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A28310 A soul-searching catechism wherein is opened and explained not onely the six fundamental points set down Heb. 6. I. but also many other questions of highest concernment in Christian religion : wherein is strong meat for them that are grown and milk for babes, in a very short catechism at the end, exceeding needful for all families in these ignorant and unsetled times / written by Christopher Blackwood. Blackwood, Christopher. 1653 (1653) Wing B3101; ESTC R24658 62,833 92

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in generation Though this answer may be satisfactory to many yet I rest upon the former that we become guilty by imputation Qu. How doth it appear that Adams sin is imputed to all his posterity A. It appears 1. Because sin was in the world before there was a Law given on Sinai as appears in that all Adams posterity were liable unto a temporal death which is the fruit of sin Rom. 5.13 Vntill the Law sin was in the world so that death raigned from the time of Adam to Moses vers 14. now sin would not have been imputed and consequently death when there is no Law Now if you say What Law was there before Moses Law without which sin would not have been imputed I answer Though there was the Law of Nature writ in our hearts by Nature yet the Law the Apostle there speaks of was this mentioned vers 12. That by one man Adam sinning all mankinde should sin in him by that one sin of that one man Adam death should come upon all He speaks not one word of the Law of Nature 2. It appears that Adams sin is imputed to all his posterity from the death of infants Rom. 5.14 Death reigned from Adam to Moses and so along even over them who had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression which cannot be meant otherwise then of infants who had not sinned actually as Adam had so that the Apostle argues thus Where death reigned without guilt of their own actual sin there necessarily must be an imputation of the guilt of the first sin But before the Law death reigned over those that had no guilt from their own actual sins meaning little infants that could not sin actually after the similitude of Adams transgression Therefore the guilt of the first sin is necessarily imputed to infants and if so infants much more to grown persons and so to all Q. What may we learn hence A. That there is a sinning after the similitude of Adams transgression or actually 2. That there is a sinning which is not after the similitude of Adams transgression or imputatively which is called original sin Q What is original sin A. It is the corruption of all mankinde by the fall of our first Parents naturally propagated or derived unto all making them guilty of temporal and eternal death and other punishments unless forgiveness be made in Christ Rom. 3.9 to vers 25. Rom. 5.12 13 14 15. It 's called original sin because it was in being from the beginning from the first man that ever was Q. What way is their to come out of this miserable condition A. Only by Jesus Christ Col. 1.21 22. Qu. What is Jesus Christ A. The eternal Son of God Mic. 5.2 made man Rom. 1.3 4. Q. How many are the Offices of Christ in relation to his Church A. They are three Qu. Which are they A. His Kingly office whereby he rules in his Church Psal 2.6 and in the hearts of his people Luk. 17.21 2. His Prophetical office whereby he revealing his Fathers will wee are to hear him in all things Acts 3.22 Matth. 17.5 3. His Priestly Office whereby he offers sacrifice for the sins of his people Heb. 8.3 Q. What sacrifice did Christ offer A. His own body upon the Crosse Heb. 10.10 Qu. Why did Christ offer his own body upon the Crosse A. To make satisfaction for the sins of all those that believe on him Rom. 3.25 26. Q. What is faith A. It is a matrimonial act of the soul Rom. 7.4 2 Cor. 11.3 Eph. 5.32 whereby I do not only believe that there was such a person as one Jesus Christ who dyed and rose at Jerusalem but I believe also that he dyed and rose again for me yea my soul is willing to receive him John 1.12 as my Lord and Saviour Jude 21.25 and to rest upon his satisfaction Rom. 10.10 11. Quest Whether doth Faith go before the forgiveness of sins Ans We are not first washed and then believe but in Scripture-language we first believe and afterwards are washed hence we are said to be justified by Faith Rom. 3.28 and to be purified by Faith Acts 15.9 and Christ is set forth a reconciliation through Faith in his blood Rom. 3.25 which blood though it have sufficient vertue to cleanse us from our sins yet it doth not actually purge any unless it be applyed when it is once applyed that the soul looks believingly and mournfully upon him whom he hath pierced in that day is there a Fountain set open to that soul the Fountain of Christ his blood Zach. 12.10 compared with chap. 13.1 Q. But whether is Faith or Repentance first in the soul A. Though Faith be in order before Repentance yet in respect of time they are both together in the soul for in the same moment the Children of God believe that Christ was crucified for their sins they melt under the sight of their sins which were the cause of his crucifying Zach. 12.12 13. compared with chap. 13.1 Q. How doth the soul act in receiving Christ A. There is not onely an assent of the understanding that Jesus is the Christ that came into the World to save sinners which may be in wicked men Heb. 6.4 and Devils Jam. 2.19 but there is also an act of the will whereby God offering his Son as a Prophet to be our Teacher as a King to take us into his Government as our Priest by his death and intercession to wash away our sins we look upon this offer as worthy of all acceptation 1 Tim. 1.15 and so receive Christ to be under his teachings as our Prophet Mat. 17.5 Acts 9.6 rest and repose our selves upon his Sacrifice and satisfaction as our Priest Psal 37.5 Acts 8.37 put our selves under his Government and subject our wills to his will as our King Luke 19.27 This accepting Christ by the will is that very receiving mentioned John 1.12 because whosoever thus receive him have power to become the Sons of God Qu. What are the two parts of Christ his Priesthood A. 1. His death upon the Cross whereby in respect of Gods foreknowledge Christs merit and Gods acceptation he bore the sins of all the Elect upon the Cross ransoming them to God by his death Mat. 20.28 Ephes 1.6 7. 2. His Resurrection from the dead together with his intercession in Heaven whereby as an Advocate he pleades their cause 1 John 2.6 appearing in the presence of God for them Hebrews 9.24 presenting the merits of his own death whose blood speaketh good things for them Hebrews 9.24 So that he is able to save them to the uttermost Hebrews 7.25 Q. How may a Believer know that Christ is his Advocate or Intercessor A. Hereby do we know that we know him so to be if we keep his Commandments 1 John 2.1 2 3 4. Q. How doth a Believer keep the Commandments A. 1. He keepeth them in his head Christ in whose flesh sin was condemned that the righteousness of the
be said They were liable to wrath but it could not be said they were children of wrath it might be said they were upon their fall cursed but it could not be said they were born cursed So that besides temporal and eternal death there is a viciousnes of nature that passeth from Adam to all his posterity so that as a creature begotten partakes of the nature of the begetter as an horse of the nature of an horse so we partake of the sinful nature of our first Parents all along so that no man can bring a clean thing out of an unclean Job 14.4 for we were shapen in wickedness and in sin did our mother conceive us Psal 51.5 so that naturally we are estranged from God from the womb speaking lyes as soon as we can speak Psal 58.3 The looking-glasse of our misery we may see Rom. 3.9 to the 20. which the Apostle applyes to himself as well as others vers 9. What are we better then they that is by nature No in no wise To say we become guilty by imitation only as one Ox learns to plow by the sight of another is most false For corrupt nature teaches many persons evill for which they never saw example as Cain when he killed Abel To say the immediate will of the sinner is absolutely necessary to constitute sin is to tye the Creator to the Law of the creature who had a soveraigne power in himself to propose what Law he pleased unto his creature To say there is no such defilement upon our natures because our consciences accuse us not for it no more doth our conscience accuse us for sins of ignorance and many other sins yet will we say they are not sins The consciences of the Jewes did not condemn them for not dwelling in Boothes in the feast of the seventh month which they had omitted welnigh a thousand years from the days of Joshua to the days of Nehemiah Neh. 8.14 to the 18. was it therefore not a sin And whereas some say They cannot see how the sin of our first Parents should be both a sin and a punishment was not Pharaoh's hardness of heart both a sin and a punishment Was not the Idolatry of the Gentiles Rom. 1.21 23 24 26 28. Q. Whereas some say No Infant no not of the Heathens is damned meerly for original sin A. We know nothing of their damnation but we speak of the desert of original sin I rather incline to judge of their salvation they dying in Infancy because Christ saith Of such is the Kingdom of God The innocency of all Infants in respect of actual sins whether of heathen or christian Parents is the same they may be saved as the elect Angels are saved or else God may forgive that offence without satisfaction for if that power be in a creature to forgive a debt without payment much more is it in God and I humbly suppose there cannot be a more fit object to exercise the same and to bring it into act then towards poor dying Infants But that which I most incline to concerning the salvation of dying Infants is that though God can pardon dying infants without satisfaction yet that he will not because Christ Is the way to the Father and No man comes to the Father without Christ John 14.6 Now Christ's satisfaction becomes effectual through believing only to them that have the power of believing but to dying infants it may become effectual by bare applying without believing because infants cannot believe Deut. 1.39 Joh. 4.11 That there is some way of salvation for infants the Scripture speaks Luke 18.15 16. but for any other way of salvation for them besides Christ his satisfaction we know not nor for the conveyance of satisfaction in behalfe of infants any other way then by bare application on the Mediators part and acceptation on Gods part I cannot conceive And should infants be damned meerly for original sin then should God deal more severely with poor dying infants then with the Devils who were condemned to hell only for actual sins Q. Wherein doth our natural defilement reside A. In every faculty of soul and member of body Psal 14.3 They are all gon aside they are altogether become filthy So that the whole man stands in need to be sanctified 1 Thes 5.23 the Understanding is full of blindness Psal 14.2 the Will full of rebellion Ioh. 5.40 and 8.44 the Affections of disorder Rom. 7.5 the Conscience of benummedness and other defilements Tit. 1.16 the Ears full of filthy listnings the Eyes full of wanton gazings c. Q. Wherein doth our natural defilement consist which we drew from our first Parents A. In two things 1. In an aversnes to every thing that is good Psal 14.3 and 58.3 2. In a proneness to every thing that is evil Rom. 7.5 So that corruption takes occasion from the holy law of God to stir us up to sin Rom. 7.8 13. Q. How came Adams sin to seize upon his posterity A. That man by nature is wholly sinful nothing is more plain but the manner how he came to be so is hard to understand Now as when we are fallen into a ditch we stand not questioning so much how we fell in as how to get out so should we see how to get out of this sinful condition But to answer some say the Parent begets the soul as well as body but God is called the Father of Spirits Heb. 12.9 See also Zach. 12.1 Num. 27.16 Eccles 12.7 Either the Parent in generation conveyes part of his soul and so the soul should be divisible contrary to the nature of spirits which are not quantitative or he conveys his whole soul and so the Parent should be without a soul or else souls multiply which is more then Angels do Therefore 1. we become guilty by imputation or by Gods ordination in one man God ordained to adorn us all if he stood in one man he ordained to strip us all if he fell 2. By natural propagation or generation of that most filthy nature which Adam had after his fall Gen. 5.1 Adam begat a son in his own likeness after HIS IMAGE What image had Adam then save a corrupt image Job 14.4 Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean no body Psal 51.5 Behold I was shapen in wickedness and in sin did my mother conceive me So that sinful man by man I mean both man and woman who though they be two in sex yet are they one in nature and one in wedlock I say sinful man begets sinful man so that sin is in the seed inbidingly as fire is in the flint as some suppose This power that the body should have over the soul being above nature may be ascribed to Gods justice punishing Adams sin in his base subjecting of his spirit to the flesh Through the seed hereditary diseases of Gout Stone Consumption Leprosy are conveyed which are invisible and why may not sin be conveyed by the father to the childe
suffers it so to do 3. His ordination or appointment whereby God orders brings and disposes all things and the actions of things how disorderly soever they may seem to be to certain ends according as it seemeth good to him for the bringing about of which ends he also appointeth means Q. How is the providence of God conversant about sinne A. 1. God preserves that nature and will that produces sinful actions God hath a concurrence about sinful actions as appears Gen. 45.8 It was not you that sent me hither but God Deut. 2.30 God hardened the Spirit of Sihon King of Heshbon Psal 105.25 God changed the mindes of the Egyptians that they hated his people But as in a chain that breaks there is no link in fault but that which breaks so in these concurrences of causes none is to be blamed but the next and immediate cause which is the will of man so that though God will the being yet man alone wills the nature of sin Q. What are the positive actions of God in and about sin A. Three 1. His withdrawment of his help and grace from the creature both the help of light Deut. 29.4 The Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive and eyes to see and also the help of supportance 2 Chron. 32.31 Hezekiah was left of God to his pride that he might know what was in his heart which two helps being withdrawn the creature sins necessarily but voluntarily so that as the Sun causes darkness not by overcasting the air but by hiding his light as the staffe falls to the ground being not forced by the hand but only forsaken of it so God withdrawing either light or supportment man sins God who suffers sin hath the power of hindering without any obligation to us and man hath the power of doing without any compulsion the action in God is without fault the action in man without excuse 2. God works about sin by removing the impediments that hindered us from sinning God took away good Jehoiada and then Joash shewed his wickedness 2 Chron. 24.17 So God takes away a Master or Father that kept such a person from wickedness who being removed his wickedness appears 3. God works about sin by setting before us objects whereby he knows our corruption will be enticed as a beautiful woman before an unchast person wine or beer before a Drunkard 4. God works about sin by setting bounds to sin that it shall go so far and no further Psal 76.10 The remainder of wrath shalt thou restrain 5. God works about sin in that he preserves the person nature and faculties of the sinner even whiles he is in sinning Act. 17.28 In him we live and move as an hors-man driving a lame horse is the cause of his going not of his halting so is God the cause of our moving though not of the sinfulness in our moving Q. What use may we make of Gods providence A. 1. See that nothing befalls unto thee by chance if we take chance as a cause in opposition to God as the Philistims took it 1 Sam. 6.9 2. To perswade us to the use of prayer Gen. 24.12 Neh. 2.4 3. To free the heart from disquieting carefulness Matth. 6.32 34. 4. Eye God in all thy affaires Psal 145.15 Prov. 3.6 Psal 139.3 5. Not to fear the terrors of men and so neglect duty Matth. 10.28 29. 6. To comfort us that we are in covenant with him that sits at the stern and governs all 7. To comfort us in respect 1. of our poor condition 1 Sam. 2.7 2. against enemyes plots Luk. 11.31 33. See Exod. 34.24 3. against fear of danger Matth. 2.13 Job 29.4 8. To work patience in afflictions 1 Sam. 3.19 Psal 39.9 Job 1.20 21. Qu. In what condition did God create man at first A. In an holy and happy condition Gen. 1.26 Eccles 7.29 God made man upright which uprightness consisted in a perfect conformity of the faculties of the soul and members of the body to the will of God Eph. 4.24 Col. 3.10 Qu. Did man continue in that state wherein he was created A. No All have sinned and come short of the glory of God Rom. 3.23 Rom. 5.12 By one man sin entred into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men in whom all have sinned Qu. What death did Adams sin procure was it only a temporal death or was it not also eternal A. Adams sin procured to his posterity eternal death in respect of desert Rom. 5.15 If through the offence of one many be dead much more the grace of God and the gift by grace hath abounded unto many As the grace of God gift by grace abounded unto many that is to eternal life and to remission of sins so the offence on the contrary abounded unto eternal death and so it is set down vers 25. that as sin hath reigned unto death even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ as if he should say As the one is so is the other 2. Such as the justification is by the second Adam such is the condemnation by the first Adam But the justification by the second Adam is a justification of life that is of or to eternal Therefore the condemnation by the first Adam is a condemnation to eternal death Rom. 5.18 Therefore as by the offence of one the judgment came upon all men to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men to justification of life If any man object that it 's against equity that eternal death should be inflicted for another man's sin A. The same may be said against temporal death it 's as unjust that natural life should be taken away for the sin of another yet the Objectors whether Socinians or Arminians acknowledge this 2. The will of God is the rule of righteousness and if Adam would enter into such an agreement with God that if he stood he and all his posterity should stand eternally and if he fell he and his posterity should perish eternally Who hath any thing to reason against it Hos 6.7 the words are They like Adam have transgressed the Covenant so you have it varied in the margin So that a Covenant passed betwixt God and Adam for the violation whereof on Adams part he and his incur'd eternal death and we hold it equitable in the Courts of men that for the treason of the Father the Posterity smarts also Levi in the loynes of Abraham is said to pay tithes Heb. 7.9 Qu. What did Adam passe over to his posterity besides temporal and eternal death A. Besides their being children of wrath that is not only persons with whom God is angry but upon whom his wrath abides John 3.36 they are children of wrath by nature Eph. 2.3 signifying not only that we are cursed but that we are so by nature or birth natura being derived a nascendo from being born Of Adam and Eve it might
Law might be fulfilled in us Rom. 8.34 2. He keeps them intentionally having a respect to every one of them Psal 119.6 without slighting or despising any of them seeing the Scripture sets down that the slighting or despising any of a mans wayes doth declare him to be as yet under the state of death Prov. 13.13 and chap. 19.16 3. In that he will not deliberately sin against Conscience for the escaping of Crosses or obtaining of enjoyments Dan. 3.16 17. having a full purpose in his heart through the assistance of grace to chuse affliction rather then iniquity Job 36.21 Q. What measure of love must we love the Lord withall A. We must love him with a soveraign love better then Father and Mother Lands and Living Wife and Children yea and our own Lives Mat. 10.37 Luk. 14.26 Q. What denial of Christ is that which excludes a soul out of Heaven A. Habitual denial when we for the saving of our Lands Liberties Country or Lives have a purpose to deny Christ or any part of his truth Mat. 10.32 33. Q. What way it there to prevent this habitual denial of Christ which is so dangerous and destructive A. To learn to deny our selves in such a measure that in the Lords strength we resolve to take up every Cross that comes betwixt us and our duty Luk. 9.23 and to hate the best enjoyment we have as friends liberty estate yea and life it self if we cannot hold them and the Lord together Luk. 14.26 27. So that we are resolved in no wise in a plain Commandment to sin against our Conscience but are resolved to chuse a fiery furnace rather then worship a golden image Dan. 3.16 17. Q. What is repentance A. A change of heart Ephes 4.22 23. Rom. 12.1 2. whereby we turn from all sin with an hatred thereof Psal 119.128 purposing to walk in newness of life Psal 119.106 Q What are the fruits of Repentance A. The Apostle sets down some 2 Corinthians 7.11 as a care of pleasing God in every thing also a fear of displeasing him in any thing also a clearing of our selves both before God not resting till we have got assurance of the pardon of our sins and clearing our selves before men in a godly course of life also a desire to eye God in all things also a zeal rejoycing when his name is honoured and sorrowing when it is dishonoured also an indignation against sin in a friend as well as an enemy in a rich man as well as poor also revenge against our selves in that as we have abused Gods blessings to our own lusts so we endeavour hereafter to spend them to his Honour Q. What doth the Scripture reveal concerning spirituall death A. It reveales unto us that we are under a threefold death 1. A death of guiltiness whereby we are bound over to eternal death Rom. 5.12 Luk. 15.32 John 5.24 being wrapt therein by Adams sin and our own 2. A death of filthiness whereby naturally we all lye wallowing in carnal courses though some are more deeply in them then others Ephes 2.1 3 3. This life of holiness was also lost by Adam Gen. 1.26 Eccles 7.29 Ephes 4.25 3. A death of discomfort whereby naturally we are deprived of that sweet Communion and enjoyment of God which Adam had in innocency and regenerate men have in part and glorified Saints have in fulness Rom. 3.23 Q What doth the Scripture reveal concerning spirituall life A. It reveals unto us that there are three parts of spiritual life in opposition to this death 1. The life of justification Rom. 5.18 Gal. 2.20 so that whereas we are all dead men by offending the Law when God pardons we are alive Col. 3.4 2. The life of Sanctification when a man is quickened up to all the wayes of God Ephes 2.1 Rom. 6.11 13. 3. The of comfort Psal 85.6 when the soul enjoyes a life in Gods favour Psal 30.5 Psal 63.3 looking upon the absence thereof as death it self Psal 28.1 Psal 143.7 Q What necessity is there of spirituall life A. It is so needful that without it there is no Salvation Joh. 3.5 All the Body of Christ being living stones 1 Pet. 2.5 without this thy conversion is nothing Ephes 2.5 thy Faith nothing Joh. 11.26 thy Hope nothing 1 Pet. 1.3 thy Repentance nothing Acts 11.18 and thy duties of Religion nothing Psal 80.18 Mat. 13.15 yea if thou beest without this thou hast no share as yet in Christ 1 John 5.12 Q. What kinde of thing is spiritual life A. As it hath respect to change of heart there is an unseen working of the spirit upon the souls of Believers so that as there goes an hidden quality from the Loadstone to the iron that draws the iron to it so is there a power goes from Christ to draw the soul off from all sinful purposes unto himself John 6.44 John 12.31 So that the soul exalts Christ though with the loss of all lusts and all enjoyments Mat. 16.24 Q. In what faculty of the soul is spiritual Life seated A. Though wheresoever spiritual life is it showes forth its acts and operations as the natural life doth in the whole man yet as the natural life is more eminently in the head and heart so is this spiritual life more eminently in the faculties of the Understanding Will Conscience Affections and Memory Q. How may a person know his understanding it made alive to God A. When he doth not onely think of divine truths John 5.39 and approve them Rom. 2.18 which natural men may do but also applies them to his own Conscience Job 5.27 meditates of them Psal 1.2 ponders them Luke 2.19 remembers them Psal 116.55 judges aright of Gods wayes Psal 119.128 1 Cor. 2.13 14. and is often inventing and devising how to honour God and to keep Conscience pure Proverbs 14.22 Isa 32.8 Q. How may a man know his will is made alive to God A. Though the Saints of God have drawn comfort from their willing good when they could do no more but will Rom. 7.18 19 25. yet may there be wishings and wouldings in a heart oftentimes and yet it remain carnal as in Balaam Numb 23.10 and many others now because many thousands deceive themselves by their wishings and wouldings know that wishing or willing good is an Argument of spiritual life 1. VVhen the will brings forth earnest and diligent endeavors 1 Cor. 15.10 Heb. 13.18 Luke 15.18 compared with verse 32. against all hindrances and pull-backs whatsoever 2. VVhen the will of a man is set for good absolutely Psal 119.145 Dan. 1.8 though it expose him to the Cross and he gave no thanks but be hated of men for the same 3. VVhen the inclinations and dispositions of the heart are for God Psal 119.112 that what other men do with a dead heart he doth with a willing disposition 4. By the chusings and refusings of the heart when we chuse the wayes of God before all other wayes Psal 119.30 173. Isa 56.4
Mercy Deut. 29.19 Rom. 2.4 5. Psal 68.21 Q. Whether may not a child of God fall into sins against his knowledge and conscience A. 1. There are some failings in duty and stirrings of lust in godly men which are committed with knowledge but not against it for it is not in the power of knowledge to prevent them Rom. 7.15 18. these evils arise on a suddain 2. A godly man may sin against his knowledge through strength of passion and suddain furreption before he hath time to compose his heart Conscience in the act of it checks him yet he cannot keep it back so Peter denyed Christ and Ionah his Conscience told him he should not be angry when God asked him if he did well to be angry Ionah 4.9 3. A godly man may fall sometimes into deliberate sins against knowledge when that which he knows habitually he doth not actually think of the violence of the temptation blinding the judgment and beating back the voice of Conscience so David is set forth as a smarting spectacle of misery lest any man should venture as he did to have fallen into the sins of adultery and murder against knowledge Davids mind was so taken up with Bathsheba that he little thought of what he knew 4. A godly man exceeding seldom or never falls into a deliberate sin against knowledge when he doth actually and deliberately think and judge of what he knows 1 Ioh. 3.9 Q But if sinning against knowledge be so dangerous is it not best to remain in ignorance A. Ignorance when it is against a mans Will may excuse from so much guilt Luke 12.48 yet will it not excuse wholly Acts 17.30 But when it is an ignorance of wicked disposition that a man is either willingly ignorant 2 Pet. 3.5 or winks and closes up his eyes against the light Isa 30.10 11. Matth. 13.13 14. Ioh. 3.20 so that they will not read such Books nor hear such Preachers nor confer with such men as might discover truth to them God is wont not only Judicially to harden such in their blindness Matth. 13.14 compared with Iohn 12.40 but will also one day reckon with such wilful ignorants as if all their sins had been committed against Knowledge Q. What are the Covenants principally considerable which God made with his people A. Besides divers other Covenants which he made as with Noah and with every living creature both fowl and beast that there should be no more a flood to drown the Earth of which Covenant he made the Rain-bow a token Gen. 9 9 10 11. as also a Covenant made with David that his seed should still rule over Israel with the Levites that they should be his Ministers Jer. 33.20 21 25 26. And a Covenant to give the Land of Canaan to the Jews Psal 105.9 10. there are two other Covenants most considerable Q. Which are they A. 1. A carnal typical Covenant or Testament called old Heb. 8.13 second Heb. 9.1 worse Heb. 8.6 which was dedicated with the blood of beasts Exod. 24.6 7 8. compared with Heb. 9.19 This was with all Israel in the day when God took them by the hand to lead them out of the Land of Egypt Heb. 8.9 2. A spiritual or new Covenant Q. What did this old Covenant signifie A. 1. An obligation of the Jews to the Mosaical Law in general Exod. 19.5 6 7 8. Exod. 24.6 7 8. in the perfect observation whereof it's thought they were to have Canaan here and Heaven hereafter but failing in one point they were under a curse Gal. 3.10 the Ceremonial part of it also shadowed our redemption by Christ Heb. 9.18 19. Q. What was the proper effect of this old Covenant A. Bondage and slavish fear for not performing what this old Covenant did require this was signified by Hagar the bond-woman Gal. 4.24 25. and this Mount Sinai in Arabia a place without the bounds of the Land of promise and by the fleshly Jerusalem which was in bondage with her children all three which resemblances signifie that the old Covenant begot children to bondage not only under the unsupportable burthen of the Ceremonial Law Acts 15.10 which was a yoak of bondage Gal. 4.1 2 3. also chap. 5.1 but also under the bondage of the curse and of Gods wrath for not performing what the Law requires for which cause the Law is said to work wrath Rom. 4.15 to be a ministration of death 2 Cor. 3.7 and to slay the soul Rom. 7.11 Now as when a Pitcher falls upon the stones it 's the weakness of the Pitcher not of the stones that it is broken So the reason why the Law ministers death is not because of the weakness of the Law but the weakness of our flesh Rom. 8.3 Q. What is the other Covenant called A. It 's that Covenant which the Scripture cals the second Covenant Heb. 8.7 9.1 18. Heb. 10.9 or the new Covenant 1 Cor. 11.25 Heb. 8.13 9.15 or the better Covenant Heb. 7.22 as being established upon better Promises Heb. 8.6 of which Christ was surety Heb. 7.22 Q. What is this new Covenant A. It is Gods free Promise whereby he promiseth not only pardon of sins and eternal life to them that are elect or do believe the same but also doth promise to to take away the stony heart and to give them a new heart and a new spirit and to put his Laws in their minds and to write them in their hearts so that all of them from the least to the greatest know the Lord yea vouchsafes to be their God and takes them to be his people Q. What are the Articles or Branches in particular of this new Covenant A. They are these 1. Forgiveness of sins Heb. 8.12 I will be merciful to their unrighteousness and their sins and iniquities will I remember no more So that the Elect have not onely redemption from Original sin but from all transgression under the first Testament Heb. 9.15 by sprinkling clean water upon them Ezek. 26.25 Christs blood 2. A second branch is eternal life Rom. 5.15 Heb. 9.15 Christ is the Mediatour of the new Testament that by the means of death that is of Christs death they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance in this inheritance no bond-slave of Satan doth partake which appears Gal. 4.30 in the type in that the son of the Bond-woman which was Ishmael did not partake with the son of the Free-woman which was Isaac the message from God being Cast out the Bond-woman and her son for the son of the Bond-woman shall not be heir with the son of the Free-woman The third Branch is softning of the hearth Ezek. 11.19 that whereas in the natural state the heart was so hard that neither promise threat nor command mercy misery moved Now this stony heartedness is taken away that the soul melts under the sense of Christs sufferings it 's own infirmities and Gods mercies The fourth Branch is Newness whereby Christ doth not onely
fit to sleep 3. Nourish Gods fear which is a wakeful affection as being conversant about danger Fear of God and comfort of the Holy Ghost go together Act. 9.31 4. Keep company with wakeful Christians Heb. 3.13 5. Consider the danger of a drouzy Estate As first It s troublesome to the conscience Song 3.1 2 3. Secondly It s the fore-runner of some great cross or sin Song 5.2 6. Of Tentations Q. WHat is a Tentation A. As it is an act in the Creature it is the moving of a man to some sin with some reason to inforce it Prov. 7.18 19. Gen. 3.5 Prov. 1.11 12. Q. Who are the tempters A. 1. The Devil 1 Chron. 21.1 2. The World by which I mean the wicked of the World Prov. 1.10 and the goods therein 3. The flesh within us Rom. 7.18 Q. What remedy against Satans tentations A. 1. Dispute not with them things Eve was foil'd Gen. 3.1 He hath many methods which we cannot fathom 2. Get faith to quench his fiery darts Ephes 6.16 which is to be set a work in believing that Satan was spoiled and stript of his power over thy soul by Christ on the Cross Heb. 2.14 Col. 2.15 3. Use the Ordinance of prayer for strength to resist Psal 4.6 and wisdom to discern his tentations Jam. 1.5 and long-suffering that he may not tire us with the length of them 2. Of the Word Mat. 3.4 2 Cor. 10.4 both in the Command Exod. 20.13 and in the promise Jam. 4.6 Rom. 16.20 set this against all his proffers and in the threathing God telling Eve if she eat of the tree she should die and she listening to Satan minced of the matter to this Lest ye dye Gen. 3.3 and so was overcome by Satan 4. Avoid three-things 1. Idleness When persons are idle Satan hath an opportunity to tempt 2 Sam. 11.2 2. Solitariness this breeds melancholy Eccles 4.9 10. 3. Secresie this makes the wound of an afflicted Conscience bleed inwardly Jam. 5.16 But if thou canst have ease from God let no man know the matter but if not open thy Conscience to some grave and godly friend and herein be sure to discover that evil that turns the Conscience out of its place 5. O draw good out of Satans tentations and so he will have no courage to tempt as more strongly to believe there is a God because Satan tempts us to doubt whether there be a God so the more to assure our selves we are Gods people because he so tempts us now being he little tempted us when we were in our natural state in a word learn by tentations how to comfort tempted persons Q. What must I do when Satans temptation is past and gone A. As Mariners make their tacklings in a calme firm against a storme come so when temptations are over prepare for new a encounter remembring Satan leaves us only for a season Luk 4.13 though Christ overcame Satan yet he came again and again Satan will try whether we have lost our former strength care and watchfulness or whether God that would not suffer him then will for some sins we have committed since suffer him to have power over us now Satan sometimes politickly gives way for a season when yet his temptation is not overcome Q. What remedy against the temptations of the world A. If you mean by the World the wicked of the Word then consent not to them be you as importunate in resisting as they shall be in tempting Gen. 39.10 Prov. 1.10 But if you mean by World the pleasures profits and honours of the World consider their uncertainty their transitoriness their inability to fill the soul 1 John 2.16 Let us love them onely in reference to God and a good Conscience Q. What remedy against the temptations of the flesh A. 1. Take heed of spiritual pride God suffers such to fall as appears in Adam and Hezekiah 2. Look not disdainfully upon any sin in others seeing thy nature is not free from the same at least in the seed of it Gal. 6.1 God gives many men over to vile temptations to cure their pride 3. Watchfulness Mark 14. ult Prov. 4.23 4. Keep your selves from sinful occasions Gen. 39.10 If thou wilt not keep thy self from occasions God will not keep thee from the sin yea if thou venture on occasions thou hast a secret liking of sin whatsoever thy pretences be 5. Set against the motions that come from the flesh before Satans suggestions meet with them when both forces are joyned they are so much stronger 6. Resist the causing sin and so the effect will cease to cure passion resist pride Q. How is one sin the cause of another A. 1. By effecting or making it so covetousness brings forth theft as in Achan 2. By deserving it when we deserve to be cast into some sin by God not that God doth infuse the matter or form of a punishing sin but by letting lust out and setting Satan loose upon us we are corrected by one sin for another Rom. 1.24 26 28. When a sin deserves to have another sin made the punishment of it we must make our peace for the causing sin before the effect will cease Psal 81.12 13. This forsaking suffering and delivering up the Creature is an act of justice in God Q. What other remedies against fleshly temptations A. 1. Apply the threatnings and Commandments against it and the promises in case we do resist and overcome Revel 2.17 2. Be earnest with God to mortifie it by his Spirit Rom. 8.13 Make no provisions for thy flesh Rom. 13.14 4. Cross thy flesh by endeavouring to do clean contrary to what it suggests 5. Resist the beginning of fleshly suggestions Jud. 23. Cain not repenting of envy it came to murther Judas not repenting of covetousness it came to murther if a Serpent get in its head it will soon get in its body 6. Venture not upon any sin because Satan tells you it is small Mat. 5.22 By listning to this suggestion many exceedingly harden their hearts Q. When are temptations of lusts sufficiently resisted A. 1. When we hate them pray sigh and groan against them but sin reigns where it is loved Rom. 7.15 2. When we do not practise at all gross and presumptuous evils for which God threatens out of heaven 1 Cor. 6.10 11. Titus 3.3 1 Pet. 4.3 4. and when we weaken less evils which appears we do when the judgement commands the will the will the affections and the affections the actions Q. How may we know when temptations come from Satan when from our lusts A. It is very hard if possible to know where the point of difference is if we reject them whether they come from Satan or us they shall not be imputed Rom. 7.20 21. Come the temptation which way it will no more is imputed by God then is seen and allowed Q. What remedy against unholy thoughts whether they come from Satan or corruption A. 1. Complain of them to Christ who had
preserved If An Argument from man were any thing material I might adde that the Iewish Bible who are the utterest enemies of Christianity their old Testament agrees with ours and for the truth of the Iewish Bible they have testimony from the Samaritans who were enemies to them and an irreconciliable rent made betwixt them yet in the Samaritan Bible as some of the learned affirme there is no difference at all to any purpose Also the consent of the godly Fathers and Christians from Christ his time who have from hand to hand delivered them to us and enlightned them with their commentaries whose commentaries we have to shew in every age well-nigh from the Apostles time some of whom confirmed the truth with their Lives and Liberty A short Catechisme FOR BABES Q. HOw doth it appear that there is a God A. From the creati●n of heaven and earth Psal 19.1 Rom. 1.20 Q. What is God A. A Spirit John 4.23 immortal 1 Tim. 6.16 infinite 1 Kings 8.27 knowing all things Heb. 4.13 and present everywhere Psalme 139.7 8 9. Q. How doth this God subsist A. In the being of Father Son and Spirit who are all one God 1 Iohn 5.7 Q. Whether is the Father Son or Spirit greatest A. There is an equality of glory eternity and power in the Father Son and Spirit Rom. 9.5 Phil. 2.6 Matth. 28.19 1 Iohn 5.7 Q. How did God make man at first A. Pure and holy Gen. 1.26 Eccles 7.29 but we all fell in our first parents Rom. 5.12 13 14. Q What befell unto us by Adams fall A. The judgement came upon all to condemnation Rom. 5.15 16. Q. What is the condition of every man since the fall of Adam A. Dead in trespasses and sins and by nature children of wrath Eph. 2.1 3. Q What way is there to come out of this miserable condition A. Onely by Jesus Christ Acts 4.12 Q. What are we to consider especially in Christ A. 1. His natures 2. His offices Q. What are the natures of Christ A. They are two 1. His Godhead 2. His Manhood Q. Why was it needful that he should be God A. That he might make the sufferings of his Manhood of infinite worth and vertue Heb. 9.14 Act. 20.28 Q. Why was it needful that he should be man A. That he might dye and satisfie Gods justice in the same nature that had offended Matthew 20.28 1 Corinthians 15.21 22. Q. What are the offices of Christ A. They are three Q. Which are they A. His Kingly Priestly and Prophetical office Q Why was Christ a King A. That he may reign in the hearts of his people Luk. 19.27 and in the Churches Psal 2.6 Q. Why was he a Prophet A. To reveale his Fathers will so that are to hear him in all things Acts 3.22 Mat. 17.5 Q. Why was he a Priest A. To offer sacrifice for the sins of his people Heb. 8.3 Q. What sacrifice did Christ offer A. His own body on the cross Heb. 9.25 26. wherewith he appears in Gods presence for his people Heb. 9.24 his blood speaking good things Q. What is faith A. A taking of Christ as a Lord and a Saviour and resting upon his satisfaction Rom. 7.4 Joh. 1.12 Rom. 10.7.8 Q. What accompanies Justifying faith without which it is not in the soul A. An holy disposition or intention of heart to confess the truth of God though with the loss of all we have in the world Rom. 10.10 Mat. 10.32 Q. What is repentance A. A thorow change of the purposes of the heart whereby they are universally set against all sin with an hatred of it Rom. 12.2 Act. 2.38 Isa 30.22 Q. What measure of love must we love the Lord with A. With a sovergaine love better then father or mother son or daughter yea then our own lives Mat. 10.37 38 39. Q. What denial of Christ is that which shuts persons out of heaven A. Habitual denial or denial of Christ in the purporse of our hearts when we for the saving of our lands liberties country or lives will deny Christ or any part of his truth Mat. 10.33 2 Tim. 2.12 Q. What doth the Scripture reveal concerning spiritual Life A. That whereas we are all dead men by Adams sin and our own when God pardons we are alive Rom. 5.18 Q. What other life hath believers A. A life of holiness whereby believing souls are quickned up to all the wayes of God Rom. 6.13 Q. What ought to be the ground of a Christian mans obedience A. The command of Christ which is the bond of the conscience Rom. 1.14 Act. 20.22 Q. What other ground is there A. The love of God from whence our obedience ought to flow John 14.15 2 Cor. 5.15 Q. What doth the Scripture reveal of the combat of flesh and Spirit A. The flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh so that we cannot do the good we would do Gal. 5.17 Q. What may comfort in this combat A. That we hate the evil that we do and love the good we do and hunger and third to do the good we do not Rom. 7.15 16 17 18 19. Q. What is the danger of sinning against conscience A. Such shall be punished with many stripes Luk. 12.48 Q. What is it to live by faith A. To rest on Gods promise for every good thing without using unlawful means Psal 84.11 12. Isa 28.16 Q. What is the new Covenant A. It is Gods work whereby he not onely pardons all the sins of all the Elect and gives them eternal life through the satisfaction of Christ but also promiseth to take away their stony hearts and writes his laws in their hearts and causes them to rellish and savour good things and vouchsafes to be their God and takes them to be his people Heb. 8.10 11 12. Q. What is prayer A. Pouring out of the soul before God 1 Sam. 1.15 Psal 62.2 Q. What are the parts of prayer A. They are sometimes divided in four parts 1 Tim. 2.1 yet may we reduce them to three parts first confession of sins Secondly petition for grace and favors Thirdly thanksgiving for benefits To which we may add intercessions to turn away judgement Q. What principal Properties ought there to be in an holy prayer A. It ought to be offered from a believing soul Mat. 21.22 in the name of Christ Joh. 16.23 24. from the Spirit assisting with sighs and groans Rom. 8.26 for things according to the will of God 1 Joh. 5.14 Q. What is baptisme A. It is a sign of a believers fellowship with Christ in his death burial and resurrection that as his body is buried in water so his sins are buried through the satisfaction of Christ and as he riseth out of the water so he is bound to walk with Christ in newness of life Rom. 6.3 4 5 6. Col. 2.12 Q. Who are the persons to be baptized A. Those who are made Disciples and make profession of their faith and repentance Mat. 28.19 Mark 16.15 16. Heb. 10.22 Act. 1.37 38. Q. What is the end why the Lords Supper was appointed A. For the continual remembrance of the sacrifice of Christs death and remission of sins which believers have therein 1 Cor. 11.25.26 Q. What must a Christian do that he may receive worthily or preparedly A. He must examine himself whether he be in Christ and whether the Spirit of God dwell in him 1 Cor. 11.28 Q. What is the danger of unworthy receiving A. Temporal judgement if they repent eternal if they repent not Q. Wherefore are hands laid upon believers after baptism A. That they may receive a further increase of the Spirit therein 2 Tim. 1.6 Q. What is revealed concerning the resurrection of the dead A. That all shall rise againe the godly to the resurrection of eternal life the wicked to the resurrection of eternal damnation Dan. 12.2 Joh. 5.28 Q. With what bodies shall the Saints arise A. with the same body in number but with more glorious qualities 1 Cor. 15.42 43 44 53. Phil. 3.21 Q. VVhat follows the resurrection A. The last judgement wherein all shall be judged of every thing done in the body whether it be good or evil Joh. 6.40 John 5.28 2 Cor. 5.10 Revel 20.12 13 14. FINIS