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A64611 The summe of Christian religion, delivered by Zacharias Ursinus first, by way of catechism, and then afterwards more enlarged by a sound and judicious exposition, and application of the same : wherein also are debated and resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are controversed in divinitie / first Englished by D. Henry Parry, and now again conferred with the best and last Latine edition of D. David Pareus, sometimes Professour of Divinity in Heidelberge ; whereunto is added a large and full alphabeticall table of such matters as are therein contained ; together with all the Scriptures that are occasionally handled, by way either of controversie, exposition, or reconciliation, neither of which was done before, but now is performed for the readers delight and benefit ; to this work of Ursinus are now at last annexed the Theologicall miscellanies of D. David Pareus in which the orthodoxall tenets are briefly and solidly confirmed, and the contrary errours of the Papists, Ubiquitaries, Antitrinitaries, Eutychians, Socinians, and Arminians fully refuted ; and now translated into English out of the originall Latine copie by A.R. Ursinus, Zacharias, 1534-1583.; Parry, Henry, 1561-1616.; Pareus, David, 1548-1622. Theologicall miscellanies.; A. R. 1645 (1645) Wing U142; ESTC R5982 1,344,322 1,128

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falling into the hands of a thiefe should be required of the thiefe to give a peece of mony for the redeeming of his life verily hee not only may but also ought if hee be able to performe that which the thiefe requireth And if this be lawfully performed unto a thiefe it is lawfully also performed unto him by an oath Likewise it is lawfull also to promise by an oath silence unto the thiefe and such an oath made for the keeping of silence promised unto the thiefe both may and ought to be kept Object That which is hurtfull to the Common-wealth is not to be promised or if it have been promised not to be kept Such silence promised unto the thiefe is hurtfull to the Common-wealth Therefore it is not to be promised or if it have been promised it is not to be kept Ans 1. That which is hurtfull to the Common-wealth is not to be promised that is if wee may doe it without hazzard and danger of our life And further if at that instant when a man is in such danger of his life he be not rather to provide for his own safety than to reveale such a thing 2. It is rather profitable than hurtfull to the Common-wealth to promise silence unto the thief and to keep promise For he which hath promised silence by an oath to the thiefe is by this meanes saved Moreover if he should not promise by oath silence unto the thiefe threatning him death he should thereby neither profit the Common-wealth nor himselfe Wherefore to promise silence by an oath unto the thiefe and to keep it seeing it is a lesser evill then that a Citizen should be slain is of the two rather to be chosen ON THE 38. SABBATH Quest 103. What doth God command in the fourth Commandement Answ First that the Ministery of the Gospel and the Schools of learning should be maintained a Titus 1 5. 1 Tim. 4.13 14.15 16. 2 Tim 2.2 3.15 1 Cor. 9.12 13 14 and that I both at other times and especially on Holy-dayes should frequent studiously divine assemblies b Psal 40.10 11. 68.26 Acts 2.42 46. heare the Word of God diligently c 1 Tim 4 13. 1 Cor. 14.29 use the Sacraments d 1 Corinth 11.33 joyn my praiers with the common praiers of the assembly e 1 Tim. 2.1 2 3 8. 1 Corinth 14.16 and bestow something according to my ability on the poore f 1 Cor. 16.2 And further that all my life time I be free from misdeeds and evill actions yielding unto the Lord that he may be his holy Spirit work in mee his work and so I may begin in this life that everlasting Sabbath g Esay 66.3 The Explication The parts of the fourth Commandement THe parts of this fourth Commandement are in number two A Commandement A Commandement A reason thereof A reason of the Commandement The Commandment is Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath day and In it thou shalt doe no manner of worke The parts of the Commandement are also two The first is morall and perpetuall namely That the Sabbath be sanctified that is that some certaine time be allotted to the Ministery of the Church The Commandement twofold or to the publike service of God The other part is ceremoniall and temporary namely 1. Morall and perpetuall That that time be the seventh day That the former part is morall and perpetuall 2. Ceremoniall and temporary is cleerly proved by the end and perpetuall causes of the Commandement The end of the Commandement is The publike service of God in the Church Or The first part of the Commandement is morall and perpetuall the perpetuall preservation and use of the Ecclesiasticall Ministery For God willeth that at all times there be some publike Ministery of the Church and assembly of the faithfull 1. The end of it in which the true doctrine concerning himself may daily resound 2. The causer of it and that for these causes 1. That himselfe may be publikely served in the world 2. That the religion and faith of the Elect may be stirred up and cherished by publike exercises 3. That men may mutually edifie one another in the faith which they professe and provoke one another to piety and godlinesse 4. That consent in the doctrine of the Church and worship of God may be continued 5. That the Church may be apparent in the world and may be discerned from other companies of men Now whereas these causes pertaine not to any definite or certaine time but to all ages and estates of the Church and the world it followeth hereon that God will have the Ministery of the Church perpetually maintained and the use thereof often frequented and therefore that the morall part of this Commandement bindeth all men from the begining of the world unto the end to keep some Sabbath that is to allot some time to Sermons Prayers and the Administration of the Sacraments That the latter part is ceremoniall That the latter part is ceremonial and temporary and not perpetuall it is evident because the Sabbath of the seventh day was in the promulgation and publishing of the law ordained by God for the observation of the Leviticall Ceremonies and given unto the Jewes for a Sacrament that is for a type of the sanctifying of the Church by the Messias to come Fzek. 10 12. according as it is said Keep yee my Sabbath for it is a signe between mee and you in your generations that yee may know that I the Lord doe sanctifie you Moreover I gave them also my Sabbaths to be a signe between mee and them that they might know that I am the Lord that sanctifie them Wherefore the Sabbath also of the seventh day was together with the rest of the ceremonies and types fulfilled and abrogated by the coming of the Messias And thus much briefly of the Commandement The reason of the Commandement is For in six dayes the Lord made heaven and earth The reason of the commandement c. It is drawne from the example of God who rested on the seventh day from his worke of Creation after six dayes labour ended Wherefore properly it pertaineth to the circumstance of the seventh day or to the ceremoniall part of the Commandement concerning the seventh day Howbeit the imitating of that rest whereunto God inviteth us is not only ceremoniall and belonging to the Jewes but morall also and spirituall signified by the ceremoniall and extending it selfe to all men But that the Commandement with the reason thereunto adjoyned may more fully be understood wee will in briefe expound the words of both and afterwards summarily handle and unfold the Common-places hitherto belonging namely the Common-places concerning the Sabbath the Ministery of the Church and touching Ceremonies Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath day A briefe explication of the words of the commandement Numb 15.35 What the Sabbath is
why the ceremoniall law belongeth not unto us are especially these 1. One part of this law of sanctifying the Sabbath is ceremoniall Col. 2.16 2. Paul saith Let no man condemne you in respect of an holy day 3. The Apostles themselves did change the Sabbath of the seventh day 4. From the end or purpose of the law It was a type of things that were to be fulfilled by Christ namely of sanctification and every type must give place to the thing thereby signified Likewise it was a severing or distinguishing the Jewes from other Nations but this severing and distinction was taken away by Christ Object 3. The Lord saith of the Sabbath day Exod. 31.27 It is a signe between me and the children of Israel for ever and an everlasting covenant Therefore the Sabbath of the seventh day is never to be abolished Ans 1. The ceremoniall Sabbath was perpetuall untill Christs coming who is the end of ceremonies 2. The Sabbath is eternall as concerning the thing signified which is a ceasing from sins and a rest in God for in this sense are all the types of the old Testament eternall even the kingdome of David also which yet was overthrown before the coming of the Messias Object 4. Wee grant the Mosaicall ceremonies to be changeable yet it followeth not thereof Look the question concerning the abrogating of the Law Ob. 1. Pag. 2. that the lawes which were made before Moses time are changeable in the number whereof also is the keeping of the Sabbath day Answ The ceremonies which were ordained of God before Moses are also changeable because they were types of the benefits of the Messias to come and therefore are by his coming abolished as circumcision which was given unto Abraham as also the sacrifices which were prescribed unto our first Parents Object 5. The lawes which were given of God before the fall are not types of the benefits of the Messias and binde all mankinde for ever for then was not given as yet the promise of the Messias and there was one and the same condition of all mankind But the Sabbath of the seventh day was ordained by God as soon as the creation of the world was finished before the fall of mankinde Therefore it is universall and perpetuall Ans The Major proposition is true concerning the morall law the notions whereof were imprinted in mans mind at the first creation but it is not true as touching the ceremony or observing of the seventh day as which after the fall was made a type of the benefits of the Messias in the Mosaicall law and therefore in like manner as other ceremonies which were either then or before instituted it became subject to mutation and change by the coming of the Messias For God would not have the shadowes of things to continue or remain the things themselves being once come and exhibited Wherefore albeit wee grant that the exercises of divine worship were to have been kept on the seventh day according to the commandement and prescript of the Decalogue as well if men had never sinned as now after they sinned yet notwithstanding seeing God hath enrolled this ceremony amongst the shadowes of the Messias to come he hath by this new law enacted by Moses made it changeable together with other ceremonies Object 6. The cause of the law being perpetuall doth make the law it selfe also perpetuall The memory and celebration of the creation and the meditation on the workes of God is a perpetuall cause of the Sabbath Therefore the Sabbath is perpetuall yea even after Christs coming Ans A law is made perpetuall or unchangeable by reason of an unchangeable cause that is if that cause it and doe necessarily or perpetually require this law as an effect or meane but not if at other times that end may be better come unto by other meanes or if the Law-giver may as well obtaine the same end by another law In like manner seeing also this law of sanctifying the Sabbath of the seventh day being repealed and abolished we may neverthelesse godlily and holily by other meanes meditate on Gods workes it followeth not that this law of the ceremoniall Sabbath is perpetuall although the memory and celebration of Gods creation and works ought to be perpetuall and therefore hath the Church by common consent according to Christian liberty well changed this ceremony of observing the seventh day being taken away by Christ and hath substituted in the place of the seventh day the first day of the week yet so that there is observed no difference of daies which is utterly forbidden in the Church seeing one day is not holier than another The Anabaptists also against the observation of the first day of the week Objecti against the observing of Sunday or the Lords day Col. 2.16 Galat. 4.10 Rom. 14.6 or the Lords day oppose those sayings of Scripture which forbid the putting of difference between daies and daies in the new Testament Let no man condemne you in respect of an holy day Yee observe daies and months and times and yeares Hee that observeth the day observeth it to the Lord and he that observeth not the day observeth it not to the Lord. Therefore say they the observation of the first day of the week or the Lords day is no lesse in these places reproved than the solemnizing of the Sabbath Ans We answer to the Antecedent that a putting difference between dayes and dayes is indeed forbidden amongst Christians but not simply or wholly but on this wise namely if it be done with an opinion of ceremonious worship or necessity Now the first day of the week or the Lords day is not so observed by the Church For there is a double difference between the Christian observing of the Lords day and the Jewish observing of the Sabbath or seventh day A double difference between the Christian observing of the Lords day and the Jewish observing of the Sabbath For 1. It was not lawfull for the Jewes to change the Sabbath or to omit it as being a part of ceremoniall worship and this they might not doe by reason of the expresse commandement of God to the contrary But the Christian Church retaining still her liberty allotteth the first day unto the Ministery without adjoyning any opinion of necessity or worship 2. The old ceremoniall Sabbath was in the old Testament a type of things to be fulfilled by Christ but in the new Testament that signification ceaseth and there is had regard only of order and comelinesse without which there could be either no Ministery or at least wise no well ordered Ministery in the Church 3. The causes for which the Sabbath day was instituted THe finall causes or ends for which the Sabbath day was instituted are these For publike service and worship of God in the Church The publike service and worship of God in the Church exercise of prayers confession and obedience in which consisteth the study of the knowledge of
and how manifold shall hereafter be shewed Here God speaketh emphatically as of a thing most strictly charged and injoyned Remember that thou keep holy that is with great care and religion keep holy the Sabbath day and else-where hee commanded him to be put to death which breaketh the Sabbath The causes why God doth so severely command the keeping of the Sabbath Three causes why the observing of the Sabbath was so severely commanded are 1. Because the breach and violating of the Sabbath is the breach and violating of the whole worship of God For the neglect of the Ministery doth easily corrupt the doctrine and worship of God 2. Because by so severe exacting of the ceremoniall or typicall Sabbath God would signifie the greatnesse and necessity of the thing signified by this type namely the spirituall Sabbath 3. Because God will have the externall Sabbath to serve for the beginning and perfecting of the spirituall Sabbath Keep holy To sanctifie and keep holy the Sabbath is not to spend the day in slothfull idlenesse What it is to keep holy the Sabbath but to eschew and avoid sin and to doe good works on the Sabbath Now God is otherwise said to sanctifie the Sabbath than are men God is said to sanctifie the Sabbath because he appointeth it for divine worship How God and how man are said to sanctifie the Sabbath Men are said to sanctifie the Sabbath when they referre it to that use unto which God hath appointed it Six dayes shalt thou labour Six dayes God allotted unto men to labour in the seventh hee selected to his worship not that hee would that on other dayes the worship of God and the meditation of divine things should be omitted but hee requireth these two things 1. That on the Sabbath day there be not onely a serving of God Two things required by God of us on the Sabbath as on other dayes but also a publike serving of him in the Church 2. That on that day all other labours should give place to the private and publike service of God which on other dayes every one doth exercise according to his vocation What workes are forbidden on the Sabbath Thou shalt doe no worke God forbiddeth that on the Sabbath day wee should worke not any worke whatsoever but onely servile workes or such as hinder the worship of God and exercise of the Ministery which declaration is expresly elsewhere set down Yee shall doe no servile worke Levit. 23.25 Therefore Christ defendeth his Disciples pulling the eares of corne on the Sabbath day to drive away hunger and himselfe healeth a man having a dry hand and saith that an Oxe or any Beast Mat. 12.3 Luke 14.4 5. falling into a pit on the Sabbath may be drawn out thence without any sin Macchabaeus fighteth on the Sabbath day that there might be some preserved which should keep the Sabbath And of the like actions there are two reasons given 2 Maccab. 15. 1 Mac. 2.40 41. If we doe all as our brethren have done and fight not against the heathen for our lives and for our lawes then shall they incontinently destroy us out of the earth Therefore they concluded at the same time saying Whosoever shall come to make battell with us on the Sabbath day wee will fight against him For the maintenance of their life and religion they say it is lawfull to fight even on the Sabbath day By the same reasons doth Christ defend his Disciples and himselfe citing a place of Hosea cap. 6. If yee knew what this is Mat. 12.7 Marke 2.27 I will have mercy and not sacrifice yee would not have condemned the innocent And The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath that is ceremoniall works must give place to the morall works so that rather the ceremonies must be omitted than such works of charity as our necessity or the necessity of our neighbour requireth And Have yee not read in the law how that on the Sabbath dayes Mat. 5.6 the Priests in the Temple break the Sabbath and are blamelesse but I say unto you Here is one greater than the Temple Also Yee on the Sabbath day circumcise a man If a man on the Sabbath day receive circumcision that the law of Moses should not be broken be ye not angry with me John 7.22 23. because I have made a man every whit whole on the Sabbath day By which words hee sheweth that such works as hinder not the use of the Sabbath but rather further and establish it such as are the works which appertain to the service of God or sacred ceremony or to charity and love towards our neighbour or to the saving of our owne or anothers life as that present necessity will not suffer them to be deferred untill another time doe not break or violate the Sabbath but are most of all required to the right and lawfull observation or keeping of the Sabbath Thou and thy Son and thy Daughter He will also have our children and family to cease from their labours for two causes Two causes why our children and family must cease from labour on the Sabbath 1. Principally that these also may be brought up by their Parents and Masters in the service of God and may be admitted unto the Ministery of the Church For God will have these also to be members of his Church 2. Because he will have especially on the Sabbath day love and bountifulnesse towards our neighbour to be shewed and seen in the Church Why Converts strangers must cease from labour on the Sabbath Why Infidels strangers must cease from labour on the Sabbath The stranger c. He willeth also strangers to intermit their labours and that if they were converted to true religion because they were of the houshold of the Church if they were Infidels he commandeth it them not in respect of themselves but in respect of the Israelites 1. Lest by their example they should give offence to the Church 2. Lest their liberty might be an occasion to the Jewes to accomplish by them those labours which it was not lawfull for them to work by themselves and so the law of God should be deluded Hereby is answer made unto three questions 1. Whether other Nations were also bond unto Mosaicall ceremonies if any of them lived among the Jewes 2. Whether they which are aliens from the Church may or ought to be forced to religion 3. Whether the Sacraments among which was also the Sabbath ought to be common unto Infidels with the Church Unto these questions we thus answer To the first and second as concerning binding and constraint the strangers which conversed among the Jewes Three questions concerning the Sabbath answered were not forced either to all ceremonies or to religion but to externall discipline which was necessary for the avoiding of breeding offences in the Church wherein they lived For a Magistrate ought to be a maintainer
of discipline and order according to both Tables of the Decalogue amongst his subjects and to forbid manifest idolatry and blasphemies and to take care as far forth as he may that strangers and sojourners minister or give no open scandall to his subjects Moreover as concerning the binding there was a peculiar consideration and respect of the Sabbath which was not then first by Moses prescribed to the Israelites but commanded by God from the beginning of the world unto all men and so did binde all men untill the coming of the Messias Although indeed this commandement and ordinance was so growne out of use among other Nations that they accounted it among the number of the chief reproaches wherewith they derided and scoffed at the Jewes terming them Sabbataries because they so religiously observed the Sabbath To the third question fore-alledged we answer that the Sabbath was no Sacrament unto Infidels though they also ceased from their labours as well as the faithfull because neither did the promises belong unto them that God would be their sanctifier neither were they therefore constrained to cease from their daily labours as for a testification or confession of this promise but only for avoiding of offence and for preventing of such occasion of breaking the Sabbath as might be given by them unto Gods people Thy cattell By this it is the better understood that the Sabbath was not a Sacrament instituted for Infidels in that their cattell also are commanded to rest whose rest had no respect or consideration either of Gods worship Two causes why the rest of our cattell on the Sabbath is commanded or of a Sacrament but was commanded onely in respect of men 1. That all occasion of labouring might be cut off by forbidding the labour or use of their beasts 2. That they also sparing brute beasts might learn how God will have regard to be had of mercy and favourablenesse towards men For in six dayes The reason which is annexed unto the commandements is drawn from Gods rest and appertaineth to the ceremoniall commandement concerning the seventh day as before hath been shewed Two causes why the seventh day is appointed the Sabbath And rested on the seventh day That is he ceased to create any new parts of the world as being now perfect and such as God would have it to be This seventh day he consecrated to divine service 1. That this rest of the seventh day might be a monument of the Creation then finished and absolved by God and of the continuing of his perpetuall preservation and governing of his worke ever since that day unto his owne glory and the safety of his chosen and that so it might be a pricke to stirre us up to the consideration and magnifying of these Gods workes and benefits towards mankinde for whose sake all things are made and preserved by God 2. That by the example of his owne rest as a most forcible and effectuall argument hee might exhort men to the imitation thereof in omitting on the seventh day their accustomed workes of the six dayes A two-sold imitation of Gods rest Two sorts of our workes And so the imitation of Gods rest is double Ceremoniall or signifying and Morall or spirituall or signified So also our workes from which wee are commanded to cease are of two sorts Labours in our vocation Some of them are indeed commanded by God but they are not to be done with the hinderance of Gods worship of which sort are the functions and labours of each mans vocation Sins Labour and sinne forbidden by the Sabbath in divers respects Some are forbidden of God as sins Both these are forbidden on the Sabbath but in a three-fold difference For 1. Labours are forbidden but in a respect only to wit as they hinder the Ministery of the Church or as they give offence to their neighbour but sins are simply forbidden 2. Labours are forbidden onely to be used on the Sabbath day sinnes are forbidden at all times 3. The ceasing from labour is a type of ceasing from sinnes which is the thing signified by that type OF THE SABBATH HAving expounded the words of the Commandement that the doctrine concerning the Sabbath and the sanctifying thereof may be better understood wee are further to consider of the Sabbath What and how manifold the Sabbath is 2. How the Sabbath belongeth unto us 3. The causes for which the Sabbath was instituted 4. How the Sabbath is sanctified or kept holy and how it is broken or profaned 1. What and how manifold the Sabbath is THe Sabbath is called in Hebrew Schabbat Schebbet and Schabbaton Three causes why the day appointed to Gods publike service is called the Sabbath day each of which signifieth a quietnesse or rest or ceasing from labours And God so called the day appointed in his publike service and worship 1. Because God rested on that day namely from making any new or moe kinds of creatures though not from the preserving of the same which he had made or from continuing the generations of the singulars of every kind 2. Because the Sabbath is an image of the spirituall rest from sinne which should be in the life to come 3. Because we also and our families and our cattell are to rest and cease from our workes on that day not from all workes but from houshold and civill workes and from others of the like kind that God may then shew and exercise in us his workes The Sabbath therefore is a time appointed for the ceasing from externall workes which are either morally or ceremonially forbidden that is from sinnes and labours in our vocation pertaining to the use of this life and a time consecrated to the execution and performance of such things as belong to Gods worship or service And this concerning the name of the Sabbath Furthermore the Sabbath is of two sorts Internall and Externall The internall What the Sabbath is What the internall or morall Sabbath is or morall or spirituall is the study of the knowledge of God and his works of avoiding sins and of worshipping God by confession and obedience To be short The spirituall Sabbath or spirituall rest is a ceasing from sins and an exercising of the works of God This Sabbath though it ought to be continuall and perpetuall with the godly yet it is begun only in them in this life and is called the Sabbath both because this is that true rest from labours and miseries and the consecration of us to Gods worship and also because it was in time past signified by the ceremoniall Sabbath And this spirituall Sabbath shall be perfectly and perpetually continued in the life to come wherein is a perpetuall worshipping and magnifying of God Two causes why ceasing from sin and study of the word is called a Sabbath Isa 6.13 What the externall or Ceremoniall Sabbath is all those labours being left and surceased wherein we are now busied and occupied And from month to month
and from Sabbath to Sabbath shall all flesh come to worship before mee saith the Lord. The externall or ceremoniall Sabbath is a certain time ordained and in stituted by God in the Church dedicated to a ceasing from works and labours and given to the Ministery of Gods Word and to the administration of the Sacraments or to the externall publike worship of God This ceremoniall Sabbath was necessary in the Old Testament to be the seventh day and that on that day as also on other holy dayes the Leviticall ceremonies should be observed This ceremoniall Sabbath is a thing indifferent in the N. Testament This externall Sabbath is also of two sorts Immediate and Mediate Immediate is that which was immediatly instituted by God himselfe and prescribed to the Church of the Old Testament and this was diversly taken in the Old Testament Divers Sabbaths in the Old Testament The Sabbath of daies The Sabbath of dayes was every seventh day of the weeke which was in a more particular sense called the Sabbath both in respect of Gods rest from the Creation of the world and in respect of that rest which was commanded the people of God to be kept on that day Hence the whole seven dayes or the whole weeke was with the Hebrewes called by the name of the chiefe day the Sabbath or Sabbaths Now in the end of the Sabbath Mat. 28.1 when the first day of the Sabbath that is of the week began to dawne Likewise Levit. 23.15 the Sabbaths of daies were other festivall dayes as the feast of the Passeover Whitsontide Tabernacles Trumpets c. because in these feasts the people were to rest as on the seventh day The Sabbath of months The Sabbath of months was the new Moones The Sabbath of yeeres The Sabbath of yeares was every seventh yeere L●v. 25.4 26 35. Levit. 25.8 wherein the Jewes were commanded to intermit the tillage of their fields And hereof also the whole seven yeeres were by a Synecdoche called Sabbaths Thou shalt number seven Sabbaths of yeeres unto thee even seven times seven yeeres The mediate externall Sabbath is that which God doth mediately constitute by his Church in the New Testament such as is the first day of the week to wit Sunday or rather the Lords day which the Christian Church ever since the Apostles time observeth instead of the seventh or Sabbath day in respect of Christs resurrection witnesse that of John I was ravished in spirit on the Lords day Revel 1.10 More briefly thus The ceremoniall Sabbath is twofold one of the old Testament another of the new The old Sabbath was tied to the seventh day and the keeping of it was necessary and was the precise worship of God The new Sabbath dependeth on the arbitrement or appointment of the Church which for certaine causes maketh choice of the first day and that first day is to be observed for orders sake but without any opinion of necessity as if that and no other were to be observed by the Church of which difference more shall be spoken in the Question next ensuing A Table of the distinction of the Sabbath The Sabbath that is to say the ceasing or rest from working is 1. Internall morall and spirituall as the rest from sinne 2. Externall and Ceremoniall instituted by God 1. Immediately in the old Testament as the Sabbath of 1. Dayes which were the 1. Seventh day 2. Feast-dayes of the Passeover Whitsunday c. 2. Months as the new Moones 3. Ye●res as every seventh yeare 2. Mediately by the Church in the new Testament as the Lords day 2. How the Sabbath belongeth unto us Christians THe Sabbath of the seventh day was even from the beginning of the world designed by God to signifie that men should after the example of God himself rest from their labours and especially from sinnes and afterwards in Moses law this Commandement was againe repeated and then with all was the ceremony of ceasing from labour on the seventh day ordained to be a Sacrament that is a signe and token of that sanctifying whereby God signifieth himselfe to be the Sanctifier of his Church that is to pardon her all her sinnes and offences to receive her to favour to endue and rule her with his holy Spirit for the beginning of new and everlasting life in her in this life which afterwards should be accomplished and perfected for and by the Messias promised to the Fathers And this is the reason why the Ceremoniall Sabbath of the seventh day is now abolished namely because it was typicall admonishing the people of their own duty towards God of Gods benefits towards them which was to be performed by Christ for which selfe same cause also all the other Sacraments and Sacrifices and ceremonies made before and after the Law were abolished by the coming of Christ by whom that was fulfilled that they signified But although the Ceremoniall Sabbath is abrogated and disannulled in the new Testament yet the Morall Sabbath continueth still and belongeth unto us and doth still remain which is that some time is to be allotted for the Ministery of the Church For as heretofore in the Jewish Church so now in the Christian Church we must ever have some day wherein the Word of God may be taught in the Church and the Sacraments administred But neverthelesse we are not restrained or tied to have either Saturday or Wednesday or any other certaine day For the Apostolike Church to distinguish it selfe from the Jewish Synagogue according to the liberty where-with shee is enfranchised by Christ instead of the seventh day hath on good reason made choice of the first day namely because on that day was Christs resurrection whereby the spirituall and internall Sabbath is begun in us Briefly the Sabbath doth not belong to us Ceremonially in speciall and particular albeit it doth belong to us and so to all men and ever continueth both morally and ceremonially in generall that is wee must have some day wherein the Church may be instructed and the Sacraments administred but wee are not tied to any certaine day Object against the abrogating of the Ceremoniall Sabbath The Jews against the abrogation of the Ceremoniall Sabbath thus urge Ob. 1. The Decalogue is a perpetuall law The commandement of the Sabbath is a part of the Decalogue therefore it is a perpetuall law and not to be abolished Ans The Decalogue is a perpetuall law as it is a Morall law But the Additions or circumstances and limitations of the Morall precepts annexed by way of signification were to be kept untill the coming of the Messias Object 2. The commandements of the Decalogue belong unto all This is a commandement of the Decalogue therefore it belongeth unto all Answ The commandements of the Decalogue which are morall belong unto all But this commandement is in part ceremoniall and so as it is ceremoniall it belongeth not to us albeit the generall belong unto us The reasons
To love thy neighbour as thy selfe is for the love thou owest unto God that is because thou lovest God to do well unto thy neighbour according to the commandements of God or to wish and doe all things unto him which thou wouldest in equity and according to the law to be done unto thee Our neighbour is every man Why the love of our neighbour is called the second Commandement Now every man is our neighbour The second It is called the second commandement 1. Because it containeth the summe of the second Table or the duties which are immediately performed unto our neighbour For if thou love thy neighbour as thy selfe thou wilt not murther him thou wilt not hurt him c. 2. Because the love of our neighbour must rise out of the first Table even from the love of God therefore it is in nature inferiour to the love of God Why it is said to be like unto the first Is like unto this It is called like unto the first in three respects 1. In respect of the kind of worship which is morall or spirituall and principall because it is there in the second Table no lesse commanded then in the first and is opposed unto the Ceremonies 2. In respect of the punishment which is eternall because God doth inflict this punishment for the breach of either Table 3. In respect of the coherence because neither can be observed without the other Wherein it is unlike It is also unlike to the first 1. In respect of the immediate object which in the first Table is God in the second our neighbour 2. In respect of their processe and order the one being a cause the other an effect of that cause For the love of our neighbour ariseth from the love of God but it falleth not so out on the contrary 3. In respect of the degrees of love For we must love God above all things We must love our neighbour not above all things nor above God but as our selves Hence riseth an answer unto that objection Object The second commandement is like unto the first Therefore the first is not the greatest Or therefore our neighbour must be set equall with God Answ and equally worshipped For it is indeed like to the first not simply and in every point but in some few and unlike unto the first in some other points as before hath been shewed On these two Commandements hangeth the whole Law and the Prophets that is all the doctrine of the Law and the Prophets is reduced unto these two heads and all the legall obedience which is contained in Moses and the Prophets doth spring from the love of God and our neighbour Object Yea but the promises and doctrine of the Gospel are found also in the Prophets Therefore it seemeth that the doctrine of the Prophets is unfitly restricted and limited within these two Commandements Answ Christ speaketh of the doctrine of the Law not of the promises of the Gospel which appeareth by the question of the Pharisee demanding which was the chiefe Commandement not which was the chiefe promise in the Law Quest 5. Art thou able to keep all these things perfectly Answ No truly a Rom. 3.10 20 23. 1 Joh. 1.8 10. For by nature I am prone to the hatred of God and of my neighbour b Rom. 8.7 Ephes 2.5 Titus 3.3 Genes 6.5 Genes 8.21 Jer. 17.9 Rom. 7.2 The Explication THis question together with the two former Mans misery known two waies teacheth that our misery as there are two parts thereof before specified so it is known out of the Law two wayes 1. By a comparing of our selves to the Law 2. By an applying of the curse of the Law unto our selves The examining of our selves after the Law What it is to examine our selves by the Law Rom. 8.7 Ephes 2.3 Tit. 3.31 and comparing the Law with our selves is a consideration of that purity and uprightnesse which the Law requireth whether it be in us or no. The comparison sheweth that we are not such as the Law requireth for the Law requireth a perfect love of God in us there is a hatred and back-sliding from God The Law requireth a perfect love of our neighbour in us there is a hate of our neighbour So then out of the Law is knowne the former part of our misery I mean our corruption whereof the Scripture elsewhere convicteth us How we do apply the curse of the Law to our selves The application of the curse of the Law unto our selves is made by the framing of a Syllogisme practicall that is assuming and inferring our action whose Major or former proposition is the voice of the Law thus Cursed is he who continueth not in all which is written in the book of the Law to doe them Conscience prompteth and telleth us the Minor or latter proposition thus I have not continued c. The conclusion or shutting up of all is the allowing and approving of the sentence of the Law thus Therefore I am accursed Every mans conscience frameth such a Syllogisme nay every mans conscience is nothing else but such a practicall Syllogisme Conscience a practicall Syllogisme formed in his mind and understanding whose Major is the Law of God the Minor is the pondering and weighing of our fact which is contrary to the Law The Conclusion is the approving of the sentence of the Law condemning us for our sin which approbation grief and despaire follow at the heeles unlesse the comfort of the Gospel interpose it selfe and we perceive the remission of our sins purchased by the Son of God our Mediatour In this sort the guilt of eternall malediction which is the second part of our misery is disclosed unto us by the Law For we are all convicted by this reason and argument The Law bindeth all men to obedience or if they performe it not to everlasting punishment and malediction But no man performeth this obedience Therefore the Law bindeth all men to eternall malediction On the third Sabbath Quest 6. Did God then make man so wicked and perverse Answ Not so But rather he made him good a Gen. 1.31 and to his owne Image b Gen. 6.26 27. Ephes 4.24 Col. 3.10 that is endued with true righteousnesse and holinesse that he might rightly know God his Creatour and heartily love him and live with him blessed for ever and that to laud and magnifie him c 2 Cor. 3.18 The Explication HAving hitherto laid downe and proved this Proposition Mans nature is subject unto sin the next question to be discussed is Whether it were so created by God And if not so What manner of nature was created in man by God And Whence sin entred and set foot in man Wherefore the Common place of the Creation of man and of the Image of God in man is hitherto duly referred Here also we are to make an Antithesis or comparison of mans originall excellency before his
corruption are become guilty of the everlasting anger of God neither can they doe any thing pleasing and acceptable to God Rom. 5.14 Psal 51.5 Originall sin containeth two things except remission be granted for the Sonne of God the Mediatour and a renewing of their nature by the holy Ghost Of this sinne it is said Death reigned even over them also that sinned not after the like manner of the transgression of Adam In sin hath my mother conceived mee Originall sinne then containeth two things Guilt of eternall damnation The guilt of eternall damnation for the sinne of our first Parents Corrupt●on of mans whole nature The corruption of mans whole nature after the fall Of both these Paul saith By one man sinne entred into the world Rom. 5.12 and death by sinne and so death went over all men forasmuch as all men have sinned The vulgar definition passing under Anselmus his name containeth the same in effect with this our definition save that it more obscurely thus propoundeth it Originall sinne is a want of originall righteousnesse which should be in us Anselm's definition of originall sin For originall righteousnesse was not onely a conformity of our nature with the Law of God but also it comprehendeth in it Gods acceptation and approbation of this righteousnesse Now by the fall of man in stead of conformity there succeeded in mans nature deformity and corruption and guiltinesse in stead of approbation Such is that definition also of Hugo Cardinall Originall sin as that which we draw from our birth Hugo Cardinall his definition through ignorance in our understanding and concupiscence in our flesh The errour of the Pelagians and Anabaptists in the doctrine of originall sin Against this doctrine of Originall sin in times past did the Pelagians strive as at this day the Anabaptists doe denying that there is any Originall sin because that neither the posterity are guilty by reason of the first Parents fall neither is sin derived into them from their ancestors by propagation but every one sinneth and becometh faulty by imitation onely of the first Parents These Pelagians Saint Augustine hath confuted in many bookes Others grant that all became faulty by reason of the fall of our first Parents but they deny that such corruption was bred in us as might deserve condemnation for the defects as they think with which we are borne are no sin But against these Sectaries and Schismaticks wee are to hold these foure Theoremes or Positions 1. That all mankind is held guilty of Gods everlasting wrath Foure Theses of the doctrine of originall sin Foure proofes shewing that originall sin is derived by nature unto posterity for the disobedience of our first Parents 2. That there are in us besides this guilt defects and inclinations repugnant to the Law of God even from the houre of our birth 3. That these defects and inclinations are sins and deserve the eternall wrath of God 4. That these evils are derived not by imitation but by the propagation of a corrupt nature from our first Parents unto all their posterity except Christ only The first second and third are sufficiently confirmed in that which hath already been spoken The fourth is thus proved Testimony of Scripture Eph●s 2.3 Rom. 5.18 19. Job 14.4 Psal 51.5 John 3.5 By testimonies of Scripture Wee are by nature the children of wrath as well as others By the offence of one the fault came upon all men to condemnation By one mans disobedience many were made sinners Who can bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse I was borne in wickednesse Except a man be borne of water and of the spirit hee cannot enter into the Kingdome of God Death of Infants Isa 48.8 Gen. 8.21 De bono mortis cap. 11. Infants dye and are to be baptised therefore they have sin But they cannot as yet sin by imitation It must needs be then that sin is bred in them Whence it is said I called thee a transgressour from the womb The heart of man is evill from his youth And Ambrose saith Who is just in the sight of God whereas an infant of a day old cannot be cleere from sinne Every thing which is borne carrieth with it the nature of that which bare it 3 Community or participation of nature between parents and children as touching the substance and accidents proper to that speciall kind But wee are all born of corrupt and guilty Parents We therefore all draw by nature in our birth their corruption and guilt From the double grace of Christs death Justification and Regeneration By the death of Christ who is the second Adam we receive a double grace Justification and Regeneration therefore it followeth that out of the first Adam there issued and flowed a double evill the guilt I meane and corruption of our nature otherwise wee had not stood in need of a double grace and remedy The Pelagians objection 1. Object If sinne be propagated from the Parents unto their posterity it passeth to the off-spring either by their body or by their soule Not by the body because that is bestiall and unreasonable nor by the soule because that is not derived by deduction out of the soule of the Parents whereas it is a spirituall substance which may not be severed into parts neither is it created corrupt by God whereas God is not the authour of sin Wherefore certainly originall sinne passeth not by nature from the Parents unto the children 1. Answ We deny the Major because the soule being created by God pure and undefiled may draw naughtinesse and corruption from the body though it be brutish into which it is infused Neither is it absurd to say that the evill disposed temperature of the body is an unfit instrument for the good actions of the soule and corrupteth the soule not being established in her righteousnesse so that it presently falleth from her integrity as soone as it is infused and united unto the body 2. Answ We likewise deny the consequence and coherence of the Major because in it there is not made a sufficient account and reckoning of the parts by which Originall sin passeth For it passeth neither by the body nor by the soule but by the offence of our Parents in regard whereof God even whilest hee createth mans soule bereaveth it of Originall righteousnesse and other such like gifts which hee gave on that condition to our first Parents that they should continue or lose them to posterity according as they themselves either kept or lost them Neither is God in so doing either unjust or the cause of sin for this privation or want of righteousnesse is in respect of God which inflicteth it for the offence of our first Parents no sinne but a most just punishment although in respect of the Parents which draw it unto themselves and their posterity it be a sinne Wherefore if the whole Major be laid downe thus Originall sinne
certainly be Probable proofes of the Resurrection yeelded by Philosophy but no necessary demonstrance IT may be verily collected probably out of Philosophy that there shall be sometime a Resurrection but no necessary demonstration can be yeelded thence that the Resurrection shall certainly be For in Philosophy are many principles which accord not with the sacred writings of Gods Spirit Againe in Philosophy the knowledge which it hath of Gods justice and truth is but a maimed reason But in the holy writ of God Proofes hereof out of Scripure the reasons are firme and true Hence alone therefore is demonstration given for the most certaine accomplishment of the Resurrection And this Testimony By testimony of Scripture Reason By reason drawn out of the Scripture The testimonies of Scripture which confirme the certainty of the Resurrection hereafter to come Testimonies of Scripture for demonstrance of the Resurrection Job 19.25 26. Esay 26.19 Ezek. 37.12 are most evident and those taken both out of the old and new Testament I am sure that my Redeemer liveth and he shall stand the last on the earth and though after my skin wormes destroy this body yet shall I see God in my flesh The dead men shall live even with my body they shall rise I will open your graves and cause you to come out of your sepulchers And many of them that sleep in the dust shall awake some to everlasting life Dan. 12.2 Job 5.28 29. and some to shame and perpetuall contempt The houre shall come in the which all that are in the graves shall heare his voyce And they shall come forth that have done good unto the resurrection of life but they that have done evill unto the resurrection of condemnation John 6.40 1 Cor. 15.13 1 Thess 4.14 Rev. 20.12.13 I will raise him up at the last day If there be no resurrection of the dead then is Christ not risen And if Christ be not risen then is our preaching vaine and your faith is also vaine If we beleeve that Jesus is dead and is risen even so them which sleep in Jesus God will bring with him And I saw the dead both great and small stand before God and the sea gave up her dead which were in her and death and hell delivered up the dead The reasons which are drawne also out of Scripture are diverse 1. God is the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob and God is not the God of the dead but of the living But he should not be the God of whole Abraham nor the God of the living except the body of Abraham should one day be raised God is the God of the whole man not of a part onely but he should not be the God of the whole man but of a part of man only if the body did never rise againe Mat. 22.32 This reason Christ useth against the Sadducees 2. God promiseth eternall life not to the soule onely but also to the body of the godly and contrary to the ungodly he threatneth eternall punishment and paines both of body and soule and these promises and threatnings of God must be fulfilled For the certainty of them is unchangeable But they shall not be fulfilled if the dead shall not rise Seeing therefor God doth most certainly in his good time accomplish that which he promiseth to the godly and menaceth to the wicked it followeth of necessity that the dead must rise againe 3. The mercy of God is perfect as which extendeth it selfe to the whole man and which will have us wholly saved therefore our bodies also shall rise againe 4. The mercy and love of God towards the godly is perpetuall and unchangeable so that what he once will of his fatherly love towards them performe unto them the same he ever will But he will have the godly saved both in soule and body therefore they must be both in soule and body even whole saved and therefore that they be whole saved they must needs rise againe 5. The perfect justice of God requireth that the same wholly whereby the wicked sin should be punisht with eternall paines But they sin both in their whole body and in their soule Therefore their bodies must be raised againe because they ought no lesse in body then in soule to suffer eternall paines 6. Christ is risen therefore we all shall rise This sequell is most sure For 1. Christ therefore rose againe that he might raise us 2. Christ is our head and we be his members Seeing then Christ our head is risen we also his members doubtlesse shall rise for the glory of the head requites this that he have his members sutable and in like condition with him Wherefore if the members should continue rotten the head should not be glorious 3. The same spirit is in us which is in Christ raised he joyneth and uniteth us with Christ and worketh the same in us which he doth in Christ nor is at any time not like himselfe But he hath raised Christ therefore also he will raise us 7. It is said that Christ shall have an everlasting kingdome but this he shall not have Psal 45. if our bodies should alwayes continue in death for neither would it suffice that our soules are immortall or eternall without our bodies For that Christs kingdome may be eternall he must have eternall subjects and those wholly eternall Therefore our bodies also shall rise that so we whole may be subject eternally unto Christ our King 8. Christ is a perfect Saviour because he hath saved and reconciled to God whole man Therefore our corrupt bodies also shall be raised by Christ and rise againe 9. Christ is not of lesse force to save then Adam to lose nay Christ restored to us all that which Adam lost and destroyed by sinning yea farre more and greater things by his merit Adam lost from us among other gifts the eternall life also of our bodies therefore Christ hath restored it unto us and consequently our bodies shall certainly rise againe 10. He published his law unto man after the fall therefore he will have man once keep it But that is not done in this life therefore it shall be done in the life to come and therefore men shall rise againe 11. The wages of sinne is death Therefore sin being abolished Rom. 3.23 death shall be abolished and death being abolished we shall rise againe to everlasting life 12. To this end also our bodies were made that in them as temples the holy Ghost might dwell for ever therefore our bodies shall rise and live for ever 4. What bodies shall rise The same bodies shal● rise THe bodies which shall rise shall be not onely humane bodies but even the selfe-same also which we now in our life time carry about with us and not others created of Christ as the Anabaptists will have it For Job saith In this flesh shall I see my Lord Job 19.26 Ephel 6.8 1 Cor. 15.53 I
holy Ghost For the holy Ghost by the Word worketh in us the knowledge of God and his will that knowledge hath following it a study and desire more and more to know God and live according to the prescript of his will John 6.68 1 Cor. 4.15 Rom. 1.16 Rom. 10.17 Whither shall we go say the Disciples Thou hast the words of life In Christ Jesus I have begotten you through the Gospel The Gospel is the power of God unto salvation to every one that beleeveth Faith is by hearing and hearing by the Word of God And this is the ordinary manner of giving us this beginning of everlasting life namely by the Word mediately But there is another manner of giving the same unto infants and by miracles such as was the conversion of the Theefe on the Crosse of Paul and of Cornelius Here the ordinary way onely is respected which is proper unto men of yeeres 6. When everlasting life is given Everlasting life is begun here by conversion IN this life is given the beginning of eternall life but the consummation and accomplishment thereof shall be given us after this life howbeit to none but such as have received the beginning thereof in this life For unto whom life everlasting is not begun to be given here that is who beginneth not here to feele a part of eternall life to wit faith and conversion unto him life everlasting shall never be given after this life 2 Cor. 5.2 Mat. 13.12 Therefore we sigh desiring to be cloathed with our house which is from heaven because that if we be cloathed we shall not be found naked To him that hath it shall be given and from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath The consummation of everlasting life is after this life It is consummated in the world to come by glorification for unto whom everlasting life is begun to be given here to them it shall be given finished complete and consummated And of this consummation there are two degrees one when the soule loosed from the body is presently carried into heaven because by the death of the body we are freed from all infirmity the other degree is greater higher and more glorious when in the resurrection of the bodies the soules shall againe be united to their bodies because after the resurrection we shall be made glorious and shall see God even as he is He that heareth my word and beleeveth in him that sent me hath everlasting life John 5.24 and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life Now are we the sons of God 1 John 3.2 but yet it doth not appeare what we shall be and we know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is 7. Whether we can in this life be assured of everlasting life IN this life not onely we may but we ought also to be assured and certaine of everlasting life otherwise we shall never have it For it is given to all the faithfull and to them onely Farther to beleeve eternall life is to be assuredly perswaded that not onely some shall be partakers thereof but that I also am one of that number which is to be observed against Papisticall diffidence and uncertainty For we must be certaine of our finall perseverance Being justified by faith we have peace towards God Rom. 5.1 John 10.28 I give unto them eternall life Now he should not give eternall life if he gave a doubtfull and uncertaine life which might be interrupted The gifts and calling of God are without repentance Rom. 11.19 John 10.28 Phil. 1.6 2 Tim. 1.12 No man shall take my sheep out of my hand He which hath begun a good work in you he shall perfect it I know whom I have beleeved and I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed to him against that day He that beleeveth knoweth that he doth beleeve This assurance and certainty is grounded on sure and strong reasons The reasons whereon out assurance of everlasting life is grounded 1. The author of everlasting life is unchangeable even God himselfe 2. Gods election is eternall and also unchangeable 3. Christ is heard in all things which he desireth of his Father But he prayed that his Father would save all those whom he had given him 4. God will not have us to pray for good things necessary to salvation with a condition but simply because he hath promised it John 17.11 24. 1 Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God remaineth sure with his seale The Lord knoweth who are his Wherefore to doubt of the perseverance and consummation of eternall life were to overthrow the faith and truth of God and to make void Christs intercession But whence may we be assured hereof Of the consummation of everlasting life we must be assured by the beginning thereof To every one that hath it shall be given The gifts of God are without repentance God is faithfull Therefore as he hath begun so will he perfect his work How we are assured of the beginning and consummation of eternal life in us Mar. 9.24 Of the beginning of eternall life we are assured chiefly by a true faith which withstandeth doubts that is which hath a purpose to resist the Divell and crieth I beleeve Lord help my unbeliefe Moreover by a full perswasion of the good will of God towards us and our consent herein which is two wayes 1. By the peace of conscience towards God which we have being justified by faith 2. By true repentance and a full purpose and intent to live according to Gods commandements For faith cannot be without repentance Whose house we are Rom. 5.1 Heb. 3.6 if we hold fast the confidence and the rejoycing of the hope unto the end That which now hath been spoken of this Article doth sufficiently declare what it is To beleeve everlasting life namely assuredly and certainly to be perswaded What it is to beleeve everlasting life 1. That after this life there shall be also a life wherein the Church shall be glorified and God magnified of her everlastingly 2. That I also am a member of this Church and therefore partaker of everlasting life 3. That I also in this life have and injoy the beginning of everlasting life Quest 59. But when thou beleevest all these things what profit redoundeth thence unto thee Answ That I am righteous in Christ before God and an heire of eternall life a Heb. 2.4 Rom. 2.17 John 3.36 Quest 60. How art thou righteous before God Ans Onely by faith in Christ Jesus b Rom. 3.21.22 24. 5.1 Gal. 2.16 Ephes 2.8 9. Phil. 3.9 so that although my conscience accuse me that I have grievously trespassed against all the commandements of God and have not kept one of them c Rom. 3.9 c. and further am as yet prone to all evill d
remission of sinnes and eternall life freely for Christs sake and we binde our selves to the yeelding and performance of faith and new obedience Therefore they confirme not neither assure them of Gods grace who are without faith and repentance or use other rites or to some other end then God hath appointed Moreover It is superstitious and idolatrous to attribute the testification of Gods grace either to the externall work and rite without the promise or to any other works invented by men Wherefore the abusing or not right using of the Sacraments hath not the grace of God accompanying it or assureth any man of it As it is said Circumcision is profitable Rom. 2.15 if thou doe the law c. The confirmation of the eleventh conclusion The figure of Baptisme being correspondent to the Arke of Noah doth also save us not the outward washing away of the filth of the flesh but the inward testifying of a good conscience towards God The bread which we breake is it not the communion of the body of Christ And seeing the Sacraments are an externall instrument whereby the holy Ghost fostereth and preserveth faith it followeth that they serve for the salvation of Beleevers as doth the Word But contrary the wicked through the abuse of the Sacraments and the contempt of Christ and his benefits which are offered unto them in his Word and Sacraments and through the confession of his doctrine which they imbrace not with a true faith purchase unto themselves the anger of God and everlasting pains according to the saying of the Prophet Esay 66.3 He that killeth a Bullock is as if he slew a man he that sacrificeth a sheep 1 Cor. 11.20 is as if he cut off a dogs neck And S. Paul Whosoever shall eate this bread and drink the cup of the Lord unworthily shall be guilty of the body and bloud of the Lord. But the things signified because they are received by faith only and are either proper unto salvation or salvation it selfe as Christ and his benefits they cannot be received of the wicked neither can they at all be received but unto salvation The confirmation of the twelfth conclusion A promise and the signe of a promise having a condition of faith and fidelity adjoyned unto it are ratified whensoever the condition is performed But such is that promise which is signified and confirmed by the Sacraments therefore if in the use of them faith doth accompany which beleeveth the promise the things promised and signified are received together with the signes I might deale with thee as thou hast done when thou diddest despise the oath in breaking the covenant Ezek. 16.59 Neverthelesse I will remember my covenant made with thee in the dayes of thy youth and I will confirme unto thee an everlasting covenant The confirmation of the thirteenth conclusion The iterating of circumcision or baptisme hath beene no where received or admitted Neither is the reason hereof obscure or unknowne because those Sacraments were instituted to be an initiating or solemne receiving of men into the Church which is alwayes ratified to him that is penitent and persisteth therein But the use of other Sacraments is commanded to be iterated as of the Sacrifices the Passeover worshipping at the Arke Cleansings as also of the Lords Supper The cause is because they are a testimony that the covenant which was made in circumcision and baptisme is ratified and firme to him that repenteth And this exercising of our faith is alwayes necessary The confirmation of the fourteenth conclusion That there is one common definition agreeing to the Sacraments both of the Old and New Testament hath bin shewed before That the difference of them consisteth in the number and forme of the rites is apparent by a particular enumeration of them For in the New Testament it is manifest that there are but two because there are no other ceremonies commanded of God and having annexed unto them the promise of grace And that the old Sacraments signifie Christ which hereafter should be exhibited the new Christ who already was exhibited is apparent by the interpretation delivered of them in holy Writ whereof we spake in the definition Now they differ in clearnesse because in the New Testament the ceremonies are purer and signifying things complete and perfect In the Old were moe rites shadowing things to come all the circumstances whereof were not as yet declared The confirmation of the fifteenth conclusion What the Ministers doe in Gods name in the administration of the Sacraments and also that God by the Sacraments signifieth that is teacheth offereth promiseth us the communion of Christ was declared in the second confirmation Hereof followeth the next which is that the holy Ghost doth move our hearts by them to beleeve For seeing the Sacraments are a visible promise they have the same authority of confirming faith in us which the promise it self made unto us hath Of this followeth the third For that which serveth for the kindling or raising of faith in us the same also serveth for the receiving of the communion of Christ and his benefits And because we attaine to this by faith therefore it is said The bread is the communion of the body of Christ Baptisme doth save us Neither yet doth the holy Ghost alwayes confirme and establish faith by them as the examples of Simon Magus and of infinite others doe shew That the use of them hurteth without faith hath been proved in the second conclusion The confirmation of the sixteenth conclusion The Sacraments without the word going before doe neither teach nor confirme our faith because the meaning and signification of them is not understood except in be declared by the word neither can the signe confirme any thing except the thing be first promised An example hereof are the Jewes who observed and now doe observe the ceremonies but adjoyn thereto the not-understood promise of the grace and benefits of Christ Without the word those who are of understanding are not saved either by doctrine as by the ordinary means or by an internall and extraordinary knowledge He that beleeveth not in the Son John 3.18 Rom. 1.17 is already condemned Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God But they may be saved without the Sacrament because although by some necessity they be deprived of these yet they may beleeve as the theefe did on the Crosse Or if they be infants according to the condition of their age they are sanctified as John in the womb and many infants also in the womb who died before the day of circumcision The word also is to be preached unto the wicked because it is appointed to convert them But the Sacraments are to be administred unto them who are acknowledged for members of the Church because they are instituted for the use of the Church only Thou ma●st be baptized if thou beleevest Acts 8.37 The confirmation of the seventeenth conclusion The confirmation thereof is manifest
lewd servant unto obedience The reason is because Christ beginneth a voluntary and free obedience in us by his Spirit so that we yield voluntary obedience unto the Law Rom. 6.14 Of this part of Christian liberty the Apostle speaketh Sin shall not have dominion over you for ye are not under the law but under grace Which liberty and exemption from the Law that it is he afterwards unfoldeth at large in the whole seventh Chapter of that Epistle and else-where saith The law is not given unto a righteous man 1 Tim. 1.9 Gal 5.23 And againe speaking of them which are under the Spirit Against such there is no law Object The Law and the Prophets continued untill John the Baptist came if therefore then first the morall law was abrogated as touching Condemnation when Christ was manifested in the flesh it followeth that the faithfull were under condemnation who lived before the coming of Christ How the Law was abrogated to the Fathers of the old Testament how to us the children of the new Ans The Law was abrogated as touching condemnation as well unto the beleevers in the Old Testament as to them who are beleevers in the New To them who lived in the Old as touching the power and efficacy of Christ to these in the new as touching his fulfilling and exhibiting How the morall Law is not abrogated namely touching obedience Now the Morall Law or Decalogue is not abrogated as touching obedience but God alwaies even at this day no lesse than in ancient times exacteth as well at the hands of the regenerate as unregenerate that they performe obedience unto his Law The reasons hereof are strong and cleare The first is drawn from the end for which Christ delivered us from the curse of the Law For the Son of God was not therefore made Mediatour Three proofes hereof 1. From the end of our redemption took the forme of a servant became obedient unto his Father even unto the death of the Crosse and redeemed us from the curse of the Law that we should continue and persist in sins and enmity with God but that he might deliver us from sin reconcile us unto God and make us againe like unto God and the Temple of God If then he had this end for which he did deliver us from the curse of the Law hee did not withall take away the bond of our obedience For this is the Mediatours office to expiate and doe away sins and to bring to passe that hereafter the party offended be no more offended by that party which had offended From our duty who receive a greater portion of Gods blessings than other men How much the more and greater Gods benefits are towards us so much the more are wee bound to yield thankefulnesse unto him that is to live according to his will and Law But they who are justified and regenerated by faith in Christ have received moe and greater benefits than others For these are evermore added unto their creation and preservation and other benefits common to the wicked with the godly Therefore we are more bound after than before regeneration and justification to yield and performe obedience unto Gods Law Testimony of Scriptu●e Mat. 5.17 Many testimonies confirme the same as Think not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy them but to fulfill them This is meant of all the parts of the Law but most especially of the morall Law which Christ hath fulfilled foure waies 1. By his owne righteousnesse and perfect conformity with the Law For Christ onely hath perfectly performed such obedience as the Law requireth both because hee was the Sonne of God and conceived by the holy Ghost and also because he could not have satisfied for us Heb. 7.26 except himself were free from all spot or staine of sin Such an High Priest it became us to have which is holy blamelesse undefiled separate from sinners 2. By paying sufficient punishment for our sins Rom. 8.3 For that which was impossible to the Law inasmuch as it was weake because of the flesh God sending his owne Sonne in the similitude of sinfull flesh for sinne condemned sinne in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in us which walk not after the flesh but after the spirit 2 Cor. 5.2 He made him to be sin for us which knew no sin that we should be made the righteousnesse of God in him And this fulfilling of the types of the Law and the paying of that punishment which wee did owe is that very abrogating of the Law whereof wee have spoken 3. Christ fulfilleth the Law in us by his Spirit reforming us by him unto the image of God that we also may in this life begin internall and externall obedience which the Law requireth of us and may perform the same whole and entire in the life to come Now both these to wit punishment paid for us by Christ and righteousnesse begun in us are comprehended and understood by Saint Paul when hee saith Rom. 6.6 8.4 That the righteousnesse of the Law is fulfilled in us which walke after the Spirit And of the giving or the holy Ghost and of regeneration which is wrought for and by Christ Saint Paul purposely intreateth Romanes 6. and 7.4 Christ fulfilled the Law by teaching it that is by re purging and purifying it from errours and corruptions and by restoring the true doctrine and understanding thereof which hee doth Matth. 5.6 and 7. If then Christ both teacheth and restoreth the obedience of the Law in us he doth not abolish the Law as concerning obedience The same doth Paul teach Doe we then make the law of none effect through faith God forbid yea Rom. 3.31 we establish the law Now by faith or by righteousnesse and justice of faith By faith the Law is three waies established the Law is established three waies 1. In confessing or approving the judgement and accusation of the Law against us as that we doe not yield due obedience to the Law and therefore are guilty of damnation for indeed we seek for righteousnesse without our selves in Christ 2. In satisfying because through faith is applied to us Christs satisfaction equivalent to eternall punishment which the Law required of us not performing perfect obedience by meanes of which satisfaction it cometh to passe that indeed not through the Law but yet neither against the Law but with the Law which Christ by his perfect obedience satisfied on our behalf we are justified before God 3. Through the beginning of new obedience in this life and the accomplishing of the same in the life to come Act. 15.9 Purifying their hearts by faith Wee through the spirit waite for the hope of righteousnesse Gal. 5.5 through faith More briefly to comprehend this large discourse The Law is established by faith both in regard that the doctrine of
157. Patience What. 539. Perfection In what sense the Scripture doth attribute perfection to the works of the Regenerate 94. How God is most perfect in himselfe 155. Whether our conversion hath perfection in this life 505. Whether our works be perfectly good and being not so how they can please God 510. 511. Whether those that are converted may perfectly keep the commandements of God 615. 616. Permit Permission Three causes why God is said to permit sinne 201. Gods permission of sin confirmed by Scripture 202. Gods permission is the withdrawing of his grace ibid. Person Of the three persons in the Trinity and why named three being but one in substance 146. What a person is 170. The difference betweene Essence and Person ibid. 171. The reason why this difference is to be held ibid. What reference Essence hath to Person 172. The properties of the Persons are distinct and divers 257. 258. Whether Christ be one person or more 275. 276. Objections against it answered ibid. c. Philosophy It s nature and lawfull and fruitfull use thereof 3. The differences betweene it and Church doctrine ibid. worlds creation unknowne to Philosophers 182. Their Arguments against it ibid. Prayer What 624. Foure sorts of it ibid. why prayer is necessary for Christians ibid. Eight conditions of true prayer 626. A difference of things to be prayed for 627. A difference betweene the prayer of the godly and of the wicked 628. The Lords Prayer expounded ibid. c. The causes why Christ taught us that forme ibid. c. Predestination Vide Election Nine circumstances thereof 352. c. what 355. the difference between it and Providence ibid. Its causes 355. 356. The effects of it 357. Whether unchangeable 357. 358. whether we can be certaine of our predestination 358. Presence A five-fold maner of Christs presence 317. Pride What. 538. Priest Priesthood What Christs Priesthood is 231. The high Priests prerogative under the law ibid. Three differences betweene the Priests and Prophets under the law 232. Christ the true prefigured high-priest ibid. Foure differences betweene Christ and other priests 232. 233. What a Christians priesthood is and its particulars 236. How Christ maketh us Priests ibidem Promises Gods promises not unprofitable to the unregenerate 91. Prophanenesse What. 541. Prophet Propheticall What Christs propheticall function is and the signification of the name Prophet 229. Two kinds of Prophets ibid. Foure testimonies of the truth of the Prophets doctrine of old ib. What a Prophet of the New Testament is 230. Christ a Prophet from the beginning ibidem Six differences betweene Christs being a Prophet and others before him ibid. c. Providence What Gods providence is 194. 197. The proofes of it 194. 195. 196. 202. Two parts of it 197. The degrees of Gods providence and testimonies of it 203. Proofes of his generall and particular providence 204. 205. c. Places of Scripture wrested against Gods providence 218. What the knowledge of Gods providence profiteth us ibid. Just causes why it may be knowne 219. The deniall of it shaketh all the grounds of Religion ibid. Punishment How God may be said to will punishment 68. The degrees of punishments of the ungodly 103. 104. The conditions of him that may be punished for another 113. The evill of punishment is a morall good and is done by God for three causes 199. Q. QUickning How the spirit quickneth pag. 23. Three parts of quickning 503. why the latter part of our conversion is called quickning 504. Quietnesse Two significations of the word in Philosophy 183. R REason How far we listen to Reason in divine matters 443. Reconcile It hath foure parts 120. No reconciliation without a Mediatour ibid. Regeneration It is but begun in this life pag. 55. The regenerate lose the grace of God in part but not whole in this life 56. The good workes of the regenerate not perfect in this like 93. 94. In what sense the Scripture attributes perfection to the works of the regenerate 94. Regeneration doth assure us of Justification 95. Christs Godhead proved by our regeneration 251. 252. Whether the regenerate can perfectly keep the law 616. A threefold difference betweene the regenerates and unregenerates sinning ibid. Repentance How God is said to repent 157. Reprobation How reprobates are said to be lightned and sanctified 61. Resurrection What Christs resurrection profiteth us 306. The manifold circumstances of his resurrection 306. 307. 308. The fruits of it 310. Five Reasons for our resurrection 311. more of it 364. 365. c. What it is and the errours concerning it 370. Proofes of its certainty ibid. c. The same body shall rise 372. How when and by what power the resurrection shall be 373. For what end and to what estate we shall rise 374. Reward No good worke of the creature meriteth reward pag. 217. 387. Three causes why God promiseth to reward our works 388. Riches Whether it be lawfull to desire them 644. Or to lay them up for hereafter 645. Righteousnesse The righteousnesse of God both generall and particular 160. How we are righteous before God 379. What righteousnesse is in generall and how manifold 380. Vide Justice Imputed righteousnesse is eternall 392. S SAbbath Three causes why the commandement of the Sabbath was so severely commanded 576. What the Sabbath is and how kept both by God and men ibid. What works are forbidden on the Sabbath 577. Two reasons why our children and families must keepe the Sabbath ibid. Objections about the Sabbath answered 577. 578. Why our cattell must rest on the Sabbath 578. How manifold the Sabbath is 578. 579. Many Sabbaths in the Old Testament 579. A Table of the distinction of the Sabbath 580. How the Sabbath belongeth to us Christians ibid. A double difference betweene the Christian and Jewish observation of the Sabbath 582. The causes why the Sabbath was instituted ibid. How the Sabbath is sanctified and how profaned 583. 584. 485. Saints What is meant by the Communion of Saints 360. Popish objections for invocation of Saints answered 562. 563. 564. c. Sacraments They are signes of the Covenant 124. 393. The originall word Sacrament what 394. It s definition with its difference from other signes 395. Their ends 396. 397. Sacrament and Sacrifice how different 397. How the old and new Sacraments differ 398. The difference of the signes and things signified in the Sacraments 399. What is the right and lawfull use of Sacraments 341. What the wicked receive in the Sacraments ibid. in what the Word and Sacraments agree and in what they differ 402. their number 403. Vide Baptisme and Supper of the Lord. Satisfaction Of Legall and Evangelicall satisfaction 108. We can make no satisfaction for two reasons 112. No other creature could satisfie for man but man 113. Meerely God could not satisfie for man 114. Christs satisfaction is made ours two waies 383. When we may be assured of Christs satisfaction imputed unto us 384. Why and how 384. 385. Sacrifice