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A07350 The English catechisme explained. Or, A commentarie on the short catechisme set forth in the Booke of common prayer Wherein diuers necessarie questions touching the Christian faith are inserted, moderne controuersies handled, doubts resolued, and many cases of conscience cleared. Profitable for ministers in their churches, for schoole masters in their schooles, and for housholders in their families. By Iohn Mayer, Bachelour of Diuinitie.; English catechisme Mayer, John, 1583-1664. 1622 (1622) STC 17733; ESTC S100659 485,672 636

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direction vnto vs For neuer more guides in euery corner poynting and haling men as it were to the right way yet neuer were they so little regarded which bringeth our profession into a suspition amongst the enemies as teaching good workes to be needlesse vnto life but they shall answer for it who are an occasion of this blasphemy 3. Duty To remember euerlasting life in all tro●bles The third duty is to vse the remembrance of eternall life as a salue against all sores as a cordiall to comfort our hearts against our greatest heauinesse Are we in misery in pouerty in pangs in disgrace in danger in the middest of continuall crosses What are all these to dismay vs the Lord hath prouided an excellent estate for vs euer enduring our suffering of these things is but momentany the Lord hath assured his seruants of Heauen and of Crownes of glory how can he then but giue vs deliuerance from these things supply our temporall wants in his good time Nay which is more the Lord hath sweetned the bitter pils of the troubles of this world by working through them the health of the soule by making them meanes of further assurance that wee are his children and that hee is our Father and by leading vs through them as through the right way vnto the euerlasting life 1. Cor. 11.28 Heb. 18. Iam. 1. If a begger might haue twenty pounds for trauelling in the wet and cold one night or for some few stripes to be giuen vnto him with a rod hee would not bee much grieued hereat no more would we at our crosses if wee had faith to be assured that instead of these wee shall haue an other day so great glory and the lesse would wee murmure at it because our stripes be vpon vs worthily as if a poore prisoner that had deserued death should bee set free and rewarded with a great summe of money for willingly submitting himselfe vnto some light chastisement Rom. 5.1 Let vs therefore not onely be content to beare our crosses but with the Apostle through faith reioyce in our tribulations and praise the Lord for them as Iob did saying Iob. 1. 4. Duty To pray for the ●astening of glory The Lord giueth and the Lord taketh away blessed be the name of the Lord. The fourth duty is to pray that this time might bee hastened 4. Duty To pray for the hastening of glory wherein we shal enter into life and euen to reioyce when we see it approach to any of vs in particular because it will be so happy a change for vs of mortall for immortall of weakenesse for strength of dishonour for glory and as one dying said of tinne for siluer of copper for gold Wee must learne therefore to be like vnto the Brides which saith Come Reuel 22.17 Vers 20 2. Cor. 5.1 and vnto St. Iohn who when he had had some sight of these things said Euen so come Lord Iesus Wee sigh saith Paul desiring to be cloathed vpon that is to goe out of this clay house and to ascend to our house in heauen What faith haue they then that by the course of nature or by the danger of sicknes being brought almost home to this house desire to be farre away from it againe How vnseemely a speech is it in olde men to say I would I were young againe how lamentable a feare in sicke men to heare that they shall die let vs be more strengthened in these things that at our departing hence we may truly beleeue and haue euerlasting life Standing vp at the Creed There be two circumstances further vsed in the rehearsing of these Articles the first is the rising and standing vp which is a ceremony neither vaine nor superstitious as some suppose but they thinke amisse that more reuerence is hereby done to the Creed which is no Scripture then to the written word of God For first of all it is not vaine because it serueth to testifie our consent to the points rehearsed and is a silent confession of the same faith by all the Congregation as in the time of prayer all kneele by this gesture manifesting their consent with the Minister in this heauenly action In other duties done at Church in publique there is not the like reason of following the Minister in his gesture whether hee readeth expoundeth or preacheth because that in all these the Hearers are Patients and he onely an Agent Read more of this aboue at the end of the fift Question Whereto may also be added that this gesture of standing vpright is the most sutable and conuenient as being the posture of soldiers and champions ready to fight vnto the death for that faith which they then proclaime by recitall Amen Why added The second circumstance is the addition of this word Amen signifying verely or certainly or vndoubtedly It is added 1. To shew that we doe not in word only beleeue these things but from our very hearts 2. Not waueringly but certainly and without doubting 3. Not as though it were in our power as if we were secure for our firme and stedfast beleefe of these things but earnestly crauing this faith at the hands of God and thus it is as much as So be it The abuse of the Creede All which shewes the wonderfull abuse of this Creed first first amongst heretikes which say these words with their mouthes but the contrary in their hearts some denying beleefe in the Sonne of God for that they hold him to be meere man and God onely in name as Princes are called Gods vpon earth as the Arians Some in the Holy Ghost as the Macedonians for that they affirme him to be seruant and inferiour to the Father Sonne some deny beleefe in the holy Trinity for that they beleeue only in one God holding the distinction of persons a monstrous fiction of man as the Anttrinitaries And some againe denying Christs bodie 's reall being in heauen because they hold it to be present in euery Masse his Office of mediation sitting at the right hand of God because they appoint other Mediators to commend vs vnto God and the beleefe of the remission of sins with the life euerlasting because they teach doubting till the last gaspe The Creed abused by the Papists 1. Cor. 13.13 Secondly this Creed is further abused amongst the Papists because when they pretend to make a confession of their faith they doe onely confesse their hope which is a distinct thing from faith according to the Apostle There remaine these three things Faith Hope and Loue Now besides that they teach Faith to be a beleeuing in generall of all the Scriptures to be true they make it to be all one with hope through the mercy of God of being saued Thirdly it is further abused by all infidell-like Christians which say with their mouthes I beleeue in God c. But like Parrets not regarding what they say not considering the fearefull estate of such as want
then petition for the grace of perseuerance Thankes to God is here first in order of nature for who considering himselfe to bee made the childe of God doth not at the first apprehension breake forth into the acknowledgement of Gods goodnesse and glorifying his blessed name for such vnspeakable mercy before he dare presume to begge a further guift from the same hand Saint Paul in most of his Epistles beginneth with commemoration of Gods fundamentall mercies in Christ and thanks for them before hee proceed to new Petitions for continuance of sauing graces Thanksgiuing to God for grace is the fruit of the first grace and the seed of the latter Lastly petition for Gods grace for continuance in grace sheweth First that it is not in our power to establish our selues but that wee must craue this blessing of him who is the first Author and last finisher of our faith by whose power wee are kept and confirmed vnto Saluation namely the same power and mercy by which wee are first taken out of the iawes of hell as I haue shewed before in handling the ability of forsaking the Diuell Secondly the difference heerein appeareth betweene the two estates of grace and glory the imperfection of this life and the absolute Perfectnesse of a better Heere we are still to intreat Lord increase our faith Lord strengthen our hope Lord assist our patience But there wee shall not need to make request for establishment our faith shall then bee euacuated by accomplishment our hope fulfilled by fruition our patience needlesse where there shall bee no tribulation There the exercise of the soule shall be in admiring adoring and magnifying that mercy and bounty which hath preserued vs to the end of our mortall liues and hath crowned vs with life euerlasting Of the Creede Qu. 2. THou saist that thou art bound to doe as was promised for thee which was that thou shouldest beleeue the articles of the Christian faith let mee heare thee therefore rehearse the same Answ I beleeue in God the Father Almighty maker of heauen and earth and in Jesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord which was conceiued by the holy Ghost borne of the virgin Mary suffered vnder Pontius Pilate was crucified dead and buried hee descended into hell the third day hee arose againe from the dead and ascended into heauen hee sitteth on the right hand of God the father Almighty from thence hee shall come to iudge the quicke and the dead I beleeue in the holy Ghost the holy Catholique Church the Communion of Saints the forgiuenesse of sinnes the resurrection of the body and the life euerlasting Amen The Symbol of the Apostles Explan Before I come to speake any thing of these Articles in particular a few things are to be premised in generall First touching the name whereby they are called What articles are it is well knowne to euery man and so is the other name the Creed of the Apostles The proper name heereof in Greeke in which tongue these Articles were first penned is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Symbolum Apostolorum which signifieth either a note a marke seruing to distinguish betweene one souldier and another or a summe of money cast in which wee call a shot It is likely and History consenteth heerein that the Apostles dispersing themselues ouer the world according to their commission to preach the Gospell aduisedly compiled an abridgement of the same to remaine as a rule according to the analogy whereof though the Church were scattered farre and wide yet both teachers and hearers might bee held in an holy agreement of the same faith and heresies arising being brought heerevnto as vnto a touchstone might bee tryed and being found drosse reiected And because that euery one of the twelue compiled some part which being put together make the whole it obtained the name of Symbolum as Augustine testifieth if it be his owne where he reciteth in particular the seuerall words put in by euery Apostle Aug. de temp Con● 114. These were gathered saith hee by Peter I beleeue in God the Father Almighty By Iohn The maker of heauen and earth By Iames In Iesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord by Andrew Which was conceiued by the holy Ghost borne of the Virgin Mary by Philip Hee suffered vnder Pontius Pilate c. By Thomas Hee descended into hell and the third day rose from the dead By Bartholmew Hee ascended into heauen and sitteth c. By Mathew From thence he shall come to iudge the quick and the dead By Iames sonne of Alpheus J beleeue in the holy Ghost c. by Simon Zelotes The Communion of Saints By Iudas Iames his brother The resurrection of the body By Mathias The life euerlasting Amen All which I haue here inserted as probable not as necessarily inforcing Jerom. Epist 41. partis 1. In the Symbol of the Church of Rome this phrase he descended into hell is not neither in the Symbol of the Easterne Churches that iust according to this forme it was first set forth by the Apostles for both the phrases of descending into hell and Catholique Church may seeme to bee of later stamp and moreouer if it were thus certainly penned by them it were a part of Canonicall Scripture The common opinion of our Diuines is that it is called the Symbol of the Apostles because it was gathered out of their writings it may bee by some of their disciples that heard them For mine owne part hauing recited thus what I finde touching the name and first collection of these Articles I will leaue euery man to iudge as reason shall induce him to doe Secondly concerning the number of Creedes It is certaine that there haue beene many some compiled by whole Councels some by seuerall learned men of the Church vpon speciall occasion but none of those which haue beene made by the Orthodox doe any whit differ in substance from this of the Apostles they do onely set downe in more words that which is here contained in fewer and so may serue instead of some Commentaries vpon this of the Apostles The principall is the Nicene Creede made some three hundred yeeres after Christs Incarnation vnto which were consenting 318 Fathers Constantine the great Emperor being President This because of Arius who denied Christs Diuinity is larger in setting this forth how hee is very God of very God and of the same substance with the Father Next is the Athanasian Creede made by that holy man Athanasius who by the Arians was much persecuted but he made this as for a testimony of his owne sincerity in the truth so also to instruct and confirme others And of like sort is the Ephesine the Calcedon the Agathen c. So that we neede not be doubtfull because there be many which to embrace knowe and receiue this and so thou dost know and receiue them all 3. The Creed penned why Thirdly concerning the ends why this was committed to writing They were sundry and excellent
cause he is called by the Prophet the Spirit of power Esa 11. 2. 1 Duty To keepe our bodies pure 1 Cor. 6.19 The duties of this faith are first to keepe our bodies holy and pure as temples of the holy Ghost and not to defile them by vncleannesse for our bodies are his temples as the Apostle teacheth This therefore wee are to doe with all readines as they to whose houses the King vouchsafeth to come or some great person by whose comming they are like to be bettered in their estate all their life after they will not haue any noysome or vncleane roome but their very entrances and courts shall be fit to giue contentment vnto those worthy guests for Gods Spirit is the King of heauen by his comming he makes vs the members of Christ but no dunghill is so loathsome as a body defiled by vncleannesse The body by whoredome is taken from being the member of Christ and made the member of an Harlot 1. Cor 6 1● the temple of the holy Ghost is made a stewes Wherefore let this and all smell hereof in thoughts incontinent and speeches filthy be farre remoued otherwise there is no faith in the holy Ghost When Christ found in the Temple at Ierusalem Mark 11.15 which was made but of stone buyers and sellers mony changers that made the house of God but an house of merchandize he waxed so angry that he whipped them all out and ouerthrew their tables how much more then will hee disdaine and scourge those that make the Temple of the holy Ghost this liuing Temple not an house of merchandize but a sinke of filthines and vncleannes On the contrary side when the materiall Arke was entertained into the house of Obed-Edom 2. Sam 6.21 the Lord blessed him and all that he had exceedingly how much more then will he blesse vs if we entertaine more nearely into the house of our body not an Ark made of Cedar wood but the Lord hereof himselfe the holy Ghost which is when wee keepe our bodies holy 2 Duty To beleeue the Scriptures The second duty is to beleeue without doubting whatsoeuer is contained in the holy Scriptures because that all were giuen by inspiration of the Holy Ghost and were set forth by holy men not of any priuate motion 1. Tim. 3.16 2. Pet. 1.21 but as they were moued by the Holy Ghost Now we cannot then beleeue in the Holy Ghost but we must also beleeue whatsoeuer comes from him We are therfore generally to beleeue the promises the threatnings the histories here contained to be true the doctrines precepts and prohibitions to be of God and necessarily to be obeyed particularly we are to beleeue places mysticall which passe humane reason and places seemingly repugnant in themselues in the reconciling whereof we cannot be so fully satisfied Such things as be historicall wee must not hold parabolicall as Porphyrius did the booke of Iob because he could not conceiue how so strange an history should be true Such things as be more vnpleasing we must not hold to haue come from an euill God and the more pleasing and sweet onely from our good God as the Manichees and Marcion did the old Testament for which they reiected it and receiued onely the new Such things as were written by men formerly scandalous but after their conuersion holy vertuous are not therefore to be reputed as vnworthy our beliefe as the Seueriani and the Ebionites did all the Epistles of Paul Such things as were written after not concurring in all circumstances with the former are not to be reiected as the Ebionites did all the Euangelists but Mathew and Cerinthus all but Marke And if there be any other that haue done the like they haue in stead of beleeuing in resisted the Holy Ghost and are therefore to be abhorred As for all such as truely beleeue in the Holy Ghost I may more confidently vse the words of Paul vnto Agrippa Act. 26.27 I know that they beleeue all the writings of the Prophets and Apostles and whatsoeuer pen-men of the Scriptures 3. Duty To vse our gifts to the honour of God The third duty is to vse all our gifts to the honor of God who is the holy Ghost from whom we receiue them all whether wit and learning whether agility and aptnesse whether courage strength and magnanimtiy or eloquence or diuers languages or any other for it is the Holy Spirit of God that makes men able to the duties of their callings as wee haue heard in the seuenty Iudges ioyned with Moses and in Aheliab and Bezaliel c. and as the Apostle doth more then affirme saying 1. Cor. 4.7 What hast thou that thou hast not receiued If then thou abuse thy wit vnto deceite thy power to tyranny and oppression thy language to ostentation thy learning to pride thine agility to cogging and cheating thy magnanimity to stoutnesse and stubbornnesse against Gods Word thy strength to strength of drinking Wine and of powring in strong drinke what dost thou else but turne the weapons wherewith the Spirit hath armed thee against thine enemies vpon his very face as if thou shouldest take the sword by a friend offered vnto thee in thy great necessitie and seeke to sheath it in his bowels Let vs therefore flye such monstrous ingratitude and vse our gifts according to his good pleasure let our learning wit and best cunning be strained to further our own and the sanctification of others let our might power and courage be bent for the strengthening and the encouragement of the feeble and faint-hearted let our agility and aptnesse be forced to a readinesse vpon all occasions of doing good 4. Duty To submit our selues to Gods Spirit The fourth duty is to submit our selues in all things to the gouernment of Gods Spirit and not to sticke in our owne wayes nor to follow the sway of our owne natures for whom should wee rather followe and bee ruled by then he vpon whom we place our confidence whom we beleeue to be the leader into all truth and our Guide For if we follow our owne thoughts they will deceiue vs 2. Cor. 3.5 We cannot thinke a good thought if what we imagine to be best we shall fouly erre for all the imaginations of mans heart are onely euill continually Gen. 6.5 Se what Gehazi gained when he thought by following his owne way 2. King 5 to get him geat riches and in the heart condemned his Master Elisha of folly and nicenesse who was led by Gods Spirit in refusing againe for doing a miracle vpon Naaman 1. Sam. 15 Looke vpon the misery into which Saul the King brought himselfe when he thought to deale more wisely in the matter of the Amalekites then Gods Spirit by Samuel directed him for he thought to please God well enough by sacrifices and to enrich himselfe also by that which God had appointed to perish by sword and fire And no lesse
foolish was Achan and Ananias and Saphyra to their smart as their Histories doe declare and Salomon in taking many wiues and contracting affinity with most Princes for the encrease of his power and establishing his peace For Ios 7 Acts 5 Gehazi is thus made a loathsome Leper Saul is turned out of his Kingdome Achan and Ananias lose their liues and Salomon almost ten Tribes of his posterity Let these examples therefore be warnings vnto vs that we trust not to our owne inuentions but goe out after the Spirit speaking in the Word with Abraham Heb. 11.8 though we our selues know not whither Euen as silly Orphans which know not how to buy and se●l and to deale in this wily world themselues doe willingly submit themselues to some faithfull friend that vndertakes this care for them Quest 33. Which is the second part of your articles of faith concerning the Church of God Answ The second part is The holy Catholique Church the Communion of Saints the Forgiuenesse of sinnes the Resurrection of the body and the life euerlasting Quest 34. What learne you here to beleeue concerning Gods Church Answ Foure things Quest 35. Which is the first Answ First I learne to beleeue that God hath a Church consisting of a certaine number of true beleeuers of whom some be in Heauen and some vpon earth and that I my selfe am a member of the same To beleeue in the holy Catholique Church Explan We are to prefix in our vnderstanding I beleeue and so to confesse I beleeue the holy Catholique Church c. and not I beleeue in as we say of God the Father Son and Holy Ghost For the meaning of the words then it is fully set downe in the answer viz although I cannot see with the bodily eye into the inuisible Church of God consisting onely of true beleeuers yet I doe by faith firmely hold that as there is an outward and visible Church militant here vpon earth that is a company of people outwardly called by the sincere preaching of the Word and further marked out by the right administration of the Sacraments amongst them so there is such a Church as is seene onely by the eye of the Lord inwardly called by the efficacy of the Spirit part of which is already triumphant in Heauen and part here still in this world the one sort being the Saints and faithfull departed the other faithfull men and women yet liuing And because I can no otherwise haue no comfort in al this I beleeue to my further comfort that I am a member of this inuisible Church and of the same body with the godly in heauen 2. For the grounds of this they are first to bee brought which testifie that God hath a Church 2. That this Church is a visible company called together by the preaching of the Word which is the Church before men 3. That they yet onely are the true Church before God which are Beleeuers 4. That no Church is to be beleeued in that is to be made the foundation of our faith but onely to be beleeued that is to be acknowledged and to be cleaued vnto when it is found to be Gods Church and to be obeyed in all things wherein it obeyeth Iesus Christ the head of all First that God hath a Church is plaine 1. Proofe That God hath a Church from the often mentioning of the Church of God in the Scriptures Great persecution is said to haue bin raised vp against the Church in the Acts and God is said to haue giuen some Apostles c. Acts 8 1 Ephes 4.12 Reuel 2.3 for the building vp of his Church And in the Reuelation there be seuen Epistles directed to seuen seuerall Churches one to the Church at Ephesus another to the Church at Laodicea c. This is so generally acknowledged that it shall not need to bee further insisted in But that this Church is a visible company called together by the preaching of the Word c. The true mark of the Church these being the principall markes and signes by which it is knowne amongst men is somewhat contradicted yea exploded by the Romanists and other signes of vniuersality antiquity succession of Bishops c. substituted and therefore aliquantulum operosiùs as this Commentary will beare to deale herein And first of all the word Ecclesia a Church comming of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greeke that is to call out giueth great light herein the Church being according to the signification of this Word a people called forth out of the rest of the world as the Apostle not naming the Church at Rome yet in effect calleth it saying To you which are at Rome Rom. 1.7 called to bee Saints now if it bee a people called out of the world the best note whereby to knowe it must needes be the voyce calling which if it be the Talmud of the Iewes it is a Synagogue of Christs enemies if the Alchoron of Mahomet it is an assembly of Saracens if the Word of God corrupted by false interpretations in matter of faith it is a Sect of Heretiques But if it be the pure Word of God purely and sincerely preached it is the Church of God For this hath euer beene a certaine note of Gods Church and such as cannot deceiue Thus hath it beene noted to be in the family of Enoch that walked with God viz. by obedience to his voice Proofes of the old Testament and of Noah for hee did thus also walke with the Lord and of Abraham who went out at Gods Word from his Fathers house and amongst his posterity the Iewes who at the Word of the Lord followed Moses and Aaron thorow the red Sea thorow the wildernesse and the numberlesse turnings by which they were directed from the Land of Aegypt vnto Canaan And still vnder the new Testament this was the infallible marke of Gods Church first amongst the Apostles who were called out from others by the Word of God to follow the Lord Christ then amongst other faithfull people as they were added to the Church they were called by the Word witnesse that great worke of conuersion Acts 2.41 wrought by the Ministry of Peter at one Sermon there were three thousand who when they heard it were seuered from the rest of the World and added vnto the Church Verse 47. and it is immediatly further noted that the Lord dayly added vnto the Church such as should bee saued viz. calling them by the Sermons of his Apostles and Ministers To proceed from History to the Doctrine of holy Scripture Doth not the Prophet Esay teach the same thing Esay 8.20 when he saith To the Law and to the Testimony if they speake not according to this Word it is because they haue no truth in them viz. When Seducers shall goe about to draw them to the seruice of Idols Verse 19. and to follow South-sayers and such as haue the
kept holy from yeare to yeare continually And Judas Maccabeus 1. Mac. 4.59 after that he had purged the Sanctuarie and set vp a new Altar ordained that the remembrance heereof should bee continued with ioy by keeping a feast Dedication eight dayes together from yeare to yeare which feast Christ himselfe graced with his presence Ioh. 10.22 23. preaching in the Temple that he was the true Shepheard and that he did giue vnto his sheepe that heard his voice and followed him eternall life Leuit. 23. Thirdly because the Lord himselfe howsoeuer hee hath said Sixe dayes shalt thou labour yet vpon iust occasion hath set apart some of these at certaine times of the yeare to be kept holy as for the feast of the Passeouer of Tabernacles and of first Fruits that there might bee then a more speciall remembrance of the great benefits bestowed at those speciall times which the Magistrats his Vicegerents following to their great commendation as further occasion was offered doe plainly shew that it is not only lawfull but requisite that it should be thus in all ages amongst the Lords people And thus much for the confirmation of the first Secondly I say that as the setting apart of some of the weeke dayes is lawfull and commendable by examples vnder the old Testament so it is much commended by the practise of the pure and vncorrupted times of the new Testament It is well knowne to such as are but meanely read that the feast of Easter and Whitsontide when Christ arose againe and when the Holy Ghost descended and the feast of the Ascension Natiuitie and Circumcision of Christ were obserued in the Primitiue Church soone after the Apostles time and not long after there were added vnto these the Apostles dayes Jeron Gal 4. and then of some singular Martyrs betwixt whose daies there was yet this difference the Apostles were kept in all Churches these onely where they suffered all which Ierom testifieth in his Commentary vpon the Epistle to the Galathians chap. 4. Adding there further that then the histories of their liues and deaths were read and their godly examples commended vnto others after all which this prayer was added Concede O Deus vt quorum natales celebramus eorum virtutes imitemur Grant O God that we may imitate their virtues whose birth-daies we celebrate Now although antiquity is not sufficient of it selfe to iustifie this or that obseruation yet next vnto the Holy Scriptures it is to be reuerenced according to that of Augustine Post sacras Scripturas Aug. Tom. 2. Epist 118. ea nobis sunt obseruanda quae vel ab Apostolis profecta esse per traditionem vel a vniuersalibus consiliis definita esse iudicantur Those things are of vs to be obserued next vnto the holy Scriptures which are iudged to come from the Apostles by tradition or to haue bin defined by generall Counsels New holy dayes rightly made Thirdly I say that to set apart any day to prayer thankesgiuing c. without iust cause is superstitious and if for the honouring and praying vnto any Saint it is idolatrous for neither God nor good men haue thus made any holy dayes A iust cause is therefore 1. When any great benefit and extraordinary Cause 1 hath been bestowed for which it were grosse ingratitude not to haue a solemne time of praising God Such was the bringing of Israel into the land of Canaan which they were euer thankfully to remember at the feast of first fruits and such is the Natiuity Resurrection and Ascension of Christ the comming downe of the Holy Ghost the stirring vp and sending of the Apostles to plant the Churches of the Gentiles which is a bringing of them into spiritual Canaan to partake of the hony and milke flowing there 2. When any great and wonderfull deliuerance hath been Cause 2 wrought such was the bringing of Israel out of Egypt their deliuerance from Hamans bloudy plot and from Gorgias vnder Iudas Macch●beus so that the Temple was cleansed and the Altar repaired for which they kept the Passeouer the feast of Purim and the Dedication and such haue been our deliuerances from the Spanish Nauy from the Gun-powder Treason and Gowries Conspiracy for which we are to continue solemne times of praising the Lord. Cause 3 3. When some great danger is vrgent vpon a people or imminent Ioel 1.14 and hanging ouer their heads thus Ioel hauing foretold of a famine to come calleth for a fast and a solemne assembly Ionah 3. and the Nineuites when Ionah threatned their destruction hauing onely the light of nature to guide them kept solemnely three daies together fasting and crying vnto the Lord for mercy And thus haue our Magistrates godly prouided that there should be solemne publique meetings for humiliation in our great danger Anno 1588. And in the time of famine and pestilence and it were to be wished that before we bee againe pressed with the like or greater iudgements which our sins cry for some times were solemnely appointed for the pacifying of Gods wrath towards vs. Cause 4 4. When any other speciall occasion is offered for the glory of God and the edification of the Church such as bee the daies dedicated to the memory of the most worthy Saints and Apostles of Christ the remembrance of whose holines miracles and excellency reuiueth the right-affected Christian to the glorifying of God who hath so wonderfully endued men with his grace and to a zealous imitation of them in their holines and integrity Out of these cases to appoint holy daies is altogether without warrant from the Word of God and the practice of purer times and if they bee multiplied to the hinderance of the poore Labourer ouer-much from his labour and to the ouer-hooding of mens consciences they are a bondage against which the Apostle inueigheth saying How turne yee againe to beggarly and impotent rudiments Gal. 4.9.10 whereunto as from the beginning yee will bee in bondage againe Yee obserue dayes c. Obiect 1 If it bee heere obiected that this cannot stand with the Lords precept Six dayes thou shalt labour Sol. I answer that this precept must not nor can bee simply vnderstood but conditionally vnlesse the Lord shall call vs to publike duties of holinesse vpon any of these dayes otherwise the Lord himselfe had amisse appointed some of these dayes yearely afterwards for holines and godly magistrates of old had been much to blame Obiect 2 If it be further obiected that thus dayes appointed by men shall also become Sabbaths and of as great account Differences betweene holy dayes and Sundayes as the Lords day I answere God forbid for yet there is great difference betwixt the Lords day and dayes appointed by men First in regard of the stricter kind of rest required vpon the Lords day from which there is more liberty vpon other holy daies insomuch as now wee may lawfully goe or ride iourneyes keepe markets or faires and
depriueth a man of all iust title vnto these things for a ciuill right remaineth in wicked men to that they possesse by Law but of comfort in vsing them they being vncleane and accursed vnto them neither doth this saying All things are yours conclude the contrary against sinners but expresseth how all things consent together for the sanctification of the faithfull 2 Giue that is bestowe vphold continue and maintaine that which thou hast giuen vs for all our labour is nothing towards the obtaining and all our care nothing towards the conseruing and keeping what we haue vnlesse the Lord giue and preserue vnto vs. 3 Giue that is blesse make prosperous and wholesome our meates and drinkes for the strengthening of our bodies and for the cheering and refreshing of our spirits so as that our fraile liues may be vpheld and we inabled to serue thee in the strength of thy blessing in our callings for it is not any meere naturall vertue in vs that maketh our meates nourishable but Gods blessing for which it is also plaine which was said before Man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God This day that is we desire not such aboundance for so long a time as whereby our dependance vpon thee should bee cut off but to be content with things necessary for the present and to waite vpon thee from day to day though in the morning wee haue not wherewithall to be sustained vntill the euening or in the euening vntill the next morning though wee see present destruction before our eyes Daily bread 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bread for our substance such as nature doth require to vphold it no dainties or costly feasting but necessary cloathing and food whereby the substance of our bodies may be continued and confirmed and not pine and waste away through want 2 Thes 3.2 Our daily bread that is not the bread the cloathes the substance of another but such things honestly gotten by our labour through Gods blessing vpon vs according to the phrase of the Apostle calling this a mans owne bread We command and exhort them that are such that they worke with quietnesse and eate their owne bread that is honestly gotten 2. For the scope of this Petition The supplication and first in the supplication Wee pray for all things needfull for vs in this present life not being measured by our owne will and desire but by the will of the Lord. These things are either generall or speciall The things generall concerning vs all are 1. Peace and tranquilitie through which small things become great whereas by discord euen great things decay and come to nothing This is the maine end which the Apostle propoundeth in praying for such as bee in authority that wee may liue a peaceable and quiet life in all godlinesse and honesty 1. Tim. 2.2 2. Seasonable weather for heate and cold moysture and drought in summer and winter that the Sunne may shine and the raine fall seasonably that the heauens may answere the earth the earth may answere the corne and the wine and the corne and wine may answere vs as is the promise of God to such as he fauoureth 3. Worthie and vertuous Gouernours of the Common-wealth by whose care peace may be maintained and we may in quiet enioy euery man his owne Vine and Figge-tree for vpon such doth the well-fare of a Countrie much depend as the Prophet sheweth by the contrary Esay 3.2 3. threatning to increase the misery of the people to take away the Iudges Counsellours and Captaines 4. Healthfulnesse strength and ability of the people and the increase of them to our mutuall comfort and the dismaying of the enemies Psal 144.12 for this Dauid prayeth That our sons may be as plants growing vp in our youth and our daughters as the corner stones of the temple and it is promised to such as feare God that fiue shall chase an hundreth Leuit. 26.8 and an hundred shall put tenne thousand to flight 5. Victory ouer our enemies that rise vp against vs for it is likewise promised Deut. 28. Your enemies shall come against you one way and flie seauen waies before you Gen. 3.19 The speciall things which wee pray for are first an honest disposition to labor take paines in our particular callings to get and preserue such things as are for our maintenance otherwise we doe not desire our owne bread but bread pulled from the mouthes of other men Whether wee bee rich or poore therefore we must not be idle and vnprofitable neither vse vnlawfull meanes of getting but according to the Lords appointment In the sweat of thy brow shalt thou eat of the fruite of the earth till thou returne to it for the Apostle a sound interpreter of the Scriptures doth thus apply it saying This we warned you of 2. Thes 3.10 that if there were any that would not worke the same should not eate So that he which will eate must worke and take paines in his calling and not liue idly whatsoeuer he be 2. Good successe through Gods blessing in our labours for in vaine doth the builder build the house and the watchman watch the city Psal 127. vnlesse the Lord build and keepe it We pray therefore that when we plow and sow the ground that God would blesse it and giue increase and when we attempt and goe about any thing that God would bring it to passe 3. A charitable disposition in the rich to relieue the poore impotent that cannot helpe themselues and such a disposition in our selues if wee be rich for we pray not for mine but for our daily bread which is a mocking of God if hauing wherewith to relieue such as be in want we deny so to do as if a man being present at any danger of his neighbour from which he is able to deliuer him should stand still and call to some other a farre off to come and helpe him 4. The sanctification of the creatures which is when wee are sanctified that receiue them according to that of the Apostle To the cleane all things are cleane for without this there cannot be a comfortable vse of them 5. The blessing of God to make the creatures nourishable vnto vs for they haue not wherewithall in themselues neither haue we wherewithall in our selues to conuert them to nourishment our heat and organes of the body fitted for this purpose must haue strength from the Lord Psal 104.29 who if hee hideth his face we are troubled and returne to the dust 6. Contentation and resting vpon Gods prouidence in our greatest wants and dangers Whilst we haue food and raiment 1. Tim 68. let vs therewith be content for this is all which we pray for and praying for it wee are taught to depend vpon God for the same which we implicitely professe by praying yea though we should be very destitute that we know not how to
Manich●es and Marcion some haue reiected the Booke of Psalmes as the Nicholaitans and Anabaptists some the booke of Iob as some Rabbins and some Daniel as Porphyrius some haue reiected the Gospel of Luke as Cerdon some all but Marke as Cerinthus some the Gospel of Iohn as the Alog● some all Pauls works as the Ebionites c. Concerning the second some haue made the Apocryphall Books of equall authoritie with the fore recited Scriptures as the Papists and others haue more boldly long since obtruded for Canonical the fatherlesse brood of other books vnto these as the third and fourth of Eldras and Appendix of Iob a Preface to the Lamentation the third and fourth of the Macchabees a Booke called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Booke of Enoch the Gospel of Thomas and of Matthias the acts of Peter And in the yeare 1120 a certaine new Gospell called Euangelium aeternum the eternall Gospell was found out being full of blasphemies but all these and the like are damnable presumptions plainly forbidden by the Lord saying Deut 4.2 Ye shal not put ought vnto the word that I command you neither shall ye take ought there-from and grieuously threatned Reu. 22.18 19. If any man shall adde vnto these things God shall adde vnto him the plagues that are written in this Booke and if any man shall diminish any thing God shall take away his part out of the Booke of life Now that the Books first aboue named are all Canonicall Scriptures and part of the word of God Epist Tom. 3. hath been acknowledged in all ages by the Christian Church Ierome writing to Paulinus of the study of the holy Scriptures doth both reckon vp all these bookes in particular and adioyneth to euery one of them a seuerall pithy commendation And vnto Leta he prescribeth an order of reading them with most safetie and profit As for the other Bookes Epist Tom. 1. which our Church adioyneth to the volume of the inspired Scriptures they are both entertained and in part publikely read in our Churches not as authentike Principles whereon to ground any doctrine but as wholesome precepts of moralitie and declarations of the estate of the Church in those times very profitable for deuotion and heauenly meditation Quest. 146. What speciall proofe is there making manifest that those Bookes of Scripture are the word of God Answ The antiquity of those books some of them being before all other bookes sundry times oppugned and sought to be burnt vp by persecutors and yet wonderfully preserued and by miracles from heauen confirmed is a manifest proofe that they came from heauen and are not of mans inuention That the ●oly Scriptures are Gods word Explan Amongst all arguments there is none of that force in the conscience of man that this is of being taken from the diuinitie of the holy Scriptures For let it appeare that they are of God and what heart dares doe any other but yeeld vnto them Now that they are of God may bee plainely prooued by sundry reasons First by their Antiquitie for the first and most ancient writings in the world concerning Religion must needs be Gods but these are the first and most ancient therefore must needs be Gods 1. That the most ancient are Gods Scriptures is plaine because otherwise either some other Instructor must haue beene before God or else God the Ruler of the whole world must haue beene without any thing recorded whereby the world ought to be ruled till that man had inuented something to gouerne man by both which are most absurd That the holy Scriptures are most ancient appeareth by the most ancient humane writers Orpheus the first of all writeth of the two Tables deliuered to Moses Whence he saith that he learned what he knew of God Linus wrote of the Tower of Babylon described by Moses c. making plaine heereby that the Bookes of Moses were long before any of their writings and so the most ancient in the world Hence it is that Tacianus affirmeth that it appeareth out of Berosus a Caldee Writer Tatiani Oratio aduersus gentes Moses fuit Baccho antiquior plurimis diis gentium Clem. Alexandr out of the writings of the Phoenicians and Annales of the Egyptians that Moses wrote long before Orpheus Linus Amphyon Homer or the most ancient Ethnickes Now the Bookes of Moses are in effect the whole Scriptures all that followeth tending onely to the further explanation heereof Wherefore the Scriptures are most auncient and consequently the vndoubted word of God 2. This is further prooued by the preseruation of the Scriptures in all ages other ancient Bookes being perished either in part or in whole but the holy Scriptures though more oppugned then any by persecutors who haue sought to blot out the memory of them yet are wholly preserued without diminution or corruption of any part of them Had they beene of man certainly it would haue happened vnto them as vnto many other humane writings which are most ancient which if they haue not perished yet they haue been falsified yea one complaineth that hee himselfe yet liuing to see it Fratribus rogantibus vt scriberem Epistolas scripsi has Apostoli Diaboli Zizanijs alia eximentes alia ad●icientes Dionysius Areo● pag. repleuerunt The Brethren requesting I wrote Epistles these the Apostles of the Deuill haue filled with tares adding some things and taking away othersome Now the holy Scriptures haue been singularly preserued heerein in the hands of the Iewes who haue misliked some things and forbidden them to be read as Daniel because he speaketh so plainly of the Messiah in the hands of the heathen as when at the request of Ptolomee they were translated by the Septuagint and in the hands of Heretikes who haue corrupted Fathers and Councels yet neuer durst but haue beene restrained from heauen from corrupting the Scriptures 3. This is further proued by the miracles which haue been wrought to confirme the Scriptures to be of God the Author of all true miracles of this sort are the miracles wought by Moses by the Prophets by Christ and by his Disciples For all these miracles doe plainly testifie of them that they were sent of God and if they were of God then the word by them set forth is the word of God 4. The same is proued by the prophesies contained in the Scriptures some being of things to come to passe many hundreds of yeares after as that the seed of the woman should breake the serpents head that Abrahams posterity should be numberlesse that they should be strangers 400. yeares that Josiah should burne the bones of Baals Priests where Ieroboam did sacrifice that the people of Israel should be in captiuity 70. yeares that Cyrus expressely forenamed should giue them leaue to returne and diuersly honour them c. From hence we may reason thus Those Scriptures which in their reuelations exceed all the vnderstanding of all creatures are vndoubtedly his who is aboue
this faith what obedient and godly liuing is required to haue comfort in this faith how scandalous professors heereof shall bee barred out of eternall life euen as they that neuer knew how to rehearse this confession at all They also which imagine faith to be in their owne power and therefore neglect to pray for it when the Apostles themselues prayed Lord increase our Faith So many as be faithfull indeed let vs bee otherwise minded beleeuing all these things in heart without doubting studying aboue all things to bee more and more confirmed herein by godly liuing and euer heartily praying Lord giue faith where it is wanting and where it is increase our faith more and more And thus by the grace of God haue we finished our commentary vpon the first part of the Catechisme concerning the things to be beleeued and maintained to the death that we may come to life The end of the Creed Of the Commandements Quest THou saidst that thou wert bound to keepe the Commandements of Almighty God Which be they Answ God spake these words and saide I am the Lord thy God which haue brought thee out of the land of Aegypt out of the house of bondage Thou shalt haue none other Gods but me Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image nor the likenesse of any thing that is in the heauen aboue or in the earth beneath or in the water vnder the earth Thou shalt not bow downe to them nor worship them for I the Lord thy God am a Iealous God and visit the sinnes of the fathers vpon the children vnto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me and shewe mercy vnto thousands of them that loue me and keepe my Commandements Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine for the Lord will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his name in vaine Remember that thou keepe holy the Sabbath day Sixe dayes shalt thou labour and doe all that thou hast to doe but the seuenth is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt doe no manner of worke thou nor thy sonne nor thy daughter thy man-seruant nor thy maid-seruant thy cattle nor the stranger that is within thy gates For in six dayes the Lord made heauen and earth the sea and all that in them is and rested the seuenth day wherefore the Lord blessed the seuenth day and hallowed it Honour thy Father and thy Mother that thy dayes may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giueth thee Thou shalt doe no murther Thou shalt not commit adultery Thou shalt not steale Thou shalt not beare false witnesse against thy neighbour Thou shalt not couet thy neighbors house thou shalt not couet thy neighbours wife nor his seruant nor his maide nor his Oxe nor his Asse nor any thing that is his Qu●st How many things doest thou learne out of these commandements Answ Two things My duty towards God and my duty towards my neighbour Explan Before that we come to shew in particular where these duties are set downe it will not bee amisse to speake some things in generall by way of preface or introduction to the commandements The time of the law giuing First of the time when these commandements were giuen and this was about two thousaods and fiue hundreth yeares after the Creation not that they were left all this time without a law for there was a law written in mens hearts by the pen of nature but to make that more plaine which by the corruption of nature was become very dimme and much defaced That there was a law euen before these commandements giuen the Apostle sheweth where hee saith that the Gentiles not hauing the law are a law vnto themselues which shew the effect of the law written in their hearts c. so that as long as men haue beene there hath also beene a law although not expressed in words yet written in the heart The knowledge of the law before it was written Wherefore if it be well obserued wee shall finde that euen before the giuing of the law all these precepts were knowne and acknowledged Gen 17.1 The first Commandement was knowne to Abraham when as almost in so many words the Lord said vnto him I am God al-sufficient stand before me and be vpright and there were no false Gods brought into the world before the floud Clemens Alexandrinus Clem. Alex. ●● 1. Strom. a learned Father sheweth that Bacchus a great God amongst the heathen was made a God 604 years after Moses and so most of the Gods of the Grecians hee sheweth further how the chiefest God of all Iupiter was made by one Phydias and the chiefest Goddesse Iuno by Euclides Orat. Hortat ad Gent. and that Socrates Plato Xenophon Cleanthes Pythagoras the ancientest Philosophers and that Aratus Hesiod Eurypides and Orpheus the ancientest Poets acknowledged but one God Gen 35 2. The second commandement was knowne vnto Iaacob for he purged his house from Idols when he was to build an Altar in Bethel acknowledging heereby that this was a corruption that the true God would be offended at yea heathen men themselues did see by the light of nature that it was a grosse thing to represent God by an Image Euseb de praepar Euang. lib. 9. cap 3. Jbid. as Numa an Emperour sometime in Rome who forbad the vse of any Image because hee held it a wicked thing that things so incomparable excellent should be set forth by baser matters and Plato an excellent Philosopher did so agree with Moses heerein that hee was said of Numenius a Pythagorean to be none other but Moses speaking in the Atticke tongue Gen 21.23 The third Commandement touching the right vse of Gods name both Abraham seemeth to haue knowne well when he sware by the true God vnto Abimelech to confirme his league and Iacob when he sware vnto Laban Gen. 31.53 by the feare of his father Isaacke And the very heathen Ephesians who were led only by the light of nature shewed how odious a thing they held it that the name of their gods should bee blasphemed when suspecting such a matter in Paul Acts 19.34 and in his companions they grew to such an vproare and cryed out so long the greatnesse of their goddesse Diana Gen. 2.2.3 The fourth Commandement is recorded to haue beene giuen in Paradise for the seuenth day saith Moses GOD rested so hee blessed and sanctified it because that in it hee had rested from all his workes which hee had created and made Gen. 28.2 The fifth Cōmandement Iacob shewed in his practise when he followed his parents direction in taking a wife heerein giuing an instance of his obedience vnto them and the children of Iaacob at his command going downe into Aegypt to buy food for him and being so carefull to giue him contentment in the returne of his son Beniamin and Ioseph nourishing him in Aegypt in his