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A25294 The substance of Christian religion, or, A plain and easie draught of the Christian catechisme in LII lectures on chosen texts of Scripture, for each Lords-day of the year, learnedly and perspicuously illustrated with doctrines, reasons, and uses / by that reverend and worthy laborer in the Lord's vineyard, William Ames ... Ames, William, 1576-1633. 1659 (1659) Wing A3003; ESTC R6622 173,739 322

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Precept The thirty eighth Lords day On Exod. 20. 8 9 10 11. Verse 8. Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy 9. Six dayes shalt thou labour and do all thy work 10. But the seventh day is the Sabbath of the LORD thy Gods in it thou shalt not do any work thou nor thy son nor thy daughter thy man-servant nor thy maid-servant nor thy cattel nor thy stranger that is within thy gates 11 For in six dayes the LORD made heaven and earth the sea and all that in them is and rested the seventh day Wherefore the LORD blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it THis fourth command which is about the time of more solemn worship is explicated 1. generally vers 8. Remember c. 2. speciall vers 9 10. that this is the seventh or one of seven whereunto is adjoyned the duty about keeping this day This duty consists of two parts to wit of rest and of the Sanctification of that rest the rest is a ceasing from all our workes and is illustrated from its causes by a distribuition neither thou nor thy son c. The sanctifying of this rest is consecrating or holy application of it to Gods worship And this sentence is not onely proposed but also confirmed and that with a double reason whereof 1. Is taken from a tacit comparison of the greater God hath promised us six dayes for our works and therefore by very good right and reason he may challenge the seventh to himself to be consecrated to his worship ●… Reason is taken from the exemplar cause because God by his own example of resting on the seventh day went before us as it were to give us a coppy to follow 3 Reason is from the efficient that is Gods institution or appointment which consisteth of two parts sanctifying of it and blessing it The sanctifying of it was the separating of this day from a worldly use to an holy The blessing of it was the promise to blesse them that rightly blesse this day Doct. 1. Certaine times are both privately and publickly to be appointed and set apart for more solemn worship This is understood in the command by that Synecdoche that names the special for the general Those times in general are due unto publick worship which are most agreeable to the societies in which we live And to the private exercises of godliness by night order some part of the morning and of the evening time is due and this is alwayes the practice of the Prophets and Apostles approved in Scripture and proposed unto us as an example to be followed Reas. 1. Because we ought to have this care that we orderly and decently worship God which cannot be without setting apart such a certaine time 2. Because our vanities and straglingnes of mind and forgetfulness about spirituall duties requires of us the help of such an ordinance as this 3. Because these appointed times keep us from many sins while in our thoughts we are either preparing our selves for these exercises or else keep still the fresh remembrance and power of them in our memories Use is of Reproofe against their negligence who though they professe themselves to be worshippers of God yet can scarce finde any time to give God the worship that is due to him Doct. 2. That one day of seven be holily observed is of morall and perpetuall duty as with us the Lords Day Reas. 1. Because this is expresly commanded in this morall law as spoken immediatly by God himself together with the other commands and written by his own finger on tables of stone as they were which things were onely proper to the morall law Reas. 2. Because it was thus ordain'd from the beginning of the Creation Reas. 3. Because it is never lesse necessary that some seventh day be observed than it was at the first institution And that the Lords day or first of the week or seventh is now by Divine authority appointed to us that it be holily kept appeareth 1. From the ground and reason of the change because as God from the beginning appointed the seventh day of the week or septenary circuit of dayes for his rest from Creating of things So Christ appointed the first of the week or of the seventh days of ordinary recourse because on that day he rested from his penall and afflictious labours of his humiliation or emptying himself whereby he restored and created the world as it were new again unto a better condition than it had lost 2. By the frequent apparitions of Christ in the convention of his Disciples on this day 3. From the sending and shedding abroad of the Holy-ghost on this day 4. By the practise of the Apostles 5. By Apostolike constitution 1 Cor 16. 6 From the very title and name of the Lords day that it hath in the New Testament 7. From the rigorous observation of this day in the Primitive Church by occasion whereof they were accounted worshippers of the sun because this first day of the week was by Heathens attributed to the Planet of the Sun as the rest were to the rest of the Planets Use Is of Exhortation that out of conscience towards God and obedience to this command we have a care of observing the Lords day Doct. 3. One part of our duty is that on the Lords day we cease from all our own works It is gathered from the Text In six dayes shalt thou doe all thy work but on the seventh day thou shal●… doe no work c. That is no work that is thme Now that work is said to be our work which neither directly belongs to the worship of God nor yet is otherways imposed upon us by any necessity from God but is chosen by our selves for some humane or worldly end Now such are 1. All our common and mer●…enary works 2 All things that call away our mind from that intention that is required unto the worship of God on that day though otherwaies they be not servile Yet such things are not forbidden as either belong unto common honesty or are of a very urgent and not of a made necessity of our own The reason of this rest is that we may be at convenient leisure for divine worship For worldly businesses do in divers wayes withstand this more solemn worship of God Reas. 1. Because the very external acts of both are for the most part such as that they cannot consist or stand together at one time Reas. 2. Because the minde being distracted with such worldly businesse cannot compose or settle it self in good order to perform solemn worship to God as it ought Reas. 3. Because the taste and savour and power of holy exercises is impaired and dulled at least or blunted by mixture of such things with them which in comparison should be but vile to them Use Is of Reproof of such as easily break the rest of this day either by their ordinary and vulgar occupations or with merchandizes or with sports or plays or
with troublesome and long feastings on it c. Doct. 4. The other part of our duty on the Lords day is to sanctifie this our rest that is to apply the leisure that we have to Gods worship as well publikely as privately Duties of this kinde are first a preparing of our minds to Gods solemn worship Secondly Hearing of his Word Thirdly Solemn prayers Fourthly Partaking of the Sacraments Fifthly Works of Charity Sixthly Meditation and conference about holy things Seventhly A religious considering of the works of God of Creation and Providence and even of such as occasionally we then hear or see though they be otherwayes worldly Reas. 1. Because in such duties we make profession of Religion and of that honour that is due unto God which therefore is to him honourable and accepted Reas. 2. Because by this means we build up our selves and advance our communion that we have with God For seeing that by worldly occupations through the six days of the week our mind is somewhat pressed towards the earth it was by a most wise purpose and counsel of God ordain'd that every seventh day at least again they should be lifted up to heaven and sent up thitherwards by all such means that they might be restored to their former step or degree from which they had been declining And seeing we contract also some filthynesse from such worldly businesses on the Lords day they should be wiped off and we cleansed from them by the exercises of sanctification And seeing many occasions fall on the other days which bring their own difficulties and tentations with them on this day we ought to be well furnished and armed so that it ought to be our day of spirituall mustering or weapon showing and a day of lustration A cleansing our selves from all filthinesses before contracted and a day of our ascending into heaven in as far as our Faith and Charity with other heavenly gifts on this day should be singularly kindled in our hearts Reas. 3. Because by this means also we build up one another in the practise of our Religion so that he who hears the preaching of the word though he learn nothing himself yet he teaches others some good thing even in this that he hears and thereby presses that he both should do so and other too So hereby he teaches others that God is to be solemnly worshipped and his word with reverence to be heard Use 1. Is of Admonition that we beware of the neglect of these duties which can not consist with any vigour either of religion to God or of love and care of our own salvation Or lastly of love and christian affection towards the Church and our neighbours Use 2. Is of Direction that according to this rule we judge of the duties which on this day we perform about Gods worship For all of them in common should rise up so high as to a sanctifying of this day and this sanctifying again of the day depends on our sanctifying of the name of God and our advancing of our own salvation Unlesse therefore we seek such fruits in our consciences we have therein just cause of great humiliation but if we feel them in any degree we have as great reason to give the Lord as great thanks for it Doct. 5. It is the duty of every Christian that not onely themselves sanctifie that day but also that they make all such to do it as far as in them lies that are under their power This is hence collected because this commandement is in a singular manner directed to such as are over others Magistrates Parents Masters c. Neither thou nor thy son Reas. 1. Because such servile works as are forbidden on that day are for the most part made to be done by command of Fathers to Children Masters to Servants Magistrates to Subjects So that though they be performed by others yet the works are theirs at whose command they are done Reas. 2. Because the sanctifying of this day was ordained as well for the cause and use of Sons and Servants as of Parents and Masters Reas. 3. Because it is the duty of all Superiours to further the salvation as much as they can of all that are under them and to procure by them and from them that honour to God that is due to him from them Use 1. Is of Reproof against that most unworthy carelesness of men who as they are not diligent enough themselves in doing their own duty on this behalf so they think that they are free from all charge of children and servants about this matter Use 2. Is of Direction to Inferiors that are under others power 1. That herein they willingly obey their Superiours when they call them to serve God 2. Yea that they be thankfull towards them for this cause 3. That such as have the liberty should chuse out such Superiours to be under as from whom they may look for this help Doct. 6. For keeping of this duty we must have a special remembrancer Remember that ye keep holy c. Reas. 1. Because this command is not written naturally on our hearts as the other but it was a command of institution rather than of natural light Reas. 2. Because the command concernes not all dayes and houres but one special time therefore we may the more easily forget Reas. 3. Because the many businesses of this life do easily turne away our mindes from this duty unless with care and some diligence we set our selves to the contrary Reas. 4. Because that we may rightly and conveniently sanctify this day we had need before-hand to think of the same and set our worldly business in such order that they be no hinderance to us in that day to sanctify it arightly and so also on other dayes be busied about them that when that day comes we may be disposed and ready with freedome of minde and chearfulnesse to lay them aside and betake our selves to and go about the solemne worship of God with our whole mindes Use Is of Reproof against the lazinesse and carelesnesse of many who are so farre from an holy remembering of this day that they remember it rather to this end that they may bestow it on their private pleasures or other businesses of their owne on which they cannot have the leisure to bestow any other day For if they must run abroad a little or some sport and easy journey must be made or some trouble-feast to be held before any day else they chuse the Lords-day for these as if otherwayes that day should be lost to them as an idle day if it were onely bestowed on Gods solemne worship Others there be that do not so much as remember the day of the week unless by the Bell they be put in rememberance of it The thirty nineth Lords day Exod. 20. 12. Honour thy Father and thy Mother That thy dayes may be long upon the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee IN the fifth command of the Decalogue
termination or resting is made by the Father For thus through the Holy Spirit his teaching and assisting or helping us we begin to pray that is conceive and make our prayers here and our prayers so conceived or made ascend and enter into Heaven by Jesus Christ and lastly they are ultimately heard and accepted by the Father The ninth Lords day Rev. 4. 11. Thou art worthy O Lord that thou shouldst have glory and honour and power because thou didst create all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created A Reason is given in these words why all glory should be given to God and it is taken from the effects For that is more praise-worthy that it be taken from the effects because the power and virtue of the cause whereunto the praise is due exists and is properly seen in its effects The effect of God is creation which in this place is illustrated First By his effects which are declared by the universality conjoyned with them in these words because thou didst create all things Secondly From his manner of creating that God out of a wise purpose created all things and for thy pleasure c. Thirdly From the adjunct of duration or lasting and for thy pleasure they are and were created For one thing is understood by the words they are and another by thou createdst c. as might be evident from the tense thou createdst in the preter-tense they now are in the present-tense by which the duration of things is evident Doct. 1. All things that now are in the world were produced and made out of nothing by God Reas. 1. Scriptures evidenceth this truth Reas. 2. Partly also all nations testify it because there is no Nation which believeth not and tells us not something concerning its beginning Reas. 3. The world it self witnesseth this of it self for as much as in all creatures almost there appeareth such imperfection in their power and mutability whereunto they are subject that of themselves they could not have their own act and first existence but of necessity they must depend upon some pure and perfect act and that is God Reas. 4. The world also witnesseth this same for as much as in its parts a certain perfection appeareth which is such as that it cannot be the first and yet it is such as must needs be from the first perfection Such are these perfections that use to be observed in this sentence whereby all things are said to be made in number weight and measure Where by measure is meant the perfection that each thing hath in it self and number that which is referred to others as to defect or excess and weight that of motion and inclination that all have to their own ends and uses as well particular to themselves as common to others and the whole Reas. 5. Lastly all right reason confirmes the same because in all order of causes and things existent common reason brings us to one first cause and to one first existence Besides it implies a manifest contradiction to conceive the world to have been eternal For if the world was from eternity then infinite dayes were before this day and so these dayes are not yet ended and consequently this day exists not because it cannot exist but after the other dayes before it were ended and gone Also if the world was from eternity there was no one day of the world before there was a thousand years of the same world because in eternity no point or moment of time can be defined before which there were not many thousand of years But this is a manifest contradiction that one year of the world that is made up of many dayes should be together at once with the first day or that there is no day of any year before which there was not a thousand years or lastly that there were as many thousands of years already as there were dayes in the world Use 1. Is of Instruction that in this part of our faith we study more and more solidity to ground and strengthen our selves because this ground being well laid our faith and affiance doth much more easily freely make progress about all such things as God hath revealed in his Word that either he hath done or will do about this world or some parts of it or other things that require the like might and power to that which was snewed in the creation of the world Use 2. Is of Admonition That we suffer not our mindes to cleave to this world or stick there but that we lift them up higher and adhere to him that made the world For it were a very great folly and perverseness if after we know that all these things were made by God we love the world better than God and for the love of the world should forsake God Doct. 2. God of his wise purpose and good pleasure created all things not out of any necessity It is gathered from these words and for or by thy pleasure or will c. There be some Philosophers that have said that all created things do come from God by way of emanation as little rivulets come and flow from their Fountain But that which doth proceed in this kinde must be part of that River from whence it flows which cannot properly be affirmed of things created if we reflect on God the Creatour Others are of opinion that the universe came from the Creatour even as the forme or fashion of him that looketh into a glass passeth from him into the glass Neither is this fitting to be affirmed because the universe is in no other subject as the shape is represented in a glass or mirrour Others have said that the universe went from God as a shadow from its body But this is altogether impertinent because a shadow goes not out of its body but followes it by a privation of light and by reason of the interposition of the opacous or gross body between the light and that place Others have said that the universe went forth from the Creatour like 〈◊〉 the footstep is made by the print of the foot of one that walkes But God had nothing without himself upon which by his walking he could imprint such a footstep All these had a good intention though they spake not accurately and properly enough For even as these comparisons are otherwise profitable to raise the minde of man in the contemplation of the eminency and majesty of God the Creatour For they point out the eminency of the Creatour to be incomparably greater than that of the whole universe it self and the vanity or at lest littleness of all things even such as seem greatest in the world if they be compared with Gods perfection For they are in respect of God as little streams or as little droppings are in respect of an ever and over-flowing Fountain or of the whole Sea or as a light resemblance of ones feature appearing in a glass is in respect of the solid substance or party
rest that belong to the real practice of religion Use 2. Of Direction that we lean not to our own or to other mens wisdome and providence but to apply our selves alwayes to lay hold on the providence of God that we may rely on it in all things Doct. 2. The providence of God includes in it self not onely the intention but also the attainment of its end For all things are no less certainly for him than they are either by him or from him Reas. 1. Because divine providence is most perfect and therefore alwayes attains what it intends properly For that is the imperfection of mans providence that it often attains not its end but is hindered by some other causes Reas. 2. Because if God attained not his purposed end then would he suffer some change in his blessedness and happiness of condition because it is a more blessed thing to have all ones desires and purposes fulfilled than to fall beside some of them Reas. 3. Because thence also would follow diminution of Gods eternal knowledge For no wise man proposes that to himself to be attained which from the beginning he knows that he shall never attain Use 1. Is of Refutation against such that turn divine providence into a humane providence Use 2. Of Consolation to all believers to whom God hath promised that he will provide and see for them so as all things at last shall turn to their good and eternal happiness Doct. 2. This providence of God extends it self to all things This is clear in the Text. Reas. 1. It is as much extended to all in the world as a good and wise master of a family hath a care as much as in him lieth of all things that are done in his house Reas. 2. It is extended to every thing that was created of God For in the same manner providence follows upon creation as the Apostle teacheth that provision doth upon procreation and seeing to children and others in the family 1 Tim. 5. 8. For God in some sort is called the Father of all things that he created Reas. 3. He hath a care of all noble and great things because the direction of such makes evidently for his glory Reas. 4. He cares also for the least and vilest things as the haires of our head and the like Mat. 10. 29. Because his wisdome being infinite these cannot escape it As from the greatness of them his being is not helped so from the littleness of them he is not hindered to care for them Oftentimes also from least things very great things depend and from vile or base things a noble change followeth either for the better or for the worse Reas 5 This providence is extended not onely to things that of necessity are or must be but to contingents also or things voluntary because contingents they are mutable and subject to many casualties coming from the course of many causes do most of all require the government of a superior power that they may be rightly ordered left all should run into confusion And voluntary things are of a most noble operation and of a higher nature than any natural things are and therefore most of all do depend upon Gods care for them and over them And these things are so cared for of God that their nature is not thereby overthrown but established and governed For it is rightly said of divine providence that though it attains to its end with strength yet even in doing so it disposeth all things sweetly that is according to the nature of all and each that he himself put into them in the Creation and yet conserves and governs by his providence For there is nothing in Gods providence that brings a necessity upon any thing properly so called but onely a certainty which no wayes withstand the nature of contingency and liberty Reas. 6. This providence is extended not onely to things good but also to evill nor yet onely to evills of punishment but also to evils of sin because though evill was not created of God and in this respect is not properly and in it self the subject of divine providence yet because it comes from the creature of God and of its owne nature disorders the work of God and is contrary to the order that God appointed and therefore ought of necessity to be ordered and limited of God otherwise the most noble work of God if he had no care to the contrary would run into great disorder and because there is in sins the greatest confusion and disorder therefore it is mo●…t of all required here that God exercise the power of his providence in regard of whom onely evill hath some kinde of good in it to wit as far as it is ordered by him and turned to good Use 1. Is of Exhortation that we may alwayes have our affiance firm and immovable and fixed on God because If God be for us who can be against us seeing all things are directed and governed of God Use 2. Is of Admonition that we depend upon no creature but upon God alone because all things are governed of God And then that we learn to reverence and fear God in all things seeing his providence that is to be reverenced and feared hath a hand in all things The eleventh Lords day Act. 4. 12. Neither is there salvation in any other For there is no other name under heaven given amongst men whereby we must be saved IN these words is contained the reason of the answer that Peter gave to the multitude being come together to the question they made about the good work done to the impotent man verse 9. The question was How he was healed and delivered from his sickness The answer was that he was made whole by the name of Jesus Christ that is by that divine authority and power whereof Jesus Christ was the author The reason of this answer and deed is taken from the nature and power of Jesus Christ which is shown declared in this verse from its effect to wit that it brings salvation as well spiritual as corporal to men And this effect is so affirmed of this cause that is of Christ that it is denied of all others So that there are two assertions contained in these words whereof the first is that Jesus Christ offereth salvation to men The second that no other can bring salvation The reason of both assertions is given because the name that is the power and authority of saving signified by the name Iesus is given to him and to none else For by name in this place as it is referred to Christ Christ himself is understood as signified by that name of Jesus or Saviour as by the name of God God himself is oft thus understood in Scripture but withall the power and authority of Christ to save is made known in more illustrious persons titles and solemn stiles whereby is declared their quality and what they import For the signification of the name Iesus is here
Lord who gave himself to the death for them Use 3. Is of Admonition that we subject our selves wholly to this Lord and his will and do him all honour in all and every part of our life and conversation The fourteenth Lords day Mat. 1. 20. But while he thought on these things behold the Angell of the Lord appeared to him in a dream saying Joseph thou son of David fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost THese words contain a reason given by the Angell of the Lord why Ioseph should receive his wife Mary And the reason is from removing the cause for which Ioseph might have been induced to put her away Now the cause was that she appeared to be with child by another than her own husband This cause is removed by putting another unblamable cause in its place and this cause is determined by the Angell to be the Holy Ghost The effect then is placed with its causes in this enunciation The effect then is Jesus Christ as to his humane nature The causes are two to wit the Holy Ghost and the Virgin Mary Mary is the efficient cause less principal and supplier also of the material cause but the Holy Ghost is the most principal and first cause which brings the less principal efficient and the material together into acting for the production of this effect Doct. 1. Christ the Son of God took unto himself into the unity of his person the nature of man truly such together with the conditions of humane weakness This is taught in the Text. When it is said In time a man born and begotten of a woman it is but the same expressed in these words of the Creed conceived of the Holy Ghost and born of the Virgin Mary c. He might have assumed the nature of another creature as of Angells he might also have assumed mans nature in its greatest perfection as Adam was made who was never in propriety of speech either conceived or born an infant But it was his pleasure to assume the nature of man truly such and in this manner of sinless imperfections and not of Angells Reas. 1. That he might do mans businesse and work that is make satisfaction for them and save them Reas. 2. He would also take this our nature in its weak and low condition First Because he would come down as farre as could be without sin into the same very place and condition out of which he intended to lift us up higher Secondly That by this means he might some way sanctify all the states and conditions of humane life least any might imagine that any such low estate separateth a man from communion with Christ. Thirdly That he might leave this to us in his own experience as a pledge of his knowledge and like sufferings and affections with us from whence he might look upon our infirmities Use 1. Is of Information for establishing our Faith on this behalf that we give no place to phantastical imaginations of Hereticks who impugne directly or indirectly and fight against the humane nature of Christ which sort of errours are some way countenanced by Papists in their Doctrine of Transubstantiation and by Ubiquitaries in theirs of Consubstantiation in as much as they attribute omnipresence and other the like divine attributes to the humane nature which is no way agreeable unto the same Use 2. Is of Exhortation to extoll and solemnly to praise the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ with all admiration and thanksgiving who not only vouchsafes to become man for us but also in the nature of man disdained not to become an infant to be conceived and born after our manner and to undergo other the like infirmities and humiliations for our sake it is that the Apostle points at Heb. 2. 16 17. Use 3. Is of Consolation that we should make no difference between an infant newly conceived or born and a perfect man or one of age or between any other conditions of the nature and life of man as to our interest in Christ as if any sinless condition of nature could make us less regardable by him 〈◊〉 exclude us from him For Christ descended to the lowest and imperfectest sinless degree and condition of the life of man in that he was 1. conceived and 2. shut up in his mothers womb the ordinary time of other births and 3. born Doct. 2. Christ assumed this humane nature from Mary as from his Mother For though he is said in the Text to be begotten in her yet elswhere he is said to be made after the flesh of the seed of a woman and a woman is said to have conceived him and to have born him as her son hence also he is called the son of Mary the son of David the son of Abraham and the like whereby that phrase is expounded and the truth of it confirmed Reas. 1. He should have been born of a woman as of his mother to the end that that first Evangelicall promise of the seed of the woman that was to tread down the serpent's head might be fulfilled Reas. 2. It was according to right that he was born of Mary that so it might be certain how he descended of the Tribe of Iudah and of the Family of David according to the promises and prophesies that went before of him Use 1. Is of Refutation against Anabaptists and such like who phantastically think that the humanity of Christ onely passed through Mary and was not assumed from her nature Of which imagination the first reason seems to have been that some simple men could not conceive how any could without sin be born of a woman after the fall But the Anabaptists afterwards though they took away this ground of their errour of denying original sin yet they adhered to this conclusion of meer wilfulness without any reason Use 2. Is of Information for directing our Faith about Christs son-ship For he is the Son of God and the son of man both yet so as he is not two sons but in a certain way twice one son in one person The first from eternity the next in time and consequently two wayes a son as both by generation eternal and by generation in time yet but one son of God and of man because but one person who according to his divine nature is the Son of God and according to his humane nature is the son of man So is every man twice a Son in essence first to father and paternal generation and then to mother and maternal generation Doct. 3. Christ was born of Mary remaining still a virgin after he was born This is gathered from the scope of the words the question being about this whether Mary were a virgin or no and the words of the Angell were to assure him that she was Reas. 1. Is that this might be a singular and miraculous signe to the whole house of Israel and this is it that is pointed
of the life and livelihood of each one in particular Reas. 2. Because sins that are committed against parents by whom we received this life are most sutably punished by the losse of this life and of the comforts thereof and there is a like reason sinnes against such as are placed in stead of parents Use. Is of Exhortation That by this and the like considerations we stir up our selves to a generall care of the performance of this duty The fortieth Lords day Exod. 20. 13. Thou shalt not kill IN this sixth command of the Decalogue Moses treats of the person and life of man and this is the reason why this command is placed before the other two following in which onely are ●…andled only the adjuncts of these For the person and life are of greater importance than the things that belongs to the person Therefore care was first ●…o be had of this and then of these The command is proposed negatively without the rest that follow when yet the praecedent were proposed affirmatively The reason is because in things belonging to the fifth precept privation is more used than contrariety that is it is more commendable not to give the honour to such as it is due than to load them with manifest injuries and reproaches But in these commands nothing is more usuall than that unto the duties commanded we run into the quite contrary faults as to hurt our neighbours life or his livelihood in his goods or to beare a false testimony against him or to desire any thing inordinately that is his It was therefore very sutable that in the fifth commandement the perfect duty opposite unto the privation of honour should affirmatively be commanded us but in the rest it was more necessary that we should be recalled from the contrary faults and sinnes by a negative prohibition Now the life for which provision is made in this command is both bodily and spirituall and both these ought to be considered not onely in their esteem and existence but also in all their accessarie qualities that makes for their comfort and conveniency Doct. 1. Out of conscience to God and his law we ought to abstaine from all such things as tend to the hurt of our neighbours bodily life This is gathered from the words of this command because while murther or killing is forbidden all causes also and effectuall occasions thereof are forbidden Reas. 1. Because man is made after the image of God and so any unjust violence done to the pe●…son or life of man makes against the honour of God Gen. 9. 6. c. Reas. 2. Because God alone is the father of spirits and the Lord of our life He doth therefore an injury to God who unjustly hurts his brothers life and arrogates to himself that power which belongs properly to no other but to God alone Reas. 3. Because this is the greatest wrong that can be done to a man as to this life to deprive him of life in which all other injuries are privatively contained Use 1. Is of Admonition That we diligently keep our selves not onely from effusion of blood in which consists the height of this injury but also from all cruelty and from all both words and deeds whereby mans life or the comforts and conveniencies of his life may be hurt or impaired Use. 2. Is of Admonition also that by like reason and conscience we keep our selves from all those inward dispositions and affections whereby men use to be led and provoked to hurt their neighbour unjustly as are 1. Anger 2. Hatred which is as it were a vehement anger now strengthned and rooted in the minde whence it is that men wish great evils to such as they hate and that constantly form which affection indeavour follow 's and from endeavour the act it self of hurting 3. Envy whereby men so repine at others good estates that they wish them worse or some evil 4 Desire of revenge whereby men use to render evil for evil and that as it is evil For although the desire of restitution of what is taken away or of satisfaction for wrong or of chastisement or punishment against such or such an one that hath offended be honest sometimes and laudable to wit because and when some evill in these and the like is wished to the party not as evil but as it tends to his good and so as it may be good for him Yet desire of revenge whereby we desire some evill to another as it is and may be evill to him onely without any reference to his good can never be either honest laudable nor lawfull Doct. 2. But most of all we ought to keep our selves from such things whereby the life of the soul of our brother is 〈◊〉 This is gathered from the words of the Text because of all other this is the deadl●…est sort of killing a man of which also the Scripture admonisheth us in the same phrase whereby bodily killing is forbidden I will require his blood at thy hands Ezek. 36. Yet this difference there is between bodily and spiritual killing that no man can be spiritually killed or murthered by violence and meer force as bodily many are Reas. 1. Because the spiritual life of a man is his preciousest possession farre surmounting his bodily life Reas 2. Because the hurting of this life belongs to the hurt of his eternal state and condition Reas. 3. Because the depriving of this life drawes with it the deprivation of all the true comfort of the bodily life also Reas. 4. Because in hurting this life Gods glory is directly wronged by reason that this life cannot be hurt but by the sin as well of him that hurts it as him that is hurt though bodily life may be taken away without the sin of him whose it is Use Of Admonition that with great care conscience we keep our selves from all things whereby this life of the soul is hurt as 1. From Heretical Doctrines ●… From evill and corrupt counsells ●… From scandalous and pernitious examples 4. From all neglect of such duties as we owe unto our Neighbour in order to this eternal salvation Doct. 3. It is our duty not onely ●…o abstain from all such things as the life of our Neighbour bodily or spiritual is hurt by but also carefully to do all such things whereby he may be fu●…red in either life and it may be made more lively and comfortable to him It is hence gathered that as no command is altogether negative but containes alwayes and commands the contrary duties to the sinnes forbidden so is it also in this sixt Commandment Reas. 1 Because there is a certaine communion of nature and life bodily amongst all the posterity of Adam as they do all come of one and the same blood There is likewise a like communion of spiritual life amongst many as to the act and exercise it self and amongst all as to the hope and possibility Reas 2. Because religion sets up a sort of society amongst
at in Isa 1. 14. Reas. 2. That the prophesies going before of this thing might be fulfilled Reas. 3. That Gods omnipotency in this so divine a mystery and principal a work of God might be evidently shewn Now it was not difficult to the power of God that a son should be born of a virgin For seeing all second causes act by their vertue which they received from God it is not to be doubted but that God can produce all these effects without this o●… that cause co-operating which otherwayes use to exist by them Yet not onely the power of God appeared in that work but also his wisdome to which it was most agreeable that so singular a substance of humane nature should in as singular a manner be brought to pass that differed from all others For in three manners all men were made before 1. Without the concurrence of either man or woman as in the creation of Adom 2. Without the concurrence of woman as in the production of Eve 3. By the concurrence of man and woman as in all ordinary generation afterwards And this onely is the proper and peculiar one of Christ by and of a woman without concurrence of a man Reas. 4. That it might easily appear how the contagion of sin might be removed from the humane nature of Christ. Use Is of Confirmation for strengthening of our Faith about the person of Christ to wit that he was both the Messias of old promised and the promised seed of the woman in that peculiar manner as that promise seems to have intended to wit the son of man that is of a woman descending of Adam and other men in ordinary way but made mother of a son not vulgarly or after the common manner but miraculously and without the company of a man begotten and born so that from his first conception all things were in him supernatural about which our mindes being busied ought alwayes to be lifted up to supernatural contemplations laying aside carnal and worldly thoughts Doct. 4. The Holy Ghost was the principal efficient cause of this generation It is from these words in the Text is of the holy Ghost the particle of denotes not any material cause but the efficient so that of the Holy Ghost signifies as much as if it had been said by the power of the Holy Ghost and his operation Now this is attributed to the Holy Spirit for these reasons Reas. 1. Because it was a miracle and all miracles by appropriation are attributed to the Holy Spirit Reas. 2. Because the principal work here was of Sanctification forasmuch as the lump of the humane nature which was to be assumed by Christ was in a singular manner sanctified and cleansed from all spot of sin and all Sanctification peculiarly attributed to the Holy Spirit Reas 3. Because the Holy Spirit was without measure to rest on to dwell in Christ. It 〈◊〉 but reason therefore that the Holy Spirit should prepare and make such a dwelling for himself as he also prepares his dwelling in the sons of God by adoption Quest. It may be th●…n questioned whether Christ may be called the Son of the Holy Ghost Ans It cannot be said 1. Because it would bring some confusion of relations and proprieties personal in God and in the persons 2. Because the Holy Spirit neither produced a new person when he made Christ to be begotten or generated neither produced the nature which he produced after his own nature or of the same essence with his own Use 1. Is of Direction in our Faith and in all our thoughts that we have of Christ that we admit of all that is in him to be spiritual holy and full of mystery nor that we ever doubt of any part of this mystery because all this as it is above common order so is it above the reach of common nature Yet we may always receive and conceive this that none of all these things are above the divine power of the Holy Spirit nor any thing impertinent or unfitting in that thing which is wholly mannaged by the Holy Ghost Use 2. Is of Direction in our practice as to the certainty of our salvation which depends upon this if we be sure that we are conformable to Christ in his nativity life death and resurrection And from thence is the beginning of this conformity to be taken if we be spiritually regenerated by the Holy Spirit as Christ was borne of Mary through the efficiencie and operation of the holy Ghost And this is the self same thing which the Apostle Peter admonisheth us to that we study to make our vocation and election sure The fifteenth Lords day 1 Pet. 3. 18. For Christ also hath once suffered for sinners the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God being put to death in the flesh but quickened by the Spirit AN argument is brought in these words whereby all Christians may be perswaded that undeserved afflictions are patiently to be born The argument is taken from the greater to the less in which also is contained the force and nature of a simily or example and also of some dissimilitude For such Logical assertions are oft joyned together in the same thing as they make to the same purpose The argumeat is this If Christ that was just hath suffered for sinnes and for unjust men then much more ought we to suffer afflictions imposed upon us but the first is true and therefore the latter also Christ considered in himself is the greater and his sufferings are the greater and so the argument is from the greater But considered as our head and Saviour he hath the place and nature of a simily or example to be imitated by us in tolerating afflictions so it is an argument from a like or from an example Lastly considered as just suffering for the sinnes of others that are uniust he is altogether unlike unto us and so also some force and emphaticalness of this argument is from the unlikeness They are ordered in this enunciation in which as the assumption of the Syllogism the cause is contained with the effect to wit Christ with his suffering For though suffering of its own nature be an adjunct of the sufferer yet as it 's voluntarily admitted and undertaken it is an effect Yet these arguments are so ordered that they have mixed with them the affection or property of the argument so called from diversit For Christ and his passions of their own nature are dissentaneous When therefore it is said Christ suffered it is as if he had said Though Christ were the Son of God yet was he not fr●…e from 〈◊〉 That this may be the better understood it is to be known that suffering in this place and in such others is attributed to Christ by the 〈◊〉 of Synecdoche of the more general for the special and that it signifies the special suffering of a grievous evill Then are these two very dissentaneous between themselves that Christ should
prayer that we may so prepare our selves thereto as all hinderances may be removed and we our selves get a fit disposition of mind and spirit Secondly In prayer we must watch against lukewarmnesse want of reverence wandring thoughts and the like Thirdly After prayers we must be watchfull against forgetfulnesse and slothfulnesse whereby we come short of the fruit of our prayers neither indeed for our carelesnesse ought we to expect any Reas. 1. Because in every moral action the manner of doing is of greatest weight by which it onely is that we not onely do that which is good but do it well Reas 2. Because in prayer after a special manner we are in Gods presence in whose sight how we behave our selves is a matter of no small concernement Reas. 3. Because a corrupt manner of praying sometimes not only blasts the power of our prayers but also makes them to be turned into sin to us Use Of Direction that we may have a care of all such things as make for the right manner of praying such as are Faith Humility Zeal or Fervour and Constancy The forty sixth Lords day Mat. 6. 9 10 11 12 13. Verse 9 After this manner therefore pray ye Our Father which a●…t in Heaven Hallowed be thy Name 10 Thy Kingdome come Thy will be done in earth as it is in Heaven 11 Give us this day our dayly bread 12 And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors 13 And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evill for thine is the kingdome and the power and the glory for ever Amen THis prayer was dictated by Christ and for this reason ought chiefly by all Christians to be had in esteem as coming from him that was the wisdome of God it self which therefore both knew well all our necessities knew also most perfectly what the will of God is towards us And it was dictated that it might be an example or pattern of all Prayers that we ought to use not that we should be bound up to this very frame and form of words however it may also be freely used by us For we read not that this very form of words was used by the Apostles though otherwayes divers Prayers of theirs are mentioned as well in the Acts as in their Epistles This Prayer is made up of certain Petitions whereunto are adjoyned a foregoing Preface and a following Conclusion The Preface is in these words Our Father wh●…ch art in H●…aven And herein is proposed and commended unto us a certain description of God to whom our prayers are alwayes to be directed This description sutably to its occasion that is unto praying layes out unto us those perfections of God which are most needfull to be knowne and considered of us for a devout calling upon his name And because nothing makes more for this than that we be assured of Gods goodnesse and good will towards us whereby he intends good to us and of his power whereby he is able to do all that he pleaseth in Heaven or on earth Therefore ●… The goodnesse of God is declared by that title of Our Father And 2. His greatest power and majesty is designed in these other words Which art in Heaven He is called Father not onely from the benefit of creation and providence whereby as with a Fatherly care he provides for us in all things but chiefly also for the benefit of adoption whereby of his special favour he chuses us to be of the rank and number of his sons And he is said to be in Heaven because in Heaven especially the third Heaven he manifests his ma●…esty as it were in his royal throne amongst the blessed and glorious spirits and from thence he sends out his Word as a royal declaration of his will through all parts of the world for the powerfull effectuating of all and every thing that he wills or pleaseth Doct. 1. Some preparation of minde is necessary for ●…ight making of our prayers This is hence gathered in that a preface is here used and that such a one as directly makes for preparing of our mindes that we may make our prayers the more directly before God Reas. 1. Because so great is the majesty of God that to appear before him and rashly as it were to rush into conference with him and so negligently without any care of our fitnesse and predisposition to it would be such an indignity as it were great incivility and want of wisedome to use towards any worldly Prince or great man Reas 2. Because so great is our weaknesse that unlesse our mindes be strengthened by some religious meditation they will never lift up themselves to God so as becomes them Reas. 3. Because so great is our unworthinesse that hardly can our mindes be raised up to consider and believe how our prayers are heard of God unless we seriously meditate on the favour or grace of God and his promises U●…e Of Direction how we ought to dispose and settle our selves to prayer namely by such a preparation which chiefly doth consist in two things 1. In calling away of our minde and thoughts and cares from all other things not onely unlawfull but otherwise lawfull though worldly during that time and exercise 2 In setting of our mindes and thoughts and affections on heavenly things and that according to that occasion which our prayers in general and in their special and particular natures give us Doct. 2. God alone by religious prayer is to be called upon This is hence gathered because in this most perfect pattern of Christian prayer we are not taught to call upon any in that kinde but whom we may call Our Father which art in heaven Reas. 1. Because prayer is so divine a worship and gives so much glory to the party that it is made to that without idolatry it cannot be offered to any creature whence also in Scripture every where it is called a sacrifice which the very Papists themselves confess cannot be offered but to God alone Reas. 2 Because no creature can sufficiently know our prayers to wit as they come from the heart and not from the mouth onely R. 3. Because no creature can always every where be present to hear prayers where they are made Reas. 4. We cannot religiously call on such as we do not religiously believe in Rom. 10. But we may not religiously believe in a creature I●…r 17. 5. Use. Of Resutation against the perverse superstion of Papists Doct. 3. In all our prayers we ought to come unto God with confidence as unto our Father It is gathered from the word Father Reas. 1. Because prayer in its most inward and essential nature is an action of affiance and trust For we seek nothing from God but out of trust and hope grounded on his promises Reas. 2. Because we ought to strive unto this that we our selves may be accepted of God as his sons that so we may know that our prayers will be accepted of him And