Learne Know Professe Promise Practise our Christian duties the better 62. How so By ordering our selves as the servants of so great and good a God and applying our selves to his worship and obedience as becommeth Saints 63. In the third place then how is obedience here decyphered That generall duty of ours is set forth 1. By the universall diligence in keeping and observing 2. By the universall object of this diligence the will and commandements of God 3. By the universall countenance of this diligence all the dayes of our life c. 64. How followeth it in this place As a fruit of faith whereon it dependeth for if we know God as we ought we cannot chuse but serve and obey him 65. How is this duty commended In that obedience is better then sacrifice 66. VVhy so preferred Because by sacrifice we offer but the flesh of Lambes Bullocks or other Cattel by obedience we offer our owne selves soules and bodies to God as a living holy and acceptable sacrifice mortifying and subduing our corrupt affections to the will of God 67. How is our diligence in this duty described By keeping and walking in or observing the Commandements and will of God 68. VVhat meant by keeping Our will and desire to Seeke into Learne to know Remember Lay up in our hearts Ponder consider That holy wil of God his Commandemēts 69. How to walke and observe them To direct our wayes and words and workes and counsells thoughts and hearts according to the same 70. VVhat the object or matter here named The will and Commandements of God his holy Lawes 71. VVhat is the will of God Our holinesse and sanctification in body and
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
holy Ghost shall come on thee and the power of the Most High shall overshadow thee so that Holy One the Sonne of the Most High also and called Emanuel 8. How his nativitie Borne of the Virgin Mary of whom hee tooke flesh and so the Son of God became man or took our flesh and nature or forme of man and of a servant and borne in the world or made man of his mother became the son of Man 9. But this is hard to bee understood much more to be beleeved Yet faith seeth more then reason and beyond it and as much as the eye of reason transcendeth the eye of the sense so much or farre more the eye of faith pierceth above reason and we know nothing is impossible with God 10. How is it proved Not onely by holy Scriptures abundantly but to the very satisfaction of reason or Philosophy were it to either Jew or Gentile if they looke to their owne Philosophy traditions or doctrine 11. How to them both If they finde a God of nature above nature as he that said O ens entium misere mihi they must yeeld him to be above the rules and law of nature that tooke her law and rules from him and so hee can doe what pleaseth him above beyond and besides the ordinary course of things 12. How for the Iew His Prophets will shew him a Virgin shall conceive and if he doe yet doubt let him show how Aarons dry rod budded the Sea ran back or Sun stood still and divers other wonders in the Law and I will straight even in the same shew him this the mightie power and finger of God 13. It is then wonderfull Yes the wonderfull worke of God ordained and prepared of old and wherein divers wonders seemed to concurre to this admirable effect where you may finde the Ancient of dayes a Child God made man a Virgin a mother all which the Lords doing and marvellous in our eyes 14. Wherein the most admirablenesse of this wonder Not so much that a Virgin should conceive and beare a son though against the law of Nature and rules of Philosophy to the astonishment of the wisest and admiration of Saints and Angels As that 1. the most high God should bee so abased 2. Ancient of dayes become young 3. Infinit God put on that finite forme of man 4. He whom heavens cannot containe contained in the Virgins wombe 5. He that gives food and raiment to all naked and destitute of all 6. The Eternall made mortall 7. Governour of all things forme of a servant 8. Fountain of life become the object of death though so to overcome eternall death which wisedome and love of God let Angels admire and men adore 15. Why so borne of a Virgin As a token or embleme of the purity of his nature that tooke our nature on him 16. Why yet in mariage Chiefly to honour that estate which in it selfe honourable and instituted by God himselfe in Paradise hereby more honoured that the Saviour borne in it though not of it but of a more excellent root secondly to stop the mouth of obloquy in regard of the evill world and froward and malicious Jewes 17. What other observations noted or reasons urged Divers fitting correspondencies betweene the manner of our first parents fall and this manner of the reparation thereof and betweene this second and the first Adam 18. Which are they 1. In regard of the woman that was the cause and instrument 2. Man that fell and manner of the fall and reparation thereof 19. How of the woman 1. As by woman the meanes and procurement as instrument of the fall so by a woman the means of the reparation came into the world 2. She offered fruit to the first Adam whereby we were all accursed so this bare the fruit the second Adam in whom all nations blessed and all generations call her blessed 3. That in the state of virginity yet marriage occasioned the fall so this in marriage yet state of virginity brought him that redeemed us and restored all 20. How in respect of the man 1. As the first Adam of earth fell so the second Adam from heaven repaired the losse restored the fall 2. The first Adam was without mother unlesse his mother earth so the second Adam without father in the world though both else sons of God 3. The first Adam had woman brought forth out of his side besides the course of nature so the second Adam brought forth by woman besides and beyond the ordinary law of nature so the first Adam by the first Eve though named mother of living lost life from all his posterity and got by their defections death this second Eve by the second Adam bringeth in his perfection life to all so truely becomming what the other in name only Mother of the living and of the Lord of life 21. How in respect of the manner of fall and rising In the fall it selfe and manner of the restoring or reparation thereof may be observed 1. The fall universall the grace generall restoring to all sufficient for all though effectuall only in the Elect. 2. The fall by man and by man came salvation 3. The fall out of Paradise and heaven from God restored into Paradise and heaven to God so This day thou shalt be with me in Paradise spoken to the thiefe 4. The fall by Satan sower of ill health from God the Fountaine of good 5. The disloyaltie of Adam in all parts amended and satisfied by the obedience of Christ. 22. As how As Adam unfaithfull lost all Christs faithfull Of those thou gavest me I have not lost one Saviour of all Adam brake one Commandement and so all Christ fulfilled all written of him and all righteousnesse Adams many offences of 1. disobedience to the Commandement and in that many sins 2. Disloyaltie hearing with patience the Divell traduce Gods truth 3. Envy of any above him to the contempt of God as if aspiring to the same state and to sit in the same Chaire of Dignity with him 4. Falsheartednesse consenting to the Divell the enemy of God so thinking better of him then God 5. Treachery taking part thereby with the Divell Gods enemy 6. Pride to aspire above his degree and in knowledge if not else to be equall with God 7. Malecontentednesse not content with the estate and good things God had given him 8. Ingratefulnesse the root of all evill to hear the Divels blasphemy against God and his truth and not offended yea consenting and so committing blasphemy in heart not being thankfull for so great benefits as that estate life and Paradise were and yeelded but so forgetting God and all goodnesse matter enough to lade him with the curse and pack him out of Paradise all which yet restored and satisfied for by the second Adam Christ. 23. In what manner 1. Not only by his main acts of obedience even to the very death in which all righteousnesse 2. Loyaltie to his Father and to doe
is this part of his exaltation As the farther manifestation of his glory and exercising his power and authority and answering in convenient analogy to a part of his humiliation 3. Jn what respect Whereas he was once judged himselfe by men under an unjust Judge with unrighteous judgement and without any guilt condemned now to the rectification of justice hee being appointed Judge of all Judges and justicer to all men by ministring true judgement shall rectifie all their obliquities and all the just however with him oppressed by injustice with him and by him be justified and cleered and the wicked however long suffered or justified wrongfully on earth now most justly condemned and so now he that was judged unjustly constituted a most just Judge over both quicke and dead 4. What herein to be considered The end of the world when this shall be The second comming of Christ or comming againe for this end The last or universall judgement of both the quicke and the dead 5. How the end of the world As the most fit time and so expressed in both the Nycene and other Creeds at the last or at the end of the world he shall come againe c. And the Scriptures The Angels reapers c. Mat. 24. cap. 25. At the last the end c. 1 Cor. 15. 6. Why the end of the world That iniquity may be full all come together to judgement the greatest concourse to the manifestation of althings to their greatest glory or shame glory or majesty of the Judge honour of his Saints confusion of all his enemies 7. How shall Christ be Iudge As appointed of the Father from whom he receiveth all power and all authority 8. But hee professeth he commeth not to judge the world That is spoken of his first comming when hee came in humility to lay downe his life an offering for sinne and save those that are his and was himselfe though wrongfully judged he being then as the heyre in minority and before his entrance to his kingdom but once constituted in the throne he shall execute justice and judgement 9. Doth not the Father then Yes the Father executeth it by the Son and in the virtue sanctity and efficacy of the holy Spirit yet by the man Christ most respectively 10. Why so 1. For the visible execution thereof in the sight of all creatures both wicked and goldly and as well men as Angels 2. For the greater terrour shame and confusion of all his enemies that in his humility in that forme despised him and therein the wisedome of God 3. For the greater comfort of all his servants and for whose sakes hee put on that forme of humility 11. Whence shall he come From thence hee shall come againe from the heavens in the power and majesty and by the appointment so of God the Father 12. How shall he come In the clouds of heaven in that majesty and manner as the Angels told the Disciples he shall come againe as you have seene him goe Matth. 22. 30. Acts 1. 13. What shall he doe Judge both the quicke and the dead execute justice and minister true judgement to all people so divided either Before judgement especially distinguished by quicke that are to be changed and dead that are to be raised Or after judgement especially to be distinguished by good that are saved and justified bad that are cursed and condemned 14. What herein considered The Antecedents Processe Consequents of it 15. What the antecedents The Signes going before it Gathering of all flesh to it 16. What signes Recorded in Scripture remembred by our Saviour for preparation of our hearts to consider it and the terriblenesse thereof Matth. 24. and Luke 21. As 1. the Sun to be darkned 2. The Moone turned into blood 3. The Starres to fall from heaven 4. The powers of heaven to shake 5. The Sea to rore horribly 6. The earth to quake and as it were all the elements moved and troubled as feeling their dissolution at hand 7. Mens hearts to faile for feare 8. And men or the ungoldly to be at their wits end Though the godly may with more boldnesse looke up as knowing their salvation at hand and their Redeemer neere before whom shall goe a consuming fire to licke up his enemies and consume the world that shall bee skrent as a scroule but purifie them changing their corruption into incorruption 17. How the gathering of all flesh At the last trumpe by the voice of the Archangell and power of God all flesh and all people shall heare the voice and come together and bee assembled at that great Sessions or Assizes of the whole world Both the quicke that shall then bee changed in a moment answerable to a dissolution by death and their corruption done away And the dead raised and all graves opened and yeeld their dead Seas and monsters beasts and birds whom they have enguft or devoured and so all flesh appeare before the tribunall seat of Christ expecting the judgement and sentence 18. How shall that be The processe thereof in all righteousnesse and equity all bookes opened both the book of 1. Law written to those under the Law Nature to the Gentiles 2. Conscience accusing or excusing as in the second to the Romanes c. 3. Angels good and bad testifying their knowledge 4. God 1. of remembrance above all things wherein all things recorded 2. Oflife wherein the Saints names are written What will the event be All things made manifest saving what God will have holden and so the secrets of all hearts disclosed the truth appearing mercy to the vessels of grace and justice to them that loved not nor exercised nor fought mercy 19. In what manner After opening of all bookes and due Examination of all things Testifying of all witnesses Accusations heard and confessed or cleered Ponderation of all causes to the approbation of the justice and mercy used a most just sentence of the righteous Judge that shall bee approved so by all consciences both good and bad guilty and absolved 20. In what forme Of a Venite maledicti to all the blessed for their eternall happinesse and salvation Jte maledicti to the wicked to their eternall misery woe and condemnation 21. What is the summe of it A blessing of the godly without end or measure curse to the wicked without redresse and paines as endlesse and easelesse as remedilesse 22. What the consequents Execution of that finall sentence in the power and authority of that most just Judge and therein the distinction of the Good from the bad Sheepe from Goats Wheat from chaffe Gold from drosse Conducting the godly to glory Casting downe the divell into hell Confirmation of eternity to both in joy or torment 23. How the distinction In the mighty power of God according to his sentence by the ministery of the Angels and powers of heaven 24. How the conducting to glory By the same power and ministry of the good Angels with joy to the heavenly Palaces
easie for us by Gods grace in Christ and his Spirit making us to doe those things in love to him which were required under a strict command before and so wee released or freed from the curse of the Law and condemnation borne by Christ for us The slavish feare of the threats that should else terrifie us The tyrannicall seising on us or commanding us who have now a better Law the Covenant of Grace 39. To what use doth the Law then remaine 1. For a rule to square our lives by in godlinesse yet without fearfulnesse in love 2. For a Schoole-master to bring us to Christ shewing how much need we have of him 3. For a Schoole-master in Christ to bring us to true humiliation knowing how much we want true godlinesse and so to seek increase of graces in Christ. 40. What the difference between the Law of workes and of Grace or the Law and the Gospell 1. In that the Law is knowne by the light of nature and the Gospell a mystery to nature 1 Tim. 3. 6. and that Angells so desire to behold unveiled 1 Pet. 1. 12. 2. Sheweth only what is to be done the Gospell how doe it in Christ in faith and love 3. Is full of threats to urge us the Gospell of sweet promises to allure us to performe it 4. It is a Schoole-master to shew us Christ and our need of him or bringing us to him the Gospell admitteth and engrafteth us into him for our comfort 41. How doe the Law and Gospell agree 1. In their Author God that first gave the Law and since his Sonne to fulfill it and in him the Gospell of peace 2. In their end Christ that is pointed at in the one in presence in the other and perfection of both 3. In their threatnings against sin and upbraiding the disobedient and unfaithfull 4. In their promises to the observers and lovers of the Law by striving to doe it eternall life 5. In their consent in the setting forth of Gods glory faith hope and all graces without any contradiction as from one fountaine his Spirit 6. In their constant and continuall provocations to godlinesse 7. In their Ministers the Priests and Levites and servants of God that are to be without blemish called watchmen To live unblameably To set forth the Truth and Law of God To live of their service and of the Altar and whose lippes are to preserve knowledge the people to seeke the Law at their mouthes they to set it forth and the truth both by their life and doctrine 42. How was the Law written or delivered Delivered by the mouth and written by the finger of God to shew the holinesse and perfection of the same 43. Wherein written Both in the hearts of men as their duty to shew it naturall as also morall and so perpetuall Both in the Tables of stone and that twice by him to shew it doctrinall as well as naturall and morall and so to be read for instruction and preserved to perpetuity to all generations 44. How twice written In the first Tables broken by Moses representing the fraile hearts of flesh in which it was written corrupted by their owne inventions as the Israelites were when Moses so brake them by their owne Idolatry and abhominations In the other two Tables prepared againe by Moses to shew the confirmation of them to perpetuity and being restored and so laid up in the Arke of the Testimony and sanctum sanctorum to be preserved and fulfilled in Christ. 45. Why written in two Tables To shew the distinction of the duties in them contained to God in the first to men in the second Table the perfection of their number also pointing at the perfection both of the Law-giver and Law and so the ten Commandements SECT 2. Quest. 8. Concerning the Commandements and first of the Preface c. The severall prefaces to the Commandements three of them as first of the childe answ to the 8. quest wherein the authenticall unchangeablenesse author and authority God speaking and saying Autograph in Exod. and the Tables and other circumstances thereof expended and why it is called Moses Law and the words doubled of speaking and saying so Moses preface secondly analysed thirdly the preface of God himselfe being both a reason and to this first and all the other Commandements wherein to be observed the author and so his authority his name by himselfe uttered to shew his awfull majesty his Attributes calling his Almighty power as well as mercy and goodnesse to minde and so his actions of saving and deliverances from Egypt and the house of bondage litterally by the Iewes and Spiritually by us to be understood Whence his honour feare and reverence with our duty and obedience are powerfull enforced Of the true and right understanding the Law and how we ought to be affected in soule and spirit towards it being of so divine and spirituall A sense sablimate above and beyond the bare letter and so divers prime necessary in number five propounded for the better and more spirituall meaning understanding and interpretation of the same with the exposition of the same as else the contraction of them to a lesse or fewer number and some other lesse prime rules pertaining more to the comparison of the Commandements and Tables so referred to the beginning of the second Table 1. YOu signified ten Commandements which are they The same which God spake in the twentieth Chapter of Exodus saying I am the Lord thy God c. 2. What observe you here A twofold Preface and then the Commandments 3. What threefold preface Of Moses intimated in his 20. Chapter where he saith God spake all these words saying Of God immediately prefixed to the Commandement I am the Lord c. 4. What is in that first preface The authenticall substance and sum of it being the very same that was 1. Both Written 1. by God In fleshly Tables the heart In the first Tables resembling the broken pitchers men hearts In the second Tables restored and preserved in the Arke 2. By his Spirit in the hearts of the faithfull willingly to doe them 2. Spoken by God himselfe upon Mount Sinai in terrible manner out of the cloud and fire recorded by his servant Moses 3. Delivered so to the Israelites in that majesticke and glorious manner 4. Authorized by God so writing speaking and commanding them saying I am c. 5. How collect you this As plainly expressed in that first place where 1. The appearance authenticall the very same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Author God thus divers wayes divulging it 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he spake it above all other Scriptures with an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. Autogragh the Tables with the finger of God written and it recorded in that 20. Chapter of Exodus and also Deut. 5. 3. Authority establishing commanding it and saying 6. How is it said the same As it was not onely the same in substance and effect but the very same in
stand too much or be too carefull for the due and orderly observation and sanctification of the same if there be but prudent and Christian discretion to moderate the heat and exorbitancy of selfe-conceited and inconsiderate blinde zeale and prejudicate opinion by partially addicted fancie and affections 25. This way then is spoken against It is by the unlearned vulgars some or factiously minded too ready and prone on their weak and ill grounds or mistakings to fall into judaizing errors or by the plausible pretence of the sanctity of it and the men that broached it to deceive themselves and seduce others so that he that shall deliver the plaine truth in this point shall finde himself on a double disadvantage as one well observeth by the preconceived and prejudicate opinion of the vulgars and weake people that have their persons in admiration as well as their piety and religious zeale that hold the contrary That hold the strict observance of that day in their fashion as it is by some made a prime character of a good Christian to distinguish him from a carnall worldling so as it were to know the state of Religion by it which stands or falls as they conceive as it is either way determined where needs we see a wary foot in delivering the truth to strike an equall course between an over-nice strictnesse and a prophanelicence the one letting loose the other ensnaring mens consciences one shutting up the Kingdome of Heaven making the way thither narrower then it is the other by making it broader then they ought enlarging the mouth of hell but the truth well and warily delivered will give the soberly religious no cause to complaine nor encourage the prophane in any licentiousnesse medium tenuere beati happy are they that finde it and blessed are they that tread that way and strive to goe it 26. Whence ariseth this Doctrine The mistake in generall of these men is that they presse the precept promise and threats made to the Jewes concerning their Sabbath point blanke and directly on us and the Lords day whereas indeed they concern us it only indirectly cannot without fetching a compasse be applied to the Sunday as our Sunday succeeds in the place of that in respect of the morality not ceremony but hence as in a prime case of conscience so many scruples are raised and traditions broached by them of the beginning and end of the Sabbath the duties of the day workes of our callings recreations and the like without any difference almost made between the Jewes Sabbath loaden with ceremonies and it which those that least love ceremonies have stedfastly with it taken upon trust that thence so many needlesse contestations have been raised about them but the truth appearing these doubts of theirs will easily be dissolved 27. What course then particularly best to be held or taken herein Rightly to consider of and distinguish these two things viz. 1. For the morality of that Law and of the Sabbath how farre that extends as well as the ceremonie in it and so the power of changing that first day thence accrewing 2. What was the first institution and authority establishing this second or substituting it being the Cardines Controversiarum whereon depend most of the doubts ventilated and things chiefly agitated and discorded on in the curiosities of these present times about this point and so in the compasse of which we shall meet with most or the most principall objections here usually cast in the way against the Sunday our Christian Sabbath or Lords day 28. How for the morality of it The morality in the Law observed as it is ordinarily to be seen by the eye of nature and reason the common rule of humane actions may be considered as it is 1. Either primary and evidently seene and acknowledged by the light and in the Law of nature or right use of reason re ipsa of it selfe straight waies appearing as God to be honoured no man to be wronged to doe as wee would bee done to not to kill and steale c. 2. Or secondary though not so plainly seene by nature especially corrupted nature or nature at large and at first sight yet by nature rightly informed either Common humanity discipline and Philosophy and after due circumspection of the circumstances or by Gods word grace and divine revelation and then straight consented to and confirmed by reason as well as divers other consequent good rules succeeding those more generall notions and primary clear dictates of reason so we may hence collect for the morality absolutely at first appearing to the eye of nature and reason that God is to be worshipped and that a time is to be set apart for it is so morall that nature concludes it as soon as it blunders on it or but once conceives there is a God and this is the prime morality of the Commandement and secondly that the seventh day is to bee set apart and the time determined to the seventh day or that it is to be rested on or so religiously sanctified is onely to be knowne by Gods precept and word and so by nature or reason directed by discipline or better informed by grace and Gods revelation of his will which nature yeelds by reason is to be obeyed and best approved and so the second third and tenth Commandement as well as this may for the substance of them seeme to be referred to this ranke that nature onely directed by discipline on farther circumspection better consideration of the circumstance or divine revelation and grace is able to discerne and so morall non tam ratione naturae quam disciplinae or rather non tam ratione naturae aut disciplinae communis quam divine revelationis and thus this Commandement participates of both those sorts of morality or of morality in both these respects and the later by some rather called the positive then simply morall part of it as so scarcely by nature or reason discernable yet farther there is found a ceremoniall relish or tincture and respect in this seventh or Sabbath and the strict observance thereof for the time to the Iewish Church enjoyned and with it to expire 29. How show you the ceremony As the ceremoniall Law is properly an appendant of the first Table regulating the externall service and worship of God as that of the Jewes relate to the Jewes Church and the judiciall law chiefly pertaining to the second Table regulating that externally to civill society or withall enforcing the observance of the former as Moses judicialls with the Jewes and so both of them so far as Mosaicall with the Jewes policy and Church antiquated and dissolved or saving so farre as reducible to the morall to expire now that there is a ceremony mixed with the morality in it is confessed by the Fathers and all ancients and soundest moderne Divines and Churches which may be seene in the respects as it was ordained either A remembrance of things past A shadow of
themselves unworthy of honour and respect by their Insolent carriage towards inferiours Light Dissolute Unmercifull Unjust behaviour in their places Inferiours their despising unreverence disobedience and dishonour of superiours by any Vndutiful Vnreverent Despitefull words behaviour actions towards them 17. How are the opposite or opposed parts seene or intimated here The honour reverence love and obedience required of inferiours expressed in this word Honour to which opposed dishonour unreverence despising or disobedience as the gravity good example mercy justice moderation and beneficence intimated in this word Father which sheweth what superiours are required to bee else not fathers opposite to which are insolent light dissolute unmercifull and unjust carriage and behaviour whereby they seeme to leave and lose the name of father 18. Who are then accordingly accounted Fathers 1. The Prince who is parens or pater patriae so Abimelech the name of the King of the Philistims King father 2. Magistrates patres conscripti so Senatours Councellors of Estate Fathers of the State and Fathers of the King as Ioseph to Pharaoh Gen. 45. 8. 4. Superiours in First knowledge and science Iubal father of them that play on the Organs Iabal father of them that make Tents Gen. 4. Secondly holinesse as Elisha called so by the King of Israel Shall I smite father 2 King 6. 21. Thirdly by instruction oversight and government as Elisha said of Eliah My father my father 1 King 1. 12. Fourthly in estate or riches Job 31. 18. 5. Ancient in yeares fathers by age 6. Spirituall Pastors Ministers and Teachers Fathers in Christ. 7. Masters of families and servants Patres familias 8. Naturall and legall parents as fathers mothers fathers in law mothers in law also Godfathers and Godmothers Benefactors and who in any the like respect guardians or have delegated power or tuition and government over us as children and inferiours to bee understood by all these severall respects and bonds of nature law or other contract 19. In what manner are they so Fathers By the law of 1. Of Nature naturall parents father in law c. 2. Nations 1. Kings and Soveraignes 2. Magistrates Senatours Councellors of State 3. Judges and Officers of justice 4. Spirituall Pastors and Fathers in Christ. 3. Contract Masters of Families Guardians Tutors and such other superiours for our instruction or aid c. by our selves or others appointed or desired How may these superiours be distinguished Into superiours In 1. Gifts 1 Received frō God whether Inward of the mind as in Arts wisedome Learning vertue or the like Outward as in Age the ancient Degree of Birth nobility or gentry Schoole or church dignity Wealth the rich or potent 2 Bestowed on us as Benefactors Guardians and helpers 2. Authority governors of Family Schooles Corporation Church Commonwealth in governm oeconomic scholasticall cōfederacy ecclesiastic politicall What the generall duties of superiours that they may worthily be accounted so Wisedome and gravity together with good example good deeds 20. What the generall duties of inferiours To exhibit honour Inwardly in reverent estimation of their worth and wisedome place and authority Outwardly both in the 1. Signe of reverence whether Rising up to them Going to meet them Bowing the knee Vncovering the head Standing before them Giving them the precedency Silence when they speake Words of reverence 2. Deed as occasion is offered to minister unto them 21. What the opposite vices in generall 1. In superiours neglecting inferiours lightly or foolishly 2. Inferiours neglecting or despising their superiours unreverently undutifully 22. What the duties in particular of superiours in inward gifts of minde In humility to acknowledge them received from God and thence willing to employ them to his glory and the good of others opposite to which is insolence and abuse of them 23. What of inferiours herein In thankfulnesse acknowleding reverence and respecting them as the gracious instruments of God for our good and in modesty even to account our equals rather superiours or betters then any way to deny deprave or disdaine their good gifts 24. What the duties of the ancient To bee sober and grave ready to instruct the younger sort both by their wisedome and good example as patternes and presidents of good and no wayes of lewdnesse or evill 25. What the duties of youngers To reverence them as fathers learne and imitate their good examples and no wise to despise the aged contemne their counsell or direction 26. What duties of those dignified by nobility gentry or other degrees of eminency By magnanimity magnificence and other heroicall and divine vertues to remember the giver of all good and use the same to his honour the good of the Church and Commonwealth thereby shewing themselves worthy of that honour who otherwise shall seeme but bubbles of honour and a shame or disgrace to their degree 27. What the duty there of inferiours To reverence respect honour them according to their worthinesse places and degrees readily exhibiting the signes thereof and no way to presume against them or neglect them 28. What the duty of the wealthy To remember the giver and that they are but stewards and shall bee called to account to use their riches as instruments of liberality and bounty to the helpe and releefe as well as protection of the poore and helplesse and not to niggardlinesse and avarice or oppression and cruelty 29. What duties of inferiours The reverent esteem and welwishing to them and their estate as the blessings of God and instruments of their good and not to disdaine presume or murmure against them or God 29. What requiredin Benefactors In that act of bounty or charity to give willingly cheerfully freely and discreetly bis dat qui cito and not grudgingly or for his own profit so not given or without discretion so cast away or with delay so qui sero dat diu noluit tardius beneficium perdit gratiam and the like exprobation or casting in the teeth of a good turne 30. What duty of the receivers of a benefit Thankfully to acknowledge and remember it with testification both by word and deed if occasion be offered as well as prayer opposite to which forgetfulnesse of a good turne or requiting evill for good 31. What the opposite or negative part of all the former Easily collected from the premises and partly expressed in them a neglect of those good duties in any respect by any of the parties or in stead thereof the return and exercise of the contrary to them 32. Who are those other superiours in authority Governours 1. Of families as Parents over children Husband over wife and family Master over servants apprentices 2. Of Schooles or Universities or other Corporations Master Guardians and Presidents 3. Of Church as Bishops Pastors and Minister 4. Of Common-wealth the Prince our Soveraigne and all Magistrates 33. How the order of these First Oeconomicall duties as that the first government in the world Secondly instruction in Vertue and Religion so Scholasticall and
Ecclesiasticall government to which subordinate and generall confederacies and Corporations mixed between private and publicke governments or societies Thirdly politicall duties of all sorts in all kinds of governments in the world whether Monarchy Aristocracie Democracie where there are commanders and subjects to command 34. What duty of Parents The love and care of them love or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 naturalis the fountaine of the other whence unnaturall parents that bring forth children and not care for them the care being seene in due providing for life naturally by 1. Nourishing them and 2. Bringing them up 3. Training them up in honest calling 4. Directing them in all matters of moment 5. Helping and storing for them as God giveth meanes For life spirituall by godly education instruction chastisement their prayers for them and blessings and the opposite hereof to be without naturall affection To traine them up in idlenesse and vanity To be neglective of providing for them or their education or instruction naturall or spirituall things or to curse and not blesse them 35. What the duty of children To answer their parents care and love with love and duty To reverence and obey them Matth. 21. 30. Eph. 6. 1. To stand in awe of them and submit to their instruction correction To preserve their parents goods and helpe them if need require To shew themselves thankfull as the Storke to her parents So a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if need or age require to help them with goods service reliefe To love and reverence them that be neare and deare unto them for their sakes Opposite to which is to neglect these duties not to love them but to hate revile scorn strike or deride them To be ashamed of parents contemne and despise them To be disobedient and unkinde To refuse or despise their instruction correction and to these heads or some of them may bee referred the duties of Tutors and Guardians towards Pupills and their Pupills towards them that as they succeed parents in government to succeed in fatherly love care and consequently Pupills to shew dutifull respects and love to them as good children to such their parents 36. What the duties of husbands and wives In generall mutuall love benevolence and conjugall fidelity in particular of the husband as head to guide direct and instruct protect cherish and defend provide things needfull and governe in loving sort giving honour also to her as the weaker vessell The wife as in subjection to her husband to acknowledge him her head reverencing fearing and obeying him being amiable and gracious seeking to please and cherish him be his assistant in the house and all duties of a good wife and huswife opposite to which is neglect of these duties and so his being his wives underling contrary to the law of nature and ordinance of God his hating striking or wronging her denying things needfull in his power or being too uxorious in in fond doting too imperious in rigour towards her As on her part her usurping dominion using unreverence unquietnesse causing trouble and griefe to him or being a crosse and not a helpe to him or idle at home or gadding abroad 37. What the duty of Masters To governe those under them with equity and moderation accounting them as children under us or brethren in Christ and fellow-servants in respect of our Master in heaven so commanding things lawfull honest possible and proportionable to their service paying their wages and wishing and procuring their good both in body and soule by instruction and else while with us and after esteeming them as our poore friends opposite to which is our neglect of them being too hard or tyrannizing over them commanding things unlawfull unpossible or too remisse in not correcting or not cockering them or suffering them in idlenesse not restraining and reproving them 38. What servants duties To love and reverence their Masters so to tender their credit and welfare submit themselves to their commands corrections and to be diligent faithfull and true thrifty and carefull to please their masters in all lawfull things opposite to which neglect and disobedience murmuring and answering againe idlenesse and unfaithfull wastefull and not carefull of their credit or displeasure 39. What the duties of other governours in Schools or other societies As they have the place of Fathers and Superiours to have a fathely love and care over them and their welfare opposite to which to neglect them or tyrannize over them and abuse their authority 40. What of the governed To demeane themselves with that reverence humility and respect as may become dutifull children to such fathers not neglective of their places or despising their authority to the disturbance of good order and bringing in impiety and hellish confusion 41. What duties of Ministers and Ecclesiasticall Fathers To be blamelesse and so behave themselves in their place that it may be to the edification of the Church both by their 1. Preaching in season and out of season 2. Their governing of the Church of God committed to them and their private families 3. Living and good example Opposite to which their inability and insufficiency impiety idlenesse and neglect of their charge or other irreligiousnesse prophanenesse or faults in preaching governing or living unworthy their place or calling 42. What duty of the people towards them Love reverence and submission to their Ministery and charge that they may performe their duty with cheerfulnesse not with griefe and so allowing liberall maintenance and their dues as those Elders that doe their duty well are worthy of double honour opposite to which hate neglect mocking or despising them resisting disobeying or abusing them denying or diminishing their dues with a mocking and a lying unto God Gal. 6. 6. or taking away and withdrawing them which is sacriledge or robbery and spoyling of God Mal. 3. 10. 43. What duty of Kings or Soveraignes In that high place and representation of Gods supreme authority the commendable exercise 1. Of that Soveraigne power in 1. making good Lawes 2. Seeing them executed 3. Creating Magistrates 4. Containing them in their duty 5. Mixing mercy with justice 6. Lawfull pardons 7. Waging war or concluding peace 8. Admitting or considering of high appeals godly to the glory of God justisie to the good of the Common-wealth II. Vertues of 1. Piety in all their actions 2. Justice in all their actions 3. Clemency in all their actions 4. Bounty in all their actions 5. Wisdome in all their actions 6. Fortitude temperance humility and generall all vertues to the good example of his subjects as Regis ad exemplum c. opposite to which is negligence and remissenesse in these duties bordering upon idlenesse or rigour degenerating into cruelty and tyranny 44. What subjects duties Honour obedience loyalty and service both with body and goods attended with love of their person desire of their welfare and prayer for their prosperity opposite to which neglect and contempt to speake evill or to curse him
with a leud disposition is though in it selfe godly to that depraved humor but an occasion of rebelling and rebellious headstrongnesse and scorning in impatiency and impotency with spurning against it and disobedience 6. But obedience to the Law is true justice Yes for the man that doth those things shall live in them Levit. 18. 5. Gal. 3. 12. Rom. 10. 3. Luke 10. 28. 7. But none may be justified by the Law No yet not because the Law is not perfect or not able to justifie for the Law is perfect holy just and good but because we are not able to justifie it for the Law is spirituall but wee carnall Rom. 7. 12. c. 8. Why can none fulfill it Because wee are all sinners and deprived of grace as of the glory and image of God Rom. 3. 23. yea sin is in the very regenerate Rom. 7. 20. 9. What is the use of the Law 1. To teach us these things and the excellency of Law and Law-giver 2. To shew us what true righteousnesse is 3. To humble us and shew us our weaknesse and infirmitie 4. To stir us up to better duties and seek Christ and his power and grace so to bring us to him 5. To direct us being in him how to live acceptably in striving to walke in the same 10. How is this use of the Law then branched Into the civill and spirituall use thereof both in respect of reprobate or righteous 11. What the civill use To shew the difference betweene good and evill and what the acceptable will of God is and to leave all without excuse 12. What the spirituall use To the reprobate not only to leave them without excuse but even to 1. Shew their sin in the full extent and so to make them appeare more ugly and deformed that are by nature void of good 2. To harden them that whereas they cannot performe it take occasion thereby to bring forth more evill and so to them the letter killeth and kindling the heat of sinne in them maketh it more strong 13. Why should they be condemned since they are not able to performe it We are not to looke that we are able but what we ought to doe not what In 1. Our corruption we want but 2. What we received in our creation that is what the Lord gave us and the Lord requiring but his owne we being not able the fault is in our selves 14. What the use to the children of God Twofold Either 1. Before they be converted to humble them and shew them their owne weaknesse whereby they may feele the sweetnesse of Christ in deliverance from the torments of hell deserved which unlesse humbled by the Law we could never be sensible of but feeling it desire the release and so a Schoolemaster to bring us to him And yet more 2. After they be in Christ for a rule of righteousnesse and godly obedience to bridle the affections while we strive for perfection 15. What is then further expressed in this preface First the caution for our more due consideration of these things and our weake estate and inability to performe the duties in the law required in those first words My good childe know this that thou art not able to doe c. 16. How is our inability seene In that we are not able as of our selves to think a good thought much lesse to doe a good deed as of our selves since our depraved nature in Adams fall is not only deprived of all goodnesse but enclined and prone to all evill 17. Was no man ever able to performe them None except Adam in his state of innocency and Christ who was both God and Man 18. How is the estate of man to be considered 1. In his first creation and estate of innocency able to fulfill them as them in Gods Image righteousnesse and true holinesse 2. In his fall and nature as now it is depraved and deprived of all goodnesse and so not able to fulfill it 3. In his new birth and regenerate estate in Christ yet so not able perfectly to fulfill the law but failing in many things yet in some measure yeelding acceptable obedience 19. How was that perfection in Adam seene As he was perfectly good created in the Image of God in righteousnesse and true holinesse having his soule endued with divine knowledge free will and affections holy in integrity and innocencie 20. How the depraved nature of man As he is corrupted in his powers of body and soule and his 1. Understanding darkned full of ignorance and error 2. His will crooked and contrary to the will of God 3. His affections impure and so bad that nothing so good but it will loath or hate it nothing so bad and vile but they will wish and seek it 4. His weaknesse such that no power to any good in thought word or deed 5. His strength of corruption so great that it will turne best things into ill to its self and good things into occasion of falling the graces of God into wantonnesse 21. How this more manifested In that they in this estate are compared to blind and deale and worse things even filthinesse it selfe so Job 14. 4. Who can bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse and Rom. 7. 18. In me dwelleth no good thing and David There is none that doeth good no not one they are all corrupt and become abominable destruction and unhappinesse is in their waies and the way of peace they have not knowne yea the unregenerate do nothing but sin and their best actions and waies but sin and to death 22. How those in estate of grace Yet they cannot perfectly fulfill the law but faile in many things as Jam. 3. 2. In many things we offend all for though there be sincere and sound obedience from the heart and guided by Gods Spirit yet it is but imperfect obedience while the corrupt nature in the old man cleaveth so neer to us and is not quite expelled but hindreth many a good worke whence the combat betweene the flesh and the spirit when not the good that wee would but the evill that we would not is done Rom. 7. 21. and so like Schollars practised in Christs Schoole in these exercises of grace there will be faults in our doings easily found we are not skilfull to the full or masters in the art of godlinesse while we are in viâ here only we shall be in patriâ when all imperfection shall be done away 23. Are none then perfect here Not absolutely but a kinde of perfection is attributed to the godly 1. As perfectio partium opposed to hypocrisie so sincere and true godlinesse as in David Josiah and others 2. Though not perfectionem graduum or an absolute fulfilling of the law and all righteousnesse without failing in any thing for this is in no man to be found of all the sons of Adam that are only men so rejected 1. Pelagianisme that gave perfection to mans naturall faculties and freewill 2. Semipelagianis●e
that in nature assisted by grace will suppose free will 〈…〉 of supererogation 24. What ability then may we 〈…〉 Only that which is of grace in Christ and to that measure that may be acceptable though not perfect since God is pleased so to accept of our best endeavours 25. Whence are we to expect it From God the giver of all goodnesse and so who is only able to worke in us both the thought the will and the deed 26. What meanes to obtaine it As here is prescribed continuall and earnest prayer the effectuall meanes to obtaine grace and all other blessings from the hand of God 27. Is there such necessity of prayer then Yes as the naturall life cannot be preserved without continuall food no more the spirituall life of the soule in grace without continuall accesse of Gods graces and comforts to refresh and nourish it 28. Is there such need for the faithfull also to pray Yes both I. As continually standing in need of such comfort 1. To shew they are Gods children and faithfull servants 2. To pay their vowes and duties of praise and thanksgiving 3. To performe their obedience to him 29. What manner of prayer required As is here expressed continually earnestl● and diligent prayer so said we ought at all times to call for grace by diligent prayer and to this purpose we are bid pray continually 1 Thes. 5. 17. 30. What further intimated in the question following this preface That the Lords Prayer is the most excellent platforme that we may desire of prayer and absolutely in it containing all that we need pray for and as a rule for our hearts and words to make request by so most reverently and religiously to be respected and used whence the reproofe of any that either I. Superstitiously neglect 1. It or sleight it 2. All set formes of prayer II. Ignorantly attribute too much to the bare recitall of it so religiously using it with vaine repetitions and babling III. Superstitiously use it to the expiating of sin by the only often repeating it c. 31. Why is it called the Lords Prayer As by him taught to his Disciples and in them to the whole Church so sanctified by his holy lips teaching and commanding it saying when you pray pray after this manner 32. Is it then meant in those very words No doubt after so good a Schoolmaster and in words so well couched in so holy perfect and absolute manner and for the substance comprehending all things necessary to be desired 33. What followeth The expresse requiring the recitall of the same prayer intimated so necessarily to be learned and religiously used by all good Christians SECT 2. The Lords Prayer Hypothesis of the Lords prayer here proposed the generall thesis of prayer and the nature definition excellency sorts order and rules of it come to be considered So the definition explaned and parts of prayer and order of them described as also the sorts or kinds of prayer among themselves compared and illustrated as of vocall and mentall of publick and private ejaculatory and others the difference and degrees of excelleney all of them excellent and usefull in their kindes the holy and religions use of set form of prayer in the Church of God and reasons of the same and how from all antiquity and by all godly men used whence also the Lords prayer by the Lord himselfe so propounded to be used yet none of the others in their due seasons to bee neglected but most necessary on the divers occasions of our life estate and callings to be religiously practised all of them and often as the many and continuall blessings of Almighty God are powred out upon us or presented to our eyes and remembrance the circumstances of prayer further set downe and declared of kneeling and the like gestures the order and rules and conditions of all true prayer the wings of prayer and how made so powerfull and why the prayers of the wicked prove so uneffectuall and unacceptable how we may pray or more to elevate our minds and inflame our zeale and affections to this divine duty of prayer in a due estimate of it we may consider the rare excellencie of it by the divine Elogies and other testimonies of holy scripture concerning it as likenise the exceed 〈…〉 and urgent nesessity pressing us on inciting us to this duty and lastly the admirable force or surpassing vertue and efficacie of true prayer which is of faith even to the obtaining of all our desires overcomming the greatest powers that are in the world the great dignity urgent necessity and wondrous efficacie of it here amply appearing from a survey of the reall worth right use and rare 〈◊〉 both effects of it to which may be added these further godly and profitable directions therein for the right use and practise of the same 1. REcite the Lords Prayer Our Father which art in heaven hallowed 2. What is here especially to be observed In generall what prayer is and how regulated In speciall this prayer the perfection and parts of it 3. What is prayer Oratio quasi oris ratio the calves of the lips or rather a devout pouring forth of the soule before God in our submission to his Majesty and ordinance and so honouring him 4. What in it to be considered The Nature Parts Sorts Rules of it whereby the Essence Matter Manner Order of it declared 5. What the nature or essence As expressed in the definition of it said to be the immediate worship of God by our calling on him in the name of Jesus Christ with devout pouring forth of the soule before him acknowledging his great Majesty and mercies and our owne miserie so desiring both for our selves and others supply of our wants and necessities from the fulnesse of his bounty and giving him praise for the same or more briefly thus a lifting up of the heart to God in the name of Jesus Christ according to his will in full assurance to bee heard and accepted of him 6. Why say you an immediate worship of God Because that though many other holy actions both at Church and else are his worship as preaching and hearing the word receiving the Sacraments sacrifice and obedience better then sacrifice yet none so immediately honouring him as this that primarily and totally respecteth it as tendring him in that very act our duty and so in the act honouring and worshipping him whereas preaching helpeth but our infirmity and prepareth us to this duty sacraments sacrifice and obedience and all other good duties in the service of God and his worship are promoted and made more acceptable by this and have as it were their best perfection from hence and thus this is the greatest highest and holiest duty that can be done by man and even Kings in this action though other great matters required at their hands doe the greatest matter that ever they can doe on earth and performe the holiest duty and most honourable and strongest for their