Selected quad for the lemma: sin_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
sin_n apostle_n law_n transgression_n 5,619 5 10.4785 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 23 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

enquicken the body of the outward element and receiue these for our true fellow-members of Christ who haue beene made partakers of the same labor of regeneration Quest What did thy Godfathers and Godmothers then for thee Answ They did promise and vow three things in my name first that I should forsake the diuel and all his workes the pompes and vanities of this wicked world with all the sinfull lusts of the flesh Secondly that I should beleeue all the articles of the Christian Faith Thirdly that I should keepe Gods holy will and commandement and walke in the same all the dayes of my life Explan In this answere obserue foure points which are further to be opened First wherefore this promise is made of forsaking the diuell c. For the resolution of which Mans foure-fold estate 1 of Inocency Gen 1 27. Eccles 7.1 it is to be vnderstood that our naturall estate is carnall and sensuall yea a very subiection vnto Satan True it is that man by his first creation was holy and righteous witnesse the Spirit himselfe saying thus God made man in his owne Image in the Jmage of God created he him And God made man righteous and this estate of holinesse was accompanied with exquisite and almost Diuine knowledge for proofe wherof the creatures were brought vnto him to be named and as he named them so they were called now his names did so fit the creatures expressing partly their seuerall natures that if a most cunning Philosopher had studied all his life he could not haue done the like Besides this he being cast into a deepe sleepe when the woman was taken out of his side did rightly diuine how neere shee was vnto him saying This is flesh of my flesh and bone of my bone c. Againe Gen. 2.23 vnto his knowledge was added a sound estate of body from all diseases as death it selfe came in by sinne Rom 5.18 hee could labour without wearines for the sweat of the brow comes in after the transgressiō He could abstaine without preiudice to his health hee could haue multiplied yeares without gray haires for he was immortall All creatures did reuerence him the earth was all seruiceable vnto him without barrennesse bryars and thornes none of all the serpents and wilde beasts were noisome vnto him The woman was without sorrow in trauailing without paines in bringing vp her children without subiection to the man Both man woman were comely without blemish warme without cloathes naked without shame I dare not say that they should haue propagated without copulation with Gregory Nyss De Opis●● lôis cap. 17. 2 Of corruption Rom. 3.23 Now man is fallen from this estate sinne proceeding from one Adam hath ouerspread all men All haue sinned and are depriued of the glory of God There is in vs all so soone as we are a want of all grace and goodnes a pronenesse vnto euill and vntowardnes to doe that which is pleasing to the Lord as both St. Paul setteth forth in himselfe saying Rom. 7.15 Jam. 1.14 The things which I would I doe not which I hate that doe I. And St. Iames Let no man say that he is tempted of God Lust when it hath conceiued bringeth forth sinne c. And hence it commeth to passe that we are the diuels subiects For he that committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne Ioh. 8.34 Heb. 2.15 He is in bondage vnto the diuell all his life long The promise then which is made in our Baptisme is that wee shall come out of this estate of nature corrupt into the estate of grace which is when wee follow not the swinge of our owne dispositions neither suffer the God of this world to rule in vs but the law and word of God For heerein standeth mans restauration and bringing into a third estate which is the estate of grace 3. Of grace if the heart be purified by faith if hee faithfully beleeue all the Articles of the Christian faith and be sanctified to obedience of life if hee alwayes walke in the wayes of Gods commandements faith giuing him interest in this estate and obedience certifying that hee is truely interessed heerein according to that of the Apostle Shew me thy faith by thy workes Jam. 2.18 Eph. 2.2 Rom. 6. Ioh. 8.34 1 Joh. 3. Heb. 2 15. Luc. 1.7.4 Heb. 11.6 2. Cor. 8. And as our condition vnder sinne is most terrible so is this vnder grace most comfortable Then wee were dead in sinnes and trespasses now wee are dead vnto sinne and aliue vnto God in righteousnes then wee were seruants yea bondslaues now wee are set at liberty yea made sonnes of God then wee were euery day in feare now we serue the Lord all our life time without feare then our best workes did displease God now though wee faile in many things wee are accepted according to that we haue Eph. 2. and not according to that wee haue not then we were without God in the world to protect vs now wee are made neere Rom. 6.23 yea of the houshold of God to conclude wee were at the day of payment to receiue for our wages death now wee shall not tast of that death but haue the guift of our God which is eternall life And heere is the last end the fourth estate of man indued with grace which shall be without end 4. Of glory the first fruits of this are had heere halfe the haruest followes at euery mans particular death the soule being placed in Paradise and all is perfected at the day of Iudgement when both soule and body inioy the kingdome of God the Father Secondly we are further to consider whether we be able and haue of our selues power to forsake the diuell c. and if not whence wee are to seeke for this Eph. 2.2 Of free will The words indeed seeme to intimate such ability but they haue no such meaning for we are dead in sinnes and trespasses that is haue as little ability to doe any act of grace as a dead man hath to moue himselfe or to doe any thing that belongs vnto the liuing Wee are not sufficient of our selues to thinke a good thought as of our selues It is not in him that willeth 2. Cor 3.5 Rom. 9.16 or in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercy Where note that as nothing in the worke of our conuersion and turning from sinne is ascribed vnto vs so all is ascribed vnto God Wherefore Ieremie saith turne vs O Lord Lament 5.21 and so shall wee bee turned and the Apostle It is God that worketh both the will and the deed and it is rightly decreed in an ancient councell against the heresie of Pelagius Whosoeuer shall say Conc Milinit Can. 4. that by the grace of the Lord we are heerein holpen against sinne because that by this is opened vnto vs what wee ought to doe and what to shunne and that it doth not effect this
hath made to cease by the liberty which hee hath brought vs insomuch as we are not vnder the lawe but vnder grace So that now we may challenge this our greatest and most terrible enemy with the Apostle ● Cor. 15. Rom. 6. Death where is thy sting hell where is thy victory Death of it selfe indeede is most fearefull as being the wages of sinne and the passage to eternall pangs but Christ by dying hath altered the nature of death of a curse he hath made it a blessing of the passage to hell he hath made it the entry of heauen to all the faithfull Againe though our griefe in our sicknesses be great his pangs were greater Heb. 4.15 and so he hath had experience of our miseries and so cannot but haue compassion and prouide that we shall not be tempted aboue our power and in good time deliuer vs out of all our troubles Quest 26. Which is the third degree of his humiliation and in which words Answ Thirdly hee descended into Hell that I might he deliuered from Hell and euerlasting death to these words he descended into Hell Rus in Exposit Symbol Explan This clause was wont of olde to bee inserted into most of the confessions of faith as Rus●● saith 〈◊〉 est quod in ecclesiae Romanae Symb●lo non habetur additum W. must know that it is not added in the Creed of the Church of Rome and neither saith hee is this speech had in the Churches of the Past yet the meaning hereof seeme to be the same with this He was buried It is not in the Creed councell of Nice nor in the Creed of Athanasius nor in the Sirmian nor in the Sardian nor in the first Toletan nor in the Ephesine nor in the first nor sixt Constantinopolitan nor in the Calcedon councels nor in many other ancient confessions and tractates written by the learned Fathers for the space of foure hundred yeeres and vpward See Pirk nemonstr problematis page 129. Notwithstanding it is now and may well bee an article of our faith or at the least this third degree of Christ his humiliation set downe vnder it About the meaning of these words great disputations are held and whole bookes written to leaue all which onely signifie briefely that these words are interpreted fiue manner of wayes Of Christs descent into hell diuers opinions Some holding them meerely literally He descended into hell that is went into the place of the damned or some lower places thereabout They which vnderstand it literally of the place of the damned say that he went thither to triumph ouer all the damned Ghosts and Diuels his enemies They which vnderstand it of some place thereabout say that hee went thither to free the Patriarks that were detained for their originall sinne in Limbo The grounds common to both are both that to the Ephesians Ephes 4 9. 1. Pet. 3.19 He descended into the lower parts of the earth and that of Peter By which Spirit he went and preached to the spirits that were in prison which were disobedient in the dayes of Noah that of the Psalmist Psal 16.10 Thou wilt not leaue my soule in Hell But the last sort that stand for Limbo haue some speciall allegations besides as that to the Hebrewes Heb. 9.8 The way into the holiest of all was not yet opened whilst the first Tabernacle was standing And againe speaking of the Patriarkes he saith All these dyed and receiued not the promises Heb. 11. Secondly others againe hold them literally but expound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the graue saying that He died and was buried that is annoynted to the buriall and descended into the Sepulcher Thirdly others interpreting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the graue make the descent to be figuratiue thus he descended into Hell that is remained in the graue vnto the third day Fourthly some others interpret it as an Idiom or phrase peculiar to the Greekes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He descended into Hell that is was in the estate of the dead for thus the Greekes were wont to speake of a man departed whether good or bad Lastly some others hold it to bee meerely figuratiuely spoken He descended into Hell that is suffered the torments of Hell viz. the anger of God against the sinnes of all the elect powred forth vpon his soule driuing him into that bloody agony in the garden and making him cry out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Now of all those that which stands for Limbo is to be exploded as by other sound positiue reasons drawne from Scriptures so in regard also of the impertinency of the places alleadged for in that to the Hebrewes The way into the holiest was not yet opened is meant nothing else but that which in more words is there expressed viz. heauen and happinesse the redemption of man as verse 12. was not obtained by the seruice done in this tabernacle and in the other these dying receiued not the promises is meant the incarnation of Iesus Christ so long before and so often promised but not sent in their times The second interpretation seemeth to mee too much strained and maketh this short Creed needlesly to labour with tautologie for what else can this import He was buried that is laid in the graue and descended into hell that is went downe into the graue as if it had beene said He was buried and was buried The third not much different from this and onely sheweth that this his buriall was not a meere transeunt act or passion but had a due continuation by his body so remaining in statis quo till his resurrection which me thinkes is sufficiently implyed in the specifying of his buriall and rising the third day importing that for that interim his body lay still in the Sepulchre The fourth interpretation hath farre more probability this Creed being composed by those who fitted it not onely to the Greeke stile in which language it was written but also to the Hebrew ordinary phrase which soundeth in this fashion speaking of a dead man namely that he is dead and gone downe into Sheol which whether you translate hell or the graue or some place of blisse it doth not heereby specifie any of these distinctly but onely pointeth at the state and condition of the dead in generall and considereth them by a confused motion as opposite to the state of the liuing heere vpon earth So that by this construction heere is to bee meant that our Sauiours not body onely but soule also did for this meane space vndergoe the common lot of separation the one from the other and so remained in the ordinary estate of others departed this life Howsoeuer it bee yeelded that this phrase may well beare this sense yet because both thus much is implied in the generall word of Christs being dead which must needs meane a true death putting him in the common condition of other deadmen and forasmuch as these words of
to say that as the wife is one flesh with the husband so we are of his flesh and of his bones Eph. 4.30 Cap. 2.20 Rom. 11. and that the Saints are the building and Christ Iesus the chiefe corner stone and that as imps are ingrafted into an Oliue tree so are we into Christ with many like comparisons setting forth this vnion And that we might be able the better to apprehend it he tooke our nature to the God-head in his incarnation and propounds himselfe wholly to be taken into vs in his last Supper Secondly for our vnion with one another it is set forth by the members of a body by the parts of an house by the branches of a vine and by the spouse of an honest husband which is one only so are the Saints but one body one house one vine and one spouse though they be many parts and members Rom. 12. Eph 4. Ioh. 15. Wherefore it is said that in Christ Iesus there is neyther Jew nor Grecian neyther bond nor free neyther male nor female but all are one Gal. 3.28 Who so would see more for this let him reade ouer the twelfth Chapter to the Romans and the second to the Ephesians Thirdly for our vnion with the Saints in Heauen though they be remoued farre from vs into another world they still remaine our fellow seruants and our brethren as the Lord told them in the Reuelation Reuel 6.11 wherefore looke what fauour the Lord beareth towards them the same hee beareth towards vs for neither shall they without vs haue perfect glory Heb. 11. 1 Thes 4. neyther shall wee at the resurrection preuent them but as fellow members of the same body wee shall begin to raigne together with our head Christ Fourthly for those things which are more properly set forth by the word Communion viz. first our communion with Christ our head whereby his righteousnes becommeth ours and our sinnes his the Apostle saith that hee made him sinne which knew no sinne 2 Cor. 5. that we might bee made the righteousnesse of God through him and the Prophet Esay saith Es● 53.4 Vers 5. urely he hath borne our infirmities for hee was wounded for our transgressions and was broken for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was vpon him and with his stripes we are healed And as in our sinnes so hee partaketh with vs in our miseries for that which is done to his faithfull seruants he taketh as done vnto himselfe whether it be matter of benefit or of affliction and neglect To such as haue not fed his members being hungry nor cloathed them being naked c. Math. 25. He will say I was an hungry and yee fed me not I was naked and yee cloathed me● not c. And on the contrary side to those that haue done contrariwise When his Disciples should come and preach vnto any City or house such as receiued them were iudged to receiue him they which persecuted them were iudged to persecute himselfe as may be seene in the example of Saul vnto whom posting from one place to another to drawe foorth the Saints to punishment it was saide from heauen Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Math. 10. Act. 9. Fiftly for the Communion betwixt the Saints themselues liuing in this world this is first in their hearts and affections in which they are knit one vnto another through loue thus the Disciples were saide after Christs ascension to haue beene together with one minde And we are all exhorted Eph. 4.3 Vers 4. To keepe the vnity of the Spirit in the bond of peace forasmuch as there is but one body and one Spirit one Lord one Faith and one baptisme 1. Cor. 3. When the Corinthians were deuided in their mindes they were sharpely taken vp for carnall and not spirituall and Saint Iohn maketh it a note of men 1. Ioh. 3.14 Esa 11. translated from death to life if wee loue the brethren In the mountaine of the Lord they all dwell together saith the Prophet both the Lyon the Kid the Wolfe the Lambe the Leopard and the Asse viz. Through the vnity of their affections though they were as diuersly affected before as these creatures yet now they are all alike truly holy and heauenly minded meeke gentle temperate sober and addicted to euery good way and to euery good worke Rom 12 15. Secondly this communion is in the effects of their hearts thus vnited viz. first ioyes and sorrowes vertues and weakenesses mutually communicated amongst them vnto which the Apostle exhorteth saying Reioyce with them which reioyce and weepe with them which weepe and professeth it to haue beene in himselfe saying 2. Cor. 11.29 Who is weake and I am not weake who is offended and I burne not Secondly hearty prayers put vp to the Lord for one another with supplications and giuing of thankes This S. Paul desireth at the hand of the Ephesians both for himselfe and for all Saints And Eph. 6.18 Iam. 5.16 Pray one for another saith S. Iames for the prayer of the righteous man auaileth much if it be feruent This is so necessary as that to neglect it is a great sinne according to that of Samuel 1. Sam. 12.23 God forbid that I should sinne against the Lord and cease praying for you Thirdly exhortations to the mutuall excitation of Gods grace in one another for which the Hebrewes are effectually moued where it is said Let vs consider one another to prouoke vnto loue and good workes and againe Let vs exhort one another and that so much the more because yee see that the day draweth neere Heb. 10.24 Vers 35. Fourthly repairing and edifying one another for where mens affections are aright there such as are fallen through weakenesse Gal. 6.1 are restored by the spirit of meekenesse and this is the repairing of grace decayed such as stand are strengthned according to the saying of the Lord vnto Peter When thou art conuerted strengthen thy brethren and this is the edifying of men in grace when euery man according to his measure of knowledge in the mystery of the Gospel endeauoureth to breed knowledge in others as Paul dealt at Ephesus when he protested Acts 20.10 That he had kept back● nothing which was profitable for them but shewed and taught openly and throughout euery house Fifthly the communication of worldly goods The practice of the Primitiue Church was wonderfull for this the necessities of their fellow-seruants requiring it they sold their possessions and laid downe the price at the Apostles feete to be distributed as euery one had neede The Christians of Macedonia are commended for their liberality to the poore Saints of Ierusalem wherein they are said to haue beene willing beyond that they were able 2. Cor. 8. and the Corinthians are exhorted vnto the same that is in all likelihood they did euen diminish their owne estates and herewith make prouision for the poore in the famine
prescribed vnto the Iewes in punishments of crimes euen against the expresse Morall Law Theft Adultery c. But referring the agrauation or mitigation of such penalties to the nature and propensitie of particular Nations and to the necessities of diuers times and occasions To the Iewes saith he God was peculiaris legislator and as a wise Law-maker ordained those Lawes with a singular respect to that people and so hee there concludeth against fome more nice then wise impostures of those lawes vpon vs Quod iactatur a quibusdam fieri contumelium Legi Dei per Mosen Latae quum abrogatâ illâ nouae aliae illi preferuntur vanissimum est It is an idle conceit to think that it is any disrespect to Gods Law deliuered by M●ses if other new lawes be preferred before ti and established in stead of it To this authoritie of Caluin and others I may adde this euident reason for the refuting of that motiue drawne from relation to the Morall Law What Law of the Iudicialls of the Iewes nay what Ciuill Law almost at all in any orderly Common-wealth throughout the world tendeth not to the maintaining some Morall Law and forwarding some duty concerning the liues goods chastitie good name peace and iustice of and among our neighbors must therefore the Lawes I meane the iust and honest lawes of all other Nations bind vs must the same penalties in euer seuerall offence be currant through the world Surely I know no Law for that Generall equitie is diuersified by particular and not onely due punishments but also offences are truly greater and lesser in varietie of times places and people especially in those actions which conserue the more remote parts and skirts of the Morall Law What shall wee say then ate we Christians no more in dutie tied to the Iudicials of Moses then to the Positiue Lawes of the Persians Lacedemonians or the Romans made for the punishment of vice and vpholding of common honestie I dare not in any wise say or thinke so These were deuised by the light of Nature only those suggested by immediate reuelation from God and therefore incomparably exceeding for eminent wisdome and iustice Nay moreouer the Iudicials howsoeuer they haue not in themselues any obligatory power or legall force to bind other Estates and Kingdomes yet in regard of the generall equitie implied in them they remaine as a seasonable and conscionable direction vnto Law-makers now adayes in Christian Common-wealths where the nature of the people and strong motiues from experience doth not enforce another way This exemplary direction though it be lesse to be regarded in those prouisions which are most circumstantiall and variable as being farre off a kind to the Morall Law yet me thinks in the more essentiall and fundamentall parts of the perpetuall and vniuersall Morall Law the discreet imitation of Gods positiue Lawes is very requisite It pertaineth not to vs priuate subiects to prescribe but onely to wish and mention with humilitie what we conceiue out of a good conscience For my part in my poore vnderstanding it many times grieueth me to thinke how in our dayes the foule adulterer vsually escapeth in a manner vnpunished and the pilfering cut-purse is trussed vp on the cursed tree without redemption whereas Gods positiue Mosaicall law strake farre deeper in the former and in the later more gently prouiding also in this a meanes of reliefe to the party wronged by accumulated restitution If any man be so presumptuous as in this heinous crime of violating wedlocke to take Sanctuary in the new Testament and to claime thence impunity for this impuritie I see not what ground of mitigation can bee built vpon that which is by some alleaged out of Saint Iohn Iohn 8. how Christ dismissed the Woman taken in Adulterie without punishment for hee was no Earthly Iudge and did this onely to take downe the insolencie of the proud Pharisees which were greater and more stiffe sinners then shee was Wherefore let vs mourne for the impuritie which is now adayes in this case and seeke to the Lord for a redresse heerein by moouing the hearts of the higher powers to consider of it and to fortifie the law against so spreading and dangerous an euill The third thing to be further generally spoken of is the difference betwixt the Law of the old Testament and the Gospell Differences betwixt the old testament and the new which is of the new and these doe differ 1. In the manifestation the Law is knowne by the light of Nature as hath been alreadie shewed euen before that it was solemnely giuen but the Gospell is a mystery vnto Nature as Saint Paul calleth it saying Without all controuersie 1. Tim. 3.6 great is the mysterie of godlinesse it is a thing hidden from mans reason yea from the very Angels according to that of Peter 1. Pet. 1.12 Which the very Angels desire to behold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word signifieth prying into a thing ouer-veyled and hidden from sight It was first reuealed by God himselfe after published by Angels by Men by Children by Deuils and by dumb Idols 2. The Law doth onely shew what is to bee done that God may be pleased but here leaueth vs without instruction how to do it because that way which it setteth downe is to vs impossible but the Gospell doth fully informe vs how this may be done namely by Iesus Christ who hath fulfilled all for vs and is made vnto vs belieuing in him righteousnes as the Apostle teacheth and so the one may rightly be termed the Law of Faith the other of workes 3. The Law is full of terrible threatnings and without comfort in the promises thereof because nothing is promised but vpon too hard conditions Doe this and thou shalt liue it doth therefore only cast downe and wound with the wounds of deadly sinne Rom. 7. Gal. 2. by it none can be iustified or saued according to the doctrine of the Apostle in sundry places but the Gospell serueth to heale all our wounds and to lift vs vp with comfort for that it is full of sweet promises flowing from Gods meere grace and mercy so that how vnworthy soeuer we are yet turning to the Lord by true repentance wee may be iustified and saued hereby The law is therefore the letter that killeth the Gospell is the spirit that giueth life 2. Cor. 3.6 Gal. 3.24 Lastly the Law is a Schoolemaster to bring vs vnto Christ as the Apostle saith for as without a Schoolemaster first had and vsed for entrance in rudiments children come not to the vniuersities so without the law we cannot be sufficiently taught to be preferred vnto Christ because we rest cōtented through ignorance in sin wounded to the death and yet not knowing that we need to seek a remedy but the Gospell admitteth vs vnto Christ and incorporateth vs into his body it opneth the gate vnto vs and giueth vs entrance into his most stately pallace of heauen The
Ios 7. Lastly the dutie heere is in all things to speake the truth whatsoeuer commeth of it not bee affraid of the faces of the greatest standing for the truth of the Gospell not to feare any enmity of man in witnessing the truth for the meanest not for feare of death or other punishment to deny the truth of any fact making vs lyable herevnto For thus as Iosuah said vnto Achan thou giuest glory to God whatsoeuer becommeth of thee otherwise thou aduancest the Diuell the father of lies Thou art a follower of God as one of his deare Children and though thou lose something heere yet thou shalt be rewarded an hundred fold otherwise as a bastard and impe of the Diuell thou shalt with him bee adiudged to hell-fire Reuel 22. as is the censure of lyars Quest 103. Which is the tenth and last Commanmandement Answ Thou shalt not couet thy neighbours house thou shalt not couet thy neighbours wife nor his seruant nor his mayd nor his Oxe nor his Asse nor any thing that is his Quest 104. What is heere forbidden Answ All first motions in the minde vnto sin springing from originall sin though no consent be yeelded vnto them Explan This Commandement as hath beene already said is diuided by the Romanists into two that the two formost might be reckoned but one But this as hath beene shewed is their sophistry and against all reason there being two so distinctly deliuered of two arguments the inward and outward worship of God heere one and the same argument euill motions and lusts of the minde and no full distinction in the matter but onely enumeration of diuers obiects Nay to demonstrate that all this is but one commandement compare Exod. 20.17 with Deut 4.21 and you shall finde the order of this enumeraion inuerted in the one the house first named in the other the wife which would neuer haue beene done if they had beene two different commandements Thou shalt not couet that is thou shalt not haue any first motions in thy minde against that loue which thou owest vnto thy neighbour whereby the way may bee opened to sinne against him in any kinde either through the desire of pleasure or profit whether the profit bee inheritance his house or goods man maid cattle which were alike bought and sold in those times all beginnings of sin must be resisted that the soule may bee pure and fit for Gods Spirit to ioyne it selfe vnto Now the Lord passeth on heere in reckoning vp particular euill motions against our neighbour and saith nothing of motions against his owne Maiesty not that men are not as apt heerein to sinne against God nether for that these motions are more excusable but because as more hainous in any common vnderstanding they are to be auoyded rather being against him from whom euery good thing and onely good commeth Psal 139. The sin against this Law I say is when ill motions of any kinde are first in the minde whether against God or against man though no consent be yeelded by the minds approbation and liking well of and thinking to put these motions in execution for as grosse affections and desires make the soule impure in Gods sight so his peircing eye-sight beholdeth it if there be any beginnings a far off and cannot abide them according to the Psalmist Rom. 7. Gal 5.17 Here therefore commeth to be censured originall sin in vs deriued from Adams sin viz. the leprosie of our corrupt nature which is called lust and concupiscence the flesh c. which is a want of originall righteousnesse and holinesse and a pronnesse to all sin and wickednesse This is daubed vp with vntempered morter by those of the Roman Church denying it to be any sinne but a disease only in nature as the hereditary stone or gout whereas the Apostle plainly teacheth euen this to be sin saying I had not knowne sinne but by the Law for I had not knowne lust except the Law had said Rom. 7.7 Thou shalt not lust or couet by which words it is euident that it is truely a sinne and against this precept to let passe that of Dauid Psal 51. Rom. 4. In sinne was I conceiued they are made lyable vnto death that sinned not as Adam that is hauing no sinne but this originall Of this Argument hee that pleaseth may see a large Tractate in my fourefold resolution Iob. 14.3 Againe I say further motions vnto sinne springing from originall sin that is from the flesh are against this commandement though no consent be yeelded because if the roote be naught the branches must needs be naught also Who can draw a cleane thing saith Iob out of that which is vncleane there is not one Springing from originall sinne or the flesh in vs I say because some euill motions are suggested by the Diuell which are not our sins vnlesse by consenting wee make them so Such motions had our Lord whē he was tempted Math 4. but wee must learne of him to resist constantly lest they by admitting Motions from Satan knowne how become our sinnes These diabolicall temptations are commonly knowne either because they are sudden and come into the minde without any obiect leading heerevnto or because they are often yea hundreths of times iterated without intermission like Ordnances planted to batter downe a wall to the infeebling of the faculties of minde and body and weakening of the senses 3. Or because they are motions to things horrible to nature as to murthers of others or of a mans selfe Or because they moue to things vnpleasing tedious and irksome Or lastly because they are violent and inforce almost to the doing of that vnto which it is moued If at any time a man bee tempted heereby to things pleasing to the flesh as Paul was tempted when he had that pricke in the flesh the messenger of Satan to buffet him 2 Cor 12 7. And Dauid when he was stirred vp to number the people or if some outward obiect be vsed as a mean to allure as Euah was allured by the sight of the goodly fruit they are not so easie to be distinguished from fleshly motions which alwaies defile where they come how lightly soeuer they passe away againe though this bee also denyed by the Romanists calling them Leuicula vitiola queis renatus contaminari nequit light pecadilloes wherewith the regenerate cannot be defiled Lastly I say all first motions to include not onely originall corruption and first motions hence arising without ioying in them but much more if there bee ioy and delight though there be no consent in the heart to put them in practice it is a sinne also heere forbidden such motions onely as are ioyned with consent being against other Commandements So that he which is pleased in motions arising in the mind to haue such house and goods of another man or such a woman being another mans wife and therefore breaketh out in vaine wishes although he doth not plot
as is shewed in the Iewes Ezech. 18.29 saying The way of the Lord is not equall but of their owne waies they thought most highly The weakenesse of the whole man is such as that he is not able to thinke a good thought 2. Cor. 3 5. and as a dead carcasse corrupteth of it selfe and stinketh more and more so a naturall man increaseth in corruption till that he becommeth most vile and runneth on to doe things euen against nature And lastly so apt is he to turne the best meanes into corruption as that Christ himself is made a stumbling blocke hee that was giuen to raise vs vp to heauen Sam. 1. is made an occasion of stumbling and falling the grace of God which appeareth for our saluation is turned into wantonnesse Man assisted by Gods grace and regenerate Thes 3. Man cannot perfectly keepe the law 1 Iohn 3 9. cannot perfectly fulfill the Law but faileth still in many things For though a man be now spirituall and guided by Gods Spirit not to sinne as men naturall according to Saint Iohn yet the flesh the old man corrupt nature is not altogether expelled but remaining for their humiliation and the exercise of grace in their spirituall combate hindreth them from doing perfectly the thing they would and swayeth them oftentimes to the thing they would not Euen as a very dull scholler being excellently taught and much laboured vpon by a most skilful Schoole-master yet through defects of his nature is imperfect in his learning and erreth in exercises of learning sometime in against Orthography sometime in false Latin and sometime in frigid inuention misplacing of words and vsing vnproper words vntill that in continuance of time he comming to perfect age all these faults come to be amended So the scholler taught by Gods Spirit shall at the last namely in patria come to perfection and be without all error and sinne but through the vntowardnesse of his nature cannot here in via doe any exercise but there be faults escaping him 1. Iohn 1.8 Iames 3.1 Rom. 7.21 Hence it is that Saint Iohn saith If we say that we haue no sin we deceiue our selues and there is no truth in vs and Saint James In many things we sinne all and Paul acknowledged it in himselfe When I would doe good euill is present with me So that both Pelagianisme is to be reiected that teacheth man to be able out of the strength of nature to keepe the Law and semipelagianisme that is Popery teaching that the regenerate are able perfectly to keepe it yea to doe more then it requireth which they call workes of supererrogation Can no man attaine to perfection of righteousnes according to the Law how then is it that some are said to be perfect according to that speech of the Apostle So many as are perfect let vs be thus minded Perfection is two waies to bee vnderstood either as it is opposed to imperfections and wants Perfection two fold and this is perfection of degrees whereby the law is kept without failing in any thing or as it is opposed to hypocrisie and this is perfection of parts whereby what is outwardly professed is inwardly imbraced so that as the outward part maketh a good shew the inward part is also right and sincere And thus Dauid Iosiah and others are said to be perfect and not otherwise and thus euery regenerate man can and doth in some measure approue himselfe for perfect though amidst great weakenesses Quest 107. What is the breach of the Law and the punishment hereof Answ It is firme which if it be but once committed onely and that but in thought it makes the person committing it subiect to Gods eternall curse which is euerlasting death in hell fire the torments whereof are vnspeakable without any end or ease 1. Iohn 3.4 Rom. 7. Explan Next vnto the consideration of mans weakenesse towards the Keeping of the Law commeth to bee considered the punishment due vnto him therefore And here first I say that the breach of the Law is sinne because sinne as Saint Iohn teacheth is a transgression of the Law and without the Law saith Saint Paul sinne is dead And this sinne though it be but one once only committed yea but in thought subiecteth the sinner to the eternall curse of God For that inbred corruption only euen before it breaketh into action maketh all men guilty of death according to that By the offence of one man Rom. 5.18 Iames 2.10 the faule came on all men to condemnation But much more if any man obserue the whole law and yet faile in one point he is guiltie of all as being actually a sinner also Now the punishment which is here said to bee death is otherwise called the curse Deut. 27.26 for cursed is he that confirmeth not all the words of the Law to doe them It is called hell fire damnation the second death vtter darkenesse the worme that neuer dieth and fire that neuer goeth out the extremitie being such as that it causeth continuall weeping and gnashing of teeth for sorrow and no one drop of mercy is granted to ease any part of these torments and all this is not for some long time but thousand thousands of yeares and still as farre from end as at the first beginning Quest 108. Is it not iniustice to appoint so great a punishment for euery sinne yea euen for the least Answ It is very iust and right for the Lord to adiudge the very least sinne to hell fire because his marke which is perfect holines set vpon man in his creation is remoued and a marke with the deuils brand is made vpon the soule of the sinner for which it is iust that the deuill and not God should now haue such a soule Mark 7.23 Explan The Lord which is iust in all the waies and righteous in all his workes cannot bee vniust in punishing sinne Therefore this heauy censure against the least sinne cannot but bee most iust and that this may more plainely appeare wee are not to consider of sinne as of an offence meerely whereby a law is broken but as of a blemish whereby the soule is steined and so made vnfit to bee a citizen of heauen where only holines dwelleth and none vncleane thing may enter This blemish also is so great as that it is said to defile the whole man and that with such filthinesse as is most loathsome Now this being the case of any sinner is it not iust with God to condemne him to the place fit for him and much more because he preferreth by sinne Satans bage and cognisance before the Lords Sinne worthy of hell fire Againe euery sinne is an offence against an infinite maiesty euen the smallest as wel as the greatest for the same God which hath said Thou shalt not commit adultery hath said also Iames 2.11 thou shalt not kill He that hath said thou shalt not doe ill hath also said thou shalt
not thinke ill Now according to the greatnesse of the person offended the offence is to be estimated if it be against a temporall King it is a temporall death if against the eternall King it is eternall death in hell For it is not with God as with man whose lawes if they bee broken yet being of diuers sorts onely such as concerns the Kings person are reckoned to be against his Maiesty others against this or that subiect onely but the lawes of God doe all concerne his royall person and any breach is rebellion as Samuel called the sinne of Saul sparing the Amalekites 1. Sam. 15.23 Rebellions is as the sinne of witchcraft and therefore worthy of death and damnation Quest 109. If no man can perfectly keepe the Law wherefore then serueth it The vse of the Law Answ Of excellent vse notwithstanding is the law of God 1. To humble vs in regard of our miserable estate hereby discouered 2. To beare rule of good life vnto vs. 3. To bee a Schoole-master to bring vs to Christ Explan Seeing the end of the Law now is not the perfect obseruing of it in all things without any faile that the doer might so be counted worthy to liue which is impossible it is needefull to bee considered to what end it now serueth Rom. 7.9 And the first is to beate downe pride and to humble the most holy and best men liuing For I was once aliue saith the Apostle without the Law but when the Commandement came sinne reuiued and being more reformed by Gods grace seeing what by the Law he ought to doe and what through infirmitie hee did Verse 24. he crieth out O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death And as the Apostle so euery man that hath his eyes open to see into the glasse of the Law and thereby his miserable estate seeth himselfe so wretched sinne being about him to defile him the threatnings of the law before him the flesh behind still putting him forward to sinne aboue him the Lord ready to take vengeance on him and vnder him hell fire the bottomlesse gulfe ready to swallow him vp with the mouth wide open as that hee cannot but ioyne in an holy despaire with the Apostle and condemne himselfe for a most vnworthy wretched sinner And being thus humbled shall he condemne the Law and cast off all care of obedience because it requireth so much more then hee can any way performe Nay hee will the more loue it and admire the perfection of it saying with the same holy Apostle The Law is holy Rom. 7.12.22 and the Commandement is iust and holy and good and I delight in the Law of God concerning the inner man Euen as a student in any Art to the perfection whereof hee cannot attaine such bee the mysteries thereof yet hee is the more rauisht with the loue of it and striueth hard after the perfect knowledge of it and neuer ceaseth He saith not with Esau what is this birth-right vnto mee because hee is tied to an hard taske hereby but with Saint Paul he presseth towards the marke walking that way of good workes which God hath appointed vsing for a rule this holy Law of God Rom. 8. And lastly finding that when he hath done whatsoeuer hee is able he is an vnprofitable seruant worthy of Gods eternall displeasure he is driuen to seeke both meanes of satisfaction for his delinquencies and failes and helpe to doe this hard task vnto which of himselfe he is so vnsufficient and this satisfaction and helpe is the Lord Iesus Christ alone For that which was impossible to the Law in as much as it was weake because of the flesh God sending his owne Sonne in the similitude of sinfull flesh and for sinne condemned sinne in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in vs. Gal. 3.24 And thus doe we see the third and last end of the Law viz. to bee a schoolemaster to bring vs vnto Christ and this schoolemaster is both the Ceremoniall law tutoring and teaching by rudiments and figures as little children those that were not come to full age vnder the Gospell and to vs more principally the Morall Law shewing the great neede which wee haue of a Sauiour and driuing vs vnto him as our onely refuge to be made righteous according to that The law was our Schoole-master to bring vs vnto Christ that we might bee made righteous by faith Quest 110 How may wee bee saued from our sinnes Answ Onely by the bloud of Iesus Christ laid hold vpon by a true and liuely faith 1. Iohn 1.7 Explan Being brought to despaire by the sight of our sinnes in the glasse of the Law and of the horrible punishments due therefore it is necessary that wee now looke for a remedy against so great danger as the cunning Chirurgion when he hath searched a festered soare to the bottom applieth himselfe to the Cure And our onely remedie is the bloud of Iesus Christ according to that comfortable speech The bloud of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth from all sinne If all Angels and men should haue done their vttermost to deliuer and saue one soule it were altogether vaine they being all finite the punishment by sinne deserued infinite and therfore such as could neuer bee satisfied for by creatures finite but in an infinite time It pleased the Lord for this cause to send his onely begotten Sonne into the world that whosoeuer belieueth in him should not perish Iohn 3 16. but haue life euerlasting And his bloud doth saue from all sinne 1. By expiation 2. By sanctification Expiation Expiation is the satisfying of Gods wrath due to sin by bearing the heauy burthen thereof and this did the Lord Iesus Phil. 2.8 when he abased himselfe and became obedient to the death euen to the death of the crosse when he redeemed vs from the curse of the Law Gal. 3.13 1. Iohn 3.16 being made a curse for vs for it is written Cursed is euery one that hangeth on the tree when in loue he laid downe his life for vs. And thus we are by his bloud saued from sin and damnation hereby deserued euen as a condemned person is saued by some other man dying in his stead If it be demanded whether Christ being the Son of God could not haue saued vs by some lesse suffering than death seeing whatsoeuer he endured was of infinite worth I answer that I take it not to be safe affirming or denying this for if we shal say that he could not we should limit his Almightie power if that he could we should call in question his diuine wisdome wherefore I say that he could not so abundantly haue manifested his loue towards vs any other way but by dying for vs and therefore let it suffice to know that hee ha●h voluntarily and of his owne accord suffered death to deliuer vs from death and damnation
should fall seeing God hath promised his spirit vnto his Church to be alwayes present leading it into all truth Answ The Lord tieth not his spirit to any place for then the famous Churches in Asia should still haue beene true Churches but the spirit is alwayes present to the faithful in all places of the world 139 Quest Which is the fourth thing that you learne to beleeue concerning the Church Answ That there be certaine speciall benefits belonging to the Church and to euery true member thereof viz. The Communion of Saints the forgiuenesse of sinnes the resurrection of the body and the life euerlasting 139 Quest What meane you by the Communion of Saints Answ That holy and sweet fellowship which all the members of Christes Church haue one with another as they all make but one body in Christ so communicating all good things vnto one another whether spirituall or temporall as their mutuall necessities doe require 139 Quest What meane you by the forgiuenesse of sinnes Ans That wonderful grace of God in Iesus Christ wherby he passeth ouer our transgressions as if they had neuer bin committed and releaseth the punishment due for them 148 Quest What meane you by the resurrection of the body Answ That though the body after death lie rotting in the graue yet at the last day it shal be raised by Gods power and being ioyned to the soule shall stand before Gods iudgement seat to giue account of all that it hath done whether good or euill and be rewarded accordingly 155 Quest What maner of bodies shall we haue in the resurrection Answ The very same which now we haue onely whereas they be now naturall they shall rise again spirituall not subiect to death any more nor sustained by naturall meanes of meats and drinks and sleepe and the like 159 Quest Amongst those that dye some are crooked through age some tender infants some blind and some lame shall their bodies at the resurrection then be the same Answ No for all these are weaknesses which shal be done away to the faithfull and strength perfection and comlinesse shall be to euery one of them 159 Quest What meane you by the life euerlasting Answ All that euer-induring happines and all those ioyes which the Lord imparteth to all his elect in the world to come which are so great as that the eye hath not seen nor the eare heard neither can the heart conceiue throughly 163 Concerning the Law Quest Thou saidst that thou wert bound to keepe the Commandements of Almightie God which be they Answ God spake these words and said I am c. 171 Quest How many things dost thou learne out of these Commandements Answ Two things my dutie towards God and my dutie towards my Neighbour 172 Quest How are the Commandements diuided Answ Into two Tables 189 Quest In which Table doe you learne your duetie towards God Answ In the first containing the foure former Commandements 191 Quest How many bee the parts of euerie of these Commaundements Answ Two the Commaundement it selfe and the reason of it 191 Quest In which wordes is the first Commaundement contained and which is the reason Answ The Commandement is Thou shalt haue none other Gods but mee the reason in these wordes I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the Land of Aegypt out of the house of bondage 196 Quest What are we heere commanded Answ To haue the Lord for our God that is to loue him aboue all to feare him aboue all to put our whole trust in him and to make our prayers to him alone 196 Quest What is heere forbidden Answ First Atheisme which is the acknowledgement of no God Secondly ●gnorance which is a neglect of the knowledge of God and of his word Thirdly prophanenes which is a regardlesnes of God and of his speciall seruice Fourthly inward idolatry which is the giuing of Gods worship vnto creatures by praying vnto them trusting in them or by setting the heart vpon them 201 Quest Whence is the reason of this command taken Answ Both from the equitie of it because hee is the Lord our God and none other and from the benefites bestowed vpon vs in bringing vs out of the bondage and thraldome of the Deuill 209 Quest In which wordes is the second Commandement and in which is the reason Answ The Commaundement is Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image nor the likenesse c. The reason for I the Lord thy God am a iealous God visiting the sinnes 212 Quest VVhat is here forbidden Answ All outward Idolatry which is first by making the image of God or of any creature to be worshipped Secondly by falling downe before any image Thirdly by seruing God according to our owne phantasies 212 Quest VVhat are we heere commanded Answ To performe all outward duties of Gods seruice according to his will reuealed in his word for the substance thereof 223 Quest Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ Partly from the punishment to bee inflicted vpon such as breake it vnto the third and fourth generation and partly from the benefits to bee bestowed vpon such as keepe it vnto the thousand generation 227 Quest Which is the third Commaundement and which the reason Answ The commandement is Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine the reason for hee will not hold him guiltlesse c 229 Quest What is here forbidden vnto vs Answ All abusing of the Name of God which is first by blaspheming or giuing occasion to others to blaspheme Secondly by swearing falsely deceitfully rashly commonly or by creatures Thirdly by cursing and banning Fourthly by vowing things impossible or vnlawfull or by neglecting of our lawfull vowes Fiftly by lightly vsing the holy name of God or his word Sixtly by vaine protestations and asseuerations 230 Quest What are we heere commanded Answ To glorifie the name of God in all that we doe thinke speake and desire and to labour that others may bee wonne by our meanes to doe the same 240 Quest Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ From the fearefull estate of such as any way abuse the name of God the Lord holdeth them as guiltie of dishonour done vnto his name 244 Quest If there bee such danger in swearing may a man lawfully sweare in any case whatsoeuer Answ Without doubt a man may sometimes lawfully sweare either for the confirming of a truth which cannot otherwise be knowne and yet necessary or for the strengthening of honest Leagues made betwixt men or lastly a man being called thereunto before a lawfull Magistrate 246 Quest What else is required that our swearing may be lawfull Answ These fower things First we must sweare only to such a truth as we know to bee so Secondly according to knowne intent of him vnto whom or before whom wee sweare Thirdly this being a part of Gods worship we must doe it with great reuerence 248 Quest What if a man shall
more haynous on the Iewes part and more grieuous on Christs part First Ioh. 18. Christ his apprehension they apprehend him like a Varlet that had done some outrage comming vpon him with swords and staues in the night time Iudas one of his Disciples being their Guide who was hired vnto this with thirty peeces of siluer and most obstinately proceeded they in their enterprize though hee gaue them some taste of his Diuine power Vers 6. for he did but say I am he and with the breath of his mouth they fell to the ground backward he did but touch the eare of one which was cut off and healed it Secondly they carry him first to one High Priest Ioh. 18.13 c. and then to another then to Pilate then to Herod and backe againe to Pilate amongst whom he is mocked laughed at scornefully entreated and buffeted questioned withall spitted vpon and crowned with thornes Ioh. 19.17 Thirdly they compell him to carry his heauy crosse till he fainted vnder the burthen being without all pitty and compassion towards him Fourthly though they could charge him with no fault at all worthy of any punishment insomuch as that Pilate the heathen Iudge would haue acquited him Luk. 23. yet they cried out Crucifie him crucifie him and had rather that Barrabas a Traytor Murtherer should be spared Esa 53.9 then he Fiftly they hung him vp betweene two theeues the most harmelesse and innocent man in the world is numbred amongst the wicked and euill doers Sixtly not content to pierce his hands and feete in most bloody manner with nailes by fastning him to the Crosse like most hard-hearted wretches they giue him vineger mingled with gall to drinke in his great heat and thirst Luk. 23 35. they doe whatsoeuer they can to increase his sorrowes by nodding the head at him by vpbrayding him with the sauing of others and telling him that he could not saue himselfe Otherwise say they let him come downe from the Crosse and wee will beleeue in him When in his greatest pangs he cryed out Ely Ely lammasabactani they mercilesly scoffe at him and say he calles to Elias when they knewe well enough that he called vpon his God Lastly not being astonished at the admirable Ecclipse of the Sun contrary to the course of nature it being about the full of the Moone an obscuring not of some degrees but of all the light of the Sunne and for three houres together nor moued at the vaile of the Temple being rent the opening of the graues and the comming forth of dead bodies all wonders of the world they rage against him when hee is now dead Ioh. 19.34 a Souldier runnes him into the very heart with a speare so that the very water which is placed there for the cooling of the heart came forth together with the blood Thirdly that hee was also buried 3. Proofe 19.38 the Text doth plainely set downe Ioseph of Arimathea an honourable man went and begged his body of Pilate and buried it in a new Sepulcher in a garden neere the place of his suffering And this was according to the prophesie of Esay He made his graue with the rich Esa 53.9 in his death Which is also particularly in our Creede expressed both for the confirmation of his death and for the mystery of our not onely death but buriall vnto sinne prefigured hereby Fourthly that all this was vndergone for our sinnes onely 4. Proofe Ioh. 10.11 Ioh. 11.50 is plentifully testified 1. by himselfe saying I am the good shepheard the good shepheard giueth his life for his sheepe then by his enemy Cataphas the high Priest saying That it was expedient that one should die for the people and not the whole nation to perish which he spake not of himselfe but being High Priest for the yeere Prophetically Thirdly by his vnerring seruants the Apostle Paul Rom 4. Pet. 1.18 saying He was deliuered to death for our sinnes and rose againe for our iustification Saint Peter saying We are redeemed not with corruptible things but with the precious blood of Iesus Christ to omit what is said to the same purpose in the Epistle to the Ephesians Eph. 5. Heb. 8.12 He gaue himselfe for his Church to sanctifie it and in the Epistle to the Hebrewes The blood of buls and goats is not able to deliuer o● cleanse from sinne but that of the Sonne of God And that of Saint Iohn 1. Iohn 3.16 Hereby we perceiued his loue that hee laid downe his life for vs with infinite like places Nay it is the plaine prophesie of Esay Esa 53.5 He was smitten for our sinnes and broken for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace is vpon him and with his stripes we are healed And to the setting forth of this tend all the types and figures of him that were before his comming All the sacrifices and slaying of sheepe and oxen calues lambs and feathered fowles made by the Iewes were types and shadowes of this grand sacrifice for the expiation of sinne For when men had sinned they were appointed to bring these sacrifices that they might be forgiuen Exod. 29.39 Ioh. 1. and more specially a lambe was to bee slaine in the morning and a lambe in the euening euery day continually which in truth was the Lambe of God Iesus Christ that takes away the sinnes of the world Againe hee that was not circumcised must die as none of Gods people and the blood of the Lambe in the Passeouer Exod. 12. Numb 21.9 striken vpon the vpper post of the doore deliuered from the destroyer Lastly the brazen Serpent healed them that looked thereupon being set vp aloft in the wildernesse Ioh. 3.14 so doth Iesus Christ heale all such as by the eye of faith looke vpon him being lifted vp vpon the crosse as he himselfe applies it saying As Moses lifted vp the Serpent in the wildernesse so must the Son of Man be lifted vp which he spake signifying what death he should die And these his horrible sufferings must needes bee for our sinnes for he himselfe was without sinne There was no guile found in his mouth 1. Pet. 2.22.1.19 Esa 53. neyther did he any sinne Hee was the vndefiled Lambe of God and without spot Hee was led as a sheepe to the slaughter without any desert of his owne so that hee was able to challenge his enemies Luc 23.4 Which of you can accuse mee of sinne yea Pilate himselfe confesseth that hee found in him no fault at all and Pilates wife that he was a iust man 1. Duty Godly sorrow for sinne Touching the outlets whereby wee are to set forth our faith herein The first is godly sorrow in bewayling our sinnes the onely cause of these great sufferings of our deere Sauiour The women that followed him to his death wept for him most pittifully but he instructs them better saying Luc. 23 28. Daughters of Ierusalem weepe
risen he is not here Luk. 24.6 saide they vnto the women that came to imbalme him Remember how be spake vnto you when he was yet in Galilee Thirdly Ioh. 20.18 Mary Magdalen Who came and told the Disciples that she had seene the Lord and that he had spoken vnto her and other deuout women that followed him to the Crosse concerning whom Cleopas in his conference with the Lord saith Luk. 24.22.23 c. Certaine women made v● astonied saying that they had seene a vision of Angels which said that he was aliue Now by the way is to be noted that women first of all of mankind were vouchsafed this ioyful sight of Christ risen againe and chiefly she which had bin the fowlest sinner Mary Magdalen I meane not Mary the blessed Virgin to intimate vnto vs that our comfort in Christ his resurrection comes not to any in regard of their own worthines any way for then he would first haue called man to testifie the same who is the head 1. Cor. 11. the image and glory of God or if not man some excellent woman such as Mary the Virgin or Elizabeth or if not some so excellent one at the least not noted for some great fault But whereas hee doth cleane contrariwise hee shewes that as no vnworthinesse past can hinder vs of Gods grace in Christ so no worthinesse in vs being naturall can further the same Fourthly the very enemies of Christ the wicked souldiers that watched at his sepulcher they came into the City Math. 28.11.12 and shewed the High Priests how they were affrighted with the Angels and Christ his comming out of the sepulcher but they had large money giuen them to say that whilst they slept his Disciples came and stole him away Which their report did not disproue their first testimony because so manifest a lye For 1. it was contrary to their knowledge and notice giuen to the High Priests and againe the very words conuince them of lying insomuch as that they say Whilst we slept his Disciples stole him away for if they slept how durst they haue confessed it their charge of watching being so strict if it were true that they slept how could they say what was done in the time of their sleepe Fiftly we haue many witnesses at once of his Disciples Ioh. 20.25 hee appeared to ten of them being together in one roome and the doore shut to the very day of his resurrection who certified Thomas then absent hereof and because he was then incredulous eight dayes after verse 26.27 he shewed himselfe againe when Thomas was amongst them also who feeling and seeing the prints of his hands and feet and side made with the nayles and speare cryed out My Lord and my God Moreouer hee ouertooke two of his other Disciples the same day wherein he arose as they were trauelling to Emmaus and after much conference manifested himselfe vnto them who so desires to finde more witnesses may see the 21. of Iohn the first of the Acts and 1. Cor. 15.6 c. And the same was long before typically set foorth in Adam cast into a dead sleepe whilest the woman was taken out of his side and then wakening againe after which manner Christ sleeping by death had his side wounded whereout came water and bloud which giue the very being to his Spouse the Church and then after a while he reuiued againe Then was it set foorth in Isaac whom his Father Abraham receiued in a manner from the dead being bound and laid vpon the wood for a sacrifice Ionah was cast out of the Whales belly the third day when he had beene before in the bottome of the deepe And thus much for the testimonies and proofes of this clause For the duties arising from this Faith they are two First 1. Duty To liue as at peace with God Rom. 4. Chap. 5.1 Ephes 2 to liue as those that be at peace with God For as he dyed for our sinnes so hee rose againe for our Iustification and being iustified by faith we haue peace with God before wee were enemies and so much at varience as that we are said to haue beene without God in the world but now this difference is taken away and we are throughly reconciled Now that we may liue as such we must practice these foure things First contentation Rom. 5.2 and ioy in tribulation as is added in the same place not onely haue we peace with God but reioyce in tribulation the Prophet Esay saith that He gaue his cheeke to the nippers Esa 50.8 and his back to the pinchers for the Lord God saith he will helpe me and if the Lord will helpe vs what can hurt vs if he be on our side may we say with the Apostle Who can be against vs Secondly Rom. 8.33 because our felicity stands in the continuāce of this peace we must by all meanes remoue whatsoeuer may breake it and because sinne seperates betwixt our God and vs Esa 59.1.2 wee must remoue this chiefely farre from vs. Thirdly because strang●nesse may easily breake off peace loue and familiarity encreaseth it and cuts off occasions if any arise we must haue our Ligier-Ambassadors as it were lying in the Court of Heauen for vs viz. our prayers by which we may obtaine the continuance of this and if any contrary occasion be offered cut it off Wherefore wee are often warned of this Pray continually and in all things giue thankes 1 Thes 5.17 and Christ by Parables shewes often Luc. 16.28 that we should pray importunatly and without wearinesse for euery day there cannot but bee occasions offered on our part of breaking this peace wee being so weake and subiect to fall therefore euery day must our prayers ascend to the heauens Fourthly because God hath his Ambassadors of Peace the Ministers of Gods Word amongst vs we must vse them reuerently and redily hearken to all good motions which they shall make vnto vs on Gods part lest the Lord seeing our base vsage of them and our regardlesnesse of such wholesome instructions as they offer vnto vs in his name grow angry and refuse to keepe any more peace with vs. We must therefore take into our mouthes Rom. 10.14 that of the Prophet How beautifull are the feet of those that bring glad tydings of peace and glad tidings of good things We must yeelde those that labour in the World double honour 1 Tim. 5.17 as the Apostle saith they are worthy 2. Duty To rise vp to newnesse of life Rom. 6.4 The second duty arising hence is to rise vp to a holy and new life from the death of sinne as Christ our Lord arose from death to life Like as Christ was raised vp from the dead to the glory of the Father so should we also walke in newnesse of life yea we must doe this if we would not haue the second death to rule ouer vs according to
fire to purge them Christs blood alone hath done it his merits hide all their blemishes and through him they are accounted worthy to enter immediatly into Paradise to receiue their peny of eternall glory Math. 20. though they haue wrought but one houre of the day If any perfection be ascribed to any in this life it is meant onely of integrity and vprightnes of heart and not of perfect degree of holines and absolute fulfilling the law in all things Math. 13. For the holinesse of Gods visible Church that this is in regard of the best not of the greatest therein our Sauiour Christ maketh it plaine in his comparisons comparing the Church vnto ground wherein corne is sowne some falling in the high-way some vpon thornie some vpon stony grounds there being for all these but one good ground and vnto a field wherein is sowne both good corne and tares by the enemy which grow vp together c. now all this ground thus sowne hath the name of corne ground though the best of it onely be corne So is it with the Church it is called holy by reason of the faithfull not of the most or greatest therein which are tares or thornes and briars comming vp amongst the corne And this hath euer beene the estate of the Church 1 Cor 10. vnder the law They were all baptized vnto Moses and did all eate the same spirituall meat and did all drinke of the same spirituall drinke yet with many of them was God displeased and vnder the Gospell the Church of the Corinthians was troubled with incestuous persons with branglers and with drunkards the Church of Gallatia with false teachers and many so inclined vnto them that the Apostle feared that he had spent his labor in vaine The 7. Churches in Asia named in the begining of the Reuelation had many bad members in them and the same is true of all others before and after them Math 5. Lastly for the holinesse of doctrine taught in the Church this is so necessary that wheresoeuer it is wanting it is a certa●ne signe of a false Church of a Strumpet of Satan and no spouse of Christ Euen as salt when it hath lost his sauour or a light hidden vnder a bushell is no light no salt good for any vse but to be troden vnder foote of men so is the goodliest Church corrupted in the substantialls of doctrine it is no more worthy to be honored as Christs spouse but to be spurned and trampled vnder foote as his most treacherous enemy The teaching of the true Church is Christ his owne teaching according to that He that heareth you heareth me Mat. 10. 1 Cor. 11.23 1 Pet. 2.2 Deut. 13. And I haue receiued of the Lord that which I haue deliuered vnto you And as new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the word not mixed and corrupted with the poyson of false doctrine Yea whatsoeuer signes be shewed and wonders done the company of those that teach Idolatry or any grand error fighting against Christs kingdome or vilifying his precious blood and mediation is to bee auoided it is a sure signe that they are false Prophets wicked teachers 1 Duty To separate from the Church of Rome For the duties of this faith The first is to make vs still to be more seperated from the Church of Rome for that shee sheweth her self in this to be a very strumpet a false Church Witnesse her teaching that it is vnlawfull for Priests to marry howsoeuer vnable to conteine when as the Apostle calleth this the doctrine of Diuels forbidding to marry Whence it commeth to passe 1 Tim. 4.3 that in stead of holy Priests she is full of filthy fornicators and standeth to the iustifying of those abhominations teaching that it is better for them to haue many whores then one wife that simple fornication is no more Campeg Comiti●s August an 30. Pi●●bius Ecci●● then aurē scalpere ●o scratch a mans eare Wherefore without making any scruple is whoredome publikly practised all ouer Italy infinite stewes are tolerated in Rome by the Pope who taketh a yeerely pension of 30000. crownes therefore which they call lactis census Pope Clement would haue women common vpon this ground By the order of nature the vse of all things should be common Conc. Toll ● Ca● 7. In a certaine councell vnder Pope Leo the first it was decreed that hee which hath no wife but a concubine in stead of a wife should not be expelled from the communion if he were content only with the coniunction of one woman or concubine And vpon this liberty giuen it would offend all chast cares to heare the reports of their filthines in Rome made by such as haue beene there One saith Elias Hasen muller Hist Ordinis Jesunici cap. 10. that being at Rome hee saw Prelats and Priests take with them openly from the Churches common whores and carry them in their Coaches to their houses and gardens and in the time of processions that honest Matrons durst not come abroad for feare of them laying in waite to take them The same man further protesteth Cap. 7. that he can truely holyly testifie that in Italy and Germany he found not fiue Priests amongst an hundreth which had conteined themselues from the filthy company of whores And why should this seeme strange seeing the Popes themselues haue beene so beastly Baleur Innocent the eight had sixteene bastards Pius the fourth was so vile a lecher as that in his old age hee tooke things to prouoke lust so exceeded that he died in the bosome of his strumpet as his Epitaph doth witnesse Iohn 13. set vp publique stewes and being reproued by the Cardinals he cut off the priuities of one the nose of another the hand of another c. till at the last hee was slaine in the bed of adultery by her husband whom he thus abused Who so listeth may read more in Platina and others writing of their liues But this may suffice to make all true Christians in stead of louing to loath the Roman Church whose inerrable Head being such what shall we iudge of the tayle If they shall say that as great corruptions of manners are found amongst the Protestants also our Apologie is that it is the enuious man which hath done this there is no such corne sowne in the field of our Church but wholsome and holy we abhorre these as the diuels tares and shame to defile our paper with writings patronizing these euills as they doe yea wee say with the Apostle Absit God forbid that such abhominations should raigne in the Church of God 2. Duty To study to far holy The second duty is for euery man to study to bee holy an hater of sinne and a louer of vertue to striue against all false waies and to endeauour after perfection of obedience to walke in sinceritie Ephes 4 and to banish Hypocrisie seeing that all the true
soule which is the losse of it the intollerable pangs to bee suffered by it in the fire Matth. 25 that neuer goeth out and by the worm● that neuer dyeth Lastly he is freed from the bondage of Sathan who ruleth in the children of disobedience that is in sinners who is their master and they his seruants according to that Eph. 2.2 2 Tim. 2.25 Rom. 7 He which committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne Who hath them in his snare carrieth them away as captiue slaues at his pleasure who terrifieth them and putteth them in feare all the dayes of their liues Secondly that God is the author of this grace is euident for no man forgiueth sinnes but God only Marc. 27. it is one of his attributes as was declared by the Lords owne voice vnto Moses saying The Lord the Lord strong gratious and mercifull slow to anger and abundant in goodnes and in truth forgiuing iniquity transgression and sinne c. Exod. 34.6 Vers 7. Wherefore as was obiected by the Pharisees against Christ it may truely be said of the Popes of Rome This man blasphemeth for none can forgiue sinnes but God Ioh. 20.23 It is true indeede which our Sauiour said vnto Peter and the rest of his Disciples Whose sinnes ye remit they are remitted and whose sinnes ye retaine they are retayned But what authoritie hath the Pope giuen him here more the any other minister of Gods word what ground is here for his māifold indulgēces by which he beguiles the simple world of such a masse of Money and increaseth his treasuries For the Disciples had none other power hereby giuen them but that which was fit for men appointed to carry the glad tidings of saluation to the rest of the world viz to publish forgiuenesse of sinnes to all such as did or should repent and beleeue in Iesus Christ and the retention of sinnes vnto all that remayned hardened against this faith of Christ and impenitent 1 Cor. 5. For as when by their preaching they were said to conuert any to Christ or to beget any to Christ nothing else is meant but that faithfully executing their office of preaching men were through the working of Gods Spirit made beleeuers and so the members of Christ in like manner when they are said to forgiue sinnes it is meant first in generall that preaching forgiuenesse to beleeuers it should not be in vaine but so many as became hereby through the working of Gods Spirit beleeuers should haue their sinnes forgiuen them before God in heauen and contrariwise to vnbeleeuers The words also haue a further meaning in particular of forgiuing sinnes by admitting into the Church notorious offendors becomming penitent and retayning them by iust excommunication and casting out of the Church as Saint Paul seemeth to comment hereupon in his first and second epistle to the Corinthians for first hee giueth charge that grauely and orderly the incestuous person bee deliuered to Satan here is retaining of sinnes then he wills them vpon his repentance to receiue and comfort him againe here is forgiuenes of sinnes yea he vseth the very word of forgiuing saying Contrariwise ye ought now rather to forgiue him and comfort him 2 Cor. 2.7 Vers 10. and againe To whom ye forgiue any thing I forgiue also Whence it is most plaine that the power of forgiuing and retayning sinnes and consequently of the keyes of heauen consisteth in admitting or duely and rightly casting any out of the Church and equally belongeth vnto the Disciples and equally to the graue ministers of Gods word so that some Paul sit at the sterne to moderate this weightie action and this is not the Bishop of Rome but euery Bishop within the limits appointed vnto him Math. 1. For the meritorious cause of the forgiuenesse of sinnes that it is Iesus Christ his very name doth shew for he is therefore called Iesus because he shall saue his people from their sinnes as the Angell told Ioseph before that he was borne and there is none other name giuen amongst men Act. 4 1● 1 Ioh. 1.7 Whereby we must be saued saith Peter it is the blood of Iesus saith Iohn that cleanseth from all sinne with infinite other testimonies tending to the setting forth of the same thing We did not loue God first that for our loue towards him he might forgiue our sinnes for he loued vs first yea when we were enemies Rom. 5. and hated him we did not seeke for it at his hands that for our importunitie he might be moued to forgiue our sinnes for I am found Esa 65.1 saith he of them that sought me not our good workes did not so please him as that therfore he should forgiue our sinnes for wee were so farre from good workes that we could not thinke a good thought of our selues 2 Cor. 3.5 Lastly neither men nor Angels doe solicite him for vs or can obtaine the pardon of our sinnes but Iesus Cbrist the righteous is our aduocate with the Father who is the propitiation for our sinnes 1 Ioh. 1.2 Psal 32 1● Vers 2. Esa 38.17 Mich. 7.19 Fourthly for that which is further added Whereby he accounteth of sinne as if it had neuer beene committed it is taken out of the Psalmes where the Prophet saith Blessed is the man whose wickednesse is forgiuen and whose sinne is couered blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity The Lord is therefore said to cast all our sinnes behinde his backe yea to cast them into the bottome of the sea euen as when a debt is discharged the bonds and writings which were before carefully kept are now cancelled and carelesly cast about because it is no more any debt so although before the remission of sinnes the Lord did carefully keepe his bookes as it were and account of all our sinnes as infinite debts yet being forgiuen Col. 2.14 he hath put out the hand-writing that was against vs and it is as it were nayled vnto the crosse of Christ because it is now no more any debt to be exacted at our hands Math. 12. Chap. 23. Ioh. 15. Lastly wee must further know that this forgiuenesse is only to the faithfull all others remaine in the bands of their sinnes and this partly appeareth by that which was said before that hee shall sau● his people from their sinnes Vnto others hee denounceth manifold woes saying Woe be to thee Cor●zin woe be to thee Bethsaida and woe be vnto you Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites and if I had not come amongst them the had not had sinne but now their sinne remaineth yea he threatneth many of his followers that hee will bid them Mat. 7.21 Depart from mee yee workers of iniquity I know you not so that euen they are without this benefit of the forgiuenesse of their sinnes viz. all such as notwithstanding their profession of the Christian faith doe still liue in sinne 1 Duty To pray for the
1.20 doe reueale to the conscience the inuisible God head power wisedome and goodnesse that all may be without excuse Affected ignorance is when there is no fault in the means wanting but people are content to be ignorant euen vnder the meanes that they may sin the more freely pretending that they are not booke-learned want leasure and haue businesse enough both to toyle and study for necessary bodily sustenance And this was the ignorance of the Iewes who tolde Ezechiel that they would not heare nor obey Ezech 3. Ioh. 3.1.9 and of whom Christ saith that light was come into the world but men loued darkenesse more then light but what saith hee of such Verily This is the condemnation of the world for he that doth good loueth the light and commeth vnto it And this is verified at this day for as poore and as vnlearned as any that vse these pretences come to the light of Gods word and are blessed with much diuine knowledge and are neuer a whit the further from meanes of sustentation heere neither Math. 4. Yea if all these naturalls were not blinde they would see that man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God If following this excellent light were some hinderance for the world yet they would see that it were to aduantage seeing the one is but food that perisheth the other food that indureth to eternall life Ioh 6. Which I doe not therefore speak to fauour or incourage poore soules in leauing the workes of their calling and gadding vp and downe to follow Sermons farre off to the pinching of themselues wiues and children I doe rather pitty such and aduise them to consider what the Lord biddeth them remember viz. to keepe holy the Sabath and in the sixe dayes to doe all which they haue to doe Amos 8. considering that there is now no famine of hearing Gods Word in which there should bee neede of wandering vntill faintnesse but great plenty for which his name bee blessed and praised for euer Let such therfore continue their deuotion but not rack it without reason in trauelling after mens persons a thing too vnusuall in many places now adayes neither yet grow so remisse as to neglect good husbandry for the soule of reading meditation prayer and hearing Sermons when opportunity is offered and allowed by authority And for the other that set so light by diuine knowledge whatsoeuer their pretexts bee they are but as fig-leaues to couer their soules nakednesse they shall notwithstanding be found out and placed in the next ranke to Atheists at the last day Obiect 1 Sol They say what needeth so much studying and hearing can all the Preachers say more then this Loue God aboue all and thy neighbour as thy selfe and belieue in Iesus Christ with all thy heart But oh louers of folly and delighters in blindnesse bee there not also for all trades and professions certaine generall short rules which all know but all are not therfore of knowledge enough for the same trades they had neede wee grant notwithstanding to be trained vp many yeares and to haue a long time to be acquainted with the mysteries thereof and shall wee then bee so basely conceited of the Christian profession as to thinke that a little superficiall knowledge of these generalities is sufficient to make a trades-man in this kinde especially considering that the mysteries heere be farre exceeding and we haue nothing this way naturally 1 Cor. 2 14. but as wee are taught of the Spirit neither doe wee know but when wee haue experience according to that of the Psalmist Come taste and see how good the Lord is Obiect 2 But they say further the more knowledge the lesse grace the further from simplicity in dealings the nearer to cunning knauery Sol. Thou art deceiued O man whosoeuer thou art that goest about thus to disgrace that which the Lord will honour is it not Christian knowledge of God and of his wayes that maketh a man thus vnlike a Christian but the corruption of nature and Satans wilines misguiding some to hypocrisie Such to vse the phrase of the Apostle know nothing 2. Cor. 8. as they ought to know they haue none experience seasoning the heart but some borrowed words of wisdome tipping the tongue and affected carriage and gesture of sanctity and austerity wherewith some seeke to catch others with admiration Yet good meanes and measure of knowledge is not bee condemned nor contemned because some perhaps make a maske of it to cloath their owne impieties Wine and other good liquor is not therefore auoyded because distemper followeth when it meeteth with light braines neither is humane learning condemned because some great proficients this way haue beene most aduerse to Christianity Obiect 3 But they say further ignorance is the mother of deuotion there is honestest dealing among such and more feare of offending Sol. It is true indeed it is the mother of popish deuotion who yet require knowledge of the grounds of Religion but not to meddle any further because it is dangerous to their state and as our Sauiour Christ said of publicans and sinners so may we truly say that wicked and prophane persons shal enter into heauen these honest dealers be shut out of doors viz. if they harken to the voice of wisedome these pleasing themselues in their estate and delighting in folly 3. Breach Prophannes The third breach of this commandement is prophanenes which is a regardlesnesse of God when a man being about any villany remembreth not or careth not that hee is in Gods presence but rusheth vnto it as an horse into the battle or as a Lyon seeking his prey goeth on not being daunted by any lets in the way and a regardlesnesse of the worship of God which is when prayer word and sacraments are not vsed at all or without all reuerence as if some stage-play were acted or some old wiues tale told But to deale more strictly with this sinne it hath the beginning from Esau whom God hated as witnesseth the Apostle saying Let there be no fornicator Heb. 12.16 or prophane person as Esau who for one portion of meate sold his birth-right It maketh that the persons infected heerewith preferre any small worldly thing either of pleasure or profit before heauenly things And this sinne sheweth it selfe many wayes Esa 3.9 First by liuing securely in open sins being without shame or regard of God or man as the Iewes were accused by the Prophet saying They declare their sinnes as Sodome they hide them not iust as if he should describe the drunkards and desperate swaggerers of these times for what doe they else but make their liues a trade of sinning as if this were the end for which they were borne into the world What doe they else but as much as in them lyeth discouraging all men from following the Lord prostitute both themselues and others
killing of Christ Act. 8.1 though hee washed his hands and ●aul vnto the killing of Steuen 3. He that concealeth as is set downe in the case of a man found slaine whose murtherer is vnknowne the Elders of the City nearest shall purge themselues of the guilt of this bloud by washing their hands and saying Deut. 21.7 our hands haue not shed this bloud neither haue our eyes seene it so that if any had seene it and not reuealed the murther hee had made himselfe guilty of murther Now this murther is so odious before God as that hee which doth it must die without any fauour yea Exod. 21.14 if he flieth to the Sanctuary he shall be pulled away from thence for thou shalt take him from mine altar saith the Lord and put him to death Whence we may see how great the Popes presumption is in giuing pardon for grosse murders to such as flie to any popish sanctuary 1 Murther a most grieuous sinno But iustly hath the Lord appointed this seuere punishment first because murther is the destruction of a little world as man is rightly called wherein the wonderfull wisdome power and mercy of God doth as much appeare 2. Because it is the defacing of Gods image which is in euery man betwixt which and the clipping of the Kings coine hauing his image there is no comparison 3. Because it is an incroching vpon Gods office to whom alone it belongeth to cal men when it pleaseth him out of this world 4. Because it is the greatest breach of loue and peace and so the greatest sinne against man Iohn 8.44 Gen. 4. Whence it is that Christ entitleth the Deuill a murtherer as by his proper name and how secretly soeuer murther bee committed it is noted aboue all other to be a crying sinne Cains murther cried to Heauen against him The Egyptians murther made amongst the Iewes children cried against them The sin of the rich denying the hire of the poore cryed to Heaven and this is a kind of murther also Iames 5.4 in these places we reade of sinnes that are crying for vengeance to shew that murther of all sinnes is the most crying sinne so that the murther shall not rest but if man reuengeth not God will if man cannot know it God will make it knowne sometime making the dead body to bewray the murtherer somtime the birds and sometime the murtherers owne conscience And hitherto of the head sinne against this Law 2 Against quarrelling A second sinne here is the next degree vnto murther all iniury done vnto our neighbor tending to the preiudice of his life 1. By striking and fighting in priuate vniust quarrelling whereby it commeth to passe that an eye or tooth is lost the head the face or the arme is bruized or broken or some other part of the body hurt The Lord prouideth for the punishment hereof Eye for eye tooth for tooth Exod. 21.24 hand for hand and to pay the charges of the party stricken during the time of the healing 2. By grinding the faces of the poore in selling and letting without all conscience in diminishing their hire or in taking their meanes away from them this is also called oppression Esay 1.15 by which rich mens hands are filled with bloud and such an oppressing bloudy sin as that it shall escape no more then actuall murther when the poore cry out vnder this burthen Exod. 22.24 the Lord threatneth that his wrath shall be kindled and he will kill them that vse it 3. By vsing any outward meanes of impairing our neighbours life or health as if the Phisitian or Chirurgion shall deale falsely with his patient giuing him rather things against then for his health that he may be the longer vnder his hands or hauing no skil or but little shall pretend skill sufficient and so keepe him to the indangering of his health and life from such as bee more skilfull and likewise if the Apothecarie through a greedy desire of gaine or by neglect shall giue one thing for another vnwholsome improper ingredients in stead of the prescribed here is not only a wicked deceit but a degree of murder And as it is in regard of others so also is it in regard of a mans owne selfe if he shall by any meanes willingly impaire his owne health rather choosing to indanger his life in time of sicknes then that he will be at charge for the meanes of recouerie in the time of health rather staruing through idlenesse then working or on the contrary side following drunkennes surfeting and whoring to the breeding of noisome diseases in his body thus and whatsoeuer way else he taketh to the preiudice of his owne life besides his sinne against other Commandements he is guilty of selfe murther 3 Against railing speeches The third sinne is to raile and reuile in speeches although no stroke is giuen for this is also a degree of murther Christ himselfe being Iudge where speaking of murther hee saith Whosoeuer shall say vnto his brother Matth. 5.22 Racha shall be worthy to bee punished by a Counsell and whosoeuer shall say Thou foole shall be in danger of hell fire Prou. 12.18 For rayling and bitter words are like the pricking of swords and therefore are not only forbidden but all appearance hereof by crying out aloud Ephes 4.31 where the Apostle biddeth to put away anger euill speaking and crying And good reason that this should be forbidden here as a degree of murther seeing experience teacheth that of words blowes doe commonly arise 4 Against malice hatred and enuy The fourth sin is to haue murtherous affections of malice hatred and enuy against our brother or but the first degree hereof vnaduised anger for to preuent the height of these euill affections the Lord threatneth such as bee vnaduisedly angry as culpable of iudgement and Saint Iames saith Matth 5.22 Matth. 5.22 Iames 1.20 that the anger of man doth not worke the righteousnes of God This vnaduised anger is heate arising in vs vpon some priuate iniurie done vnto vs or to our friend pricking vs forward to reuenge and this may well be said not to worke the righteousnes of God because it setteth not a man the right way but contrary to that which the Lord hath appointed vs saying Rom. 12 19. Ephes 4.26 Vengeance is mine and I will repay it There is a kind of anger which is commanded Be angry but sinne not but this is not an humane but holy anger and hath these properties First Properties of holy anger 1. Against sin it is only against sinne and not against that which is a priuate displeasure done vnto vs. Such was the anger of Moses when as comming from the Lord with the tables of the law in his hands seeing the idolatry of the people he threw them downe not being able to hold when he saw God thus highly dishonoured 2. It is onely because God is offended
2. Because God is offended for the same sinne may be to the offending of God and of our selues also because it is some iniury vnto vs as when a seruant neglecteth his masters busines behind his backe or spendeth his money at the Ale-house or when a people walketh stubbornly against their Minister or ruler in these and the like cases our anger must not be for our selues but for our God Here meek Moses himself erred at the waters of Meribah when the people murmured for water so that hee could not enter into the land of Canaan 3. It is not sudden but vpon deliberation 3. It is not sudden Iames 1.19 Theodor. 5. cap. 17. according to that precept Bee swift to heare slow to speake slow to wrath Thus Ambrose Bishop of Millaine obtained at the hands of Theodosius the Emperour after that he had greatly offended by sudden anger that he should not suffer any decree made in his anger to be executed till thirty dayes after 4. It doth not continue long Psal 03.89 Ephes 4.26 4. It doth not continue long but is soone ouer againe where there is repentance according to the example of our Lord who is slow to anger and ready to forgiue wherefore it is said Let not the Sunne goe downe vpon thy wrath 5. It ariseth from loue 1. Cor. 13. Gal. 6.1 5. It ariseth from loue and is guided by loue the loue of God and the loue of our neighbor that hath sinned for whatsoeuer is without this is sinne and if any be fallen by infirmitie saith the Apostle restore such an one with the Spirit of meekenesse When anger is thus ordered it is so farre from being a sinne as that it is necessary in all men it is zeale for Gods glory and out of this anger the disgracefull words of fooles wicked children sonnes of a whore c. haue rightly and without sinne been vsed as by the Prophets our Sauiour Christ and by the Apostles But out of these cases anger is fleshly and if it be more violent it is hatred if it dwelleth in a man to make him watch his opportunity to be reuenged it is malice if it causeth ioy when it falleth out ill vnto our neighbour and griefe when it is well with him it is diuellish enuy if it bee a perpetuall barre to reconciliation it is a reprobate affection as of such as cannot be appeased Rom. 1.30 Now as the very act of murther hath been shewed to be a most odious sinne so are these degrees of railing anger c. 1. First the heart and tongue is here set on fire of the fire of hell Iames 3. neither good men nor good Angels durst euer doe thus no not Michael the Archangell when he stroue with the Deuill about the body of Moses Iude verse 9. he durst not blame him with cursed speaking but said the Lord rebuke thee 2. To sinne thus is to be a murtherer before God euen as Cain was Iohn 3.15 for he that hateth his brother is a manslayer Rom. 3.13.14 3. It is a proper brand of the wicked His throate is an open Sepulcher the poyson of Aspes is vnder his lips his mouth is full of cursing and bitternesse 5. Properties of cruelty Prou 12.10 Cruelty in the lookes Gen. 4. Gen. 31.2 5. The fift sinne against this Commandement is al cruelty towards man or beast for the righteous man is noted to bee mercifull euen to his beast Cruelty is sometime in the very looke and countenance when it is cast downe towards any man thus was Cains towards Abel before his murther and Labans countenance expressed his malice against Iacob before his departure and this downeward looke is a sinne in any when an ill mind is hereby set forth as it is for the most part 2. In the behauiour there is cruelty when it is harsh In their behauiour and churlish as Nabals is said to haue been towards his seruants so as that they could not tell how to speake to him of him therefore it is said He was churlish 1. Sam. 23.3 and ill conditioned and this is an ill condition indeed and vnworthy a Christian seeing our lesson is Learne of me that J am meeke and gentle Matth. 11. Too much seuerity towards the poore 3. When any way too much seuerity is vsed by the rich towards the poore by officers towards malefactors dealing with them in all extremity by gouernours towards such as be vnder them vnreasonably correcting or otherwise expressing an hatefull mind against them This was a sinne in the Pharisees that brought the adulterous woman to Christ Iohn 8. breathing out cruelty against her and al they shal haue iudgement mercilesse that are thus without mercy 4. Cruelty is in the vnmercifull vsage of the dumbe creature Vnmercifull vsage of the dumb creatures working them without reason pinching them in things necessary beating or killing them without mercy or otherwise abusing them so as that they surfet or grow diseased hereby all these are wicked acts and shew wicked men Prou. 12.10 whose mercies are cruelty 1. Cor 9. For howsoeuer the Apostle saith comparatiuely Doth God take care for Oxen it is certaine that God doth take care for Oxen and Horses and for the very fowles of the aire Deut. 22.6 seeing that he hath made a law forbidding when a man findeth a birds neast to take the old together with the young It is therfore to be vnderstood that he doth not take care for Oxen principally and chiefely but subordinately as his care is towards all the creatures And hitherto of the sinnes against the bodily life The murther of soules 1. Cor 8.11 Now there bee sinnes also against the spirituall life and soule according to the teaching of Saint Paul who sheweth a case wherein a man destroyeth the soule of another viz. when he is an occasion of his stumbling and falling into sin Thus Ministers murther 1. In Ministers or at the least make themselues guilty of murthering the soules of the people committed to their charge when as through their default any of them perish This is plainely taught in Ezechiel Ezech. 3. whom the Lord told that he made him a watchman ouer the people and if the enemy which is sin should come and destroy any he not giuing them warning their bloud hee threatneth to require at his hands If any minister therfore either by neglecting to teach and watch ouer the people much more if by false doctrine or a wicked life he be an occasion that any die in their sins he shall vndoubtedly answer for this soule-murther if he endeauoreth being furnished with gifts necessary to saue them whosoeuer shal perish he is acquitted shal haue his reward 2 Parents and Masters Againe parents and masters and all priuate gouernours are murtherers if by their neglect or bad example their children seruants or pupils perish by ignorance prophanenes or any other
manner yea it is a breach of promise made with God for the strange that is the whorish woman Pro. 2.17 is said to forget the couenant of her God 2. It is the greatest disgrace to a familie that may bee the mother being a whore the children bastards and through the curse of God following herevpon the father being likewise and whoremaster according to that which Job calleth for as iust against himselfe Iob. 31.9.10 If my heart hath beene deceiued by a woman c. let my wife grinde vnto other men and let another bow downe vpon her For this is comonly seene where the husband is naught the wife is giuen ouer to bee such also And the children begotten of such beside that the Lord esteemeth them as base Deut. 23.1 excluding them from bearing office in the congregation to the tenth generation doe commonly follow the steps of their adulterous parents a family is made of a chaste houshold and a Church of God as it ought to bee a very brothel house and stewes loathsome to God and to all good men 3. It is an intollerable wrong to the husband to be thus abused in that he nourisheth bringeth vp and prouideth for as for his owne the bastard brood of lewd knaues and thus adultery is greater then any theft because a man is heereby robbed of his whole estate defrauded of his chiefest worldly treasure and preuented of his greatest comfort here through the want of genuine true-begotten children these bastards being suggested in their stead And therefore as murther hath beene and is daily miraculously discouered that it may be accordingly punished so did the Lord appoint a miraculous way for the detection of adultery that it might not escape vnpunished viz. holy water which the woman suspected should drinke that should cause her thigh to rot Numb 5.12 Sed non ego credulus illis and her belly to swell and there is a certaine precious stone as some report at this day which being laid vpon a woman sleeping maketh knowne whether she hath beene false to her husband Boem How odious this sin is appeareth by the punishments appointed by men led onely by the light of nature some adiudging the Adulteresse to be punished with the cutting off of her nose and the adulterer with a thousand stripes as the Aegyptians some allowing to kill such as were taken in adultery instantly as Solon Hackluit p. 561. Munst Cosmog some adiudging that the adulteresse should cut the throat of the adulterer and the next kinsman to him should cut her throar as a people dwelling southward from the Indians and some stoning them both to death as the Turkes Nebuchadnezzar hearing that one Acab and Zedechiah Iewes had committed this wickednesse with two married women broiled them to death vpon a gridiron Pet. Mart. in 2 Sam pag. 241. Zaleucus a Law-giuer of the Locrians appointed both their eyes to be put out when his own son was taken in adultery rather then the Law should be broken hee spared one of his sonnes eyes and caused one of his owne to bee put out And yet more to shew how abominable it is to naturall reason when Cabades King of the Persians made a Law to tolerate it his subiects tooke it so hainously that they would not suffer him any longer to raigne ouer them Not onely men but other creatures led by the instinct of nature without reason doe in their kinde hate adultery The Elephant will not indure it in his female and it is reported Topsel Histor of Beasts that a certaine Elephant seeing another man lying with his mistresse in the absence of his maister slew them both and the like is said to haue been done at Rome whom also being slaine the Elephant couered vp and shewed them both to his maister at his comming home and another time when a man had murthered his wife and married another his Elephant leading her vpon a time to the place where the first wife was buried opened the ground with his trunck shewed her the dead body Wherefore whosoeuer thou art that bearest the name of a Christian abhor to commit this wickednesse so foule and so much detested euen by heathen men-and by the very bruit beast assure thy selfe that how secret soeuer it be God beholdeth it and if not heere yet heereafter he will open it to thine eternall confusion Against fornication Or the act of vncleannesse is committed with a single woman by a single man for if either be married it is adultery but this is fornication the punishment of this sin of old was to be enforced to marry her that was defloured and to pay her father fifty shekels of siluer Deut 22.29 and if her father refused to giue her to wife vnto him he was to pay mony according to the dowry of virgins Exod. 22.17 And straightly hath the Lord charged saying Deut. 23 17. Vers 18. There shall not be an whore of the daughters of Israel nor a whore-keeper of the sonnes of Jsrael And in the verse following a whore is compared vnto a dog for ●hou shalt not bring saith the Lord the hire of an whore nor the price of a dogge into the house of the Lord. This sin is next vnto adultery and so placed euery where in the Scriptures both because it is next vnto it in foulnesse before God such as that whosoeuer falleth into the one neuer maketh conscience of the other Many waies is this a most detestable sinne 1. Because indignity is hereby offered vnto Christ the member of Christ being thus made the member of an harlot 1 Cor 6 14.15 for Know ye not saith the Apostle that your bodies are the members of Christ shall I then take the member of Christ and make it the member of an harlot God forbid Know ye not that he which coupleth himselfe to an harlot is one body 2. Because that by no sinne is the body so much wronged as by this vncleannesse wherefore the same Apostle proceedeth and saith Euery sinne that a man committeth is without the body Vers 18. but he that committeth fornication sinneth against his owne body That is actually cutting off himselfe from Christ hereby and dissoluing the couenant with his God For the Lord hath vouchsafed to ioyne vs that beleeue vnto himselfe in marriage now by other sins we offend greatly this our dearest loue and are blemished and made loathsome vnto him so as that he is at the point of cutting vs off but by fornication either spirituall which is with Idols or corporall a man cutteth himselfe off from God 3. Because that by fornication the Spirit of God the Spirit of all comfort is wronged and that extreamly being thrust out of his owne house and temple for your body Vers 19. as it followeth in the same chapter is the Temple of the holy Ghost bought for a price and is not your owne All which being put together or
acknowledge it and to ascribe all honour and glory vnto it whether we speake of thy titles behold thy creatures and works of prouidence or receiue any of thy blessings or whether we be conuersant in the exercises of thy Word and Sacraments or of any other diuine ordinances And againe whereas thy name is vsed as vnholy by prophane worldlings vindicate and deliuer it from such abuses and make vs to stand for the maintenance of thy honour against such And lastly prouide for the preseruation of the same from being vsed as a common thing working in all thy people an holy consent to hallow it together abstaining from all common and base vsage thereof 1. The supplication 3. For the scope of this petition as euery one of the other it containeth a supplication a deprecation and a thanksgiuing The supplication is that we and all the people of God may glorifie the holy name of God in our affections louing him with all our hearts with all our soules and with all our might fearing him aboue all putting our trust only in him in our deuotion with pure minds lifted vp to him only to pray and in our speeches swearing rightly and reuerently by his name and neuer making mention of him but wirh high reueuerence lastly in all naturall and ciuill actions seeing hearing eating drinking labouring recreating buying selling and conuersing and dealing one with another doing these not as men led by sense only but by religion eating and drinking moderately and with thanksgiuing seeing and hearing of Gods works with vnderstanding and praising his power his wisdome and his iustice and mercy labouring and working the thing that is good as in Gods presence recreating with moderation and not according to the sway of voluptuous and vaine minds and in all our contracts and dealings following the rule of iustice and equity in the feare of this great God And this in briefe is commanded by the Apostle Whether yee eate or drinke or whatsoeuer yee doe 1. Cor. 10.31 doe all to the glory of God And if in some of these things onely wee giue glory to God and not in them all we come short of that which wee are here directed to striue after We honour God with our lippes but our hearts are farre remooued from him whilst we performe workes of deuotion outwardly but haue hearts void of this loue feare and trust and liues irregular swaruing from iustice temperance and the feare of God and tongues let loose to curse and blaspheme God or else wee honour men more then God whilst wee follow iustice temperance and sobernesse and speake reuerently of Gods name amongst men but are cold and seldome or corrupt in our deuotion So that this one short petition comprehendeth the three former Commandements of the Law and herein we craue that we may be able to doe whatsoeuer we are therein directed vnto 2. The deprecation The deprecation is against the sinnes in these Commandements forbidden contrary to the duties before spoken of with an acknowledgement of our transgressions and weakenesse through which wee daily offend herein sighing after more perfection and strength of grace Wee acknowledge therefore here our selfe-love and loue of the world feare of men and trust in armes of flesh our corrupt worshipping of God our neglect of his worship our errours in speech to the dishonour of his name cursings swearings periuries neglect of vowes and giuing Gods honour to creatures swearing by them and our errours in action not being moued with diuine meditations beholding Gods works being intemperate in meates and drinkes and not following that iustice and feare of God in our dealings that wee ought to doe and for strength to ouercome all these our corruptions we pray 3. The thanksgiuing The thanksgiuing is for these corruptions mortified and purged and for contrarie graces reuiued and setled to the praise of Gods name when wee find to our comfort that the Lord hath set vp in our hearts some measure of this loue feare trust made vs deuout worshippers of God and reformed in some measure the errours of our speeches and actions in which notwithstanding wee must take heed that wee doe not glory and boast our selues least wee fauour of the proud Pharisie but to giue God onely all the glory 1. Tim. 2.1 Likewise wee praise God here for his grace in other men by whom his name hath also glorie whilest they consent in things together with vs to the honouring of God For this is also commanded as to pray for others so to praise God for others I exhort that first of all prayers and supplications and giuing of thankes be made for all men For this cause of old they that were led by the Spirit of God did praise his name ouer the graues of Martyrs for his grace giuen vnto them shining so much to his glory though since it hath been turned into praiers for them being dead and to them and it is an euident want of the Spirit of God and of the presence of the lying Spirit to maligne such as seeke thus to liue to Gods glory and to discourage them and to speake all manner of euill against them as is the manner of many now adaies seeking by their checkes and taunts to quench the sparkes of zeale which are kindling in the hearts of others especially of vnderlings Out of your owne mouthes shall yee bee iudged yee euill and wicked seruants to the highest seeing with your mouthes ye speak the words of Gods praise for grace in others and with the same mouthes ye pricke their sides as with swords to spill if it were possible all warmth of grace out of them Now all this is in the first petition the supplication wee pray thee let thy name be hallowed the deprecation wee pray thee let not thy name be vnhallowed or haue dishonour done vnto it the thanks-giuing wee thanke thee for disposing vs to the magnifying and giuing glory to thy name for thy grace and goodnesse and so let thy name be hallowed Quest 124 In the second petition what doe you desire Answ That the number of true belieuers may be daily increased that Gods Kingdome of grace may bee enlarged and his Kingdome of glory hastened Acts 2.23 Explan According to the method propounded I consider first the order of this petition it goeth before this Thy will be done to teach vs that no man can rightly doe the will of God and please him vnlesse he be of his Kingdome and deliuered out of the Kingdome of darknesse by faith and the Spirit of Sanctification He shall doe his will indeed as a vessell of wrath being ouer-ruled by his Almighty power as the Deuill doth Gods secret will but not as a vessell of mercy out of a good heart to be accepted as the Angels and Saints in heauen For when the wicked Iewes had crucified the Lord Iesus it is said that they had taken him being deliuered by the determinate counsell and
humiliation and repentance before God his wrath bee turned away So that man may for his part forgiue trespasses and yet they may be retained still before the Lord and on the contrarie side though man will not forgiue through the hardnesse of his heart the trespasse may be forgiuen before the Lord the trespasse being acknowledged and pardon craued or if there be ability satisfaction offered and the heart being turned thorow a purpose of not offending any more 3. For the scope of the Petition in the supplication What we pray for wee pray for the forgiuenes of our sinnes and whatsoeuer tendeth hereunto and to make vs iust and righteous in the presence of God Wherefore wee craue first the knowledge of our sinnes that we may vnderstand the infinite number of our offences and our wofull case in regard of them for without this knowledge the tongue may pray for the pardon of sinne but the heart cannot Hee that knoweth not himselfe to be sick cannot seeke for remedy to cure his sicknes neither can he seek to fortifie himselfe against the enemie that knoweth not the danger wherein hee standeth no more can a sinner seeke remedie against his sinnes if hee bee ignorant of them The Church of Laodicea is censured for saying that shee was rich and wanted nothing when as the holy Ghost testifieth saying Reuel 3.17 Thou knowest not that thou art poore wretched miserable blind and naked And many poore and miserable soules through ignorance not seeing this say forgiue vs our trespasses but cannot pray it because they know not that they haue any such need of forgiuenesse Prou. 28.13 Secondly wee craue grace to acknowledge our sinne For Hee that confesseth and forsaketh his sinnes shall haue mercy but hee that hideth them shall not prosper All men that know their sinnes doe not confesse them or if they doe they will not confesse and put away their beloued speciall sinne but rather seeke to iustifie themselues in them because all men are sinners and in many things we offend all But such craue not the pardon of their sinnes so as that they may bee in hope to speede the confession and putting away of all sinne onely haue a ground to build comfort vpon When there was sinne in the congregation of Israel specially noted Ioshua 7.10 but in one Achan Ioshua could not be heard without remouing it first much lesse can that man be heard to haue his sinnes forgiuen that loueth any one sinne though it be most secret and small and laboureth not to put it away from him Ought this confession to be before the Lord onely and not vnto men also In some case it ought to bee before men who are wise and holy viz. when our mind is inwardly troubled and wee cannot by our selues find any ease or comfort confessing them vnto the Lord Iames 5 16. In this sense Saint Iames willeth vs to acknowledge our faults one vnto another But to doe this vpon absolute necessity as if there were no saluation without it and to performe it not vpon particular grieuance of conscience but for formality at a certaine time in the yeare which the Papists call the time of Shrift and to confesse before the Priest al our particular sins with the circumstances is superstitious and auaileth not but to make way for more licentiousnesse as experience teacheth and to establish the Popes Hierarchy ouer the world and to the increase of his reuenues by buying pardons Thirdly we craue grace to be truly humbled for sinne that in the sense of Gods curse due for it Rom. 7.14 Matth 11.28 wee may crie out with the Apostle Miserable man that I am who shall deliuer mee from the body of this death Come vnto me saith the Lord all yee that are weary and loaden and I will refresh you If any man therefore commeth to aske forgiuenesse of his sinnes and is not humbled for them but is without a contrite spirit to offer in sacrifice vnto God he cannot pray to speed but is still in his sinnes Rom. 4.25 Fourthly we craue iustification through the death bloudshedding of Iesus Christ who was deliuered to death for our sinnes and rose againe for our iustification that the Lord would not therfore require our sinnes at our hands either holding vs guiltie or punishing vs therefore in this world or in the world to come but that the sacrifice of Christ may be a perfect attonement for vs and his precious blood effectuall to clense vs from all sinne Now of this iustification there are two degrees the first whereby of sinners wee are made righteous in the very act of our conuersion the second whereby our daily infirmities and failes are done away and wee are still notwithstanding them reputed righteous The first we pray for and desire to be confirmed in it through Gods grace that our estate may be comfortable the second wee pray for as wee haue need to preserue our peace and comfort when wee view our estate before God Euen as a bankrupt debter finding great fauor with his creditors to forgiue his great debts and being ready still daily through his extreame want to run vpon the score againe is a daily sutor for mercy vnto them to continue this their fauour in forgiuing all Fifthly wee pray for loue and charity towards our neighbours through which wee may bee ready to forgiue them their trespasses against vs for our heart naturally is a corrupt fountaine and wee are implacable when wee are offended especially if it be spitefully done against vs or by an enemy Wherefore wee pray that when wrongs are done vnto vs we may consider how much and often wee haue offended the Lord to what griefe of his holy Spirit and with what hatefull hearts preferring Sathan and his seruice before the seruice of the heauenly Maiesty that as we would notwithstanding haue all this forgiuen vnto vs wee may frame our minds to forgiue the greatest offences against vs hee which hath done them acknowledging his fault Thus Christ being asked Should I forgiue my brother if he sinneth against me seauen times in a day Matth 18.21 answereth If he turneth againe and saith it repenteth me I say not vntill seuen times but vntill seuenty times seuen times And for this cause he bringeth his Parable of the Lord forgiuing ten thousand of talents to his seruant but finding him with rigour to exact the hundreth pence due vnto him from his fellow-seruant shewing hereby how vaine all our prayers are for the pardon of our sinnes against God if we refuse to forgiue the sinnes of our fellow-seruants against vs. Let no man therefore deceiue himself by keeping malice and seeking reuenge vpon men for wrong done vnto him but through loue let him forgiue all for if there be not this loue towards his brother there is no loue towards God and then it is sure that God beareth no loue towards him his loue of God being an inseperable reflexion of
1. By forsaking and with-drawing his grace without which as a lame man going with stiltes falleth if they be taken from him so euery man falleth and is vnable to stand in the day of temptation 2. By leauing a man to his owne lustes by which as by a violent streame running downe a steepe hill hee is carried quite away 3. By deliuering ouer to Satan for the punishment of former notorious sinnes who hardeneth more and more in all wickednes as he did Pharaoh and King Saul But deliuer vs that is withdraw not thy grace from vs for the time to come leaue vs not to our owne lusts neither deliuer vs ouer to satan to be hardened as thou mightest iustly doe for our sinnes but when satan and our owne lusts conspire our destruction stand by vs that our faith may not faile as Christ promised to his Disciples saying Satan hath desired to win now you but I haue prayed that your faith may not faile From euill euill is twofold of sinne and of punishment vsually called Malum culpa and malum poena From both these wee pray to bee deliuered 3. For the scope of the petition because it is negatiue it is first to bee considered in the deprecation which is 1. Against spirituall desertion or forsaking of Gods Spirit What we pray against which if it be gone all power to stand and all spirituall comfort is gone also It is in vs the new life and spirit of the soule Gods fire sent from heauen to heat vs with good affections to inlighten vs with true vnderstanding and to ouercome whatsoeuer corruptions it meeteth withal in vs according to which the Apostle warneth quench not the Spirit 1. Thes 5.19 Wofull is their estate that are thus forsaken as we pray therefore against it so let vs prouide by willing entertaining the motions of the Spirit and auoyding all vnkind vsage thereof that wee may neuer be forsaken or left without the sweet consort and company of it 2. We pray against solicitations to sin either by the deuill world or flesh that satan may be chained vp not let loose against vs that the flesh may bee nourished and not continue so rebellious in the euill motions thereof and that we may auoide the outward flattering obiects in the world and company of wicked men alluring vnto sinne Against which things seeing that we pray what mock gods are those that are careles of offering themselues into temptations and prouocations to sinne yea delight so to doe by frequenting wicked company and giuing aduantage to Satan whilst they please themselues in deceitefull obiects of sinne 3. Wee pray against sinne euen when we are most solicited and tempted vnto it because it cannot be but wee ust needes meet with temptations as long as we haue eyes and hearts and eares in this world Wee pray therefore that though we be tempted yet wee may not be ouercome and made slaues to sinne as they are which commit sinne according to the Apostle to the Romans Rom. 6.16 He that committeth a sinne is the seruant of sinne To be preserued from sinne vse these remedies with thy eies euer behold God present with thy eares euer heare that terrible voyce sounding Arise yee dead and come to iudgement with thy hands bee euer exercising that which is good in thy heart euer hide the Word of God and with thy feet stand in the courts of Gods house 4. Against grieuous afflictions long continuing to make vs despaire of Gods mercy or hearing our prayers for these are the most forcible temptations in the world and therefore need of strong faith is there still to trust in God and patiently to indure that they may be turned of temptations to sin into purgations of sin that grace may more abound through meanes of them And otherwise wee doe not pray against them least we should be found such as would follow Christ but whilst we resist the crosse rather goe from him then take vp the crosse and follow him as he hath commanded 5. We pray against sudden death which is a great euill and therfore threatned against wicked worldlings of whom Dauid saith Psalm 73.19 How suddenly are they perished destroyed and horribly consumed yet we do not simply pray against sudden death out of a carnal desire of licentiousnes but that we may haue space to set our house in order to testifie our faith to the comfort of the Church and to repent of our renued trespasses into which we daily fall though we striue against them The fiery Serpents in the wildernesse destroyed the Israelites suddenly and so did the Angell suddenly in one night destroy 185000. of the Assyrians and all this was done in anger for sinne likewise the men of Bethshemesh perished and Vzzah and the old World and Sodome al being smitten in great indignation On the contrary side it is a fauour vsually done to such as feare God to giue them time at their death as to Abraham Isaac Iacob Moses Aaron and to all whose deaths are described Which I speake not as censuring those that die suddenly but those that find fault with praying against this vncomfortable departure For whatsoeuer is ordinarily a signe of Gods anger and barreth his ordinary manifestation of his greatest loue in this life is to bee prayed against but such is sudden death ergo it is to be prayed against 6. Wee pray against obduration and hardning in sinne through a custome of sinning or through some notorious sins for which the Lord vsually giueth men ouer to sinne with a reprobate mind for a punishment as he did the Gentiles of whom the Apostle testifieth Rom. 1.24 Verse 26. Versse 28. He gaue them vp to their owne hearts lusts and againe God gaue them vp for this cause to vile affections and againe God deliuered them vp to a reprobate mind Wee pray therefore that of all punishments the Lord would not lay this vpon vs or turne vs into Satans hands so that hee should take vs and worke his cursed will in vs at his pleasure which is the very entrance of hell and most terrible to the soule inlightned as experience sheweth If any set light by such a punishment let him know that hee is blinded by the god of this world and led as the Aramites by Elisha into the midst of deuils in the bottomlesse pit 7. We pray against eternal death and damnation the greatest euill of all other in regard of which all torments here are but flea-bites and to be despised We desire therefore that whatsoeuer our deserts be by reason of sin yet that the Lord would not punish vs accordingly but lay all the burthen of these too intollerable vpon the shoulders of our blessed Sauiour who hath submitted himselfe vnto death and all possible humiliation of dolours and terrors by the apprehension euen of Gods heauy wrath and indignation for vs that wee might escape 2. The supplication is for such things as are best for vs
thee in thy holy mountaine when euery day shall be a Sabbath and time of vnspeakable delight vnto vs for euer and euer through Iesus Christ our Lord and Sauiour Amen A Prayer for the Sabbath after publike meting MOst gracious God the fountaine of all goodnesse wee desire with thankfull hearts to acknowledge that as at all times so especially this day euen streames of thy grace haue flowed vnto vs to refresh vs when we were drie Thou hast led vs to thy house thou hast set thy doore open vnto vs thou hast heard our prayers and supplications made for our selues and for the rest of thy Church Militant vpon earth suffer them not O Lord to returne empty vnto vs though comming from polluted lips and hearts full of many imperfections Receiue them as sweetned with the precious incense of thy Son our Sauiours passion and perpetuall intercession Thou hast fed vs there with Manna from heauen by the ministry of thy holy word thou hast vouchsafed thy presence vnto vs filling vs with ioy gladnes thou hast giuen vs to belieue to abhor sinne and imbrace thy grace though we are ashamed of our inconstancy and too little profiting in regard of the meanes of so long a time O Lord suffer not this to bee as an vntimely birth in vs or as the grasse vpon the house top that neuer commeth to perfection but worke in vs constancy and perseuerance that where any grace is begun it may be continued and perfited in the day of the Lord and where it is not begun it may be in thy good time Open our eyes still more and more to see those things that concerne the peace and welfare of our soules that wee may folfow after them Giue vs grace to consider the vanity of this world and of all worldly things and that the whole duty of man is to feare God and to keepe his commandements and encline our hearts vnto these and not vnto couetousnes Let vs not be forgetfull hearers of thy Word but carefull doers of thy will let thy Word dwell plenteously in vs that as the Scepter of thy Kingdome it may sway vs as immortall seed it may fructifie in vs as a sword it may cut vp sinne and as a pillar of fire it may guide vs in the night of this world till we come to the heauenly Canaan Forgiue the infirmities of this day our irreuerence in thy worship our vanity worldlines and neglect of so precious time Let not these things hinder but that thy word may become the sweete sauour of life vnto vs but that we may be made hereby fruitfull in all good works to the honour of thy most blessed name through Iesus Christ our onely Mediatour and Aduocate Amen A Prayer to be vsed in the time of sicknes MOst gracious God who onely smitest and art able to heale againe breakest and art able to binde vp againe behold with the eye of compassion mee thy poore seruant iustly broken smitten with thy rod for my transgressions behold I say how I lye at the gate of thy mercy waiting till thy charitable hand bee stretched out to helpe and comfort mee I am a wretched sinner I confesse O Lord and whatsoeuer punishment thou doest inflict vpon mee I deserue tenne thousand times more at thy reuenging hands if thou shouldst enter into iudgement with me In my prosperitie I haue waxed wanton like a ful fed heifer lifting vp my heele against thee I haue giuen my strength vnto sinne and not vnto thy seruice and although thy word hath been sounded in mine eares threatning heauy punishments for my sinnes yet I flattered my selfe in my heart saying I shall neuer bee moued But haue mercy vpon mee most mercifull Father for Iesus Christ his sake remember not these my abusings of thy mercies against mee but let there bee an healing of my transgressions and sins Open mine eyes to see how greatly I haue offended in omitting duties commanded in committing euils forbidden against thee and against my brethren that all my sorrow may be turned into sorrow for sinne that the issue hereof may bee repentance vnto saluation neuer to be repented of And good Father bee pleased vpon my vnfained humiliation and turning vnto thee in mercy to turne vnto me againe speaking peace vnto my mourning soule saying by thy spirit that I shall be comforted And the cause of all misery sinne being remooued out of thy sight let my punishment be remoued also Remember my frailty O Lord how that my strength is not the strength of stones or of iron that I be not tempted beyond that I shal be inabled to beare Temper my bitter cup with such faith patience and wisedome as that I may wisely patiently and with due submission drinke of the same to thy glory mine owne comfort and the good example of others When I am weakest bee thou strongest by thy grace in me and let my prayers in the name of thy deare son preuaile as the wrestlings of Iacob for a blessing in the middest of these grieuous troubles Set the the glory of thy Saints before mine eyes alwaies that I may the better beare these momentany afflictions which are not to be compared vnto that inestimable ioy Make me stedfastly to behold the Lord Iesus heauy vnto the death wounded bleeding and dying an accursed death when hee was altogether without fault or blame that I may not bee despairingly cast downe seeing that I suffer iustly for my sins Giue me a due consideration of thy wonderfull loue manifested in afflictions to thy children that I may reioyce in tribulation seeing that I am punished in this world for my amendement that I may escape the intollerable iudgements of the world to come Turne mine eyes downward to see how thy holiest seruants Iob Dauid and Daniel with infinite others haue more deeply tasted of this cup of aduersitie that I may not grieue to be sorted with them who are now in Paradise with these the like heauenly meditations so fill my mind O Lord that I may beare my infirmities And deferre not but make hast to worke my deliuerance according to thy promise to those that trust in thee I beleeue O Lord helpe mine vnbeliefe let it not hinder the working of this gracious work the freeing me out of this griefe and misery Once againe let mee haue some respit from my paine that I may praise thee in the land of the liuing if through thy mercy I shall be restored to health and strength so sanctifie this affliction as that I may say it is good for me that I haue been afflicted for that I am hereby taught to keepe thy commandements And here I doe promise and vow my selfe O God vnto thee if thou shalt vouchsafe this mercy a perpetuall sacrifice in soule and body to serue thee in new obedience for all time to come If in thy diuine counsell thou hast determined this to be the end of my fraile life here O Lord into thy hands I commend my spirit preserue me to thy Kingdome to the very last gaspe let not Sathan come neere vnto me set a guard of thy holy Angels about me and so assist me with thy grace that both in life and in death vnto the end and in the end I may glorifie thee that my troubles in my bed of sicknesse may end in perpetuall rest in Abrahams bosome and my grieuous pangs in euerlasting ioy and heauenly singing to thee O King and to the Lambe that sits vpon the throne who with the holy Ghost euer liues and reignes one God world without end Amen Grace before Meat O Lord blesse vnto our vse thy creatures at this time prouided for our sustenance that being preserued hereby and comforted we may doe thee more laudable seruice vnto thy glory who art the Author of all good vnto vs through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen Or this O God who hath iustly cursed the earth and all things therein for the sinne of man pardon our sinnes turne away thy curse and vouchsafe thy blessing vpon these thy gifts which we are now to receiue that we vsing them with temperance and thankfulnesse may obtaine by them refreshing and be enabled by them to thy seruice through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen Grace after Meat COntinuall praise be vnto thee O Lord who doest continually prouide so graciously for the feeding of our feeble bodies Leade vs hereby to a tast of our spirituall food so that by the helpe of both wee may grow vp in thy seruice both in body and soule till at the last we attaine thy heauenly Kingdome and be for euer glorified both in soule and body through Christ our Lord. Amen Or this MErcifull Father who neuer ceasest to do good vnto vs though wee neuer cease offending thee and now more especially hast renewed thy bounty in feeding vs with thy blessings Let not the common fruition of thy benefits make vs commonly or lightly to esteeme of them neither when wee are fed let vs wax wanton against thee abusing our strength to the seruice of sinne But let thy perseuerance in goodnesse worke in vs perseuerance in all dutiful obedience to our liues end through Iesus Christ our Lord Amen FINIS
Law is also a Schoolemaster when we are come to Christ euer checking and correcting vs when wee walke not according to the straight rule thereof but the Gospel vpon our humiliation comforteth vs and assureth vs that al our aberrations and going astray are remitted so that there be an heart vnfainedly hating that euill which we doe Rom. 7. Now as there be differences betwixt the Law and the Gosspell so there be some things wherein they agree The agreement of the old Testament and the new Heb. ● 1 Mat 3. 1. In the author God not as the mad Manichees taught the bad God to be the author of the law and the good God the author of the Gospell for the same God which spake by his Son Iesus Christ in these last daies spake also at diuers times and in diuers maners in times past he that said from heauen this is my beloued Son heare ye him the same God spake all these words said from heauen I am thy Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt out of the house of bondage c. 2. They agree in the threatning of sin and vrging obedience vnto the Lord in all things but the Law vrgeth it for feare the Gospel for loue If ye loue me keepe my Commandements the Law as the meritorious cause of life the Gospell as most necessary signes of the life of faith and the way that God hath appointed vs to walke in vnto life the Law giueth no hope in the case of swaruing from the strict rule thereof the Gospell giueth hope to the penitent and where the like hope is giuen by the Prophets they doe rather play Euangelists then Preachers of the Law 3. They agree in this that howsoeuer the Gospell giueth hope to the penitent yet it denieth all hope to those that liue and die in transgression of the Law for against such most common are the threatnings contained in the Gospell They that doe such things Gal. 5.17 shall neuer inherit the Kingdome of Heauen 4. They agree in this that there is no contradiction betwixt them but as they come from one and the same spirit so there is a sweet harmony consent between thē the one only sheweth what God doth strictly require in his iustice the other how his iustice is satisfied and yet his mercy to sinfull man appeareth the one saith he that breaketh the Commandements shall die the other saith that because man through the weaknes of his nature could not but breake them one man that neuer brake any the least of them died in the stead of sinfull man and thus freed him that was the son of death from death and damnation 5. They agree in the Ministers of them both for they of the Law were to be without blemish their lipps were to preserue knowledge they were to liue of their seruice they were diuers sorts both Priests Leuits they were watchmen c. so ought the ministers of the Gospell they must be vnblameable apt to teach they that preach the Gospell are to liue of the Gospell 1. Tim 3. 1. Cor. 9.24 Ephes 4.12 2. Pet. 5.2 some are Doctours some Pastours c. they are Pastours watching and keeping their flockes as those that must giue accounts for them And thus much of the third generall The manner how this law was giuen Exod. 19.20 The next thing to be spoken of in generall is the manner how this Law was giuen and that is described in the nineteenth and twentieth of Exodus 1. First there was great preparation three dayes together the people were sanctified according to the manner of those times by washings and purifyings shewing both what need wee haue by prayer and reading of the holy Scriptures which may bring vs from worldly to heauenly meditations to prepare our selues euer before that we come to heare the Lord speaking vnto vs in the Ministery of his holy word and also how wee must euer be more and more doing away by the Spirit of Sanctification the blots and blemishes of our natures that we may be the fitter to come into the presence of the Holyest 2. Secondly a straight charge was giuen that neither man nor beast vnder paine of death should come neere the Mount whence the Law was to be deliuered but certaine marks were set beyond which none might dare to passe shewing as the Apostle hence noteth 2. Cor. 3.6.7 Heb. 12.19 how glorious was the Law now to bee deliuered and if such as passed the markes set them were without mercy to die the death that much more the transgressours of any of these precepts should die and find no mercy Heb. 12 2● Thirdly the Lord descended with great terrour the Trumpet sounding the earth shaking and Lightnings flying abroad insomuch as that the people are noted to haue run away and Moses himselfe to haue said I tremble and quake shewing that the things here vttered were graue and waightie and to be receiued into the heart with a feare of offending against them and also that when the time shall bee of calling the offenders to account with what wonderfull terrour the Lord will then come against them 4. Almighty God himself spake al these words in the hearing of al the people but whē they were too weak to beare his words and desired that the Lord would not speake any more for so they should die but promised obedience if Moses should speak two tables of stone were giuen vnto him written with Gods own finger that he might carry them to the people shewing hereby how stony-hard our hearts be and that Gods finger alone is able to imprint them there his speech from Heauen must worke in vs a reuerence of them otherwise we shal all be too negligent of his Lawes 5. When Moses had broken these Tables through zeale seeing how God was dishonoured in his absence by golden Calues which they had set vp and worshipped the Lord bad him hew two other Tables and therein he wrote all the words that were in the first shewing hereby that mans heart by Gods creation had all the lawes ready written in it as the Tables prepared by God himselfe had but the heart which he had gotten vnto himselfe by falling away from God is without any letter hereof in effect vntill that the Lord wrote them anew as it was with the Tables prepared by Moses 6. Lastly when Moses had been long with the Lord and came with these Lawes vnto the people his face shone so as they were not able to looke vpon him for which cause he vsed a vaile when hee came vnto them and put it off when hee returned vnto the Lord shewing hereby as S. Paul noteth 2. Cor 3.13 ●4 that the Iewes should not be able to see into the end of the Law Christ Iesus vntill the vale of blindnesse and hardnesse of heart were taken away by the Lord neither yet could any of the Gentiles without the same
along life in this miserable world and yet remoueth to a Kingdome euerlasting that hee is not true of his promise 1. King 14. Doth any man thinke Enoch the lesse blessed because hee was taken away some hundreths of yeare sooner then others or doth he thinke it an vnhappines in the good sonne of Jeroboam for that he was taken away in his youth no more are they vnhappy or lesse blessed but so much the more whom the Lord is pleased to take away from the euils of this world to come as saith the Prophet Esay 57.1 Quest 2 Why doth the Lord rather promise long life to such as honour father and mother then any other blessing First because life is sweet and we are apt by nature to hearken to any thing to prolong life but this is generall and fitteth other commandements as well 2 More specially because children that honour parents may be said in some sort to prolong their dayes through that ioy wherewith they are affected when they doe well for as sorrow shortneth the dayes according to that of father Iaacob yee shall b●ing my gray head with sorrow to the graue Gen. 42 38. so ioy prolongeth them Againe by nourishing them in their necessity they prolong their dayes euen as young storkes so that it is most equall with the Lord to giue them this recompence in prolonging their dayes which also is an argument of force to moue to obedience and to make them flie disobedience seeing this is a death to their good parents and they are like the viper herein which as is thought is the death both of sire and dam in the breeding and comming forth into the world 3. Because the way to come to an estate of honour is giuing honour according to our prouerb qui nescit parere nescit imperare He knoweth not how to rule that knoweth not how to obey first Wherefore it is iust with God to cut off the disobedient that they may not liue to honour and to prolong the life of the obedient that they may come in their age to bee obeyed and honoured Quest 91. Which is the sixth Commandement or the second of the second Table Answ Thou shalt doe no murther Quest 92. What is here forbidden Answ All murthering of our selues or others and all approbation hereof either by command counsell consent or concealement secondly all iniurious actions tending to the prejudice of our neighbours life thirdly all railing and reuiling speeches fourthly all murtherous desires and affections of the heart as malice hatred and enuie fifthly all cruelty towards the creature which sheweth a murtherous mind in vs. Matth. 5.22 Explan The Lord hauing prouided for the vpholding of euery man in his estate and condition to preuent a confusion amongst the orders of men proceedeth here to take away particular abuses which if they should bee this order cannot stand and first the most horrible of all other murther the despoyling men of their liues Now because the Pharisees erred when they restrained the sinne here to the outward and compleat act of murther our Sauiour Christ reprouing this their absurd cleauing to the letter of the text I haue more largely according to his blessed direction set downe the sinne against this commandement It may well be referred to these fiue heads First actuall murther which is either of our selues or of other men 1. Thou shalt not murther thy selfe howsoeuer thou art pressed by tēptations of pouerty disgrace or other heauy crosses wherevpon the deuill is busie about thee and seeketh to driue thee to this desperate selfe-execution Thou shalt feare and neuer yeeld to so horrible an act whatsoeuer becommeth of thee And that thou maist the better bee preserued because the diuell preuaileth against many in these dayes and against some that haue formerly had a care to doe well I haue set downe heere the most effectuall meanes of preseruation in all assaults Forerunners of selfe-murther First take heed of all forerunners of these temptations as of pride and carying a higher saile than thy estate will beare for when a man commeth thus to be spent and must necessarily come downe and be laid open to the world according to his meanes his proud heart cannot indure to yeeld if by any meanes he may auoid this open debasement wherevpon Satan is ready and biddeth him murther himselfe this is plainely to be seen in many examples in our dayes Another forerunner of this is some notorious sinne or sinnes which are committed in secret but the conscience will not suffer to bee secret but accuseth for them and d then Satan layeth hold heerevpon pressing the threatnings of the Law and neuer ceaseth till he hath driuen a man to the desperate making away of himselfe These hideous sinnes are murther adultery periury apostacie or backsliding from the truth before imbraced and such like A third is generall security in matters of religion from which when the eyes come to be opened there ariseth an horrour and trouble in conscience which the Diuell further presseth to desperate selfe-murther Wherefo●e let euery man first be carefull to auoid these wayes Let him put on humility liuing rather in meaner fashion then he is worth let him watch ouer his hands and hea●t and tongue against mu●thering against adultery and vncleannesse against lying and fo swearing and ouer his waies against backsliding and let him in all his dealings keepe a good conscience If thou shalt say I feare not this temptation I hope I shall keepe mee without this pensiue carefulnesse farre enough from it heare what the Apostle saith Rom 9. ●ee not high-minded but feare consider that thou art a man and if a man subiect to the like passions as the meanest worst of men if thou take not the better heed It is no wisedome to surfet the body then to seek a cure neither is it wisedome to let the enemy into the Citty and then to seek to driue him out againe In like manner it is no wise dome but great folly to put a mans selfe into the hazard of this desperation thinking then to be cured againe ● Labor for pitience Labour for patience in all crosses according to the example of thy master Christ if being a seruant thou be buffetted pinched with hunger and hardly intreated or being a childe art neglected of thy parents and discouraged or being a subiect thou art in danger through thy Princes displeasure consider not so much the greatnesse of thy crosse as the reward if thou haue patience consider the vanity of the most excellent things in this world the shortnesse of all crosses heere and the most worthy partners which thou hast both Christ and all the holy Prophets and Apostles to whose society it is ioy to be ioyned The want of this patience breedeth discontent discontent with the Diuels furtherance desperation and murther 3 Consider if at any time thou beest thus tempted that to murther a mans selfe is the most
vnnaturall Sinne that can bee in the world and therfore because other meanes of punishment is taken away the law doth brand the dead carcasse with infamous buriall 2. It is also the most dangerous and vnrecouerable except the sinne against the holy Ghost for it seldome giueth any time of repentance and perhaps more seldome any probability Hee that dyeth thus dyeth alas in Satans worke and I feare me in Satans hands Yet I presume not to confine Gods extraordinary and boundles mercy that can reach it selfe forth inter ●ontem font●m after voluntary headlong percipice I deny not this to be possible But O dreadfull tryall of this ballance which in probability weigheth down so heauy on the other side as to presse wretched man to hell it selfe Distressed Brother art thou tempted to this hellish and monstrous sinne Gather thy strength vnto thee say Auoid Satan if thou tell mee I shall notwithstanding bee saued commending my soule to God when I dye say thou art a lyar and the father of lyes for the truth saith ●f a righteous man turneth from his righteousnesse and committeth iniquity in the sinne wherein he is found he shall surely dye If hee telleth thee that thou shalt thus end thy sorrowes say thou art heerin a lyar also Satan I shall passe thus rather from sorrow to greater sorrow from temporall woe to eternall to be gnawed vpon by the worme that neuer dyeth and to bee burned with the fire that neuer goeth out If it be said there are some that dye thus Obiect 2. Selfe-murther ●● p●eseru● vertue inuiolate August de Ciuit D●i to preserue vertue vnuiolate as Lucretia to preserue her chastity and certaine Matrons of Rome of whom S. Augustine writeth and some that they may be glorious Martyrs as the Donatists of old holding that if they could procure death to themselues they should immediately passe to glory in heauen Sol. They are all in the same dangerous and demnable plight notwithstanding without extraordinary and euen miracu-repentance they perish as guilty of their owne death Read S. Augustine in the same place excellently setting forth the vice of Lucretia which by the Heathen was commended for a vertue 2. Murthereing of other men 2. Vniust blood-sh●d This is vniustly to shed the bloud of any man by any meanes whatsoeuer First I say it is an vniust shedding of bloud because there is a shedding of bloud that is no sin as of the bloud of creatures which are giuen vnto man for meat or which are any way noysome vnto him contrary to the Tacian heresie which denyed it to be lawfull to kill any thing Againe there is s shedding of the bloud of man which is no sinne viz. when it is done iustly by such persons as to whom it doth belong and this is by the Magistrate or at his appointment onely and that by iust proceedings for Hee ●eare●h not the sword in vaine Rom. 13.4 but is Gods Minister to take vengeance on those that doe euill And it is so necessary for them to put to death where there is iust and necessary cause as that if they spare Gods curse will follow for the Lord hath expressly taught Num. 35.33 that bloud defileth the land and the land cannot be clensed of the bloud that is shed therein but by the bloud of him that shed it And on the other side if they put to death vniustly through malice or for any priuate reuenge they are murtherers for so far forth only may they reuenge by death as they are Gods Ministers set a worke by him Ioh. 21.15 Whence we may see that heathen Kings persecuting the poor Christians to the death were murtherers and in like manner are such as be in authority in the Church of Rome that doe diuersly murther the poore people of God by burning by the sword and by cutting their throats in butcherly manner only for following a righter and more holy way then is allowed amongst them Peter of whose succession they brag so much durst not so to haue turned his maisters charge Feed my sheepe feed my lambs into killing them though they had run out of the fold He would not haue taken heart vpon so sleighty a ground Act. 10. vp Peter kill an eate as some doe to iustifie this killing of the poore sheepe of Christ nay to murther or expose to murther Gods Anointed Lastly there is another iust cause of shedding bloud viz. in lawfull and iust wars and in defence of a mans owne life for iust warres are called the Lords battels 2 Chron. 20.15 as Iehoshaphat encouraging his men saith The battle is not yours but Gods But some make doubt whether it be lawfull for Chrstians to wage warre Answ This is the fancy of the Anabaptists whose follies are easily refuted out of their own furies and ourages in Germany where they that impugned lawfull warre and Magistracy made vse in their rebellions of that which themselues disauowed namely the Sword And as for the vocation of a Souldier surely Iohn Baptist when the Soldiers came vnto him Luk. 3.14 demanding of him What shall we doe Did not answer them that they must of necessity cast off their Swords if they would be the seruants of God but rather aduised thē to remaine still the Military seruants of Caesar else what place can those precepts haue Do violence to no man neither accuse any falsly be content with your wages Another frenzy of the same sect denieth all vse of the sword at home in time of peace by way of ciuil iustice as if it were against Christian perfection put any man to death by the hand of publike authority though for neuer so grieuous a crime tending to the dissolution of humane society and defacing the Image of God Alas frantique soules that in hatred of Murther maintaine Murther Shall he that hath murthered one man be suffered by suruiuing to embrue his hands with the guiltlesse blood of more Our Sauiour himselfe whose nearest Disciples these saintly innocents would seeme to bee expressly pronounced this law of Iustice Math. 2● 52 They that take the Sword shall perish by the Sword That is priuate auengers that wring the sword out of the Magistrates hand to vsurpe the vse of it for their own passions must expect to feele the edge of it and to be cut off by it This publique reuenge is so far from being a sinne that as euen now I shewed it is a necessary duty in him that beareth the Sword If this Sword had no edge or were not imployed vpon iust occasion verily it were borne in vaine Ob●ect But the Apostle Paul say they speaketh of Heathen not Christian Magistrates I answer hee speaketh of Magistrates as Magistrates generally of all whether Heathen or Christian Is not a Christian King Gods ordinance Gods Minister Doe we not owe tribute and honour to Christian Kings as well as to heathen Surely much more Are there not that