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A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

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This Errour in point of worship you may call Idolatry But beware that you take not decent or comely Ceremonies for essentiall parts of worship The Apostle urging women in the Church of Corinth to be covered 1 Cor. 11.6 that which they might think was too much precisenesse in him for we may be apt to suppose he discontented them that did otherwise was decent in his eyes and commanded to be done but not making it a point of worship nor pressing it upon them as part of Gods service declares that ceremonies may be used in but ought ever to be differenced from the worship performed In brief whatever Ceremony of what nature or kind soever that is enjoined that is not contrary to the Word of God and by the Officers of the Church thought comely to be used as tending to make that worship then used to be the more Reverenced and esteemed by the performers is not to be opposed This age discovers what a dis-respect contempt undervaluinig thoughts most men have even good men in a great measure of the house of God table of God service of God and Servants of God since decent and comely ceremonies were banished from the Church of God and where such ceremonies are injoyned and thou separatest thou art guilty of renting the seamlesse coat there being no cause for making that separation justifiable For Here●●e then and Idolatry only then is there a cause of separation and what ever is more then these cometh of Satan Wherefore though our departure were a trouble to them sayth Reverend Bishop Iewel speaking of Rome yet they ought to consider how just cause we had of our departure And in another place he saith It is true we have departed from them and for so doing we give thanks to Almighty God but yet from Christ from the Apostles and from the Primitive Church we have not departed Romes Heresie and Idolatry gave a just ground for the Reformed Churches separation But In our days there is made such a separation as by no Scripture can be justified there being nothing in matter of doctrine taught nor in point of worship performed that in the least contradicts the Word written or the worship injoyned and therefore their sin is the greater tending to the destroying of that love charity concord union that ought to be in and amongst the members of the Church we must not cut off the arm for every scratch or smal hurt much lesse cut off our nose because it seems to stand awry through a false glasse neither ought we to separate from the body of the Church for every small errour in it as for every Ceremony that in our judgment is amisse and indeed those that are most separate from the Church now in the highest points of doctrine and fight against her did but at first dislike her Ceremonies so dangerous it is to yield in the least to the sin of Schisme for the hurt in that quickly turns to the Gangreen of Heresie Those that disliked her Su●plice now scorn her preaching those that disliked her prayers will not now pray at all those that disliked standing at the Creed now will fall down to no God those that disliked her Crosse in Baptism now scorn the Spiritual washing those that looked sowr upon my Lord the Bishop now casts stones at the Preacher Master G Those that dug down her Altars now would pull down her Churches they that saw her kneel at the Lords Supper and grumbled because she sate not are now so holy that they scorn it Which thing duly and seriously weighed might make men afraid to play about the hole of the asp or to put their hand in the Cokatrice den nay to touch it were it but with a stick least as it befals him that toucheth the Torpedo a spiritual numbnesse or Judiciall stupefaction befall them that they shall no● move one foot forward in a right way more Seldome can we see them returning to their mother Church and to that doctrine wherein they were baptized but like sheep out of the Fold as soon as out of the Church porch they wander further and further and so far they are gone that for the present I am not disposed to go after them but to such as are within hearing I give this short direction viz. to behold such as have gone before them that at first did but st●mble at straws were troubled at trifles thought to have gone no further yet whither are they now hurried look back to the Church you have left view her orders her Sacraments her points of worship study them try them by the Sciptures if you can find them contrary or repugnant to the written Word of God stand stil and save thy own soul but follow not them for they went in the way of Cain and run greedily after the errour of Balaam perished in the Gainsaying of Co●e Clouds without Water carried about of Winds raging waves of the Sea foaming out their own shame wandring stars Jude 11.12 13. By good Words and fair Speeches they deceive the hearts of the simple not for our Lord Iesus Christ but for their own belly Romans 16.18 Quest. 7. Whether more Religions then one may be Tollerated where the true Church is Established In the opening of this Question knowing the times wherein I live and the fewnesse of my years I will not shew you my opinion but you shall hear the Judgement of a Master in our Israel that was gathered with gray hairs to his Fathers and lately fell asleep One Religion is to be Tolerated and no more to be publickly taught then one 1. Because there is but one God who is the object of Religion his Essenc● being simple and indivisible his worship is also to be diversitie of Religion breeds and produceth only diversity of Opinion touching God which in time may in the conceits of men d●stroy his unity and Onenesse 2. As there is but one truth so there ought to be but one Religion for false Religions either teach to worship false Gods or else in a false way and manner to worship the true God which made God himself in constituting the Church of the Jews in a strict manner to give charge touching that and in his constituting the Church of the Christians to do the same by commanding them to stone that Prophet that taught otherwise and us to curse that Angel that should teach other Doctrine then he did then by Moses and now to us by his Son give teach command and appoint Deut. 13.1 Gal. 1.8 3. There is but one Church which is the ground and pillar of truth 1 Tim. 3.15 and one Spirit to lead that Church in the way of truth and therefore there ought to be but one Religion which is the Doctrine of that one Truth 4. There is but one way to heaven and eternal Life in which way few through ignorance and errour walk or find and ways to Hell and destruction which many through corrupted nature fall
Either 1. Strictly for those Precepts Sayings Sermons Exhortations that he gave made left behind in the World when he was visibly dwelling among men in the shape and form of a Servant and whosoever lets these words dwell in them they shall be like men dwelling upon a Rock the water may come about them but it shal never hurt them they may come about their feet but never swell up to the head the wind may blow but not a hair of his head fall to the Earth Mat. 7.27 2. Largely for all the Words Sayings Prophesies Sermons that were spoken by all whom he commissioned to preach after for the whole Doctrine of the Old and new Testament rejecting nothing nor turning out of doors of the great and capacious building of our souls no Word no Scripture since we can see the Image of Christ upon them all we know that Orally and Vocally or Verbally Christ made no Psalm yet here they are put down as the Words of Christ for they were truly Prophetically and spiritually made by him they are a part of that holy Book called the Word of Christ not excluding the other persons but including for it hath various titles according to the purpose and pleasure of the holy Ghost It is the VVord of God Ephes. 6.17 It is the VVord of the Lord 2. Thes. 2.3.1 It is the VVord of Life Phil. 2.16 and here it is the VVord of Christ. In those other places the Son is not excluded quod necessario subintelligitur non deest and here the Father with the Spirit are concluded That the whole body of the Doctrine of the Scriptures and what ever is contained therein may be called the word of Christ though Christ might not be yet come in the flesh may be thus demonstrated 1. They were all uttered and spoken by his spirit or they were written by that spirit that came from him Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy ghost 2. Pet. 1. ult Now the Holy ghost is sent by the Father in his Sons name Ioh. 14.26 and the Son sends the Holy ghost again from the Father Ioh. 15.26 It was this Spirit that put words in the mouth and mind of Noah Abraham Isaac Iacob David Solomon Iehosophat Iob Daniel Ieremiah VVhat shall I say the time would fail to speak of Gideon Barack Sampson Peter Paul and Iames the Lords Brother all which were acted by one and the same spirit which proceedeth from the Father and the Son prompting them and dictating to them the things Councels prophesies that are recorded in the Oracles of God 2. They did all of them hold him out to the VVorld or to the Sons of men speak of him Abraham saw his day Iohn 8.56 Moses wrote of him Ioh. 5.46 Isaiah saw him born of a Virgin Isa. 7.14 and told the VVorld of it Isa. 9.6 Ieremiah saw the children of Bethlem slain for him Ier. 31.15 He was seen from the top Tower of divine speculation giving eyes to the blind and ears to the deaf Isa. 35.5 He was sold for thirty pieces of silver Zacch 11.13 he was seen scourged mocked and crucified Isai. 53.4 5. he was seen to rise from the dead the third day Hos. 13. 14. Psal. 16.10 Ion. 1.17 he was seen to intercede at the right hand of God Dan. 9.17 he was seen coming in the clouds to judge his people Iude 14. his Birth his Reign his Nature his Suffering the cause of his Suffering the profits of his sufferings the height of his Power the extension of his Kingdom was made known to the world to Simeon before he embraced him else he would not nay could not have beheld him as the Lords Salvation Luk. 2.30 that is he through whom God appointed salvation to come by Christ himself commanded the Jews to search the Scriptures Ioh. 5.39 as if he had said If you do not find by the Scriptures the properties acts signs tokens of the true Messias spoken of by the Prophets to agree with and in me then believe me not They speak so fully and so largely of him of his Kingdome strength and power that almost it is nothing else but the word of Christ as if he himself were speaking of himself the things concerning himself Every Prophet in his turn prophesied and spake of him untill Iohn and he pointed him with his finger saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 behold the Lamb of God they held him out unto the World in Prophesies and Types the Baptist held him forth to the World in flesh and bones yet fleshand blood revealed it not to him neither but the spirit which he sent before to restifie of those things that should come to pass and that they might be brought by those sayings to believe on the Son of man he brought indeed glad tidings vere magnum id est majus quom humana capit intelligentiam that said To you is born this day a Saviour which is Christ the Lord. Gloria in excelsis he plainer that said Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the World 3. They were all of them ratified and fulfilled of him confirmed and established by him Not a Iota or Title that was foretold of him but was to the height accomplished of him ut impleretur that it might fulfilled which was spoken in the Scriptures is a usual phrase with the Evangelists As Ionas was three days and three nights in the Whales belly so was the Son of man in the bowels of the earth As the Serpent was lifted up that the Israelites beholding it might be cured of those wounds the fiery Serpents had given them so must the Son of man be lifted up on the Cross that whoso beholds him might be saved from the stings of that old Serpent called the Devill and Sathan Revel 12.9 He is the true Melchizedec who meets the faithfull returning from the slaughter of their sins and comforts them with bread and wine and blesseth them yea and they shal be blessed There was one Text and it seems but a mean one yet he wil not dye nay rather he cannot dye until it be fulfilled for at the last gasp he cryes out Ioh. 19.28 I thirst Quodnam Genus Sermonis he that could endure mockings scourges buffettings nay nailing to the Cross cast out of the land of the living and near to be made free among the dead cannot he endure a little thirst This thirst it seems is more then naturall that death it self cannot quench he is a thirst and Heaven and earth shall perish before he drink not those hands feet that in this his condition we would think should rather smite him spurn at him must be imployed to fetch reach him drink Ut impleretur all this was done that it might be fulfilled which was spoken in that Scripture Psal. 69.21 In my thirst they gave mee Vinegar to drink which when he had done then Consummatum est all was finished if it had not been the truth
that had spoken it in the Psalm the truth had not performed it so exactly in the Gosple 4 According to his pleasure were they spoken and at his good wil were they uttered by them The spirit of prophesie did not always abide upon the most holy Prophet hence Advenit Verbum Iehova The Word of the Lord came is a usual phrase among the Prophets Elisha was a man of God and yet the Lord had hid the Shanamites grief from him 2 Ki. 4.2 When he put it in their mouths then they spoke and not before they were his words for untill he spoke to their hearts their mouthswere shut up end they remained silent till the Word of the Lord came there was neither voice nor hearing in truth what he spoke they uttered and when he was pleased to be silent they were forced to be mute 5. The prophesies did but open a passage for him and the whole of them had a tendency to him the Law in all its Ceremonies and in all its precepts doth but lead us conduct us point out Christ unto us it hath no Language in it but Christ in it's Condemning power it is a harsh School-master to drive us to Christ Gal. 3.24 The Gospel hath the self same end viz. To bring us to Christ he stands as it were between both Testaments the Prophets behinde him Call but to touch the hem of his garment and come under the skirt of his apparel the Apostles before him call upon men to imbrace him in their arms by faith joyfully and he himself in their mouth utters but what he delivered in person Come unto me all ye that labour Mhtth. 11.28 6. They are his words in respect of that power and that Commission he gave to holy men to write and teach them he gave the Apostles power to preach and a Commission to teach all Nations Matth. 28.19 It was he that took the Apostles from their other Callings and gave them authority to teach what ever he had commanded They did nothing untill he gave that power and assoon as they received their authority from him they began that heavy though holy Imployment 7. In regard of the publication and promulgation of them whatever was spoken was spoken in the name of the Lord all was preached in the name of Christ they desired to know nothing more then Christ they called upon men to believe in Christ they baptized in the name of Christ not by their own power or holiness but in the name of Iesus Christ of Nazareth did they work their miracles Acts 3.6 It follows then that the whole Scriptures in what way soever delivered whether by vision inspiration dreams by signs by voice by writing by Urim and Thummim by men or by Angels by Prophets or Apostles for God spoke divers ways to our Fathers Heb. 1.1 All of it and every part of that All is the word of Christ which we must have to dwell in us for the words are Imperative Imperativo praceptionis a duty that we are to avoid then and shun him that would seek to turn us from the Faith of that word here enjoyned The Apostle is pleased to call the Scriptures the word of Christ rather then the word of God for this probable reason At this time these Coloss●ans were infected and in danger to be drawn to the old Rites and Ceremonies of the Jewish Church by self-seeking men who desired them to look back to the word wherein indeed these things were written Col. 2.16 but now since he exhorts them to the studie of the word of Christ he foresees and knows that by the word of Christ they shall learn that all those Ceremonies were but as shadows and since Christ is come not binding for which cause he chooseth rather to call it the word of Christ that those Hereticks might not take any advantage to corrupt them which they might have done if he had said the word of God From this we might draw many inferences we shall at this time collect two one concerning the Ministers of Christ the other to all the Professors of Christ. 1. Concerning the Ministers of Christ. Let them not hereafter be afraid of man nor of the son of man let them be bold to say to any offender Non licet tibi with Iohn the Baptist It is not lawfull for thee Mat. 14.4 Let their faces be strong against the faces of men their foreheads strong against their foreheads that they be not dismayed at their looks Ezekiel 3.8 9. the word is not theirs but the Lords Let the word of God be spoken with boldness Acts 4.31 Christ speaks as one that had authority Matth. 7.29 and he hath given authority and power to his servants to charge men to their duty 1 Tim. 6.17 where God threatens sin they must not be afraid to pronounce punishment The Lord God hath spoken who can but prophesie Amos 2.8 As they are to preach it with Authority so let them study it constantly where shall the Ambassadors of the most High know the will of their great Master but here Till Christ come let them give attendance to reading A Minister must be a man apt to teach 2 Tim. 2.24 And it s this alone that can fit him for that function In these lyeth the substance and matter of their Commission therefore they must be looked into studied upon 2. To all the Professors of Christ to all that name the name of Jesus let them freely hear me touching these two particulars 1. Let none of them trust believe or depend upon any new or immediate Revelation for his happiness there are in this Age many that trust to those raptures of the Spirit as they call them and will have no other word dwell in them then that word that the Spirit within suggests within casting aside and refusing the Scriptures as useless and unnecessary because a word without But I hope you have not so learned Christ. We shall carry a small time upon the search of that Spirit pretended to trying it by the Scriptures the touchstone of truth and we shall see if those breathings of the Spirit be different from the blasts of the Prince of the power of the Ayr that rules in the children of disobedience 1. It doth not those things that the Spirit of God should do not to insist upon particulars there were three general Acts that Christ promised his Spirit at his coming should perform unto Believers and this Spirit that goes abroad in this Age performs none of them as may appear by a rehearsal of the severall acts themselves 1. Was to bring to remembrance what ever Christ had spoken Ioh. 14.26 This was to be his work then and his work with all believers is the same now what Christ hath taught what Christ hath spoken is the Spirit to bring to remembrance which he will send That Spirit therefore that teacheth and puts that in the minds of men which Christ never spoke cannot be that spirit sent of
to you young men because you are strong and the Word of God abideth in you 1 Ioh. 2 14. 4. It was the end of the Scriptures miraculous preservation what pains did the Heathens take to have the Bible out of the world what wonders did God work to preserve it it was that men might know them and keep them that they might live by them SECTION IV. THe next thing in Order before us is to demonstrate the truth of the Doctrine by reason and strength of Argument that having both reason and Scripture for it we may without delay addresse our selves to obedience It is necessary for all persons to know the Scriptures For 1. All persons are bound to know God and worship or serve God There is a knowledge must be had which all the Creation cannot give the Creatures in heaven and in the Earth may show that there is a God but how to know God they are silent one of them could say Deum colit qui novit but understood he what he said The wisest of men did worship an unknown God Act. 17.23 The Scriptures only teach us and do only show us what God is that he is a spirit Ioh. 4.24 Infinite Eternal Immutable Creator Preserver of all things mercifull gracious long-suffering a God that heareth prayer a hater of all sin one in nature three in persons This no book in the World holds out but this and he that knew most of the nature and best knew in the secrets of art had read far and much in the large volume of the Creatures yet could not know that which is Eternal life to know him to be the only true God and Iesus Christ he had sent Which the Scripture doth truly fully and clearly Having known God by the Scriptures we by that know how to worship Deum colit qui novit God will be worshipped in spirit and in truth Joh. 4.23 By no book can this Question be answered Wherewith shal I come before the Lord that is to be accepted Mi●● 6.6 but by the Scriptures The whole society of men and Angells cannot answer this one Question How shal I do to be saved but by the Scriptures Act. 16.30 The effectual walking after holinesse was never to be seen and read in the starry heaven but in the Heaven of the Scriptures Many excellent things and indeed holy truths may appear and do occurre in the reading of Heathens Seol verbum caro factum est habitavit in nobis ibi non legi but not a syllable of the great mystery of godlynesse Christ manifested in the flesh 2. All persons have need of cleansing against their approaches to God Man is naturally filthy being wholly defiled by sin he is cast out ●n his blood to the loathing of his person Ez. 16.5 Could he apprehend his own filthiness he would be more loathsome in his own eyes then the most infectious Creature could possibly appear All persons may say with the Leaper Unclean Unclean Levit. 13.45 Old and and young rich and poor Male and Female want cleansing therefore had need learn the Word of God which is clean it self Psal. 19.9 and cleaneth others Psal. 119.9 It is of a purifying nature and therefore compared to rain that washeth away filth Deut. 32.2 to Rivers of Waters which denotes the purifying nature of this Word of truth since all persons are impure they are to entertain this Word of Christ which will make them beautifull God is said to wash the soul with water Eze. 16.9 to heal them that are sick Psal. 107.20 and clean them that are filthy by his Word Psalm 119.9 3. All persons may be drawn to believe some great errors against and some to damnable opinions of God Paul assures the Elders of Ephesus Acts 20.29 that after his departure grievous Wolves should enter among them commends them to God and to the Word of his grace which was able to build them up v. 32. whereby they might stand against the blasts of contrary doctrine The worshipping of Angels was going to be intruded upon those Colossians Chap. 2. v. 19. the Word of Christ is recommended to them that by the force and light of that such doctrine might be excluded from Congregations Through ignorance of the Scripture by mens persons by enticing words we may be drawn to believe the doctrine of Devils We must therefore if we would steer our course right for the Haven of happinesse sail by the light given us in the body of the Scriptures Things that have but a show of Scripture mee●ing with ignorance doth o●●en passe as having divine Authority while ●hose that know the Scripture know that it is Sathan transformed into an Angel of light Not a fixed but a wandring star Iud. 13. and therefore not to be walked after lest as he that follows that Meteor ignis fatuus we fall in a ditch and perish in the mid way of our errour and backsliding The ignorance of many in Scripture and the mistakes of many touching some places in it are apparent causes or the Apostacy of many from it in these days of liberty c. 4. No person can perform that duty required commanded and enjoyned them of God Without the knowledge of and acquaintance with the Scriptures the Magistrate will be to seek the Minister will be at a losse and the people like sheep without a Shepherd The Magistrate is to punish sin which cannot be known but by the Scriptures Rom. 7.7 The Minister is to preach the Word and how shall he preach it but by the spirit and how shall he have the spirit except he ask it and how shall he ask except the Scripture direct him How can the people know to give obedience to the one and double honour to the other without acquaintance of this Word of Christ It is that alone that discovers the duties of all relations and by all therefore to be consulted with lest being found faulty in the least Commandement we become breakers of all Iames 2.10 and be called for so doing Least in the Kingdome of Heaven Therefore all Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for Doctrine for reproofe for correction for instruction in Righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished ●●to all good Works 2 Tim. 3.16 17. 5. All Persons will be judged acquitted or condemned by the Scriptures at the dreadful appearance of God we mean by this All those to whom the Scriptures are given according to conformity of mens lives with this Word shall God passe that sentence of Come ye Blessed or Go ye cursed If thou cast thy bread upon the waters give a portion to seven and also to eight Eccl. 11.22 if thou hast dealt thy bread to the hungry Isai. 58.6 or hast neglected and saw thy Brother have need and shut up thy bowels against him 1 Iohn 3.17 and hast stopped thy ears at the cry of thy poor brother Prov. ult 13. thou shalt have thy self condemned and
is he desires not its company for that would set him on work and he loves not that though it were to work out his own salvation 4. Infidelity There is a Spirit of unbelief in men and that mightily opposes and keeps out the Word Heaven is not so beautifull in the conceits of some nor Hell ●o hot in the opinion of many as men make them to be they do not believe but that it shall go well with them in the latter days though they continue in wickednesse they conceit that they shall stand in the Congregation of the Righteous though they here sit in the Seat of the Scornfull like Lots sons in Law Gen. 19.14 The Scripture they think but mocketh when it holds forth Justice against the least sin and transgression and this makes them regardlesse of its acquaintance and carelesse of the studying of it They esteem it not as they should because they believe it not as they ought nor value it according to its worth 5. Wilfulnesse The Jews would not come to Christ that they might have life There is a Gener●tion so pure in their own eys that they despise prophesying and speak evill of the means of salvation They will not be gathered together but separate themselves The Scripture if we believe these is unto them no use They are so pure perfect that its company they need not its Co●nsels they want not and for its threatning they care not being thus resolved they cast it from them as an unnecessary thing and empty shaddow They can read without this Fescue and write without this Copy and come to Heaven without the Scripture c. 6. Haughtinesse or pride which is either Natural or Spirituall 1. Naturall It is below some to be holy it stands not with their grandeure to be Religious their honour lies at the stake and they must revenge flesh and blood cannot indure such affronts as he hath cast upon him Scripture would have him be humble meek patient long-suffering Gal. 5.22 and this man hates all 2. Spirituall Nothing can be taught this man but what he knows already he is as wise to salvation to every good already as all the Preaching of the World can make him what they know he knows also nay possibly the Scripture is a poor dish for him he can live without that milk walk without that crutch swim without those bladders they leave the Scriptures to bring up the feeble and the tender they will walk before to meet the Lord by Revelation and let them go for I here purpose to part with them SECT VI. The Sixth thing we promised in the opening of the Doctrine was to draw some Corolarier which shall be of Information and of Dioection I. Information And that 1. Of the necessity of having the s●cred Scripture in a known Tongue It cannot dwell Richly where it is not understood a strange Language cannot edify the so●l that hears not how shall the Lord be praised served and worshipped by him that cannot understand the Lords meaning If the Trumpet give an u●certain sound who shall prepare himself to battel ● Cor. 14.8 So likewise you except you utter from the Tongue things easie to be understood how shall it be known what is spoken The Scripture ought not to be kept from the people by keeping it in an unknown Language Sacrilegious therefore is the Church of Rome for so doing It ought not so to be For 1. The Prophets and Apostles that were the writers of it writ it in Tongues then known and common to every Nation did they Preach and write in that common vulgar tongue then in use in that Nation 2. They are to be the Spiritual weapons for those that receive them The Scripture is the Armour of a Christian Ephes. 6.17 his Armour is to be by him to secure him at all times against his Enemies that are always watching an opportunity against him 3. There is a generall precept for all Christians to search them Iob. 5 29. Deut. 31.11 This command is not only for Scholars but for the whole company of Believers every one singularly and all of them universally are to search the Scriptures they must therefore be in a Tongue and Language that they can understand 4 It is against Common equity and justice When Modecai wrote Letters to the hundred twenty and seven Provinces Est. 8.9 He write unto every Province according to the writing thereof and to every people after their Language and ought not the mind of God and the gospell of our Lord be made known to all according to their severall Languages its but equity that people understand those Laws they are governd by especially when their lives are in hazard as the case was then with the Jews but most of all when mens souls are in hazard as the case is now with the Romanists But let me not wrong Rome she lately consented since necessity drove her to it to allow Bibles to some in their Vulgar Tongue yet prayers to be made Sacraments to be delivered to a people Church or Congregation in a tongue common that is in any save in the Latin is no lesse sin at Rome then blasphemy making the poor people at those Ordinances p●●take of that that they have no knowledge of From their practice in this dissent the Reformed Churches and the Church of England Article 14. the Article it self is this Art 24. of the Church of England It is a thing plainly repugnant to the word of God and the custom of the Primitive Church to have publick prayer in the Church or to minister Sacraments in a tongue not understood of the people 2. This informs us with what spirit they are possessed that contemn or flight the Scriptures and tread it underfoot as unsavoury salt counting it an unholy thing Must the word of Christ dwell richly in all How is it that many scorn it all That spirit that is in them sets its face against that Spirit that the Scripture was written by therefore we may know whence he came but of these c. 2. Direction Seeing how necessary it is that the word of Christ be known and received it is expedient to direct the Christian to walk in that Road where the word of Christ is to be found that he may bring salvation to his house The Direction shall be general to follow or practise four things which are four Ordinances of God contemned and slighted in this Age though they be necessary means of the words indwelling and the power of God to salvation the Directions are these 1. To read the Scriptures 2. To hear the Scriptures 3. To confer about the Scriptures 4. To sing some part of the Scriptures Which being practised by the watering of his grace that worketh all the good man shall bring forth of his treasure things new and old his leaf shall never wither nor be shaken with the blasts of persecution nor blusterings of Hereticks or Seducers which is the cause and ground of
our undertaking this subject at this time wherein so many are shaken to and ●ro by every wind of Doctrine desiring to establish you in that Faith once given to the Saints and to confirm you in the do●●rine of the holy Catholick Church to which I presume you were baptized we shall from this Text maintain several grand truths in reference to the Word Sacraments and Prayer which may serve you as Antidotes against that poyson that hath already slain thousands at our right hand and ten thousand at our left but we must first come to the last Section and see some questions resolved SECTION VII Questions Resolved Quest. 1. Whither the Scripture be the word of God Quest. 2. Whither the Scripture ought to be mens onely rule Quest. 3. Whither men may come to a saving knowledg of God without the Scripture Quest. 4. Whither persestion may be attributed to the Scripture Quest. 5. Whither Salvation may be had by the single knowledg of the Scripture Quest. 6. What may perswade one that doubts to beleeve the truth of the Scripture Quest. 7. How far the Saints may be our rule besides the Scripture Quest. 8. Whither the books called Apocrypha be not Scripture Quest. 9. Why would God writ the Scripture Quest. 10. Whether men be bound to beleeve all that is in the Scripture Quest. 1. Whether the Scripture be the word of God By Scripture here is meant the whole word of God contained wholly and onely in the Canonicall bookes of the old and new Testament for though the word Scripture signifies only a writting or a book and may be attributed to any book scrole or writing in the world yet use and custome which is the rule of speaking hath wrought this word Scripture to signifie that writing of the Holy Ghost contained in the Book of God and not any other book 1. From the excellency that it hath above all other it is called the Scripture that is the Book as if there were none deserved that name but it hence the book of Canticles is called the Song of Songs that is the most excellent of Songs so this the Book that is the book of books 2. From that necessity that lies upon men to have this book above all other If all the learning of all the most famous Libraries could be contracted into one book and that one book digested into one mans Head yet he would call for thee Book that book that his life his comforts his salvation stood upon this book was made to mend all other books and the light that all other Learning could afford without this would but make Hell so much the darker when all Books are shown him yet as David said of Goliahs sword there is no Book like that 1 Sam. 21.9 or as Rachel said to Iacob Give me that or else I die Gen. 30.1 The like might be said of the word Bible that signifying also a Book and properly any Book of the world might be called a Bible but customarily it s given only to that Book that contains the word or that Book written by the Spirit of God Now that the Scripture or the Books of the old and new Testament are the words of God and written by none but God that they are from heaven and not of men may appear by these following reasons 1. None but God can be found out to make them let heaven and earth be searched as with a Candle and among all the Inhabitan●s therein the Author of this Book is not to be found For 1. If he was not the writer of them either Angels Beasts or men must for Plants and Trees are not to be once suspected for their original But 1. Angels made it not for then it was either made by them altogether or by some part of them But 1. Not by them altogether for then in some place or other this had been discovered the Angels would have told the world before this time that it was composed by them They would have discovered to the so●s of men by some means or other that they were beholding to them for these comfortable words 2. Neither can the Scripture be supposed to be made by one part of them for then either they m●st be made by the fallen Angels or the confirmed Angels But 1. Not by the fallen Angels the devils are more subtle then to destroy their own Kingdom to give weapons to overcome themselves Satan hath more policy then to reveal how men shall avoid his snares escape his traps overcome his temptations prevent his ambushments frustrate his watchings and disappoint all his purposes every line of the Bible tends to the r●ine of his Kingdom every verse in it is his neck verse Would he have had himself known by no other name then a lyar a Serpent a Dragon a roaring and devouring Lyon a Deceiver an Accuser an unclean Spirit if he had gone to set himself out into the world it will follow therefore it was not them 2. Neither was it made by the confirmed Angels for they acknowledge themselves our fellow Servants Rev. 19.10 22.9 being therefore professedly our fellow servants they could not make Laws to restrain us of our desires nor enjoyn us from performing any thing that our own hearts lusted after neither would men acknowledge the Angels in this case to be their superiors 2. Beasts did not write it It is to be hoped that the Reader is so much a man as to understand Beasts or Fouls composed not that work their irrationality shews sufficiently their impossibility 3. Men did not do it There is but man to be thought on as the Author of this Book since Angels are known not to do it And yet apparent it is that men had no hand in it for then either it must be done by men altogether or by some men But 1. Not by men altogether where was that meeting and in what Country is that place that mankinde gathered themselves together to make L●ws against themselves to bind their own hands to their own feet nay to crush their own heart yea which is more to doom themselves to the everlasting flames for doing that that above all things is most pleasing to themselves What time of the world was this meeting in What Histories mentions of it What Generation was then living and who called this Assembly together What makes this Age to tye themselves to those Laws made by their Fathers since they are dead and fallen asleep 2. Neither was it done by men apart for then those men that composed it must be either good or bad But 1. Good men would not do it for then they ought to have been speakers of the truth they have kept the world in falshood for they say that the Scripture is of God made by his finger spoken by his Spirit if made by themselves it s nothing so yea the best of men find in themselves disobedience to the Laws therein contained which costs them much sorrow many tears
be attributed to the Scripture This Question arises from the doctrine of the Church of Rome who teacheth her Members that the Scriptures are not perfect that is that the Word of God contained in the Scriptures is not of it self sufficient for salvation and therefore they help it out with their Traditions yet the Catholick Church in all Ages reputed the word in it self absolutely perfect For 1. The Scripture it self acknowledges perfection to be in it 2 Tim. 3.16 All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for Doctrine for Reproof for Correction for instruction in Righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished unto all good workes Now what Spiritual occasion can there be devised or what Act of Religion can a soul intend but what in one of these ways the Scripture is profitable and able to make him perfect of it self without any addition to it It s profitable for Doctrine that is for all truths necessary for salvation For Reproof that is for confutations of all errors For Correction that is a reprehension of all Vice For Instruction that is for exhortation to all ver●ues And all this is that the Man of God may be perfect or that he might be a perfect man of God throughly furnished unto all good works This discovers the Scriptures largenesse The Scripture is written that the Soul may be full of joy The water of tradition need not be mixed with the Wine of the Scripture it can give fulnesse of joy without them 1 Ioh. 1.4 2. They are the Rules whereby the perfection of all other doctrine must be tryed we must bring all other to this Touch-stone we must weigh all weights in this ballance all Rules must be ruled by this and therefore it ought to be straight it self Acts 17.11 the truth of Pauls Doctrine appears by it's conformity to this Nay Christ himself in whom was no errour appeals to it Iohn 5.39 3. The whole and full will of God touching his Church to the end of the World is contained in it Ioh. 14.26 There is no new thing to be done nor no new truth now to be taught The Acts of the Spirit are but remembrancers of that Doctrine formerly taught by Christ. He shall bring to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you so that no new thing nor any other thing is to be expected but what he did speak unto them even all things that he had heard of his Father John 15.15 so that the will of God being by the Scriptures fully known they are to be acknowledged perfect Put nothing therefore unto his Words lest he reprove thee and thou be found a Lya● Prov. 30.6 4. There is no truth doctrine or Act which is necessary for salvation but is in the Scripture either by express Text or may be drawn from it by good rationall and holy consequence yea all necessary truths are plain open and manifest in Scripture 5. The Scriptures are called and owned by the Name of Gods Testament Heb. 9. the Old is the first Testament and the New is the last v. 15. c 18. Now the last Will and Testament of a man will not admit of any Addition nor suffer a diminution shal Gods Will and Testament not be sufficient to bring his Sons and Children to heaven without something put to it by man It is not therefore his but their Testament if they must perfect that which blasphemy let our souls abhor 6. The Arguments that the Church of Rome brings are in themselves frivilous and indeed prove the perfection of the Scriptures To this agree the Reformed Churches of Helv. Art 1. Bohem. Art 1. of Fr. Art 5. of Belg. Art 7. of Wirtem Art 31. of S●ev Art 1. of England Art 6. The Article it selfe was mentioned before Quest. 5. Whether Salvation may be hold by single knowledge of the Scriptures By the single knowledge of the Scriptures we understand the bare knowledge of the History precepts counsels and promises of the Bible abstracted from the spirit of God which knowledge will never bring a man to Heaven nor happinesse For 1. Not by grace but by nature might many be saved contrary to Ephes. 2.8 much reading and a good memory or once a week to look upon the Bible might be sufficient to make a man holy and denominate one a Saint 2. Such a knowledge might and doth consist with all wickedness and uncleannesse there are some Matth. 7.22 that did prophesie in the Name of Christ which shews that they knew his Law and yet they knew not his glory for he never knew them being workers of iniquity v. 23. 3. It is not a knowing only but a doing also that God requires as a means to obtain Eternal life Iames 1.22 But be ye doers of the Word and not hearers only we are not altogether to know but likewise to walk by the same rule Phil. 3.16 4. A clear full and true knowledge of the Scriptures can never be had without the spirit ●f God Man is naturally blind and cannot see spirituall things because they are spiritually discerned 1 Cor. 2. 14. the plainest thing in the Scripture is a mystery to him he knows not wat sin is he knows no what Christ is he cannot see sin to be deadly poyson the vomit of a Dog Neither beholds he the Lord Jesus as the chiefest of ten thousand It is the unction of the Spirit by which the Believer knoweth all things 1 Iohn 2.20 that is savingly and as he ought to know 5. God threatens severely suth as barely know his Law Psalm 50.16 Hs says to the wicked What hast thou to do to declare my statutes or that thou shouldest take my Covenant in my mouth c. God puts no regard to a sinner that only knows his will on Earth and shall never Crown him that barely knew his Masters will in Heaven 6. If the bare knowledge of the Scriptures were sufficient for salvation I question whether the Devils should remain in everlasting chains under darknesse This is not spoken to put away the use of the Scripture but that abuse of trusting barely to it we ought to call for the Spirit and beg for the Holy ghost to open our eyes and sanctifie our hearts and renew our natures that the Word of God might be inwardly taught us as well as outwardly preached unto us Quest. 6. What may perswade one that doubts to believe the truth of the Scriptures By doubting of the Scriptures here is understood a calling in question out of pure ignorance the very truth of the History of the Bible he doubts if David King of Israel did compose Psalms and doubts that the Lord is not round about them that fear him as the Mountains are about Ierusalem He doubts that the Apostles being ignorant men and by Trade Fisher-men most could convert Nations not a few In a word he questions the Books of Moses of the Psalms Prophets Evangelists and Apostles not all out
they dye like men Psal. 82.7 and after death commeth judgement Heb. 9.27 2. Ministers must read the Word St. Paul seriously pressingly exhorts his Son Timothy to give attendance to Reading 1 Tim 4.13 It is the Scriptures that he professeth he is come to open therefore his heart and breast above all mens should not be shut against it He cannot execute the Office of an Ambassadour that is ignorant of the Nature of his Commission nor he of a Divine that is not wel read in the Word of truth God in some sence never gave his Ple●● potentiaries to a Minister but the Scripture always is proposed for this Rule he must be therefore an A●ollos mighty in the Scriptures Acts 18.24 His calling is to draw men from darknesse into light from the power of Sathan to the power of God Act. 26.18 The light therefore of the Scripture ought to be in his hand constantly and the Gospell which is the power of God ought to be in himself powerfully 1. That he might Preach the Word boldly 2 Tim. 4.2 Prudently Eccles. 12.10 11. Aptly 1 Tim. 3.2 Savingly 1 Tim. 4.16 2. That he may pray servently Iames 5.14 15 16 17. 3. Administer the Sacraments purely 1 Cor. 11.23 4. Visit the sick comfortably Iam. 5.14 5. Convince the gain-sayer strongly 1 Tit. 9. 6. Reprove and admonish the Offender meekly 2 Tim. 24 25. 7. That he may save himself and all that hear him Eternally 1 Tim. 4.16 3. All people must read the Word No person is exempted of what degree quality or condition soever high or low rich or poor Male and Female ought to perform this duty Every one must let the Word of Christ dwell richly in them that would dwel with Christ enjoying those Riches that shall never fly from them the truth of this appears from what hath been spoken in the proof of the Doctrine yet by way of supplement let us adde 1. The rich and high ones of this earth must read the Scriptu●e 1. That they may not set their hearts on riches Psal. 62.10 2. That they do good to the poor 1 Tim. 6.18 especially toward the poor Christian Gal. 6.10 and that he might do both bountifully not grudgingly 2 Cor. 9.6 7. 3. That they be not high-minded 2 Tim. 6.18 4. That as God hath blessed them above others they might go in holynesse and devotion before others Matth. 5.16 5. That their works of charity might be suitable to their plenty 1 Pet. 4.9 10. 6. That they might not oppresse the poor Isaiah 1.17 7. That they may render to all their dues Rom. 13.7 8. That they might be rich toward God Luke 12.21 Laying up for themselves A good Foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold on Eternall life 1 Tim. 6.19 2 The poor and low ones of this Earth must read 1. that they may never distrust Gods goodnesse to themselves and their posterity Gen. 48.15 16.2 that in patience they may possesse their souls neither grumbling against God Iames 5.10 11 nor grudging or envying any man Psal. 37.1 3. That they might with the stronger faith pour out their desire before God for things they stand in need of Psal. 42.8 4 That a Momentary affliction may work for them a more Eternall weight of glory 2 Cor 4.17 5 That they be not false accusers Incontinent fierce despisers of those that are good Traytors 2 Tim. 3.3 4. Again 1 All the male-kind must read it 1. For they were made according to Gods image which consisteth in knowledge righteousness and true holinesse which the Scripture worketh in men Ephes. 5.26 27. 2. That they may admire Gods wisdome goodnesse and greatnesse in making all creatures for his use Psal. 8.6 3. That they may use all those gifts to his glory which he gives to them 1 Corinthians 12.8 4. That they might not be drawn aside by the flattering tongue of a strange woman Prov. 6.24 5. That they might be temperate and sober in the use of all Gods creatures Ephe. 5.18 6. because the Scriptures were written to them It s written to Fathers 1. Iohn 2.13 to young men to little Children v. 14. It s written to old men and young men therefore they must read it as an Epistle sent to them from God for the ordering of others and cleansing and purifying themselves 2. All the Female kind must read it the weaknesse of woman should be a spur to excite them to the knowledg of the word of truth I have read of one Catharina Alexandria who during the persecution of Christian Religion An. 309. did so rationally refuse the practises of Heathens and Infidels against the faith of Christ that she caused severall of the wisest of them to subscribe to its doctrine and turn Christian their most accute reasons being blunted with that divine wisdome which appeared in that virgins tongue But to proceed that sex is to study the Scriptures 1 That they may continue in Faith and Charity and holiness with sobriety and be saved by Child-bearing 1 Tim. 2.15 2. That they may so demean themselves as may give no occasion to any to be enticed or drawn after them Gen. 14.1 2.3 That they provoke not the Lord to anger through pride haughtinesse and disdaine Isa. 3.16 4. That they may keep within those bounds God hath set them and not exercise authority over the man as to preach c. 1 Cor. 14.34 1 Tim. 2.11 12. SECT 2. WE are now to give some directions touching and about Reading and they shall be 1. Before Reading 2. In Reading 3. After Reading By these as by three doors the Word of Christ enters in and dwels 1. Before Reading 1. Pray that God would give knowledge to understand his Word It was Davids Petition Open thou mine eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of thy Law Psal. 119.18 the naturall man cannot see the things of God 1 Cor. 2.14 The Spirit of God must make us to understand the things of God In his Word there are many things hard to be understood and in them we may easily miscarry there are also many things plain and they have a further reach then man can at the first perceive Let God be called upon therefore that he would open thine eyes and cause thee to understand the meaning of the Holy Ghost The Saduces did read and yet erred in that great doctrine of the Resurrection not knowing the Scriptures 2. Pray that thou mayst profit by the Word Read not Scriptures to put off time but to prepare for Eternity it is best for thee to desire this if thou profit not by Reading thou shalt be on the losing hand if it do thee not a great deal of good it will do thee much hurt if it dot subdue thy sin it will increase thy punishment Study not therefore the Scriptures to fetch thence curious and sinfull questions the forerunner of Heresie Tit. 3.9 10. but to increase thy spiritual wisdom Even to know God and his
Son Iesus Christ whom to know is life Eternall Joh. 17.3 3. Resolve to practise the Word what vice thou findest the word to reprove charge thy own heart not to act strive not against the Spirit in the Word but says speak Lord for thy servant hears What Act or duty it exhorts unto stay not but make hast to perform all Righteous Judgements Make haste least hell and damnation overtake thee left hardness of heart and willfullesse of soul creep upon thee and God and his grace forsake thee and thou become like those that go down into the pit What thou ara commanded to do do it withall thy might resolve to conf●ss● sin and forsake Transgression thou shalt have mercy for sin and for iniquity 4. Resolve to believe the Word and that stedfastly What God hath declared and purposed in his Word touching Saints or sinners in reference to a Tempor●ll or Eternall condition must be believed if we would be saved 1 Cor. 15.1 2. God says that he comes quickly and his Reward is with him Rev. 22.12 Do not mock saying Where is the promise of his coming 2 Pet. 2.3 4. What h●th passed from the mouth of God is by man to be believed if Judgement it is to be feared if promises to be loved The wicked may presume of his present security and cry peace peace The Righteous may doubt of his present safety and say One day or other I shall perish yet say to the Righteous it shall go well with him and wo ●nto the wicked it shall be ill with him Isai. 3.10 11. this if thou believe thou shalt do wel 5. Resolve to receive the Word and that wholly It is not the duty nor suits it with the profession of a Christian to pick out of Scripture and separate one part of the Gospell from another Even in this sence these are days of separation c. Let not a tittle of the Law or Gospell be by thee slighted the Word of the Lord is for ever settled in Heaven his faithfulnesse to all Generations Psal. 119.89 90. though now the Spirit of this World can set the Son against the Father and the New against the Old Testament and the Servant against his Master the Epistles against the Gospell yet from the beginning it was not so The Christian being thus prepared for reading what David said to his Son when he had instructed him cocerning his building of the Temple shall be said for him Now my Son the Lord be with thee and prosper thee 1 Chron. 22.11 2. In Reading 1. Read it Reverendly It must be read as the Laws of the great mighty and Eternall God upon the performing of which depends the Eternall happiness or misery of thet soul that is at this present within thee it must not be read as a story It remains for ever to acquit us or sentence us this man will I look that trembles at my Word Isaiah 66. 2. The Laws was delivered with Thunderings Lightnings and smoak Exod. 20.18 to create a Reverential fear in the souls of men left that fire come down and that smoak break out into a flame to consume that spirit that shall contemn the least of those Commandements 2. Read it heedfully What thou readest let thy Judgement be employed about it not a word thou readest but there is something of an everlasting concernment to thy self Some studie the Scripture and observe things without themselves but these men are not wise O thou man of God flye these things and follow after Righteousness Godliness Faith Love Patience Meeknesse 2 Tim. 6.11 this will profit thee more then to enquire after the State of this or that man or that will profit thee nothing here and the other will both here and hereafter 3. Read it distinctly It must not be read as if we were in haste or could not tarry as Saul for answer from the mouth of the Lord we ought to ponder every line as did Ezraes and his ●ff●ciats when they read the Book of the law of God they read it saith the Holy Ghost Distinctly Nehe. 8.8 he that huddles up this duty but looses his labour and if it be not done again his own happiness if it be hastened by the tongue it is to be feared it will not tarry long at the heart we ought to say to every verse in Scripture as Iacob to the Angel Gen. 30.26 I wil not let thee go except thou blesse me 4. Read it affectionately Arr thou hungry thou would'st eat thy meat with gladness and joy of heart It is the word when thou hast done all that thou must live by be saved by it s called Bread Ames 8.11 And that is the staffe of mans life It s the word of eternall life Iohn 6.68 It s thd water of life that enlightens the Eyes and rejoyceth the heart Psal. 19.8 It feedeth and strengthneth the Soul Deut. 8.3 It maketh a man to be born again 1 Pet. 1.23 It purifyeth and cleanseth men Iohn 15.3 purifies them from tueir iniquity and cleanseth tham from sin Psal 51.2 116 9. And therefore with joy draw thou water out of that well of Salvation Isa. 12.3 5. Read it dayly O how some have loved the Law and made it their meditation all the day Psal. 119.97 There ought not a day to passe without inspection into this word the soule of man is in continual reparation for it is subject unto loss and damages there is no day wherein Satan assaulteth not no day but may be our last day no day wherein man may not see evill or fall into evill and therefore no day ought to passe without our guard against evill and an antidote to cure the evill the word hath a soveraign quality to cure all our running sores we ought therefore to have our meditations there upon night and day but in this two things must be avoided 1. Wearinesse when thou findest thy self growing weary of reading O how fraile is man O bon Jesu lye close the Book and goe about thy lawfull and ordinary occasions for in that thou must also serve God as the Scripture commands the. Yet in this let me charge thee by God not to nourish sluggishness drousiness or idelness 2 Confidence it is the blessing of God that must make thy dayly reading profitable unto thy soul depend not and trust not therefore upon thy doing without him thou canst do nothing In this also it s not onely the hand of the diligent but the blessing of the Lord maketh rich Prov. 10.4 22. that is in the word of Christ. 3. After reading 1. Meditate upon the word it is meditation that gives a soule to reading and breaths in it the breath of life it makes the word to be lively and o stir in the soul. It wat Davids meditation all the day Psal. 119.97 Nay all the night too Psal. 16.7 So must every one th● would frame his heart according to Gods heart and have the Scripture thereupon God would
remis Saxaque Sisyphi Juditer delabentia Frustra revolvite En Phoebus oritur cujus matutinum vel jubar Ad fugandas valet Fanatici erroris nebulas En Phoebus oritur acutis armatus radiis Ad extirpandam foseresin deleudamque funditus Hercules strenuus qui clava Biblica Hydram a fronte adorieris Tantum ab est ut ad strepitum Hujus Draconis horridum expavescas Plaudite Togatae Gentes plaudite Invictus in arenam jam nunc descendit Agonista Nec de frivolis quibusdam nugis Sed pro Aris focis dimicatur Veritatis causa agitur Fideque Catholica ab infandis Erronum contumeliis vindicatur Aspiret studiis divina caelitus gratia Favonius Ut in sui nominis gloriam Ecclesiae imolumentum Reipub. tutelam Tendant omnia E D. H. A. M. e Col. in Oxon. THE AUTHOR TO HIS BOOK SHake off this panick fit there is no fear poor heart to cause a fear Englan●'s not what it was its Holy Ground since CHARLES was crown'd The Bores the Wolfs the Foxes and wild men are chain'd or watch'd in den The Crown the Mitre Cassock and the ✚ Hath purifi'd the land remov'd the dross Of Schisms Factions Errors Heresie Truth 's got her palace Church her Armoury Then shake off dull Del●y and now at leng●h With man-like s●reng●h Go thou the rounds of Albions soyl and view Phanatique Crew And with thy plainer Rh●tro●ck cause them say This Old is the best way That they may learn an● love both fear and serve Gods Laws Christs Church and from them never swerve Yea leaving Satans Sy●agog●es may turn Into our Temples there the●● incense burn So with thy faithfull Optick digitate and shew The way that 's new Make known that Via Lactea Heavenly path Cal'd Catholick Faith In which our Fathers walk'd and walking were Secur d by Angels care Fear nor the Frowns nor surly looks of those Who Truth and Order's Popery doth oppose Inform the Quaking sinner to his face There 's Rev●rence due to Person Time and Place Hold out thy Lamp present thy spiced Wine They 'r both Divine And thy Baptismal water make appear As Jordan's clear A ✚ is there 't is true declare its loss Was to the Church a ✚ Salute each house with Peace and to each eye Of all thy Treasure make discovery If any sume bite lip or wag their head Abide not there the Son of Peace is fled Put on this Pilgrimes weed poor Baby mine And Heavens shine Upon thy weak endeavours by success much Add daily to the Church Thy Fathers Blessing thou hast also got and now Go forth and prosper thou AN INDEX Directing to the ORDINANCES AND QUESTIONS Contained and discussed in this TREATISE Of the Church page 1. Questions I. WHether the single Testimony of the Church be to be received in matters of faith pag. 19 II. Whether the Church hath power to ordain Ceremonies not ordained of God p. 18 III. Whether the Church hath power to compel any irregular person to her Ordinances p. 24 IV. Whether the Civil Magistrate hath power over or in the Church of Christ And if he have whether his Law be binding to the Consciences of men p. 30. V. Whether the Segregated Churches now in England be true Churches p. 40. VI. What may justifie a mans separation from a true Church p. 75. VII Whether more religions then one are to be tollerated where the true Church is established p. 84. VIII Wherein consists the individuality or singlenesse unity or onenesse of the true Church p. 87. IX Why is the true Church called holy p. 90. X. Why is the true and holy Church called Catholick p. 91. XI Whether the Elect only be true members of the Church p. 93 XII What are the markes of a true Church p. 95. Of the Scripture p. 99. Questions I. Whether the Scripture be the word of God p. 143. II. Whether the Scripture ought to be mans only rule p. 148. III. Whether men may come to a saving knowledge of God without the Scripture p. 150. IV. Whether pefection may be attibuted to the Scripture p. 152. V. Whether salvation may be had by single knowledge of the Scripture p. 154. VI. What may perswade one that doubts to believe the truth of the Scriptures p. 156. VII How f●r the Saints may be our rule besides the Scripture p. 158. VIII Whether the bookes called Apocrypha be not Scripture p. 160. IX Why would God co●municate his to his Church by writting of the Scrip●ure p. 162. X. Whether men be bound to believe all that is in the Scripture p. 164. Of Reading the Scripture p. 165. Questions I. Whether there be a God as is declared in Scripture p. 175. II. Whether God be a spirit p. 178. III. Whether there be but one God p. 180. IV. Whether there be three persons in the Godh●ad and how these persons do agree p. 181. V. Why are Kings and Magistrates called Gods and Rebellion to be like witc●craft in Scripture p. 191. VI. What was that Image wherein God made man and why was man created naked p. 194. VII Whether the reading of the ceremonial law be profitable to a b●liever or whether any part of that law be established under the Gospel p. 196. VIII Why would God suffer his dearest Saints to lye under such sad ●fflicti●●s as are mentioned in Scripture and whether the book of Jo● be a reall hict●●y p. 211. IX Whether there be any diffe●●●ce betwixt the old and new ●●●tament and why the Scriptures are called a Testament p. 215. X. W●● are there some things in Scripture hard to be understood and whether the Scripture can dwel richly in ●●ose that cannot reade p. 218. Of the Sabbath p. 221. Questions I. Whether the keeping of a sabbath be a ceremony and abolished by Christ. p. 235. II. Whether it be lawfull to make feasts on the sabbath p. 236. III. Whether sporting or gaming is to be followed upon the sabbath p. 273. IV. Why did God give charge concerning the resting of beasts upon the sabbath p. 239. V. Why did not God give Charge concerning a wifes resting upon the sabbath p. 240. VI. Why is not the change of the sabbath in Scripture mentioned p. 241. VII Whether the Church may command any other day to be rested on beside the sabbath p. 243. VIII Why doth God put a Remember before the Commandment of the sabbath only p. 245. IX Whether the first day of the week may be termed sabbath or sunday p. 247. X. Why is the sabbath called Holy p. 251. Of a Fast. p. 252. Questions I. Whether the fasts of the Church of Rome differ from those of the Church Catholick p. 249. II. Whether fasting be not a ceremoniall or Iewish Rite p. 251. III. Why is the fast of Lent observed by the Christian Church p. 252. IV. Why are the fast of the weekes of Ember observed by the Church p. 255. V. Whether it would bring advantage to the Church to have those
is himself and his Cardinals saies it a poor bolster God knows for a man to place his rest his confidence his assurance the unchangable estate of his eternal soul upon And why must I believe it because they say it Because they cannot erre and why must I believe they cannot erre because they say so thus may they impose upon mens consciences the very doctrine of Devils as they do 1 Tim. 4.12 3 4. and the poor people are taught that they must believe that o● herwise they are no members of the Church out of which indeed there is no Salvation or of Christ though no Scripture be brought in the least to confirm it 2. We were not baptized in the name of the Church this argument Paul brings against the divisions of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11.3 there were some that would stick to the Doctrine of Paul some hold to that of Cephas what sayes he was Paul Crucified for you or were you baptized in the name of Paul that you should suppose to be saved by me we were baptized in the name of the Triun God and we expect only and we believe throughly to be saved by him alone without the aid of men or Angels for if an Angel should come down and perswade us or teach to us a necessity of believing in him without or against the Scripture as frequently Rome doth he were to be accursed I say again he were to be accursed 1 Gal. 9. 3. The Catholick Church calls upon her members not to do that and good reason too the Son of God would not though he might urge his own authority plead for a beliefe but upon a Scripture account Iohn 5.39 and Paul desires to be followed no further than he follows Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 and those Bereans are made noble for searching the Scriptures whether the things that were spoken by Paul were true or no Acts 17 11. And we have a charge given us to hear the Son the same teacheth the reformed Churches as of France Art 2. Belg. Art 7. Art 20. of the Church of England Art 1. of the Church of Bohem In which Article there are two reasons given for this truth 1. because the Scriptures were inspired and taught by the holy Ghost confirmed by heavenly testimonies which spirit discovers to men how it ought to be understood for Prophecie came not in old time by the will of man but holy men spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. ult Besides the Lord himself saieth Search the Scriptures And again Ye are deceived not knowing the Scriptures c. 2 Because that is a true and sure testimony and a clear proof of Gods favourable good-will which he hath revealed concerning himself such things as are necessary to doctrine to discipline and government of the holy Church are all fully and absolutely so comprehended then which no Angel can bring any thing more certain and if he should he ought not to be believed For which cause saies that confession in our Churches the Scriptures are rehearsed to the hearers in the vulgar tongue and especially according to the ancient custome of the Church those portions of the Gospel in Scripture which are wont to be read on solemn daies out of the Evangelists and Apostles writings and are usually called the Epistles and Gospels The whole stream of the confessions of reformed Churches runs against Rome in this 4. Our Creed which is the rule of things to be believed as the ten Commandements are of things to be done and the Lords Prayer of things to be asked calls upon him that reads it or hears it to believe only in God the Father and in God the Son and in God the holy Ghost and not to believe in but to believe the Catholick Church i e to be perswaded that there ever was is and shall to the end of the world be a company of men Elected and called unto life by which confession we acknowledge our selves one of them Now to believe in the Church were to set her in as high dignity to rule over the consciences of men as Christ himself or any other person in the Trinity which were a giving his glory to another 5. Men should by this never be assured of their Salvation nor of their good estare it might be necessary for thy Salvation to do that this day which might not be done if I would be saved the next for as the Rulers of the Church uttered their judgments upon the light of reason I must judge my self in a happy or in a forlorn condition which is contrary to that Catholick doctrine Make your calling and Election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 which could never be done did it lye upon the fine flourishes of an Oratour or distinction of a Canonist sitting in counsell And indeed this may be one cause why the Church of Rome denies the possibility of a firm assurance of future glory contrary to the text above named 5. There are but four false religions in the world Heathnism Turcism Judaisme and Papism the Heathen possibly may reason the case for his religion against an Opponent though perhaps as soundly as Cyrus reasoned with Daniel concerning the dignity of Bel Thinkest thou not ●hat Bel is a living God said the King seest thou not how much he eateth and drinketh every day The Jew he will direct thee to the Scriptures see and try if his religion be not according to that most sure word of Prophesie The Turk is stubborn and it is death to dispute or search the truth for the confirming of the faith in the matters of the Alchoran The same it is with the Papist the bell will ring and candle will be put out and the book opened if the authority of the Bishop of Rome be once questioned though in matters of faith Let the Turk and Romanist therefore go together give me that religion that may be tryed and hold out in tryal yet let the Romanist remember that as Mahomet said he found the hand of God seven times colder than ice he may find it seventy times hotter than Purgatory for either adding or taking from the word of God and imposing any thing upon the people as necessary to be done in point of Salvation Illi ergo potius parendum monenti ut omnia exploremus quod bonum est retineamus quoe certe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instituti non potest nisi ad manum sit Lydius ille Scripiucarum lapis cujus ope aurea ab aereis humana á Divines internoscantur Notwithstanding that the restimony of the Church is not to be taken singly in matters of faith yet the testimony of the Church is of great weight and concernmnst in matters of fact For 1 it may prepare our hearts and move them to believe the thing the surer that the Church hath affirmed This made King Charles the first of glorious memory strongly to assert that what could not be proved by the word of God to be unlawfull
him but such doth the spirit that in this Age is pretended It calls down prayer it will not be guided by Scripture not live of the Gospel nor according to Law they will have no ordained Ministers they will not own Magistrates thrust Sacraments out of the Church make Ordinances in their power depend upon the merits of men take singing out of our Christian Temples preaching up new revelations and that they only are the Saints that heed least the Scriptures that it is only formal or Antichristian to crave a blessing before meat that none are baptized but such as are dipped to curse revile slander those that are set apart by Apostolical Tradition for the preaching of the Gospel c. This is that that Christ never taught and therefore it is not his Spirit that brings them to our remembrance 2. The Holy Spirit of God was to glorifie Christ Iohn 16.14 that Christ that was then with his Discsples that was born of the Virgin Mary that Christ that was to suffer at Ierusalem was he to make glorious that Spirit now amongst us casts contumelies and scornfully speaks of that Christ under the notion of a Christ without us Its seeks its own glory and bears witness of it self its whole aym is to invert the Divine dispensations by slighting that Christ crucified upon the account of being without 3. He was to shed abroad the love of God in the hearts of Believers Rom. 5.5 that is the apprehension of the love of God a sense of it a feeling of it from whence comes love joy and peace Now the spirit that some pretenders have is a contradistinct spirit from this for by their trembling quaking foaming it appears that the sense of the love of God is not shed abroad in their hearts but of his wrath those strange and monstrous actings proceed rather from wrath indignation and anguish and indeed if gnashing of teeth be a picture or fruit of Hell we may know whence that spirit comes that carries men forth into those distempers 2. The Spirit of God is a Spirit of Union and of Agreement that ever speaks and agrees with it self In no place doth it really oppose or contradict it self it leads all men into one kind and way of truth how distant soever they be from one another but this spirit that goes abroad in our Age never appears in one shape it speaks this in this mans mouth and contradicts is again next day In this mans mouth it threatens hell in that mans mouth it says there is no hell it says that it is a decent thing for a woman to preach the same spirit calls down all preaching in another here it throws aside the Law there it throws away the Gospel there it throws away both here it is for a Christ within there it affirms there is no Christ at all by its cloven foot you may discern whence it came 3. The Spirit of God teacheth honourable and glorious Doctrine such Doctrine as made the highest in the earth bow their necks to receive the same the whole Army of the Philist●ms even of those Heathens that persecuted the Doctrine of the Spirit of God was overcome by the noble Army of the Martyrs the more it was afflicted the more it grew and went over the world like a Sea overflowing the banks of all Penal Laws Kings became its nursing Fathers and Queens its nursing mothers The Doctrine that this Spirit teacheth is a Doctrine of Reprobation Reprobated silver hath God called it his providence and power hath crushed it always suppressed it and hath only given Satan a little power for the Tryall of his Church but never gave him all his chain to destroy Their Doctrine was never on a Candlestick their house was never on a mountain to bring all Nations in into it God kept it under that it never yet said So would I have it How hath the same Gospel we teach run over the world and that without garments rolled in blood and hath been beautifull and glorious But this spirit hath attempted indeed but stopped tryed condemned cast out Never was there a Kingdom Country Parish nay scarce a house that this spirits Doctrine or Doctrines rather was ever received in These things considered let not the Professors of Christ depend upon those seducing revelations but to the Scriptures the foundation of the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles But 2. If the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament be the word of Christ let none of the people sleight it it is that which Christ hath spoken to be the Rule of their lives tryers of their thoughts and measure of their actions if thou be of the houshold of faith thou art upon that foundation whereof Jesus Christ is the chief Corner-stone Eph. 2.20 All you that build must be squared fitted and proportionated to this Corner stone which can only be done by this Word of Christ and therefore it is not to be slighted Now the Scripture may be slighted divers ways 1. When it is regardlessely heard when Gods message is delivering for the good of a mans soul by Gods servant thereunto appointed to have an irreverend or unseemly carriage shows they put no high valuation upon it to be drowzy or sleepy when God is holding forth our duty or his own greatnesse our sins and his Justice is a great sign of irreverence and may provoke him to thrust us out of his presence for it is not a slighting or contemning of man who reads it or speaks it but of God who made it and enjoyned it 2. When it is scoffingly used when men make Scripture to be the bottome of Jests and Jears the Subject of their profanenesse or Object of their mirth When the Prophet called the Burthen of the Lord the people answered him in scorn the Burthen of the Lord the Burthen of the Lord. Ier. 23.33 34 35. or as Iulian that would smite a Christian on the one cheek und then bid him turn the other as his Lord and Master directed The Scriptures were not written to make men laugh but to make men wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 they were sent into the word by God to instruct men how to demean themselvs without offence towards God man Act. 24.16 it ought only to be imployed to that end It is not safe jesting with edged Tools so neither is it safe to sport with the two edged sword of the word of God This is holy ground let us be afraid to sin upon it least the owner of it Mock when eur fear cometh and laught at our calamity Prov. 1.26 It is in it self a high provocation of his Majesty contempt of his honour and a diminishing of his greatnesse in the sight of men 3. When it is heedlessely forgot if a mans servant should not do the thing commanded und excuse himself from his forgetfulness it would not reprieve him from his masters anger How shall God be patient when his precepts and word are
spiritual conflicts which in their own nature are so unpleasing and so bitter that were it only their own Laws we should see them live more merrily in the world And what makes after Ages imbrace those Scriptures though good men should make them since they are contrary to flesh and blood and might therefore be rejected In a word a good man could not have said O earth earth earth hear the word of the Lord Jer. 22 29. if it had been his own Invention 2. Bad men did not do it the lyar the drunkard the thief the swearer would never have made Laws against lying Drunkenness stealing swearing nor have counselled men to have shunned their company nor damned themselves eternally for their so doing Since therefore neither in heaven nor in earth can there be found ●ut a Creature to be but probably supposed the Author of the Scriptures it remains therefore that the Creator must who is God blessed for ever 2. From the testimony of the Scripture it self it is apparent that God is the Author of it He that gave the Law was the same that brought Israel out of Egypt viz. the Lord God ●xod 20.2 He that commanded Iohn to write to the Churches of Asia was the first and the last Rev. 17. Thus saith the Lord Hear the word of the Lord is a usual phrase in Scripture which co●ld not have been said by Men or Angels had it been their own It was he that gave Moses the Law the Statutes and the Judgements for all Israel Mal. 4.4 It was God that spake by the mouth of his Holy Prophets which have been since the world began Luke 1.70 All the words that are written in that Book are his words Ier. ●0 2 What Isaiah uttered it was the Lord that spake it Isa. 1.2 what Ieremiah spake the Lord commanded Ier. 1.7 Nay what ever the holy men of God spake it was as they were moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 3. From the excellency of the matter contained in the Scripture it appears to be of God where it promiseth it goes above the power reason or invention of man as Those that do well shall shine as the stars and as the firmament nay as the Sun for ever and ever Dan. 12.3 and Matth. 13.43 The Incarnation of God a Virgin bearing a Son the resurrection of the dead all without the reach of man making Laws for the hearts of men of Kings and Princes poor and rich high and low shews that it is not of man threatening eternal death and promising eternal life both which are without the power of men and that to soul and body both which by man nor the powers of man cannot be reached unto It perswades to nothing but what is in it self good were it not commanded and disswades from nothing but what is in it self hurtfull were it not forbidden and that oftentimes without giving any reason but the will and authority of the Law-giver why must not men swear steal c. The Lord hath forbidden it The Proem to the Law is I am the Lord thy God Exod. 20.2 I am the Lord is often given as the only reason of the Law Lev. 18. 4. From the effects thereby wrought the Scripture hath wrought that upon the hearts souls and consciences of men that the writings of men and Angels could never have accomplished it fills sometimes the very souls of men so full of terrour and other times so full of comfort that were not God the Author thereof could not be effected he that is in love with sin and dark through sin it makes him to hate sin and to be in love with righteousness it hath brought the hearts and spirits of men to so much certainty that all the tortures torments and pains that men or devils could invent was not once able to make them doubt of it 5. From the scope and final end of the Scriptures it declares that God is the Author of them if any creature had been the composer of them he would in one verse or other have sought something to himself but the scope of the Scripture is purely for the glory of God the honour of God the praise of God to make men admire God to have them praise God to have them pray to God and to depend upon God and in their ways to acknowledge God It debaseth every creature in comparison of God and puts all things under the feet of God by which it is demonstrable it is from God 6. From the constant consent and declaration of the holy Catholick Church that in all Ages under and after Moses before and afte● the Judges before and under the Kings before and after the Captivity before Christ and in his time before the coming of the Holy Ghost and af●er the Apostles untill this very time hath in all Ages been consented to and looked upon as the word of God the very word of God the only word of God the holy word of God and besides this the Church hath owned no other The same Teacheth the Reformed Churches of Helvetia Article 1. of Bohem. Art 1. of Fra●ce Art 2. of Belg. Art 3. of Wirt Art 31. of Scot. Art 17. Quest. 2. Whether the Scripture ought to be mens only Rule There are many that pretend to new Revelations new lights walking according to and going a whoring after their own Inventions but that the Scriptures are to be our only rule these following Arguments may declare 1. It is the only infallible and unalterable Rule Many Rules and Laws have there been in the world which time hath altered and experience hath made to appear not good but the Scriptures of God remain the same no addition to them no dimunition of them to Kings and people they are now what they ever were and they shall be what for the present they are to all generations For ever O Lord thy word is setled in heaven Psal. 119.89 All other Rules have and may still deceive but this hath never deceived nor failed and is the same for ever and ever 2. The Churches of Christ had never any other Rule the word of God the Scriptures of God was ever the Rule of their Doctrine in matters of Faith The Rule of their lives in matters of fact Malachy that ends the Old Testament commands them to Remember the Law of Moses and Iohn that concludes the new pronounceth him Blessed that keepeth the Prophesie of the sayings of this Book Rev. 22.17 And whoever speaks not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Christ himself appeals to the Scriptures to be the Tryers of his Doctrine Iohn 5.39 3. They are written that they might be our Rule These things are written that we might believe that Iesus is the Christ and that believing we might have life John 20.31 We are to take heed unto this doctrine 1 Tim. 4.16 We have a more sure word of prophesie unto which we shall do well if we take heed
2 Peter 1.29 And as many as walk according to this Rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God Gal. 6.16 Hence it is that the Scriptures are called Canonical because they contain and give a perfect Rule of all things conducing to salvation 4. God hath now ceased to repeat any new matter to his Church or for giving them any other Rule We must know that God who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in Times past unto the Fathers by the Prophets hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son Heb. 1.1 We are to expect no●hing now but to walk according to what his Son hath given us and to the word his Son hath left us God hath revealed his mind by his Son to the world and there stops his Son at the time appointed will come to Judge according to this Rule that he hath left behinde Him 5. By this Rule only can the soul be satisfied and peace secured when this Rule is left what Rule can man have to walk by nay how many Rules shall he presume to settle himself by when this is laid aside All other are so full of uncertainties so loaded with doubtings so liable to exceptions so uncomfortable in distresses so various in their natures that like Noahs Dove Gen. 8.9 the creature can get no rest for the feet of its soul untill it pitch upon this again When he that is builded that is ruled and fitted to upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Iesus Christ being the chief corner stone groweth unto a holy Temple c. Ephes. 2.20 being ●●stened secured and confirmed he grows in holiness and purity and in Christ is quieted and glorified 6. The Spirit of God it self when it acts within us is to be tryed by this Rule We are not to believe every Spirit but try whether they are of God 1 Ioh. 4.1 And this is one way to see if it speak according to the teaching of Jesus Christ or not Ioh. 14.26 The Doctrine that St. Paul taught was by the infallible Spirit of God and yet the Bereans are commended by the same Spirit for searching the Scriptures to understand whether the things th● were spoken were so or not Acts 17.13 7. We should open a wide door to all impieties and prophaness should we admit another What Laws might not be baffled by pretence of the Spirit what murders thefts might not be committed under the notion of a Call from God What man could be secure of his life or his goods if men might walk according to their own wills How often is that in Scriptures In those days there was no King in Israel but every man did that which was right in his own eyes And what villany was then committed is clear and obvious 8. We have seen sad wanderings and dangerous paths since this doctrine of inward Light was known or broached The s●me teacheth the Reformed Churches of France Art 2. Belg. Art 7. Bohem. Art 1. Helvet Art 1. of Ireland Art 5. and Article 6. of the Church of England The Article it self is this Art 6. of the Church of England Holy Scriptures containeth all things necessary for salvation for whatsoever is not read therein nor may be proved thereby is not to be required of any man that it should be believed as an Article of Faith or be thought requisite and necessary to salvation c. Quest. 3. Whether men may come to a saving knowledge of GOD without the Scripture That there is a natural knowledge of God in the hearts of men cannot be denied by him that knows his own soul the Nations never so barbarous acknowledged ever a superiour power and supreme being unto whom they called for help in their distresse but a spirituall saving knowledge of the true God is only to be acquired from the Scriptures but we must distinguish 1. Between Infants and the Adult how God works upon Infants in a saving manner to fit them for himself is a Theam the Scripture is dark in that Infants may be saved and that some are is easie to be defended though they are not capable of knowing God by Scripture the Question is to be understood of the Adult and such as are grown in years 2. Of the Adult there are two sorts some that never had the Scriptures unto whom the knowledge of Christ never came these we ought not neither will we judge them but leave them to rise and fall to their own master and others that have the found of the Gospell unto whom Christ hath been preached of them only is the Question proposed 3. Those that have the sound of the Gospell are of two kinds Some of them God hath bereaved of the use of sence or understanding one that is born deaf another that hath not the u●e and exercise of Reason we must behold as perpetuall Infants and leave them to the Judge of Israel that will do justly And others there are unto whom God hath given the benefit of sence use exercise and reason those then who having their understandings open to receive the Gospel and opportunities of hearing can have no knowledg that is saving without the Scriptures For 1. There was never any other way given by God The Scriptures since their composing have been by God given unto men that men might live by them know him serve him in this only is the way to motives for holynesse and piety here alone can we read of Heavens glory to stir up zeal and of eternall life to cause diligence 2. There was never any other way known to the Church of Gods The Scriptures are written that ye might have life through his name Joh. 30.31 The Church of Ephesus is recommended to this Word by Paul it being alone able to build them up and give them an inheritance among them that are sanctified Acts 20.31 Blessed is he only that keepeth the sayings of the prophesie of this Book Rev. 22.7 3. We are to shun him nay cur●e him that w●●ld teach us another way For though we or an Angell f●●m Heaven preach any other g●spel unto you that is that holds ou●●noth●r way to be saved then is in the gospel then that which we hav● 〈◊〉 unto you let them be accursed As we said before so ●ay ● now again If any man preach unto you any other gospell let him be accursed Gal. 1.8 9. An Angel who is incompassing the Throne of God dayly and whom ●od useth as his Messenger Ordinary should he as from God reveal another way of salvation though by his very nature and holynesse he might allure men to this doctrine but forewarned forearmed he were to be Anathema Maranath● 4. What need we any further witnesse we our selves have heard him say To the Law and to the Testimonies Isai. 8.20 Thou shalt not go aside from any of the Words that I command thee this day to the Right hand or to the left Deut. 28.14 Quest. 4. Whether Perfection may
not under the Law have those beasts offered up fo him in sacrifice that did not chew the cud they were unpured as unclean those under the Gospel that brings not up again by meditation what they gathered by reading shall not be esteemed pure Meditation puts a boult upon the door that Sathan that gsand picklock cannot so enter to rob their treasure of knowledg 2. Walk sutably to it When Moses was in the mount with God his face shined at his comming to the people when a Christian hath been in and seen the glory of the Lord in the holy mount of the Scriptures his conversarion ought to shine in the eyes of the world he ought to bring forth the fruit of the Scriptures in a holy life Not lying but speaking the truth Ephe. 4.25 As much as in us lies living peaceably with all men Rom. 12 18. Iudging no man Matthew 7.1 Giving honour to whom honour tribute to whom tribute custome to whom custome is due Rom. 13.7 Speaking no evill of dignities not reviling the Gods nor cu sing the ruler of the people Levit. 22.28 Judg. 8. c. Putting away all bitternesse and wrath and anger and clamour and evill speaking with all malice Ephe. 9.31 But as he who hath known the mind of the Lord. 1 Cor. 2.16 He may honour all men love Brotherhood fear God honour the King 1. Pet. 2.17 Every good act is a watering of that root of grace that is planted in the soule by the word of God that it may abide and bring forth the fruit of eternal life 3. Call upon God again to blesse it to the As thou hast sought him ie his word where his Saints alwayes found him through his goodnesse so do thou raise up thy soul and beg that it might make thee perfe●t in every good work that he by the abundant pouring forth of the Holy Ghost might sanctifie thee through his word Ephe. 5.26 But 1. In this praise him for what thou hast learned 2. Repent for what thou hast neglected 3. Confesseth and forsake that for which thou hast been reproved 4. Remember those who to thee are recommended 4 Go about the works of thine ordinary calling chearfully it is not the end of God in publishing the Scriptures to make men idle and loyter in the earth to neglect their Families and forsake their callings as c. Follow then thy calling it is a part of his service and leave him to bring to perfection that good work which he hath begun But never forget to remember that the Scriptures are as necessary as thy dayly food SECTION III. Question Resolvd Quest. 1. Whether there be a God as it declared in Scripture Quest. 2. Whether God be a Spirit Quest. 3. Whether there be but one God Quest. 4. Whether there be three Persons in the God-head and how these Persons do agree Quest. 5. Why are Kings and Magistrates called Gods and Rebellion to be like witch craft in Scripture Quest. 6. What was that image wherein God made man and why was man created naked Quest. 7. Whether the reading of the Ceremonial Law be profitable to a Believer And whether any part of that Law be established under the Gospel Quest. 8. Why would God suffer his dearest Saints to lie under such sad afflictions as are mentioned in Scripture und whether the book of Job be a reall history Quest. 9. Whether there be a difference between the old and new Testament and why the Scriptures are called a Testament Quest. 10. Why are there some things on Scripture hard to be understood and whether the Scripture can dwell richly in those that cannot read Quest. 1. Whether there be a God as is declared in Scripture It hath been proved that all are to read the Scripture that being the will of God revealed and published to man for the right ordering of his life yet in reading some fool might say in his heart There is not a GOD and throw all aside but that there is a God appears 1. The Creation or Fabrick of the world by such a glorious building as this wherein we live such a goodly frame as our eyes behold could not but have been formed by some or other if by a creature why cannot a creature do the like now why cannot they that are displeased with this remove it and give us another who made the starry Heavens and the vaulted Roof of the whole Ear●h to shine with such glorious light by night and by day what is his name and what is his Sons name Who hath layed the measures thereof if thou knowest who hath streched the line upon it whereupon are the foundations thereof fastned or who lay the corner Store name another besides God eris mihi magnus Apollo I shall take thee to be some great one see Rom. 1.19 20. 2. From the order that is in all the world this world is of an uniform nature this world is not a confused and disorderly heap but in all things ordered and sure were there not a God to keep all in order the Sun might often stray the Moon might withdraw her shining or get above the Stars the Stars forget their path and shine below the Moon the Heavens might not alwayes goe directly ro●nd by ehance they might slip aside and smother men and cover the whole Earth or the beast might break out upon man and the Horse not know his Rider the Servant rebel against his Master and he that had a House might live in fear by chance harvest might fall in the spring and the spring not make haste by reason of the cold yea the Sun by some means or other might not hasten his going down The universal and constant order that we see in the world makes manifest they are acted by some superior being which is and can be onely God 3 From the variety that is in that Order wee see not onely a sweet and orderly Harmony in the Creatures but a delightfull and pleasant variety there are Stars of different magnitudes and each Star differs from another in glory there are greater and lesser lights lighter and heavier darker and brighter Clouds It is a goodly sight to see the Sun like a Bride-groom comming out of his Chamber in the East to see Flowers Herbs Grasse Plants stores of rare qualities and inimitable variety to see the Earth shining with Flowers and Heaven with Stars with the souls of the one and Be●sts of the other sporting in the beautifull Ayr and playing in the delightfull Rivers without the study or art of man or any other creature doth plainly show there is a God The wonderfull symmetry and proportion that is in the face of man the placeing of its parts the hanging of his Tongue the guard of the Teeth how uniform are they in all yet the variety that is in those Faces the diversity that is in those Sounds doth evidence a Diety 4. From the testimony of all Nations in the world no People so Savage
no Kingdom so Atheistical no Nation so Ignorant no part of the Halitable world so Barbarous but acknowledged a Diety and ownud a ●od some superior power they had to call to in distress something though it were but an Onyon did they bow to the Knee to and adore Those barbarous inhabitants of Matta of Melita seeing a Viper come upon Pauls hand conclude Acts 28.9 that he was a murtherer whom though he had escaped the Seat yet VENGEANCE suffereth him not to live He had escaped drowning yet he will not scape dying some God or other Nemesis po●sibily will not have him live this was a darke acknowledgment of a God 5. From the Testimony of the consciences of men Who is he that can put to silence that tell-tale called Conscience which makes men affraid and tremble even when for all the world they might spend their dayes in mirch what made these Barbarians to think murther a sin a sin that deserved death even this testimony of conscience which though they know not the cause did so sharply reprove them fright them when evill committed that never could they fully nor freely act according to their own desire Suppose one of those in a wilderness meets a passenger loaded with treasure that may be profitable for him he dare not take his goods he dare not take his life why he is affraid of VENGANCE where doth that dwell when did you see it is it not a great way of yet for all this he is affraid that if he do so some time in some place some way VENGEANCE will not suffer him to live this is a dark yet a conscionable demonstration of the being of a God 6. From that restraint that is put upon wicked men in the world If their were but a Bridle in the jawes of the wicked such as they could not shake off how long should the world endure what face of Religion what beauty of Holinesse what acts of Righteousnesse what deeds of Justice nay what naturall maintenance would be either for good or bad if the wicked of the world could have there full swing in iniquity their are stops put to them by conscience they are affraid of VENGEANCE they are held in by Providence God beats out the Teeth of these Lyons and the cheeh Teeth of those young Lyons and oft times brings their wickednesse and their wicked lives to an end together They roare sometimes but as to the Sea he hath made them Bancks and though they lift up themselves yet can they not passe over 7. From the Testimony of the Scriptures in this the being natures properties works of God are so fully held out and in all points necessary so clearly that h● that runs may read it of whose authority if any doubt see Quest. 1. and 6. of the third Chapter Quest. 2. Whether God be a Spirit In reading of the Scripturee we read of the hands of God the Eares the Eyes the Nose the Back the Face the Mouth the Feet of God his Heart his Breath his Throne his Age which gave formerly and at this day doth give occasion to some to conceit God a corporall and bodily substance A Spirit therefore we defend him to be excepting the body of Christ which in fulness of time he took upon him 1. From the Scripture Ioh. 4.24 God is a Spirit saith he who was well acquainted with his nature and Paul who was wrapped up into the third Heavens charges the Heathen for changeing the glory of the incorruptible God into an Image like unto corruptible man Rom. 1.23 If God had a bodily shape there was no ground for this reproof 2. From his nature as 1. From his Infinity were he in the shape of man that is of a bodily substance he could not be infinite every body is confined to its own proper place but God is in all places at once filleth all yet confined to none of old did he declare of himself that he filled both Heaven and Earth Ier. 23 24. It was long before that that it was the ground of Solomns admiration that God would dwell on Earth when behold the Heaven and the Heaven of Heavens could not contain him 1. Kings 8.2 And before that it was the subject of Davids praise that he could not flee upon Earth from his presence and if he went up to Heaven he was there and if he went to Hell he was there Psal. 139.7 All which could not have been true had he been circumscribed with a body Christ himself as man is not infinite but sits at the right hand of God according to the 6. Art of our Creed 2. From his invisibility Were the Son of God again upon the Earth he would be seen because of his body now whoever saw him he is an invisible King 1 Cor. 1.17 A Spirit hath not flesh and bones as you see me have says Christ to his timerous Apostles Luke 24.39 Now God is a spirit Ioh. 4 24. 3. From his Eternity He was for ever and to everlasting shall remain with him is no variablenesse no shadow of changing Now all flesh is grasse and all the goodlinesse thereof as the flower of the field that is naturall of itself which shews if God were a fleshly substance he must in a great measure have a shadow of imperfection 3. Another Argument against that grosse conceit may be drawn from those prohibitions so often urged by Moses against the Israelites making any Image of God Deut. 1.12 Ye heard the voyce of the Words but saw no similitude only ye heard a voyce And again v. 15. Take ye therefore good heed unto your selves for ye saw no manner of similitude on the day that the Lord spake to you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire lest you corrupt your selves and make you a graven Image the liknesse of Male or Female If our Authropomorphites had heard this Law the Argument had not been strong enough to keep away Images they themselves being made after Gods Image and by their Logick the Picture of a man might have been a sufficient representation of God Since in outward appearance he is all one with them and they with him We must note that those Scriptures that hold out God to have a heart or hand c. are but spoken to our capacity that knowing the use of those parts we may be bro●ght to know the better what he is The Holy Ghost speaking to us as Nurses to their Children in that childish Language best understood by them By the eyes of God therefore we must understand his watchfull care and providence over men By his ears his infinite knowledg by his mouth the Word he hath revealed by his Nose his fury kindled by his heart his Eternall decree or his his good liking by his arm the greatnesse of his Power by his hand his effectuall purpose to bring all things to passe by his right hand his honour glory and Majesty by his finger the holy Spirit by his love the
Let us make Man in our image after our likeness he that sayes these words must be one that can create and make Man to whom are these words spoken not to a Creature not to an Angel for man was not made after the image of an Angel as some that denies this truth makes Christ to be it must be God Why is it said let us note that there are more Gods as hath been before proved but the word Us denotes the plurality of Persons for the next words show God created man in his own Image It must be therefore God the Father that sayes to the other persons the same God with him let us make man in our own image that is in the image of God not of any created being moreover Matth. 3.16 We finde Iesus the second Person in the water the Spirit of God descending like a Dove upon him and the Father calling down from Heaven this is my well beloved Son c. where we clearly see the three Persons in different places doing different acts which proves that they are different persons which place being clear for the distinguishing of three we may say to our new Atrians or Antiteinitarians what I read Athamasius said to the old ones who denyed the three Persons Abi ad Iordanem vibebis go to the River of Jordan and thou should see the truth of it Though they be different in persons as is so clear in Scripture that it is to be wondred what impudent devil possesseth so many in our dayes to deny it yet it is not to be concluded there there are three Gods for these three personally make but one God essentially 1 Iohn 5.7 which brings us to the second part of the question how these three persons do agree This being such a mystery if any be too curious about this point let them shew me how they are framed figured in the wombe how they grow upon Earth how their own Soul animates their Body and by that time something more may be thought on for the further clearing of these insearch●ble mysteries viz. the begetting of the Son and proceeding of the Spirit yet that the one is begotten and the other doth proceed from Scripture is apparent but the manner of his begetting and of the other is proceeding God hath clouded And it is not good to be wise above what is written but to the point The three persons agree and ate one in Eternity in Dignity in Diety in Operating and in Willing 1. In Eternity there was none of them before another each of them have had and shall have as long continuance as another all of them hath been from everlasting and all of them shall be to everl●sting Iesus Christ is the same Yesterday to Day and the same for ever Heb. 13.8 I was set up from everlasting from the beginning or ever the Earth was Prov. 8.23 In the beginning was the word and the word was with God Iohn 1.1 and Gen. 1.26 To suppose now the Father and the Son to be one from Eternity and not also the Spirit is to suppose that God was without his Spirit which were Blasphemy in Divinity since he was alwayes a living God and absurd in reason yea equally ridiculous as to imagine a man to live move and have a beeing without a Soul The Father the Son and the Spirit are therefore coeternal that is one in eternity 2. In Dignity that is one hath as great excellency majesty as the other they are in one and the same state Honour and Glory ● none of them is greater then another none of them to be worshipped called upon more then another nor to be worshiped less then another the same glory that we give to the Father we are to give the Son and the same to the Holy Ghost and what we give to the Son the same we are to give to the Father and the Spirit Holy Holy Holy is the Lord of Hoasts cryed the Angels Isa. 6.3 a darke representation of the Trinity in Unity so Iohn 5.18 Gen. 1.26 Iohn 5.23 All men should honour the Son even as they honour the Father and Revela 5.12 13 Blessing Honour Glory and Power be to him that sitteth upon the throne and to the lamb for ever We cannot give nor ascribe these to him that sitteth on the Throne and to the Lamb but we must give them also to the Spirit of him that sitteth on the Throne and of the Lamb. The Father the Son and the Spirit are therefore coequall that is one in Dignity 3. In Diety that is one is equal and as much God as the other the Father is very God the Son is very God and the Holy Spirit is very God and yet there are not three but one God the self same God that the Father is the self same is God the Son and that very God that the Father and the Son is the self same God is the Holy Ghost Trinitatem omnipotentem quis intelligit quis non loquitur eam si tamen eam Rara anima quae dum de illa loquitur scit quid loquitur Lord I believe help my unbeliefe I believe that the Father is not the Son nor the son the Spirit and also that the Son is not the Father nor the Spirit and also that the Spirit is neither Father nor Son yet I believe that the Father the Son and the Spirit is ONE A TABLE Demonstrating this In his igitur tribus quam sit inseparabilis vita Unae essentia quam inseparabilis distinctio tamen distinctio videat qui potest certe coram se est Aug. lib. Con. 13. c. 11. Haec est enim sides vera veniens de sana doctrina haec certe est Fides Catholica Orthodoxa quam me docuit Deus in sinu matris Ecclesia gratiâ suâ Aug. 1. med 30. This shall appear by a distinct proving each person to be God And 1. That the Father is God appears by the Scriptures and reason 1. By the Scriptures Thes. 3.11 Now God himself and our Father and our Lord Iesus Christ direct our way unto you here God Almighty is called upon distinctly with the Son under the notion of our Father for so he is by adopting us his children as before was spoken and so v. 13. Before God even our Father so 2 Thes. 1.1 2. Paul c. Unto the Church of the Thessalonians in God our Father and Chap. 2.16 Now our Lord Iesus Christ himself and God even our Father so Ephes. 1.3 Blessed be the God Father of our Lord Iesus Christ He that is his Father is our Father is God blessed for ever Heb. 1.1 8. God who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the Fathers by the Prophets hath in these last day spoken to us by his Son The same God that spoke to the Prophets hath a Son therfore he is his Father whose Son now is Christ His who spake in divers manners
to the Prophets and he is God And again I will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son v. 5. Who says these words he that begot him Who begot him He whose Son he is Who is that Son Christ that purged our sins and sate down on the Right hand of the Majesty on high v. 3. Whose Son is he He that spoke unto our Fathers by the Prophets and he was God v. 1. Moreover Prov. 8.22 The Son himself says The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way c. when there was no depths I was brought forth before the Hills was I brought forth Who brought him forth he that made the Earth and who made the Earth God Geu 1.9 10. Many other places might be brought for this truth as Ioh. 17.3 Ioh. 20.17 Rom. 1.7 but we forbear in regard that those against whom the question is raised denye not the divinity of the Father but of the other person 2. By reason drawn from Scripture or scripture reason it appears that the Father is God for 1. Prayer must be made to him Pray to the Father which is in secret Matth. 6.6 Pray Our Father which art in Heaven now we are to pray to none but to God Isa. 42. ● 2. It is he that revealeth hidden mysteries Luke 10.8 This none can do but God Isa. 41.8.22 23. 3. It is he that maketh the Sun to shine and the Stars to give light to the Earth Matth. 5.15 The Sun is his for he made it he made the Stars also Gen 1.16 This showes that he is God Isa. 40.26 4. It is he that maketh the Raine to fall Matth. 5.45 This none can do that but God Jerei 14.22 2. That the Son is God appears by Scripture and Scripture reason 1. By scripture John 5.20 And we know that the son of God is come c. And we are in him that is true even in his Son Iesus Christ this is the true God and Eternal life Heb. 1. ● But to the Son he sayeth Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever Rom. 9.5 whose are the Fathers and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came who is over all God blessed for ever Isa. 9.6 Vnto us a child is born unto us a Son is given c. his name shall be called wonderfull Counsellour the mighty God so John 1.1 The word was God John 20.28 Psal. 68.18 with Ephe. 8.8 Psal. 95.6 compared with 1 Cor. 10.9 Isa. 41.4 with Revela 8 6. Isa. 25.9 Zacha. 2 9. Isa. 7.14 Phil. 16. Phil 2.6 Acts 7.59 Tit. 2.13 1 Tim. 3.16 What ●e●d we oppose those blasphemous Arians any longer h●ve we not heard himself say I and the Father are one John 10. ●0 Reader these things are written that thou mightest believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God and that believing thou mightest have life through his Name Ioh. 20.31 And this is eternal life to know him to be the only true God and Iesus Christ whom he hath sent viz to be the true God also Iohn 17.3 2. By Scripture reason or reason drawn from Scripture t is clear that the Son is God 1. He made and created the world Iohn 13 this none did but God Gen. 1.1 or could do Isa. 44.24 2. He can and doth forgive sins Luke 7.48 this none can do but God Luke 5.8 3. He gives the holy Ghost Ioh. 20.22 this none can do but God Isai. 44.3 4. He preserveth his Church Matth. 16.18 this none can do but God 5. His Name is preached up Phil. 1.18 this ought not to be done were he not God 6. He is Omnipresent he is in Heaven and Earth at once Iohn 3.13 this could not be were he not God 7. He knows the thoughts of man Matt. 9.4 this he could not do where he not God 8. He is Eternall Revel 1.8 this he could not be were he not God 9. He is Almighty Revel 1.8 this he could not be were he not God 10. Men are baptzed in his Name Mat. 28 19. this ought not to be done were he not God 3. That the holy Spirit is God appears by Scripture and Scripture Reason 1. From Scripture Act. 5.3 Why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye against the Holy ghost c. Thou hast not lyed unto man but unto God Isaiah 6.9 The Prophet heard the Lord say Go and tell this people hear ye indeed but understand not c. The Holy ghost is said to speak the Words Acts 28.25 26. By which two places it appears the Holy ghost is God And so 1 Cor. 12.6 there are diversities of Operations but it is the same God which worketh all in all c. To one is given by the Spirit the word of Wisdome to another the gift of knowledge by the same Spirit to another the gift of Faith by the same Spirit Quest. What Spirit is it that giveth these diversities of gilts Answ. It is the same God that worketh all in all and the same Lord v. 5 6. Also we read Deut. 12.6 If there be a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my self known in a vision unto him and will speak to him in a dream now Prophets spake as they were moved by the Holy ghost 1 Pet. 1 21. 2. By Scripture Reason or Reason from Scripture It appears that the Holy ghost is God 1. He is Eternall Heb 9.14 this he could not be were he not God 2. He is Omnipresent Rom. 8.9 He is in all the faithfull whereever they be therefore he must be God Psal. 139.7 3. He is Omniscient 1 Cor 2 10. therefore he must be God 4. He created the World Psal 23.6 this he could not do were he not God Gen. 1.2 Job 26.13 5. He gives the gifts of miracles c. 1 Cor. 12.10 therefore he must be God 6. He calls men to be Apostles Acts 13.2 therefore he must be God 7. Because the sin against him is unpardonable Matth. 12 31 therefore he must be God 8. He knows the souls and consciences of men Rom. 9.1 therefore he must be God 9. He hath a Temple 1 Cor. 6.19 therefore he is the living God 2 Cor 6.16 10. Men are baptized in his Name Matth 28.19 therefore he must be God Thus it appears that the Father the Son and the Spirit are one essentially that is one in Deity The other two parts in which they are one a viz. in Operating and in willing may be dispatched in Word 1. For Operation they work all one and the self same thing together Joh. 5.17 Gen. 1 26 And 2. For willing they will all one and the self thing without opposing crossing or contradicting each other Joh. 8.29 I do always those things that please him viz. the Father saith the Son by consequence the Spirit of the Son must please him which is the holy Ghost Rom. 8.9 and the spirit of the Father must please the Son which ●sthe Holy Ghost Isaiah 48.16 The Church of Christ hath in
onely in respect of giving cause of offence to others is things sacrificed to idols not to be eaten and by consequence eating of blood is no more necessary the cause therefore of that forbearance being removed viz. the reading of Moses Law and the tenderness or ignorance of new converted Iews through the establishment of the gospel being also taken away that the consciences of few or none that are Christians are wounded for useing our liberty in that particular we may without sinning against our own souls eat blood as safely as ever the Corinthians might eat things sacrificed to idols or in an idols Temple since both these by the Canon of the Council were esteemed necessary not in themselves but in respect of weak consciences peace of the Church which now in these two particulars is in no danger for had things sacrificed to idols been in it self necessary to prevent sinning against a mans own soul then meat had commended us unto God which it doth not 1 Cor. 8.8 Nay our Apostle would have urged it and pressed the not doing of it upon that account but contrary he yields and would have them to abstain for the consciences of their weak brethren onely witho●t once mentioning any other cause 2. From the holy Apostles attestation speaking of things indifferent and of meats Rom. 14.2 3. Commands that be that eateth meats forbidden in the Law despise not him that eateth not viz. for conscience of the Law Every man living not to himself only ought to have a care of his Brother or not judge him Or put no stumbling block in his Brothers way v. 13. But why must not one judge another in eating or not eating meats forbidden in the Law the Reason he gives v. 14. I know and am perswaded by the Lord Iesus that there is nothing unclean of it self but to him that estesmeth any thing to be unclean to him it is unclean the Apostle is speaking of meats of which not by Moses but by the Lord Iesus he knows none unclean in it self therefore not blood but if a man be conceited through ignorance or conscience to that man any thing were it bread it is unclean He perswades therefore that though men by Christ may eat any thing yet if any Brother be grieved for his eating any meat forbidden by the Law he would not have him cause his Brother to sin For the kingdom of God is not in meat and drink but righteousness peace and joy in the Holy Ghost For he that in these things serveth Christ is acceptable to God and approved by him Now if it were so that that Law touching eating of blood were necessary then a part of the kingdom of God should consist in meat and though we followed after peace righteousness yet could we not neither should we be acceptable to God without abstaining from meats or something that were in it self edible for what is such is meat What ever therefore is forbidden as eating of blood is not to be forborn upon any account but onely upon the weak consciences of our brethren and in eating or forbearing none ought to judge the other for God hath received both him that eats and him that eateth not vers 3. Which God would not do if abstaining from or eating things edible had in it self been either a grace or duty 3 From the Apostles unlimited proposition 1 Tim. 4. where warning Timothy of some that in the latter days should fall from the faith and teach the doctrine of Devils Forbidding to mary and commanding to abstain from meats which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which beleeve and know th● truth v. 3. Blood is a creature that God hath created for the use and service of man is in it self edible and therefore meat God was pleased for a time to forbid the eating of blood having appointed it for his own Altar to make an atonement for the sin of the soul but now Christ being come and his blood shed which was Typified by that No man is now to judge us in respect of meat Col. 2.16 The time is expired and he that under the Gospel preacheth up the use of forbearing meat as a point of Doctrine binding the consciences of men under what seeming purity soever is but a messenger of Sathan and his doctrine the doctrine of Devils c. To prevent an Objection which might have been raisd against that which the Apostle is asserting suppose blood eating he affirmes that every creature of God is good and nothing to be refused if it be received with thanksgiving v. 14. But are there not some creatures that are in themselves good yet for us to eat them it is a sin and a part of unholiness No says the Apostle Every creaturo is good none is to be refused for it is sanctified by the Word of God and Prayer v. 5. Suppose S. Paul to have blood before him he is not afraid to eat he hath craved a blessing by which it is Sanctified and he wil eat for no creature is to be refused and these things if Timothy teach he shall be a good Minister of Iesus Christ v. 6. He is not a Minister of the Law and therefore he is not to look to that but of Christ and what the Word of God and Prayer hath sanctified and they sanctifie every creature let no man call it impure unlawfull and if they do as what will not some men do we are to avoid them they are seducing Spirits and teachers of lyes not apprehending the Law of the Counsel and the reason of that Law nor comparing it also with other Scriptures makes the ignorant and unlearned wrest this as wel as other Scriptures to their own hurt and the Churches disturbance making this not eating blood to be a standing law in the Gospel upon the account of sin when by the Apostles themselves it is made no more necessary then that of not eating what was Sacrificed to Idols a thing by that faithfull Labourer in the Gospel Saint Paul in it self lawful enough to be done but to be forhorn for the sake of the consciences of others and yet that very forbearance but for a time till ignorance did turn to perverseness and the Iiws weakness became stubornness then other doctrine was taught but still having a regard to the peace of the Church the ground of Iames his determination which otherwise in point of Doctrine did agree to Paul and Peter in opposing every part of the Ceremonial Law yet it seemed good in regard the Iewes in a great measure were not yet unchurched nor wholy cast off for their sakes to forbear meats in themselves lawful enough as blood was since Christs was shed But to teach now as a matter of faith the forbearance of any thing edible particularly blood the Iews being wholly unchurched and the Gospel confirmed is not of God but of Satan For every creature and therefore this is Sanctified by the Word of
God himself calls a Sabbath wherever therefore one day in seven is kept Holy it may from the morality of the Law be named a Sabbath providing it to be the Sabbath of the Lord God that is a day set apar● by him for his own service by which we conclude that the seventh day kept by the Iew or the seventh day kept by the Turk though they work not are not morally Sabbaths the Lord never chusing the one and rejecting the other constituting the first day of the week to be since Christs Resurrection a perpetual Sabbath to himself B●t what is all this to Sunday this being a prophane name drawn from the Heathens It is to be wondred at to see what canting language is in the mouthes of men and how mystically they will speak to avoid ordinary expressions in time our dip pers may new dip doublets gloves and give them new names and by consequence set us all to schoole again that we may learn to forget our selves to be men and with authority pronounce all our Ancestors fools being they could not tell how to speak The Heathens it is true named the days of the week according to some feigned Gods real planets one among the rest was called Dies Solis the day of the Sun the self same day that is our Christian Sabbath naming or dedicating that day to that planet if the day had been dipped in the fountain of the Sun all had been well enough tamen non ●bstante we may call the first day of the week Sunday any thing in this argument to the contrary notwithstanding 1. From the practice of an Holy Evangelist he that was in labours more abundantly for the Gospel then any now can pretend to be that is not past shame was not so scrupulous as these men would seem to be for it is but a seeming be in his History of the Acts Acts 28. giving us an account of Pauls dangerous voyage to Rome shews us vers 11. That they viz. Paul and his company whereof Luke who wrot this History was one after three moneths departed in a Ship of Alexandria which had wintered in the Isle whose sign was CASTOR and POLLUX the Spirit of God made no scruple at these heathenish names but writ them and they stand in the Scripture and no reproof is given to the users of them and yet in their own natures they are to be more stumbled at then D●s Solis or Sunday either We shall interpret and open this story that these mens folly may appear you must know that the great Heathen God who ruled all was called Iupiter he was born at Crete and when he came to be of age he threw his Father Saturn out of his kingdom having three Brothers he gave the government of Hell to Pluto the government of the Sea to Neptune and kept the government of Heaven and Earth to himself This Iupiter according to Heathen Poets and Fables would come oftentimes out of Heaven and play pretty pranks upon Earth one of which was this One Tyndarus had a handsome wife called L●da she being with childe to her own husband Iupiter in a merry pin turned her into a milk white Swan and in that shape he being a God a pretty one got her with childe likewise she grew mighty big her hour of travel comes she is delivered of two Sons well shaped boyes they were One of them is named CASTOR the other POLLVX the lads grew and when they came to be of age their coasts being pestred with Pirats they got Ships and destroyed the Pirats in a short time they rid the Sea of them for this they are worshipped as Gods of the Sea and where they are together it is a sign of a fortunate voyage this is the reason that that Ship wherein Luke and Paul was had the sign of Castor and Pollux upon Their stern as some English Ships have Saint George this Ship therefore being at her outrigging named by Castor and Pollux foolish and heathenish Gods which had such a filthyoriginals this name being used by the Spirit of God and that without a check we may use the name Sunday though used by the Heathens by a more ra●ional cause then the other and not to be reproved by any whimsical sawcy or Hypocritical rebel whatsoever whose conscences in matter of sin we have no cause to suppose tender 2. From the innocency and harmlesness that is in the using of it there are some customes originally heathenish used too often that are attended with sin and whose being ought to be removed because of transgression as may-games particularly which always is accompanied with sinful and by relation shameful Acts and once in seven year a great occasion of the polluting of that day of which we are now speaking But this word Sunday hath nothing in it that savours of evil or that can be said to border upon that which is not right 3. From the happy event that God hath been pleased to give this name The Heathens gave one day to Mercury another to Venus one thought a thief and the other a whore the first day of the week to Apollo or the Sun Apollo they thought a God well skilled in Physick Excellent in Musick good to open Prophesies always young to such a one was this day dedicated and after him named he carrying about the Sun it was called Sunday now this hath fallen out so well as it deserves to be remembred Christ is Sol Iustisiae the Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4.2 this day did the Sun of our souls break through the clouds of his winding sheet and triumphed over darkness this day did he come out of the Chamber of his sepulchre and rejoyced as a bridegroom to run his race he came with healing under his wings to cure our souls he brought the sweet Musick of the Gospel of reconciliation I ascend said he Iohn 20.27 Vnto my Father and your Father to my God and your God he is the true explainer of the Prophets by this Sun● rising we see what was meant by Ienas lying in the Whales belly he comes out of his grave like a R●e or a young heart Cant. 8.14 In a word he is the light that inlightens every one that comes into the world our Sun the Son of God is risen by him we see Heaven by him we receive the fruits of the Earth this is his day dedicated to him by the Spirit set apart by himself never be bafled therefore but if thou so please call it Sunday it hath fallen out well that this day was by them that knew not God dedicated to the Sun and not to any other since in many points it can quadrate with our Sun of righteousness which with others it could not so well have done Quest. 10. Why is the Sabbath called Holy We shall have occasion to speak to this more at large hereafter for the present the Sabbath may be called Holy 1. In regard of the author of it
In respect of its activity and singlenesse In cathechizing there are some called out for assistance the catechist hath not all the work but in preaching there is no second to assist that is a taske wherein none claims a share wherein none are co-workers but the preacher himself is the sole agent and efficient 3 In respect of its object and partys preaching reaches to all persons old or young knowing or not knowing high or low now catechizing is properly for the ignorant and unlearned 4 In their subjects and actions preaching is peculiar for the ministerial function catechizing proper to none but common to woman and man no sex but may have hand in this exercise of catechizing and no person is a tyed to it Quest. 2 Whether preaching be to be preferred before Catechizing There is a generation that supposes if a minister spend one half of the sabbath upon catechizing that it is through idlenesse and sloath whereas if Catechizing be soundly performed there is no labour nor study saved yea possibly more undergone Others again would make no account of preaching holding that a proper dish for a feast and not for ordinary fare conjectureing they are not blame-worthy if the ordinance of catechising go forward In humble submission it is thought they are both out of the way and besides the truth It is not safe to make the ordinances strive with each other or one to jostle out another to the purpose in hand let us distinguish of places and of persons 1 Some places are rude plaine and ignorant without much travel we may fall into country parishes whose ignorance is so grosse that it is incredible there Catechizing may be of much use and though they love it not it may do them most good 2 Some places are more orderly civil and knowing there may be populous places and parishes in which generally the people may be knowing and by reason of schooles and other advantages Catechizeing may go forward without much troubling the Minister In which places there is no losse if it yeild to preaching especially on the sabbath day lest the genrality of the people make no account of their assemb●ing together And as touching persons there are men whose parts and genius are not fit for Catechizing their excellency may ly in preaching others there are whose excellency may ly in Catechizing the fewnesse of ministers craves that that be done by which their genius and parts may do most good in the Church of Christ yet by experience I know shortnesse of dayes infirmity of body c. must and will cut one short the preheminence therefore is to be given to preaching for 1 That is the most powerfull way for the convincing of sinners the strength of rea●on and the force of application in a Sermon are powerfull meanes for the opening of the heart of man and causing him to see his errour which would from a Catechist be Improper 2 That was cheifely the practise of Christ and his Apostles he and they both went into the Synagogues and taught the people expounding Scriptures and setting them home to the eares and consciences of their people 3 Preaching is of most general concernment there are sins of the age and times wherein the Catechist may faile but preaching disclaiming these detecting those is most profitable there are providences sometime sad and sometimes cheerfull which is to be observed and noted and people taught accordingly these oftentimes may not fall under the cognisance of a Catechist and if they should he would put a block in his own way and give occasion of stumbling to them for whose sake Catechizing is most u●ed Moreover preaching extending it self largely meets with the tempers sinnes dispositions of most whereas a Catechisme t ys up and limits the Spirits of him that teacheth by it that he can reach but a few if any his office being only to lay down the truth touching some head of divinity to convince the understanding and no more 4 It puts a greater chearfullnesse in the spirits of the most knowing to come to Gods service when Christians have been in the days of their minority trained up in that way by question and answer To be kept continualy to it might flat their appetite and blunt the edge of their devotion especially in publick places where by relation in former times when Catechizing swallowed up preaching halfe the sabbath was loosly not to say prophanely kept and spent the Ministers gifts may not be for that service nor his parts though otherwise eminent for such teaching which may in time breed a slighting of him among his own people what gifts God gives to teachers by which they may most advance the end of teaching which is the edification of the Church those ought to be most exercised by them and by this rule men may know what is best to be done CHAP. II. Of Preaching WE come now to that ordinance which is the power of God unto Salvation though some in this age account it foolishness and vanity In this ordinance we shall see 1 The nature of it 2 The manner of it 3 The necessity of it 4 The ends of it 5 Resolve some Questions SECT I. This ordinance of preaching by which men are saved if they keep it in memory 1 Cor. 15.1 2. may be thus described 1. It is an opening expounding or unfolding the meaning of the Holy Ghost in Scripture 2. According to Scripture 3. And applying it for the edification of the Church or perfecting of the Saints 1. It is an openning expounding c. of the meaning of the holy Ghost in Scripture That the Scripture is the mind or meaning of the Holy Ghost is blasphemy once to be doubted Heb. 3.7 Acts 1.16 2 Pet. 1.21 and his expressions are sometimes so lofty and at other times so dark that the understanding of man is naturally ignorant of his purpose yea when highest not able throughly to apprehend his meaning Man may read all day at night lye down upon the restless bed of uncertainty not understanding the nature of the thing read Now preaching unfolds it expounds and interprets it gives the sence and meaning of the Spirit of God in it by which the hearts of the Elect are turned from the world unto God Acts 19.19 and made to burn towards God Luke 29.27 32. and go towards heaven with rejoycing Acts 8.35 39. 2. According to Scripture There are those that will expound the Scripture by their own fancies and make the Holy Ghost by an irreverent compulsion speak that which he never thought but what they would have others to believe such were the Pharisees of old Mat. 5. and such are our upstart Preachers now who assoon as they find some portion of Scripture that they can coulourably wrest for the defence of their own fancies immediately cry to their Proselites Rejoyce with us for we have found c. and where any appears that is not so easie to be drawn by the wier of their
brain they can lay it aside and flee to the Penthouse of the light within but Scripture is the l●st Expounder of it self for as it is the mind of the Spirit that is written it is the tongue of the Spirit that must interpret Isa. 8.20 The Scripture that is dark in one place must be opened by the Scripture that is light in another place otherwise it is not preaching but seducing 2 Tim. 4.3 3. Applying it for the edification of the Church This is the great end of preaching and the end of Gods sending Preachers into the world Ephes. 4.12 and in this this ordinance differs chiefly from that of Catechising Paul having spoken much of the doctrine of faith Heb. 11. makes application thereof Hebrews 12. having treated of judgement makes application thereof 1 Thes. 5.14 When a Preacher hath opened the sence and meaning of the holy Ghost in a portion of Scripture by Exhortation Reprehension Confutation Consolation he ought to set it home to the hearts of his hearers For the edifying of the body of Christ Ephes. 4.12 SECT II. This ordinance of preaching ought to be performed according to the will of God in this manner 1. Orderly God is a God of order and all his works are orderly he will have his word orderly every one is not to assume the office of a Preacher in the congregation of the Elders Every man must keep in that Calling wherein God hath put him and he that presumeth to preach without his call of which we have spoken before breaks order 2. Plainly He that preacheth must condescend to his hearers capacity Our Saviour when he preached was often plain that we might understand his meaning as easily as we understand a hens call when she would gather her young ones under her wings yet sometimes as a judgement God may give a commission to a Preacher to speak things not easie to be understood Isa. 6.9 For this reason our Saviour sometimes preached in dark parables Now preaching is plain 1. When it is sent home to the heart and conscience 2. When it is without flattery 3. When it is without deceit 3. Impartially The Scribes scape not the lash of Iohns Doctrine let the soul be afraid that his Maker will cut him off that Accepts any mans person or that gives flattering title unto any Job 32.22 4. Authoritatively Let their words be such as command attention who ascends the Pulpit stairs whatever they say let it be in the Lord Thus saith the Lord ought to be the preface and close of a Sermon 5. Freely Courage and spirit ought to be in his bosome that undertakes to deliver the Lords mind Men naturaly have hard hearts and he that would preach savingly must have an hard brow Ezek. 3.9 Ephes. 6.19 20. 6. Zealously he must so preach that it may appear he desires in soul his people to shun what he reproves to perform what he exhorts he ought to be jealous over Gods people that is a shepherd of the flock of Christ 2 Cor. 11.2 7. In the power and demonstration of the spirit he ought so to reason the case with sinners to convince the Gain-sayer to reprove the unruly to open the Scripture so sincerely and comfort so strongly that men may see and know the spirit of God to be with him of a truth 1 Cor. 2.3 SECT III. Touching the necessity of submitting to this ordinance much might be said we shall confine our discourse to these few things 1. It is the Soveraign means appointed by God to save them that believe 1 Cor. 1.21 There are some who hold it necessary to convert heathens but will not admit it usual for the confirming of Saints but it is otherwise It is needfull to beget a Saint to uphold a Saint to perfect a Saint They may account it foolishness as they do yet such as it is the wisdome of God hath appointed us to hear it Rev. 1.3 2. It is necessary for Preachers to be at all times preaching 2 Tim. 4.1 Wo unto them if they preach not which declares wo shall befall the people if they hear not 3. The people is lost and is known to perish that have it not Prov. 29.8 They are as it were made naked to their shame they have nothing to shield them or shelter them from the stormy blasts of divine wrath where this Candlestick of preaching is removed or where it was never placed there is no place for Christ. Gods presence is with his Church and his walk only among his Candlesticks All other places are in darkness and he that walketh in darkness stumbleth and perisheth 4. There is a special charge not to despise it 1 Thes. 5.20 and therefore it is much to be regarded he that contemneth it contemns him that appointeth it which is God he is not to be cast our irreverently that preaches it lest the dust of the earth judge them and therefere it is to be reverenced of all such as would believe for the saving of the soul. 5. It is effectual for the bringing of future and present generations nigher and nigher unto God Ephes. 2.17 there are still young coming into the world who by nature are children of wrath Whose fathers being Amorites and whose mothers being Hittites are aliens from the spiritual Common-wealth of Israel now this ordinance of preaching is a proper instrument for the circumcising of the heart by which they are made Citizens of the New Ierusalem and by faith made sons and daughters of the faithful Abraham SECT IV. As to every purpose under heaven there is a time there is an end for every thing under the Sun All Gods ordinances are designed for some end or other besides his own glory the end of all his purposes designs and undertakings Preaching he hath ordained for these ends viz. 1. That sinne might be discovered more convinceingly the whole Law or Word of God reproves and holds out sin but preaching by mustering and collecting all Gods threatnings together and laying them in the sinners sight holding them to his face seems to make him startle and really to tremble Acts 24.25 Mat. 3.5 2. That they may be condemned more inexcusably Sinners might plead their ignorance at the barr of Justice and excuse their sin in regard of the Scriptures deepness God therefore to clear himself from the least imputation of injustice stirs up his servants to open expound reveal and apply his Word giving by them unto his people line upon line precept upon precept shewing them their sin and making them know their transgression whereby their condemnation is the more just and their ignorance the less inexcusable 3. To set out the freeness of Gods grace the more effectually the grace of God appears in every line of the Scripture and each line may lead us to admiration yet this of preaching laying mans sinne before him with all just heightning circumstances discovering mans nature with its abomination opening hell with all its torments and then making known
because the most fresh colour is soonest apt to fade we must pray that they may be alwayes plump and wel-favoured For 1 They pray for us to be sure they make supplication and prayer for all men knowing that it is acceptable in the sight of God our Father 1 Tim. 2.1 3. And if there be anything pure lovely or of good report as this is they think on these things Let us therefore shew so much kindnesse to our friends as to Pray for them again and love them in some degree at least that loveth us so much left the Publicans come and take our reward from us 2 They are the very pillars of the world Psal. 753. In some sence the earth is not hanged upon nothing and in another heaven moves not by intelligences the Saint keeps all up take them out of the world then it is like Lot out of Sodome remove them from the earth then it is like Moses separate from the congregation of Cora when these are gathered together then comes the end let prayers therfore be made that that they may be strong in the faith strengthened with all might That they may be stedfast unmoveable alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord 1 Cor. 15.58 That they may be filled with the fulnesse of God Eph. 3.19 And that they may be perfect and compleat in all the will of God Gal. 4.12 3 They are the Teachers and Doctors of the world It is they that teach their Children what the Lord hath done for them they are Schoolmasters leading the age wherein they are to Christ by the word of his grace and washing with water It is they that speakes of the Law when they rise up and when they lye down and are ever mindfull of his Covenant we are therefore to pray That as strangers and Pilgrims they would abstaine from fleshly lusts 1 Pet. 2.11 That the manifestation of the spirit might be given to every man to profit withall 1 Cor. 12.7 And that they might seek to excell to the edifying of the Church 1 Cor. 14.12 And grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ. 4 They are not without their faillings they see but in part and known but in part and their unbelief would be helped The time is not yet come wherein they shall know as they are known feares passions troubles sometimes interposeth themselves between them and ●aven and their graces suffers an Ecclipse and this ●● to be observed and prayer offered up that they might have life more abundantly Iohn 10.10 That they might be enriched by him in all utterance and in all knowledge and that they might come behind in no gift 1 Cor 1.5 7. And that their faith might grow exceedingly and that the Charity of everyone towards each other might abound 2 Thes. 1.3 For these several kind of persons ought prayers to be put up whether they be our friends or foes whether good or bad whether tyrants or scandelous their office their danger their condition requires it Yet in supplication against evil we must not forget to justifie God in sending that evil but must confesse that we have sinned and have committed iniquty and have done wickedly and have rebelled Dan. 9.5 And in postulation to obtain mercy alwayes remember with Josephs Brethren to bring double money in our hands thanks to pay for the last mercy we did receive and faith to obtaine that me cy that for the present we come to crave For know in every thing therefore in prayer We are to give thanks 1 Thes. 5.18 SECT VI. When God brought his people out of Egypt he gave them a cloudy pillar to be their guide to prevent their wandering Neb. 9.19 In our passing unto heaven we are to observe a rule or we shall easily loose our way It is not our own good meaning that will defend or justifie evill practises though a string much harped upon in our dayes for the case in hand we are not only to pray but to pray ●fter this manner John 6.9 For as good intentions never justifie bad actions so unsavory or uncharitable petitions will never be tollerated or allowed through a good meaning The rule o● prayer is twofold 1 More generall that is the whole Scriptures of God 2 More particular the prayer composed by the Son of God commonly called the Lords prayer and commonly refused by the ungodly Saints of this generation and not without reason as by and by shall be seen 1. We shall first speake of the generall rule which is the scriptures and in them we have seven things which may be our rule in prayer 1. The precepts that are enjoyned therein what ever duty we find God obliging his people to performe whether moral or ceremonial we may make either of them rules for our prayers and what ever grace tends to the right performing of it or quickening up the he●rts of men to do it may be lawfully called for if morall for the thing it self directly as for knowledge that we may love him or if Ceremonial for the thing signified as circumcised eares and hearts that we may be his people 2. The promises that are made therein what ever God promised to give his people or his Church in generall or whatever concerned the soul in particular or the body in things necessary for his promising David a Kingdome in special is no rule to us we may pray for the same thing as for raine in its season Zac. 10.1 and for a new heart and new spirit Ezek. 36.26 3. The threatenings that are denounced therein what ever judgment God threatens for sin in general or for any sin in particular it is lawfull for us to pray against that punishment in the commission of that particular sin It is therefore agreeable to the Scriptures to beg that God would not dispise our feast dayes not our solemn assemblies though we have sinned against him Amos 5.21 4. The providence observed therein when we see God in out-goings giving to this or that Saint such a particular grace sutable to the place wherein he put him or drawing him out of that misery this or that way wherein he was pleased to cast him this may be a rule for us to pray accordingly so Magistrates may pray for wisdome 1 King 3.9 and subjects to be delivered from all that oppresse them 5. The protestations that are declared therein what ever it be that God for the vindication of his honour or exaltation of his grace hath declared to the sonnes of men in reference to their sins or soules to there temporall or eternall estate may be eyed by us in our prayers and therefore boldly may we aske that we dye not the death though we be sinners Ezek. 33.11 6. The expostulations that are found therein We find the Almighty chiding and checking men for their wilfulnesse lazinesse idlenesse and prophannesse which humbly we may make use of in our pleadings with God thus Ierusalem may pray that suddenly
content he takes in men by his hatred a detesta●●on of things done by his feet is signified the power strength speed or presence of God by his back parts an imperfect Image of his glory c. these things being in Scripture in a Metaphorical way to help our infirmities Quest. 3. Whether there be but one God 1. That there is but one God the Scripture in no point is more clear For instance Thus saith the Lord the King of Israel and his Redeemer the Lord of Hosts I am the first and I am the last and besides me there is no God Isai. 44.6 And I am the Lord and oheré is none else there is no God besides me Isai. 45.5 so Deut. 32.39 1 Cor. 8.4 5 6. Deut. 6.4 2. There can be but one Omnipotent Omnipotency is to have all power might and strength there is power and there is Omnipotency Power may do much but Omnipotency can do all power may be suppressed by a greater power but Omnipotency knows no opposition It hath no difficulties nor Lets it works freely and perfectly without co-workers or Materialls if at any time it uses any it at no time needs either Gen. 17.1 I am God Almighty therefore there can be no other God but he For suppose another there must follow a Contest who should be most worshipped most feared most magnified one must yield to the other which denotes impotency which is a denying of a deity 3. There can be but one Infinite To be Infinite is to be fully constantly in all places It is to be without bounds to be unmeasurable to exceed reason or capacity it hath respect to time place power wisdome Justice mercy God is infinite in time being Eternall Infinite in place filling Heaven and Earth in power he do all things in wisdome he knows all things past present and to come In Justice who can dwell with everlasting burnings in mercy for the Righteous go into life Eternal Do not I fill Heaven and Earth saith the Lord. Jer. 23.24 There is therefore no place no time left for another God Suppose one you must at the same instant give him a Vacuum to Reign in which to affirm would but argue emptinesse of Wisdome and shallowness of understanding 4. There can be but one recipient We are commanded to love God with all our strength soul and mind Deut. 6.4 5. there is no part of our love service fear worship to be given to any other then one therefore there is but one 5. Therre can be but one Efficient There are many things in the World depending upon each other as the lincks of a chains which if we measure and count we shal come to the first which is the preserver of all the greatest number hath it's Original from a Unite Trace every Creature in it's steps upward and we shall fall upon one that is the Original of all He is before all things and by him all things consist Col. 1.17 To suppose another God were to suppose a being without acting which is an irrati●nall conceit Yet thre are in Scripture that are called Gods besides the Lord of which afterwards Quest. 4. Whether there be three Persons in the God head and how these persons do agree These things are by many of this age denyed and therefore must be proved and though they may be thought to be needlesse in regard that by many they are believed yet this may give to many an enlightning into the truths that possibly upon trust only are received Before we come to prove the question its proper to premise 1. We must know that this mystery is a great mystery and is indeed above Reason It is to be rather the subject of our admiration then inquisition it 's to be feared that many reason themselves out of Heaven by endeavouring to apprehend the depth and rationality of this 2. That though it be above reason yet it 's necessary for salvation i. e. to such as are of years of discretion Upon this Principle stands the Fabrick of all Religion to quit this is to quit with Christianity 3. That though the word Trinity be not found to be in Scripture yet the thing that we would expresse by that word is in it 1 Iohn 5.7 which holds out that one is three and that three is one which is expressed significantly enough by the Church under the word Trinity 4. That the three Persons in the God-head are distinguished by these Names The first person is called the Father the second is called the Son or the Word the third is called the Holy ghost or the Spirit yet they make not three but one God There are three that hear Record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy ghost and these three are one the other three that follow viz. the Spirit Water and blood are said to agree in one but these three are said to be one 1 John 5.7 that is essentially and naturally These three differs three ways 1. The Father begets Psal. 2.7 Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee He begets Christ by Eternal generation and believers by spiritual adoption in reference to both thes● is he called Father Ioh. 20.17 2. The Son is begotten he is called a Son Prov. 30.4 Iesus is the Christ and is born of God 1 John 5.1 3. The Holy ghost proceedeth from these two Ioh. 15.26 As a man when he looks in a glasse if he smile his image smileth also and if he take delight in it it taketh delight in him the face is one being suppose that the Father the Image of the face in the glasse is another being suppose this the Son begotten of the Father and the smiling of them both is a third thing proceeding from the two former suppose this that the spirit that procoeds from the Father and the Son All these a man knowing to be but one face and of one face may know that these three are but of one ●od That they are personally distinct from each other appears by many Texts chiefly these Prov. 8.25 The Son speaking of himself shews us that when there was no depths I were brought forth when there were no Fountaine abounding with water before the Mountains were setled before the Hils was I brought forth c. When he prepared the Heavens I was there when he established the clouds above when he gave to the Sea his decree then was I by him as one brought up with him c. In which speech it appears that he that was begotten by the Father was a distinct person from him that established the clouds which was the Lord Gen. 1. Again Psal. 33.6 we read that by the word of the Lord were the Heavens made and all the Hoasts of them by the breath of his Mouth Here are the three persons differenced Christ the word the Lord God the Breath of his mouth the Spirit which appears by comparing this Text with Iohn 1.1 and Gen. 1.2 Also Gen. 1.26 One says
of King Ahaz when gathered together by godly Hezekiah the people are commanded to give the portion of the priests and levits unto them that they might be encouraged in the law of the Lord and the people bring in abundance of the first fruits of corne wine and oyle and honey and all the increase of the field and the tithe of all things brought they in abundantly 2 Chron. 32.4 5. to say no more the ministers of the gospel are even to receive outward encouragment otherwise they may go out and see if they can find a place to sojourn in There are some that find out a way to prevent all these inconveniences they are so much in frendship and in love with their minister that they could wish him to learn some trade and so he might live comfortable and for his example they produce him Paul But to that we give this brief reply 1 The other Apostles worked not 1 Cor. 9.6 The Apostle vindicating himself declares that he and Barnabas hath a power to forbear working as well as other the Apostles he therefore haveing no engagement upon him by God for his so doing is not to be brought as a stan●ing president to the ministry of the Gospel in that particular he haveing a power to forbear working as well as Peter and the other Apostles and we are sure Paul had no commission to work 2 Paul for all his working made but a poor liveing so basely covetous were the Citizens or Corinth that he could not get a subsistence among them for all his preaching for all his working but took wages of other Churchs to supply his necessity 2 Corinth 11.7 8 9. And because he took it from those Churches unto whom at that time he did preach he calls it a robbing of them 3 He seemes to give us his reason of so doing 2 Cor. 11.12 The false Apostles in that City glorying that they preached the gospel freely the same which our Hereticks do now which the Apostles of Christ did not made Paul in that City to take a way the occasion of their so glorying by his free teaching which is no rule for them to follow unto whom God and the laws hath given a certaine maintainence and yet for his working was despised of those false Apostles ver 7. so desirous always are those that are not true teachers to find something against them that are Another reason of his so doing is the Corinthians covetousnesse If he had but took from them so much as would have maintained him the gospel had been hindered and Pauls doctrine by reason of charges had been neglected and therefore is not to be brought as a rule for the ministry of the Gospel now since Church rents are setled and Christianity established 4 Those Immediate inspirations whe●ewith those holy men of God were inspired are now ceased in the Church Paul might worke and yet his preaching never be the more erron●ous his lips being guided and that immediatly by the unerring Spirit of God but these gifts now fayling Men ought to study search and ponder upon what they are to deliver which indeed is sufficient considering other necessary divertisments to imploy the whole man without following a trade except we would preach as they do and lead our people into by-paths and by what I know of those preachers if they knew no better how to handle their needle their axe their aul or their plough then they do a text they would never get a living by their trade 5 These men are injurious to the whole Church of Christ they long to see her again in persecution pursued with fire and faggot Is it possible that they are ignorant of that text wherein the Apostle makes it one of his miseries that he must work with his hands take his own words 1 Cor. 4.9 For I think that God hath set forth us the Apostles last as it were men appointed to death For we are made a spectacle unto the world to A●gels and to men c. Even unto this present hour we both hunger and thirst and are naked and are buffeted and have no certain dwelling place and labour working with our own hands shall any man hence take occasion to affirme that it is a duty of a true minister of the gospel to live in want and misery and to have no certain dwelling place if so even those trades-men must passe for false teachers That then that Saint Paul groaned under through persecution and affliction shall it be a standart unto all others in times of peace and setlement To conclude then these men are angry that the Church hath gotten victory over her enemies in regard her ministers have bread and a habitation Let me assure them that when the wise disposer of all things shall see fit to visit the Church with persecution which they long for they may see many not only chuse to work rather then the Gospel shall go down but chuse to be burned and to dye as there hath been many rather then the faith shall want defenders Quest. 2. Whether an Heretical or upstart teacher may be known from the true The markes and tokens or symptones of an Heretick according to a very able and good man are these following 1 He preaches ambiguously in dark phrases there is a new kind of canting language got up among our Hereticks now I have heard some of them an hour together and so darke were their expressions that it would have puzled a wise man to have made even nonsence of it which the ignorant take for inspiration 2 He delivers some doctrine against the fundamental points of religion there is nothing more common with many of them then this some deny original sin some the divinty of the holy Ghost some eternal judgment other the doctrine of baptisme others the Inbeing of sin in believers c. 3 He opposes the faithfull preachers as Iannes and Iambres withstood Moses This text they have the Impudence to apply to the true ministery opposing them though they have no call to shew that they are sent of God whether inward or outward and the ministers of the gospel can show both however Wizards Witches Seducers are their ordinary language though God account them as the starrs in his right hand 4 He is not in the same tale in his chamber and in the pulpit to his followers and to others this experience abundantly testifies this piece of pollicy the jesuit hath learned him who often times in bookes seemes as made up of devotion and yet in their closets and practises are full of all manner of Iniquity 5 He boasts of illuminations and revelations this is like the popes infallibility which the heretick flys too in cases of necessity sometimes they will take the boldnesse to praedict or prophesie touching Christs second coming the downfall of Antichrist by which they mean the Clergy but their spirit hath so often deceived them that I hope they by this time see it was a
lying one 6. He challenges Disputes in which they falsify the Scriptures and learned Authors pretending they are on their side In this last Rome hath an excellent faculty and in the first our Hereticks hath a strange confidence Vaine glory is the stirrup by which he mounts and popular applause the breath by which he lives which he hopes to receive by challenging and indeed he may be very Impudent I should have said confident in his disputes that resolves before hand never to be convinced which is his property 7 His followers betray him They are either the ho●low Hypocrites who generally favour the Heritick in his tenents or the Idle person he that lives without a calling shelters himselfe under the garment of an Heretick that it may be thought its religion makes him leave the world in a word young curious boys weak b●ains silly women generally makes up his congregation 8 He is most bitter against them that op●se him This makes the ordained ministers to be the Butt he most malitiously shoots at he is the greatest eye so●e in the world to the seducer because he is to discover him point him out unto his people that they may shun him wherefore he hates him and yet let me assure him he shall as soon keep the sun from shining upon the world as get ordination out of the world 9 He ever makes a gain of those w●om he seduceth he calls his preaching either free or if he do get it is only the peoples free gift and not certain to him however generally a collection is made at the close of his speech and like Idolaters who can give their Jewels and their ear-rin●s to make a golden c●lfe yea give their sonnes and dau●hters unto Devils they give him sometimes a large contribution some have refused this publick way yet have under ground sayd such pipes as have brought in a large quantity of creature comforts It is a great blessing in their account if any be seduced that hath large portions of this life for by some secret deeds of conveyance they are all sonnes and daughters adopted and sharers of his goods and like greedy horse leetches never leave sucking untill he be as poor and empty as ever he was full But I long to make an end of him 10 He comes to disgrace in the end denyes what he affirmed before or else casts it into a new mould and mince it and alter it and tells he was not rightly understood Were heresie a standing dish in time it might be swallowed down by many otherwise adverting enough but it never continues in one stay It cannot be licked unto one form he denyes this tenet this day He must strengthen it by denying another tomorrow his hearers may be are in love with a new religion he must set up shop again and that he may have trading he must varnish over his old stuffes with some new glosse and to his new Proslytes teacheth for doctrine some new fancy and like a man in danger of drowning catches at any opinion though never so false before he clearly be shut out as a deceiver which oftentimes by good laws or Church censures falls to his lot Quest. 3. Whether a Preacher once setled in a place may leave that place There are some that touching this Question are one the extreams of both sides by on party it is affirmed he ought not at all by anotheir partly it is held that he may doe it when he will we shall not at this time fall out with either party yet there are some ground that salva conscientia a Minister may remove from that place wh●rein the law hath set him As 1 When the activity and excellency of parts deserve it unto whom God hath given eminent gifts it is lawfull to manage that place that is sutable for those gifts if it were not so the places of most concernment in the Church might be worse supplied and he whose parts the Church stood in most need of might be buried in a corner he than that conceives his parts might be sayd out for the good of the Church in a more powerfull manner in such a place unto which I suppose him lawfully called then in that wherein he now is he may remove himself and that from the nature and end of his office which is the perfecting of the Saints One of lesse and of inferiour parts may in that place wherein he is now accomplish the same end as well as he and his parts can help it more forward in that place unto which he is now removing 2 When inability of body and weaknesse of parts call for it A man may not be able through severall infirmities to undergo the duties of one place and yet the same man be sufficient to execute all the parts of his office in another In this case he may remove by the Law of Charity for God will have mercy and not sacrifice 3 When the affections crossenesse of people seem to compell it people as the Galathians may stay in their affections and their hearts for some cause or other be alienated from him they formerly loved In this case a Minister may remove by the Law of reason for where there is not love to the person there will hardly edification be got by the doctrine he may go where he is better beloved and the people may receive or choose another in whom they more delight and in my judgement both changes for the better this relinguishing is justifiable from the end of preaching which is the edification of the Church 4 When the Covetousnesse of the people or smallnesse of the meanes force it As was sayd before a Minister is at certain charges common with other men he may have a familie which ought to be provided for he may be sick and must then have attendance or perish Now not to have wherewithall to answer his necessity or supply him in his need he may remove by the Law of nature which binds him to educate his Children to provide for his family if this place wherein he is will not do he may leave it and his relinqiushment is Justifiable both before God and man God will keep no man in his vineyard nor bid any go in but upon good termes and competent allowance and men will allow every Tradsman Shopkeeper to live by his calling and profession why therefore ought not a minister to live by his function and office Indeed if men make a custome of removing from one place to another without some emergent cause it is both sinfull to themselves and dangerous to the Church As Warre therefore is to be made with good advice so a choice is to be made with mature deliberation Quest. 4. Whether it be expedient to permit one to Preach constantly or weekly in a place that hath neither Order from the Church nor Charge of the people This Question hath no eye to them that so preach in a Church not setled or in a nation not