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A76812 The covenant sealed. Or, A treatise of the sacraments of both covenants, polemicall and practicall. Especially of the sacraments of the covenant of grace. In which, the nature of them is laid open, the adæquate subject is largely inquired into, respective to right and proper interest. to fitnesse for admission to actual participation. Their necessity is made known. Their whole use and efficacy is set forth. Their number in Old and New Testament-times is determined. With several necessary and useful corollaries. Together with a brief answer to Reverend Mr. Baxter's apology, in defence of the treatise of the covenant. / By Thomas Blake, M.A. pastor of Tamworth, in the counties of Stafford and Warwick. Blake, Thomas, 1597?-1657.; Cartwright, Christopher, 1602-1658. 1655 (1655) Wing B3144; Thomason E846_1; ESTC R4425 638,828 706

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put in their lives about their health their estates the nature of their grounds or how to carry on their Trades besides those multiplyed ones of meer vanity and inconsiderable concernment they never had it in their thoughts to move a question of any concernment to their soules The young mans question the Jaylours question Peters hearers question never came into their heads I have seen little evidence of good in these and I see little ground to believe any thing of faith in their soules You may speak of some of these as of men of good dispositions of a fair nature and harmlesse life and course these may grow up in nature moralized and regulated when yet faith is far from them they may grow up high in profession but growing in the blade or leaf onely and not in the root they may justly be suspected Every tree that bears a fair leaf doth not bear good fruit and every apple of a fair colour is not to be desired for food Such fruit as this may take where faith will not grow The Prophets words then should be heeded Break up your fallow ground and sowe not amongst thornes this way must be taken for soul-humbling that men may be brought to believing The nature of faith wherein it consists A necessary prerequisite in faith 2. The next way of discovery is to take notice of the proper and true kind the genuine nature of this grace And here I hope the Christian Reader may reape a double advantage First to understand what faith is and the requisites in it Secondly helps for proof of themselves whether they be in the faith And here we may observe First a necessary prerequisite of faith Secondly the essential parts of it The prerequisite to it is knowledge which some indeed make a part of faith but faith I suppose rather presupposeth it then is made up of it The essential parts are either in the understanding or in the will or affections for faith is an act of the soul and the whole soul is implyed in it First then of that which I make a prerequisite Knowledge is in that way required to the making up of faith that is often put for faith as Isai 53.11 And when God works to faith he is said to open the eyes or to work to knowledge or light Heb. 10.32 Act. 26.18 We come to faith by hearing we must therefore hear and know before we can believe Knowledge is the first act or work of the soul that conducerh towards faith in the heart Now knowledge is threefold First of sense we know what we see Thomas knew Christ that is the person of Christ when he had seen his wounds and put his finger into them This knowledg is not necessarily required in faith Christ there saith Blessed is he that seeth not and believeth John 20.23 And the Apostle saith that faith is the evidence of things not seen Secondly of reason we know those things which our reason is able to reach This knowledge runs through all sciences in which we attain knowledge by discourse and the clearer head the better Artist and the more of knowledge This we do not require to the being of faith though faith be not alwaies against yet it is oft above all our reasonings yea our reasonings and hammering out conclusions are oftentimes against faith The word of faith beats down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it self against the knowledg of God and brings into captivity every thought 2. Cor. 10.5 Our Notionalists are indeed men of sublimated understandings in case they can alwaies reach unto that which according to the Gospell they are to believe Thirdly of authority we judge our selves to know a thing which men worthy of credit do make known and if we receive the witnesse of men saith the Apostle the witnesse of God is greater 1. John 5.9 The testimony of man gives a morall certainty and such that we will not question The multiplication of witnesses renders our knowledge grounded on such authority more firm and therefore the proverb in a well qualified sense is at least near to truth Vox populi vox Dei The voice of the peop●● unanimously witnessing is as the voice of God We do no m●re doubt that there was a massacre of Protestants in Ireland about the year 41. then we do that there was one resolved upon at Shushan in the reign of Ahashuerus Esth 3. The testimony of God is alwaies of infallible truth as to the substance so to every circumstance of it many passages about that massacre we may justly question so we must not any thing which divine verity hath made known This knowledge we require in faith and know it to be necessary to the being of faith we must know that God hath revealed in his Word a Trinity of Persons or else we shall believe no such thing as three distinct subsistences in God that the holy Ghost is God that Christ is God and man in one person or else we shall believe no such doctrine We must know the creation from the Scriptures or else we shall not believe a creation but run into that opinion that all things have ever been as they are We must know the offices of Christ or else we shall not believe that any such office was undertaken by him The same we may say of every doctrine of faith perhaps without Scripture we might have known somewhat confusedly of some of them as that there is a God and that the world had a beginning but we should have known nothing at all of many of them and nothing distinctly of any of them These we must know and from the Scriptures of God know or else we cannot believe we may as easily see where nothing is to be seen as believe where that is not known which is to be believed Ignorant persons therefore that know not the right hand from the left in religion and are to seek in the very first principles of the Oracles of God in the very beginnings of the doctrine of Christ that either come not to hear that they may learn or that learn nothing at all by hearing ever learning and never coming to the knowledge of the truth are in an incapacity of faith Men weak in knowledg can hardly make proof of their faith they do not well know the nature or lively workings of it so want the comfort but not the thing Men without knowledge are without faith have not gone the first step towards it The essential parts of faith The essentiall parts of it are as we have said in the understanding will and affections In the understanding there is an assent to that which is revealed upon the authority of him that doth reveal it 1. In the understanding An assent When we believe any thing upon that account that we suppose we see a reason of it as that the middle region of the ayr is coldest or that the Sun is in many degrees
the Disciples of Christ for discovery of a Disciple in the former sense by their affections to him and suffering of affliction for him are of singular use Christ himself hath gone before us in it But upon the notation of the word because Christ gave the Bread and Cup to Disciples to make the subject of that Sacrament to be onely those that reach these markes is besides the holy Ghosts intention All outward Ordinances are for the Church in fieri and not onely in facto for the bringing of it on to Christ I should desire to know where any outward sensible Ordinance is made or how in reason and according to Scripture it can be made the proper peculiar right of invisible members SECT XI Proposition 9 THe Sacrament of the Supper no more then other Ordinances is not limited to those that have received a new life in Christ by the Spirit that are actually regenerate and in grace The Lords Supper is not limited to those that have received a new life by the Spirit others as they may be admitted without sin so they are in a capacity and possbility to receive benefit from it This I am not ignorant that some will question But let these consider before they censure First That it is an external Ordinance as hath been said Arguments a priviledge of the Church as visible put into the hands of those for edification that are not able to discern men of spiritual life and invisible interest And though there be characteristicall differnces whereby a man in grace and he that is short of it may be distinguished whereby all bad ground at the best may be differenced from that which is good yet they are such whereby a man is to make trial of himself onely they are Spirit-works and none knowes them in any man save the Spirit that is in him and therefore no marks for any others cognizance For a Minister of Christ to dispence by command the Sacrament to many when he knowes that it is of possible use and benefit to some few unto these it is food and nourishment unto life unto the others as Rats-bane Poyson and onely for death is such a snare that may hold him in his administration in all horror and amazement A fad dilemma either to lay aside an Ordinance of Christ and so never come up in his place to the whole of his duty or else to deliver to them that which will inevitably be the ruine and destruction of so many of them I know no possible way that can be supposed or so much as pretended for avoidance but in the Name of Christ to give warning to all in whom this new life by the Spirit is not to abstain every man and woman not actually regenerate on their peril to keep off Let them say some know their danger in the highest terms that can be uttered and then if they come their blood is on their own heads and the Minister of Christ hath by this means delivered his soul But to this I have three things to say 1. That it is as I suppose without all Scripture-precedent to warn men upon account of want of a new life by the Spirit wholly to keep off from this or any other Ordinance of Christ I know we must warn men of their sin and the judgement hanging over their heads for sin in which let it be our prayer that we may be more faithful but that we should warn men upon this account upon this very ground to hold off from all addresse to Ordinances I have not learnt 2. I say this doth presuppose that which is wont to be denyed unregenerate men to be in a capacity to examine themselves respective to this Ordinance How can we warn them upon want of justifying faith and the saving work of repentance to hold back when they are in an incapacity upon trial to find themselves thus wanting 3. Shall we not hereby pluck the thorne out of our own sides and as much as in us lyes thrust it into the sides of many of our hungry thirsty and poor in spirit people How many may we suppose are in grace through a work happily begun on their souls yet for several reasons are not able to see this grace or reach to any discovery of it Sometimes by reason of the infancy of the work upon their hearts being yet babes or rather embryo's in grace The first that appears upon light received is an army of lusts and potent corruptions as we know Paul sets it out This cloudes for present any other weak work that as yet in present is wrought In this time Satan is not wanting he did not shew so much artifice before to lessen their sin but he now makes use of as much to aggravate it and as he was industrious before to seduce now he is as busie to accuse He led the incestuous man to incontinency 1 Cor. 7.4 And we know Paul feares least upon continuance of the Church-censure he would gain advantage to swallow him up in overmuch sorrow 2 Cor. 2.8 11. These perhaps as yet are not able to give an account of the nature of faith and repentance or their genuine fruits much lesse are they able by a reflex act to conclude the truth of them in their souls Sometimes by reason of some sharpe conflict of temptation being under the shock and assault of it and therefore whatsoever they have seen of grace heretofore or the favour of God now it is under a cloud which I believe was Pauls case when a messenger of Satan was sent to buffet him and a thorne in the flesh given him seeing it is put in opposition to the abundance of revelations that he had being taken up into the third heavens 2 Cor. 12. and therefore had need of Ordinances for support Sometimes on a soyle received by temptation of which his own heart and not the Church is witnesse and therefore is at a losse of the joy of his salvation and stands in need of strength for recovery Sometimes by over-much sloath and rust contracted on his graces through negligence which is supposed to be the case of the spouse indulging her self too much in carnal ease Cant. 5.2 I have put off my coat how shall I put it on I have washed my feet how shall I defile them Sometimes God out of prerogative withdrawing the rayes of his Spirit and refusing to testifie with our spirits in which case the soul that is most upright with God and sincere in his feare walks in darknesse and sees no light in which there is need of all communications from God and attendance upon him in Ordinances When these shall hear all in whom the work of grace is not in truth thus warned to keep back and told of the high danger of approaching to this Table in such away aggravated will not they put in their name and say their souls are now spoke to They must therefore absent themselves and so the smoaking flax is quenched
for Manna Bellarmine contends that there can be no question but the Domestick creatures as Dogs and Hens did eat of it that not by casualty or wickednesse as he confesseth they may of the Eucharist and so a Dog or a Swine eats Christ but ordinarily or commonly Answ We must distinguish between the Natural and Mystical Answ 1 use of this Manna and of this water The natural use was for their bodies as well men as beasts and of all such beasts as they had in their possession The Mystical use was as pledges of Spiritual mercies and favours 2. The whole of those elements were not Sacramental but Answ 2 the eating and drinking of men in Covenant is necessary to make them Sacraments Participation is a part as I may say of consecration The bread and wine is not unto us the body and blood of Christ unlesse it be eaten and drunk neither was this Spiritual meat or Spiritual drink before the Israelites ate and drank of it 3. It is objected that the Israelites saw no such thing as Baptisme Object 3 in the Cloud or in the Sea nor any such thing as remission of sin which is the fruit of Baptisme nor any such Spiritual nourishment in Manna or the Rock They saw the Cloud to be their present safety and Manna and the Rock their sustenance Answ 1. What Israel did see is one thing and what these Answ 1 did hold forth to be seen is another 2. That they saw not Christ in these Sacraments nor yet Answ 2 in Circumcision in that explicite cleare way as we see him in Baptisme or the Lords Supper is evident but they saw these to be evidences and signes of God in Covenant with them and that as they were hereby kept from the present that so he would keep them from everlasting danger They saw Christ implicitely though not explicitely in these Ordinances and so for the time of their continuance they had the nature and were of the use of Sacraments SECT V. The five supposititious Sacraments of Rome Examined IN the next place we are to make it appear that there are in New-Testament-times onely two Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper In this we may be more cleare seeing none is set up in competition with any fair colour And here the five suppositious Sacraments of the Church of Rome offer themselves which are either such which according to them belong to all in general or those that are restrained to some in peculiar Of the former sort there are three Confirmation Penance and Extreame Vnction Of the latter two Orders and Marriage SECT VI. Confirmation no Sacrament THe first of these is Confirmation For discovery of which we must leave the fountain of Scriptures to rake in the dunghill of Popish Writers In case therefore we should dwell too long in it the Reader would be in danger to nauseate it yet perhaps it may not be ungrateful to look into it to see the mercy of our deliverance from it Though they put it after Baptisme in order Confirmation preferred before Baptisme yet with them it goes before it in honour In Baptisme we are made the servants of Christ in Confirmation they become his Champions or Souldiers Confirmation therefore perfects what Baptisme begins and before confirmation baptized ones are onely one half Christians The lowest Priest may therefore ordinarily baptize and any other upon emergent necessity but the Bishop onely may confirm Concerning this the Councel of Trent hath determined If any shall say that confirmation of baptized ones is an idle Ceremony and not rather a true and proper Sacrament or that heretofore it was nothing but a certain Catechisme in which young persons of growth gave a reason of their faith before the Church let him be accursed And now it is time for all that have sworn to that Councel to see that they defend it I shall briefly out of Bellarmine lay down the whole of it The matter of it he laies down in four propositions 1. Chrisme or Vnction is the matter of Confirmation 2. The matter of Confirmation The matter of confirmation is not simple oil but oil mixt with balsame 3. Chrisme which is the matter of confirmation is first to be consecrated and blest 4. The ointment of Chrisme ought to be made in the form of a crosse in the forehead of the baptized person that it may be the true and immediate matter of this Sacrament The form The form of this Sacrament is this I sign thee with the sign of the crosse and confirm thee with the Chrisme of salvation in the Name of c. The fruit The fruit of it is 1. To conferre grace to strengthen the soul against Satans assaults 2. To conferre an indelible character whereby men are received into the Army of Christ as in Baptisme they are received into his family so that it may not be reiterated any more then Baptisme The Minister The Minister of this Sacrament is onely the Bishop and no other He that administers other Sacraments hath nothing to do with this Sacrament The Ceremonies The Ceremonies are twofold 1. At consecration 2. At administration At consecration At Consecration there are four Ceremonies The Oyl and Balsame are blessed with prayer with the sign of the Crosse The Bishop breaths certain times on the ointment he salutes it with these words All hail holy Chrisme At the administration At the administration there are eight Ceremonies There must be a Godfather present prayers must be used over them the Bishop gives a pax to the party now confirmed he gives him a blow upon the face the forehead must be bound with a fillet some say seven daies others onely three The head must not be washed nor the forehead for seven daies space It must be administred at the feast of Pentecost Lastly it must be done with fasting When all this is considered we may well think that Austin was much deceived when he said that the Sacraments of the New Testament are few and easy Bellarmine in order to prove this to be a Sacrament laies down three requisites in a Sacrament 1. A promise of grace 2. An outward sensible sign as an organ or instrument to convey the promise 3. A command of God for administration But all of these we say are wanting in this Supposed Sacrament and therefore according to himself it is no Sacrament The promise of grace he thinks he finds in the fourteenth fiftenth and sixteenth Chapters of St. John's Gospel Joh. 14.15.16 chap. Luk. 24. Act. 1. vindicated where the Holy Ghost is promised to the Apostles to make them valiant and undaunted in the profession of the faith And Luk. 24. where they are commanded to tarry at Jerusalem until they be endued with power from on high And Act. 1. where they are promised to receive power after that the Holy Ghost is come upon them Here if our Author may be heard is enough A divine promise and that in Scripture made
to men baptized for a larger measure of grace for strength for confession of faith But our acute disputant should shew us where this promise is made to his Chrisme made up of oyl and Balsame and thus cross'd and bless'd 2. He should remember that he himself tells us that the Apostles had this promise made good unto them without this or any sign at all 3. He might have found many of these promises in Old-Testament times which yet made up no such Sacrament in those daies Act. 8.17 vindicated The outward sensible sign he finds Act. 8. where it is said They put their hands upon them and they received the Holy Ghost But 1. Papists use no imposition of hands in this supposed Sacrament 2. In other Sacraments both we and they make the outward sign and matter to be one and the same why is it then that imposition of hands is the sign and other things the matter 3. The gifts there mentioned are not saving but miraculous proper to those times and not found in ours 4. Those were conferred before Baptisme as well as after Act. 10.44 Who can forbid water that these should be baptized seeing they have received the Holy Ghost as well as we The command from God Bellarmine will prove from the Apostles use of this sign If God had not enjoyned imposition of hands The Apostles imposition of hands no proof of Confirmation they would not so ordinarily saith he have laid on their hands in conferring of gifts Answ 1. we look for a command for that which our adversaries do use viz. their Chrisme Balsame Crosse and not for imposition of hands which they use not 2. John did baptize yet our Author will not allow that for a proof that he had a command to baptize 3. The pen-men of the Holy Ghost wrote Scripture yet that is no proof with him that they had a command to write 4. Alex. Hal. part 4 quaest 9. affirms that Christ the Lord did neither institute nor dispense this Sacrament as it is a Sacrament 5. Thomas Aquinas is more modest likewise as we heard before when we spake to the Author of Sacraments confessing that their Chrisme is not found in Scriptures and he excuses it as not belonging to the being but solemnity of Sacraments therein confessing that all that belongs to the being of Sacraments ought to be written in Scriptures But though his answer is more modest yet it is lesse advised that which all his fellowes make the matter of this Sacrament he denies to belong to the being of it The ancient use of that which afterwards did degenerate into this soppery The ancient use of confirmation degenerated into this practice Bellarmine out of Chemnitius layes down in six Propositions 1. When a child baptized in infancy comes to discretion he is to be instructed in the principles of Religion and then to be brought before the Church and put in mind of his Baptisme how and why he was baptized 2. He is to utter a profession of his own faith according as he hath learned 3. He is to be examined in the principal heads of Christian Religion 4. He is to be admonished that hereby he now differs from Heathens Hereticks and all of prophane opinions 5. There is to be added an exhortation concerning the vow of Baptisme and the necessity of perseverance in the doctrine 6. This is to be concluded with prayer And if laying on of hands be used it may be well done saith Chemnitius without any superstition But when care in Catechizing and examination is wanting it is no better saith he then an idle Ceremony and with addition of the forementioned Ceremonies a meer foppery SECT VII Pennance no Sacrament THe next that they would obtrude upon us as a Sacrament is Pennance Satan not enduring the grace of Repentance hath made it his businesse to rob us of the Word and to bring in that of Pennance in the stead of it leaving little that is of God in it and making it up with the device of man It is not my work in this place to speak to Repentance as it is held forth in the Gospel to us and to be practised of Christians whether as it is inward the change of the mind and will from evil to good from Satan to God or outward in answerable works of obedience We confesse a necessity of it in this sense in the highest degree a necessity as well medii as praecepti being not onely enjoyned by command from God but of that necessity that salvation cannot be obtained without it Luk. 13.3 Except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish but the Sacramentality of it which they assert we wholly deny Our souls having all made shipwrack in our first parents and upon that account made lyable to wrath the first plank for safety they say is Baptisme in which all sin Original or Actual before contracted is actually pardoned and that Sacrament is as they say of no further use for the pardon of any sins following after it The second plank for safety after shipwrack with them is Pennance which is a following Sacrament for remission of sins not so easie as the former but attended with more trouble The parts of pennance 1. Contrition consisting of three parts Contrition Confession and Satisfaction The first of these aright understood we willingly acknowledge to be a Christian duty and a necessary requisite to the grace of Repentance 2 Cor. 7.10 Godly sorrow worketh Repentance to Salvation not to be repented of Upon sense of sin we are brought to turn from sin 2. Confession Confession we likewise acknowledge knowing with Job that it is an evil to hide our sins as Adam Job 31.33 and that the Apostle tells us If we confesse our sins God is just and faithful to forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousnesse 1 Joh. 1.10 But that which they would bring in which is a whisper of all in a Priests ear in order to take from him some bodily Pennance and accordingly receive his absolution we deny and well know that it were a vain labour to search into the Scriptures or antiquity for it Satisfaction we so farre receive that offenders to publick scandal must make that publick acknowledgement that the Church may with freedom receive them into communion 3. Satisfaction But for satisfaction to God we must let it alone for ever unlesse we will shoulder Christ out of that function and take it upon our own persons he will never suffer that we should be sharers with him in it and so we should be for ever on the work as the damned in hell are and never able to go through with it This is as though a man were fined of his Prince as much as the servant in the Parable was indebted to his Lord ten thousand talents and should attempt to pay it with a few pence of a counterfeit coyn of his own stamp