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

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their bodies Reuel 7. not distempered through heat or cold hunger or thirst sickenesse or infirmities and lastly their continuall rest from all labour and paines and yet no darkenesse of the night for they shall keepe a Sabbath from weeke to weeke and from moneth to moneth Esa 66.23 and the Lord shall bee a perpetuall light vnto them 2. They shall haue added vnto their ioy Reu. 21.25 riches for be not there wonderfull riches thinke you where the very Pauements shall be of Gold chap. 2.26 c. where the riches of all the Gentiles shall be brought in to them 3. Vnto their riches shall be added glory therefore it is called a crowne of glory reigne ouer nations our bodies shall shine as the Sunne and be like the glorious body of Iesus Chirst Phil 3.21 4. Our happinesse shall exceede for all these euen as the glory of the Sunne exceedeth all the rest of the Starres and the glory of Kings all the rest of their subiects for this life shall bee vnto vs a Kingdome and hence it is that the Prophet saith The eye hath not seene nor the eare heard any other God that doth so to him that waiteth for him Esa 64.4 5. Our happinesse shall bee absolute vniforme and entire not mixed as all worldly happinesse is pleasure hauing irksomenesse abundance hauing wants glory and honour accompanied with shame and ignominy but in this life Reuel 7. Esa 65 19. All teares shall be wiped from our eyes wee shall sorrow nor grieue no more our delight shall euer bee fulnesse of ioy 6. These things shall not be by intermission and fits but continually yesterday and today the same as the damned in hell can haue no remission of their paines so shall the saued in heauen haue no diminution of their ioyes but as they that liue shall not sometime be dead and sometime liuing no more shall they that liue the euerlasting life bee sometime in pleasures and sometime without for their life is pleasure riches and glory Prou. 16.4 Lastly all this shall be for euer and euer for farre more thousands of yeares then the Sea hath drops of water the earth hath spires of grasse and all men haires vpon their heads and so beginning againe circularly without ende For heerein is God perfectly glorified and the wicked are fully iudged which is the last end of all Gods workes according to that Hee made all things for his glory and the wicked for the day of Iudgement For though the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for euer doth some time set foorth no more but a certaine large time at the last to be ended as the time of the Mosaicall Law or the time of this worlds continuance for thus it is said of ceremonies yee shall obserue these things for euer and of the earth Eccl. 1.4 It standeth for euer yet when it is said that the life ●o come shall last for euer the meaning is as the Lord liueth for euer vnto whose dayes infinite millions of yeares can put none end for death is swallowed vp of life all cause of death is taken away and so neuer neuer can this life cease but still still remaineth simply without respect vnto any period of time The life euerlasting 1. Duty Carefully to fly such sins as are threatned with death 1 Cor. 5 9 10. For the duties of this faith The first is carefully to breake off all those sinnes the doers of which are expressly threatned that they shall neuer enter into the Kingdome of Heauen Such are named to be fornication adultery Idolatry buggery wantonnesse theeuing couetousnesse drunkennesse rayling extortion for such saith S. Paul shall not inherite the Kingdome of God Gal. 5.19.20 Vers 21. In another place he reckoneth vp the same sinnes againe and further addeth witchcraft hatred debate wrath seditions heresies enuy murther and gluttony of which saith hee I tell you before as I also told you before that they which doe such things shall not inherite the Kingdome of God Math. 25. Reuel 22.15 And our Sauiour Christ further numbreth vnmercifulnesse to the poore and the holy Ghost by Iohn the Diuine inchanters lyers and dogs meaning contemners and neglecters of holy things of whom he saith That they shall bee without the gate of the City 1 King 1. Wherefore let vs all with one accord bee at enmity with these vices and watch ouer our hearts and wayes that wee commit them not When Shimei was threatned by Salomon saying Whensoeuer thou shalt goe ouer the brooke Kedron thou shalt dye the death what else could hee expect though vnder so mercifull a Kings gouernment but death when he should transgresse as he found it to his cost so what other thing can wee expect if wee liue in any of these or other grieuous and heynous sinnes concerning which the Lord hath said if thou doe these thou shalt not enter into life but to bee shut out indeed at the latter day Ierusalem in which wee looke to liue is aboue our soules must flye vnto it to vse the words of the Prophet Esa as Doues vnto the windowes but sinne is an heauy clogge and presseth downe if we thinke to be rid of it at leysure when we list we are deceiued for it hangeth on fast Heb. 12.1 how then can we hope to get thither vnlesse wee doe lighten our selues hereof All our faith is vanity our profession is deceit and instead of this endlesse life our end will be miserable death 2. Duty To enter the way of life The second duty is to striue to enter and to walke on in the way that leadeth to euerlasting life and neuer to goe out of it to our dying day and this is the way of good works which God hath appointed that we should walke in them Eph. 2.10 Ioh. 5.29 They that haue done good shall enter into life they that haue done euill into condemnation Reuel 22.14 Blessed are they that doe his Commandements that their right may bee in the tree of life and that they may enter in by the gate of the City Though it be a straight and narrow way and there bee few that finde it most men goe the contrary way yet if thou wilt enter into life thou must keepe the commandements Math. 7.14 Wherefore goe not with the multitude which bee in the broad way but embrace the counsell of Christ Striue to enter in at the straight gate and that whilst thou hast time Will any man being in a strange Countrey returne to his home and yet not take the right way thither And will any man then being in the Countrey of this world come to his home in Heauen and not take the right way How is it then that wee hope to come to eternall life and yet refuse to take the way thither yea to hearken to the guides or to be led by them whom the Lord hath appointed to bee a
of theft is the practise of vnlawfull Artes and meanes to get riches as iudiciary Astrology whereby it shall be vndertaken to iudge of particular future euents the Blacke Art whereby the deuill is consulted with to finde out things lost and Palmistry whereby it is pretended to tell fortunes by beholding the hand Howsoeuer it may and doth oftentimes fal out to be true which is thus foretold yet these Arts are to be condemned as for the open or secret compact betwixt the practizers and the deuill and the presumption entring vpon the search of Gods secrets and so climbing as it were into his chaire of Omniscience so for that they are altogether vaine and vnprofitable to such as make vse hereof no danger being the more preuented and if things lost bee recouered the losse being no whit the lesse notwithstanding but farre greater because God is lost for the deuill who thus discouereth things lost and getteth soules Againe to make a trade of gaming to gaine hereby because men are hindred hereby and many vndone in their outward estate Moreouer to make paintings for womens faces disguising and monstrous attires vnciuill and immodest apparrell and many other things which serue meerely to set forth pride and vanity and to sel these things it is an vniust gaine for the blazons of sinne Lastly to keepe stewes or whores to gaine hereby is to tollerate this wickednes for yearely pension of money raked out of these sinkes as the Pope doth as it is an intollerable abuse against the seuenth Commandement so it is the most odious theft against this Commandement of all others Against prodigality The fifth kind of theft is by prodigality and riotous wasting that which God hath lent vnto a man to prouide herewith for wife and children and to pay euery man his For our goods in this world are not our owne to vse as we list but committed to our dispensation that wee should honestly and soberlie vse them to such ends as God hath appointed as a seruant therefore hauing receiued money of his master to be laid out to such and such vses if hee shall spend it vpon his owne pleasure is a thiefe to his master so he that hauing the goods of this world more or lesse at the hands of the Lord to the end that he may liue comfortably hereupon owe nothing to any man and prouide for his owne if God permits if contrariwise he shall wast and consume them amongst harlots and drunken companions and gamesters he is a thiefe to the great Lord of all 1. Tim. 5.8 and a worse thiefe as S. Paul calleth him then many an infidell Hee robbeth and depriueth his owne bowels his children his owne flesh his wife O sauage and inhumane of all meanes of maintenance and leaueth them helpelesse exposed to hunger and cold and pouertie Quest 99. Is not this Commandement broken any other way Answ Yes couetousnesse in heart is also a great sinne against it and vnmercifulnesse and lastly robbing of God in things dedicate in Tithes and offerings Explan These sinnes are not put off to the last place because the least for they are most heinous but because they deserue a distinct consideration by themselues as being rather against God then against man Couetousnes is an vnsatiable most eager desire of hauing more carrying a man on to the obtaining of worldlie gaine through any meanes though vnconscionable and wicked Matth. 6.25 1. Tim. 6.10 For first it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a desire of hauing more and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a loue of money that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a superlatiue manner so as that the mind is taken vp night and day with worldly cares and deuises to get the things of the world there being an ouer great distracting feare of wanting these things according to the word vsed by Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Be not carefull This very desire of the world is couetousnes and the roote of all euill this is the seruing of Mammon so as that the man that hath it Matth. 6.24 1. Iohn 2.15 cannot serue God for he that thus loueth the world the loue of the Father is not in him Secondly I adde carrying a man on to the obtaining of worldly gaine through any meanes because hereby couetousnes doth expresse it selfe before men and when any man is come to this without conscience of right and wrong Iames 114.15 1. Tim. 6 9. Luke 21.34 to get what he can his sin is perfected nothing remaineth now for him but as a iust reward death and damnation the drowning of his soule in perdition for this foolish admiring the dust of the earth and adoring the wedge of gold and that that day should come vpon him vnawares wherein he shall be sent into the torments of Gods enemies If any mans hart therefore be oppressed with worldly cares choaking the feed of Gods word hindring from heauenly meditations and deuout prayer though there bee no meanes of wicked gaine outwardly vsed yet it is a couetous hart a seruer of Mammon and an hater of God but this is only betwixt God and a mans owne conscience Againe if any man seeketh gaine by oppression by deceit by vnreasonable sparing when hee ought to spend he vttereth himselfe for couetous before men also And this is the right vnderstanding of couetousnes whence it appeareth how fowly they erre that account him couetous who is only frugall and desirous to keepe within the compasse of his estate in his expences There may bee a couetous heart in the sight of God indeed but that is not seene to thee and therefore if thou iudgest if thou shalt take him for couetous thou sinnest by taking vpon thee Gods office Contrary to which is that precept of the Apostle Iudge nothing before the time 1. Cor. 4.5 till the Lord come who will lighten things that are hid in darknesse and make the counsels of the heart manifest Woe is to them that condemne the righteous and a double woe then is to them that delighting in riot themselues doe passe their sentence vpon men of more sober and staied minds taxing them as couetous because they will not drinke and spend superfluously at the alehouse nor entertaine lauish and riotous idle-packs good fellowes as they call them in their houses Vnmercifulnes is a benummednes of Christian loue hardening him that is affected herewith so as that he will not bestow any thing where apparant necessitie doth require And this is a kind of false dealing against God for a mans owne priuate commodity which hee taketh so heinously as that he maketh such hard hearted misers examples of his vengeance Matth 25. euen for this adiudging them to hell sire with the deuill and his angels For the Lord commeth in the person of the poore which are poore indeed that is impotent of body and vnable to helpe themselues or necessarily by Gods hand cast into pouerty and want and what thou deniest
disanull them and against all defects if there be any in our lawes and neglect of the execution that the defects may be supplied the execution of good lawes better lookt vnto for the furtherance of Gods kingdome Hinderances of Gods kingdome in the ministry In the ministery there may bee also many hinderances of this kingdome against which we pray 1. Ignorance and vnaptnesse to teach for euen as the childe without milke perisheth and hauing too little languisheth so the poore soules of men vnder ignorant ministers or such as be vnapt to teach them doe perish and decay Hos 4.6 1 Tim. 3. 2 Tim. 2.15 My people perish saith the Lord for want of knowledge and a Bishop saith the Apostle must be apt to teach he must know to diuide the word of truth a right 2. We pray against heresie in them whereby the milke of the word as with poyson is corrupted and turned to the destruction of soules Of this hinderance S. Peter speaking 2 Pet. 3.16 saith that there bee many hard places in the Scriptures which the ignorant and vnstable peruert vnto damnation And like vnto this are prophane and vaine bablings which by the Apostle are compared vnto the Canker and Gangreene tending to the destruction of the body Wherefore wee pray 2 Tim. 2.27 that no such preachers may creepe in or be suffered in the Church as doe teach hereticall opinions vainely and prophanely handle the holy Word to the disgrace thereof amongst the hearers 3. Wee pray against idlenesse in Ministers taking the fleece and fat of the flocke but through lazinesse and carelesnes suffering the wandring to be out of the way the feeble without pasture and the diseased and weake without cure and exposing all to the rage of the deuouring Wolfe If hee that hath the keeping of a tower against the enemy committed vnto him and a reward therefore shall sleepe and neglect his charge he is worthy of death by the Martiall Law and he that taking wages and hauing any worke committed vnto him if through sloath he doth it to halues or to quarters he is worthy to bee punished as a thiefe So and much more they which take charge of soules and wages therfore a spirituall worke in hand and hire to doe it and yet are sloathfull and giuen so much to their ease as that they labour not in this worke by preaching praying exhortation yea and by good example of life shall answer as theeues and robbers and vndergoe the vtmost of Gods Law Wee pray heere that if there be any such O vtinam nusquam they may bee diligent or else speedily remoued and more painfull and faithfull placed in their roome 4. Wee pray against wickednesse in the life and conuersation of Ministers for a Bishop must be vnreprouable Leui had both the Thummim and Vrim committed vnto him 1 Tim. 32. When wicked ministers are wicked liuers though they teach things good and the way right yet such a cloud is cast ouer their doctrine that it shineth very dimly and few or none see to follow after it when like Images shewing the way they are seene to stand still without motion they are held as idols to be teachers of lies and what they shew is not imbraced Particular hinderances of Gods kingdome The particular hinderances of Gods kingdome are such as be in euery priuate person in particular These are first Infidelity and vnbeliefe whereby the dore of the heart is shut vp against the Lord that hee cannot rule there as King Heb. 4.2 Where vnbeliefe was it is noted that Christ could doe no great matters Lydiu had her heart opened before that the power of godlinesse wrought in her The Iewes are noted to haue had the world without profit because their hearing was not mixed with faith Faith was the first thing which Satan vndermined in our first parents to beat downe Gods kingdome it is the first thing wherin Paul laboureth with King Agrippa to make him a member of Gods kingdome As all things are possible to faith so it is impossible that any good thing should be with vnbeliefe Wee pray therefore here against this vnbeliefe that the Lord would open our hearts to belieue his word and all the promises and threatnings therein contained 2. Impenitency and hardnesse of heart whereby the mind is without relenting for sinne and reioyceth rather heerein and as the hand by often handling of hard things becommeth daily more hard and insensible so by sinning the conscience becommeth more hard and without sense or remorse for sin Luc 3. Wherefore when Iohn would prepare the way for the Kingdome of Christ hee preacheth repentance the putting away of this hardnes in sinning Esa 66 2. and when the Prophet Esay would describe such a man as with whom the Lord doth dwell to rule and raigne in him he saith that he must be humble contrite spirit and tremble at his word Wee pray then heere that the Lord would take away the heart of stone out of vs Ezech. 11.19 and giue vs an heart of flesh as he hath promised so that the power of sinne may be shaken we may tremble for sinne past and resolue vpon newnesse of life for the time to come as good subiects of Gods kingdome 3. Any one raigning sin which is when the soule is quiet in some priuate secret sinne and doth not striue earnestly against it For let it be neuer so small if there be a willing going on in it it is a raigning sinne and God cannot reigne in that heart Let not sinne therefore saith the Apostle Rom. 6.12 raigne in your mortall bodies Eph. 5.14 Hee that promiseth to the enemy of the Land but one peny or one egge towards his maintenance to inuade the countrey is no good subiect to his Prince no more than hee that promiseth horse man and armour neither is he a good subiect of Gods kingdome that resteth and without checke nesteth in lying in petty swearing in vaine talking or euill thinking and fighteth not against these Awake thou that sleepest stand vp from the dead and Christ shall giue thee life if thou sleepest in any sinne thou art without life out of the Kingdome of light 4. Negligence in superiours towards inferiours in parents masters or the wealthy towards the poore children or seruants suffering them to sin leauing them vntaught forbearing to admonish them to further Gods kingdome in them Leuit. 19.17 For if it be a sinne of neglect in any man to let his familiar friend to sinne vnreproued much more is it in such as haue some authority annexed vnto their persons they sinne against that Charge Thou shalt plainly rebuke thy neighbour and not suffer him to sinne 5. We pray therefore that all gouernours of families may shake off negligence towards their charges and though it be painfull vnto them labour to further Gods Kingdome in their families and that the rich in disposing the liberalities
forme of baptizing I baptize thee into the death of Iesus Christ no mention being made of the Farher Son or holy Ghost Euseb lib. 4. cap. 11. Hist And Valentinus an Heretique of old to haue baptized in the name of the vnknowne God and of the truth the mother of all Now such baptismes are no baptismes and those that were out of the right forme baptized had need to be baptized again but according to the right forme he that is once baptized ought not to be baptized againe whatsoeuer the person baptizing be or whatsoeuer sin the party baptized hath since fallen into And the reason is because Baptisme is a signe of regeneration or the new birth which can be but once vnto one man seeing that a man being once born cannot enter into his mothers womb be borne again This prepostrously applied made some of the Ancients though erroniously to deferre their Baptisme fearing that if after Baptisme they should be ouertaken with sinne they could not be forgiuen because that in Baptisme onely there is remission of sinnes which may not in any case bee againe iterated Whereas in truth though the act of baptising bee transient and but once performed yet the power and comfort of it diffuseth it selfe through all our life and is renewed and reapplyed by repentance after grieuous lapses of the faithfull Quest What is the inward or spirituall grace Answ A death vnto sinne and a new birth vnto righteousnes for being by nature borne in sinne and the children of wrath we are heereby made the children of grace Explan That Baptisme may bee perfect there must not onely bee the outward part water and the forme of words vsed but the inward part also mortification and dying of sinne and regeneration and liuing of righteousnesse The outward alone is no more auaileable than the rocke flowing waters in the wildernesse to saue the rebellious people from perishing before that they came in Canaan then Elishas staffe to reuiue the Shunamites childe when he himselfe was absent 1 Pet. 3.21 Vnto true Baptisme therefore must concurre a death vnto sinne in him that is dipped and a new birth vnto righteousnesse otherwise his baptisme is vaine euen as it had beene in vain for Noah when he had built the Arke not to haue entred into it in time for vnto this answereth Saint Peter Baptisme the figure that now is when it is not the washing away of the filth of the flesh but the stipulation of a good conscience For let a man be neuer so rightly baptized yet if he be not borne againe saith our Sauiour Christ that is if sinne be not killed in him that grace may liue hee shall neuer enter into the Kingdome of Heauen The death vnto sinne is signified by the dipping or sprinckling with water it being necessary that as by water the filthines of the flesh is washed and done away so by the vertue of Christs bloud the filthinesse of the soule should be washed away and it should be purged from sinne and that as hee which commeth to washing disliketh and accompteth that filthinesse which is to be washed and not any part of his body growing to him so should he that is baptized account his sinnes filthinesse and dead and no liuing part of his soule and that as he which is washed entreth into the water and is couered therewith that he may be made cleane so he that is baptized should enter into the graue with sin and be buried that as dead bodies his sinnes may decay and be abolished more and more The new birth vnto righteousnesse is signified by the taking vp out of the water the soule being lifted vp out of the puddle of sinne and clensed herefrom becomming a pure new soule as it were in the vnderstanding the will the affections and in all the desires and thoughts euen as a childe being new borne into the world and clensed from that corruption which hee bringeth with him is as it were a new creature and cryeth after the meanes of sustentation of his new life Againe it is signified by his taking into the congregation of Christians he now conuersing labouring in all things and duties of holinesse suting himselfe vnto them euen as the leaprous person being made cleane commeth to liue againe in the congregation from which hee was before seperated Lastly it is also signified in the forme of wordes Jn the name of the Father c. whose faithfull seruant and soldiour he is thus admitted to be he was before the slaue of sin and seruant of the Diuell but hee hath now changed for a new seruice of him into whose name hee hath beene baptized Wherefore hee whosoeuer hee bee that after baptizing committeth sinne is liable notwithstanding his baptisme to damnation Doth not Baptisme then conferre grace vniuersally and infallibly to the baptized by the very worke wrought and if it doth not what vertue is there in the Sacrament more then if washing should be vsed after the Iewish maner Baptisme as it is an act done by the batizer without any any relation to the disposition of the person to bee baptized beng of ripe yeares and vnderstanding hath no force to saluation by vertue of Christs ordination but if that person bee by faith within the couenant of grace then it doth conuey grace vnto him Luke 3.7 This is plaine from the Doctrine of Iohn Baptist who reproued those that came to his baptisme without repentance and inward sanctification whereby it might become effectuall to saue them from the wrath to come For had the very worke wrought beene auailable Iohn had beene worthy of blame for such a censure and sharpe reproofe of them calling them a generation of Vipers whereby they might thus be discouraged whereas otherwise by comming and being baptized they should haue receiued grace and beene saued notwithstanding their impieties and hypocrisy It is not therefore the act done that preuaileth but the right disposition of the person Baptized neyther shall this Sacrament become thus an idle ceremony but an excellent and effectuall institution to purge and confirme the faithfull Wherefore let vs renounce that opinion that holdeth the Sacrament of Baptisme by the very act of administration of such vertue as that originall sinne remaineth not any longer in such as are baptized True it is that where Baptisme is perfect and vnto the outward is ioyned the inward part the sting of sinne is plucked out both in regard of the guilt and of the punishment but for the vtter abolition of sinne this is not till death though the power thereof be broken so as that it raigneth not in vs it remaining still as a rebellious head to exercise vs to the last gaspe Quest What is required in persons to bee Baptised Answ Repentance whereby they forsake sinne and faith to beleeue the promise made vnto them in this Sacrament Explan Hauing considered Baptisme both in the outward and inward part it remayneth that we shew the
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
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
descent c. doe rather import somewhat added to his death and buriall the more currant exposition is to make it a seuerall and different Article or Parcell of our Sauiours performances and so wee will now consider in the remaining interpretations That branch of the first interpretation auouching that our Sauiour did sometime in triduo mortis really descend in soule into the place of the damned is most literall naturall and agreeable to the words no way lyable to tautologie nor repugnant to the analogie of Faith but consorting with the plaine termes of Scripture and testimony of ancient Fathers In this sense the Church of England in the first times of reformation Artic● 37. seemeth to vnderstand and interpret this Article both by insisting vpon the direct words in the booke of Articles of Religion where the truth realty of Christs descent into hell is auouched in the same manner with the realty of his death c. as also by the explanation thereof in the larger Catechisme authorized by our Church called Nowels Catechisme The end of such descent might well bee to triumph ouer Satan in his owne dunghill and dungeon and withall there to vpbraid vnto the damned spirits of obstinate men what a gracious and glorious Sauiour they had neglected Though some be of another minde in this point yet I see no coactiue reasons out of Scripture or otherwise brought by them against this plaine literall construction And caeteris paribus why should not the authority of our Mothr the Church of Englād ouer sway For my part in my priuate opinion I haue much inclined to the fifth interpretation applying this descent into hell parabolically to the dismall apprehension of Gods wrath lying heauy vpon the soule of Christ and representing the paines of hell due to vs. The reasons that perswade that our Sauiour vnderwent such inward sufferings in his soule are First if hee had not suffered extreame torments in soule besides what he suffered by sympathy through bodily pangs hee must either haue been weake and ouer-yeelding or else haue dissembled being without sorrow Sixt. Sennensi Bibl. Patrum li. 6. Annot. 35. when hee expressed so great sorrow as one saith that Hillary sometimes held but afterwards recanted making a sound confession of his faith for if Christ did not truely suffer wee are not truely redeemed or else the Saints of God which are by infinite degrees more weake then Christ God and Man must bee acknowledged to haue had more courage and magnanimity when they haue been vnder extreame torments then he had For before his passion vpon the crosse he was very heauy much troubled Math. 26.38 verse 39.40 in so much as hee said My soule is very heauy euen vnto the death and prayed three times if it were possible that the cup might passe from him at what time also his passion was noted to be so great that he sweat with paine and his sweat was like drops of bloud Luc. 22.43.44 and an Angel appeared from heauen comforting him whereas weake men haue by Gods assistance ioyfully prepared themselues and haue beene ready to meet with the most extreame bodily torments Againe in the time of his passion what a wonderfull deale of feare was he surprized withall when hee cryed out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Luk. 24.46 yea and he cryed againe the second time and gaue vp the ghost whereof mention is made also in the Epistle to the Hebrewes verse 50. In the dayes of his flesh hee did offer vp prayers and supplications with strong cryings and teares to him that was able to saue him from death Heb. 5.7 and was also heard in that which hee feared whereas weake men haue beene vnder cruell tormentors hands with vndaunted courage to the astonishment of the beholders Now there is no Christian but will acknowledge that Christ was ten thousand times more able to indure any tormēts then any of the most cōstant Martyrs that haue suffered for his name and if hee were without all comparison more able to beare whence could it happen that he was pressed with such sorrow heauinesse and feare but for that hee alone suffered more then all Martyrs if all their sufferings were put together euer since righteous Abel to this day And how could hee suffer more but in his Soule wherein hee felt the wrath of God which is vnsupportable to men and Angels Heereto is added this reason also Arg. 2. Christ did sustaine the person of the faithfull who without him were all subiect not onely to bodily sufferings and death but to the euerlasting death of the soule now the only way whereby God is pleased to deliuer vs heerefrom is by sending Christ to bee in our stead and more or lesse to suffer that which wee for sinne should haue suffered wherefore it ●s said Hee was made sinne for vs that knew no sinne 2. Cor. 5.21 that wee might be made the righteousnesse of God through him And Hee tooke flesh that he might destroy through death him that had the power of death Heb. 2.14 that is the Diuell Therefore Analogie inferreth that as the Lord Iesus suffered for vs in body so hee suffered in his soule also and thereby hath perfectly redeemed vs in both but how and by what particular passions hee suffered in soule is not reuealed and therefore by vs vnutterable Only wee must know that how great soeuer his passions were hee did in the end ouercome them all and by the way though hee feared sweat blood and cryed out through want of present sense and apprehension of the vnion with the diuine nature yet the diuinity was neuer separated from Christ Iesus but supported him and made him conquerour ouer all when hee seemed to be ouercome The Meditation also vpon these suffering of our Sauiour is very needfull profitable to vs. First the remembring Christs passion in his soule 1. Duty By the remembrance of Christs sufferings to feare to sinne is an antidote to preserue vs from sin For though thou be so stout-hearted as that no bodily punishments can scarre thee from following thy will and resolution in wickednesse yet doe but behold Christ in his spirituall conflict with Gods wrath due to sinne sorrowing sweating sweat of bloud comfortlesse and crying out vpon his Father without hope and it will make thee to tremble to thinke am I forward to commit that which doth thus anger the King of Heauen that hee would not shew any countenance nor fauour that hee would no whit spare nor regard his owne beloued Son standing in the roome of sinners though his grones and cryes went vp to Heauen O then if I doe thus if I rot in the dregges of my sinnes how shall I indure his anger how regardlesse will hee bee of mee when I shall in my need cry for mercy Surely I shall with Esau be sent away empty Heb. 12.16 though I seeke the blessing with
the matter is suppressed because that would haue beene too great an euidence against them Not long after Ardanus Bishop of Northumberland vnder King Oswaldus opposed himselfe against the same alledging that the grieuous things of the law the burthens of the Pharisees were not to bee propounded to the people Anno. 670. Colmanus another Bishop stoutly resisted the shauing of Priests and other fooolish ceremonies that were vrged but the King taking against him he preuailed not and therefore went from his Bishopricke into Scotland with those that tooke part with him The like resistance had his Predecessour Fannanus made before Auintint lib. 3. Annalium c. Afterwards anno 714. when Boniface who was called the Apostle of the Germans was sent of Gregory the second for the like purpose of establishing Romish ceremonies he was resisted by Adelbertus Gallus Clemens Scotus Sampson Scotus Virgilius and Sidorius learned men who could not endure the ceremonies vrged about the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and Baptisme but they were oppressed by the Popes authority viz. Gregory the second Gregory the third and Zachary Anno 774. Egila Nist Magdeb. Cent. 8. cap. 10. a Bishop in Spaine who before had much reuerenced the Bishop of Rome afterwards vnderstanding that his traditions depended not vpon Gods Word hee contemned them for which cause hee stirred vp other Spanish Bishops against the said Egila Anno 899. there was one Claudius Cent. 9. cap. 10. who had beene a Priest in the Court of Charles the Great which taught the same doctrine that Luther afterwards did inueighing against the imagery and superstition of those times Baleus Trithsnus Anno 841. Bertram a Priest in France who was greatly esteemed by Charles the brother of King Lotharius taught that the body of Christ was not really present in the Sacrament but is by faith receiued Anno 847. Thergaudus Bishop of Treuiris inueighed grieuously against Pope Nicolus hee called the Pope Antichrist and a Wolfe saying Auentini● Regin●l lib. 2 Cum sis seruus seruorum Dominus Dominantium esse contendis When as thou art by profession a seruant of seruants thou striuest to be a Lord of Lords Hee called Rome Babylon Being called to Rome together with Guntherius Guntherius Bishop of Calle● he was excommunicated vnheard and after slaine Anno 859. S. Vdasrick Bishop of Augusta held that the Roman Bishop might erre and proued learnedly by sundry arguments that it was lawfull for Priests to marry Hist Mag. Cent. 9. cap. 10. Anno 1054. Berengarius a learned man had many followers who stoutly maintained that the body of Christ was not really in the Sacrament Anno 1071. Lanfranke Hist Magdeb. Cent. 1● cap. 10. Arch-Bishop of Canterbury is said to haue corrected the writings of the Fathers according to the Catholique Faith whence it must needes follow that the Church was then gone frō the purity of the Fathers times which was noted by some but to blinde their eyes this correction was made In the Epistle of Anselme there is a forme of visiting the sicke prescribed in this manner The Priest should say Thou confessest that thou hast liued so ill that thou hast deserued hell Hist Magd. Cent 11. cap. 6. The sicke answers Yea Doest thou repent thee of these thing He answers Yea Doest thou beleeue that the Lord Iesus Christ dyed for thee He answers Yea Doest thou giue him thankes He answers Yea Doest thou beleeue that thou canst not be saued but by his death He answers Yea Go to therefore whilst thy soule is in thee put thy whole trust in this death trust in no other thing commit thy selfe wholly to this death with this couer thy selfe all ouer winde vp thy selfe all ouer in this death S. Anselme was a Lutheran Whence it appeares that according to the present doctrine of our Church it was held then and that meritorious workes wrought by men were in no request for iustification and saluation Anno 1110. Florentinus a Bishop auouched that Antichrist was then born Platina Blondas for which he was called to account by Paschalis the second and suppressed Anno 1135. one Francis an Abbot maintained that Christs body was not really in the Sacrament Hist Magd. Cent. 12. cap. 5. Anno 1110. Petrus de Beuis a Priest Henry a Monk in France taught that the body and bloud of Christ were not offered in the Masse neither that it was a sacrifice made for the saluation of soules that Altars were to be destroyed that the substances in the sacrament were not altered that sacrifices and masses and prayers and almes c. being made for the dead Cent. 12. cap 9. were fooleries and profited not that Priests and Monkes were rather to marry then to burne that Crosses were not to bee reuerenced that the Canonicall Scriptures were onely to bee beleeued and that the writings of the Fathers haue not equall authority and of these the one was burned the other hardly escaped Bernardi vita Anno 1190. Bernard a learned Father though hee was not so sound through the iniquity of the times in all things yet in the case of iustification he speaketh like a Protestant when being in danger of his life he said I am not worthy J confesse neither can I by mine owne merits obtaine the Kingdome of heauen but my Lord obtaining it by a double right viz. of inheritance and by the merit of his passion being content with the one himselfe h e bestoweth the other vpon mee Anno 1220. one William a Goldsmith said that Rome was Babylon the Pope Antichrist was therfore burned Hist Magd. Cent. 13. cap. 2. Anno 1250. G●lielmus de sancto Amore was banisht for an heretique and his bookes burnt Robert Grost●d Bishop of Lincolne a zealous opposer of Papall tyranny should haue had his bones digged vp and burnt but that the Pope being terrified in a dreame desisted from this his enterprize Anno 1260. on Laurence an Englishman had his bones burnt after that they were taken out of the graue Anno 1350. there were many sincere Teachers specially Iohannes de rupe Scissi● Anno 1360. Armachanus an Arch-bishop in Ireland Anno. 1370. Iohn Wick●liffe disputed openly at Oxenford and was defended by K. Edward the third and the Nobles against the Pope Summa Conc. a Bartholom●o Goranza collecta The poynts maintained by him were That the materiall substance of bread and wine remained in the Sacrament That outward confession to the Priest was superfluous and vnprofitable That if any man giueth almes to the idle Friers hee is excommunicate That hee which entreth into any such order is made more foolish and vnfit to obserue Gods Commandements That the Church of Rome is a Synagogue of Satan neither is the Pope the Vicar of Christ That it is a foolish thing to beleeue the Popes Indulgences c. Anno 1410. Iohn Husse and Ierome of Prague were famous in Bohemia Conc. fol.
cleane broken off wee are put from him and without all pitty must endure the euer-burning flames of hell fire 4. Duty To doe good vnto all Gal. 6.10 The fourth duty is to doe good vnto all but specially to those of the houshold of faith as the Apostle warneth because of our communion with them and that not onely in distributing our temporall goods but our spirituall in being like affected towards them reioycing with them that reioyce and weeping with them that weepe For in the members of our body to vse the Argument of the Apostle Can one be pained and not all of them in like manner grieued so in the spirituall body of Christ of which wee professe our selues members there can be none grieued but it must bee our griefe also none comforted but it must bee our comfort also And if wee be thus affected towards one another wee shall need no spurs to pricke vs forward to any duty of loue towards one another but Ministers will preach diligently to inlighten their fellow members people will pray heartily that a doore of vtterance may be giuen vnto them neighbors wil not suffer one another to sin but plainly rebuke vice the forward in matters of religion will not suffer others to bee slacke but prouoke them to loue and good works the stayed will not suffer the vnruly to goe on in their inordinate courses but restore them in the spirit of meekenesse the rich will not suffer the poore to perish for want of food but relieue them they which haue plenty will supply the necessities of such as suffer through scarcity euen beyond that which they are able and all this readily and cheerefully because it is to the benefit of our common body of which wee are all members alike Neither is this all but in thus doing we do wonderfully please our deare Sauiour and shall haue it remembred at the last day to our vnspeakable comfort Math 2● Wherefore let our hard hearts breake within vs let them resolue into bowels of compassion towards the poore and let our security in regard of others become anxious carefulnesse for the keeping of them vpright in the way of righteousnesse 5. Duty To be comfortable in distresse Heb. 4.15 The fift duty is to bee comfortable in all our sufferings whether by persecutors or slanderours by sicknesses or l●sses by pouerty or wants because our head Christ is not without a Sympathy and feeling of these miseries and will not suffer vs to be tempted heereby beyond that we are able but will giue the issue together with the temptation Was it not a wonderfull stay to the mindes of the Disciples when Christ told them Math 10. Hee that receiueth you receiueth mee and hee that receiueth me receiueth him that sent me And on the contrary side to those that do contrariwise Did it not confirme Paul much becomming a Preacher of the Gospell to heare that they which persecuted the Christians did persecute Christ himselfe Doubtlesse it did Likewise then should it confirme and comfort vs in all our troubles and crosses If any man were so neere vnto the King and so great in his fauor as that whosoeuer dares to touch him it were as good for him to touch the King himselfe hee would bee secure in all wrongs and iniuries done vnto him But wee are so neere vnto the King of Heauen as that whosoeuer toucheth vs goeth about to pull the signet out of his right hand and toucheth the apple of his eye Esa 49.15.16 What ioy and comfort then should wee exexpresse euen in the time of our tribulations seeing that when wee suffer Rom. 5. the Lord is grieued who will not hold his peace for euer but as a mighty Gyant waked out of his sleeep will surely come forth and smite all his enemies with a great destruction and with Sampson shake off the cords and ropes of all miseries as threds burnt in the fire 6. Duty To lead an heauenly life The sixth duty is to leade an heauenly life whilst we liue vpon earth because there is a communion betwixt vs and the Saints in heauen And this is by hauing our hearts lifted vp to heauen by meditation by setting vp Iaacobs ladder to Heauen by prayer by hauing our mouthes seasontd with speeches of Heauen and of heauenly things by making vnto vs wings with the Angels for swiftnesse and readinesse in doing Gods will by being fiery through zeale with the Seraphims for Gods glory If wee looke well about vs all things consent together to worke in vs this heauenlines our Father is in Heauen our head and husband Christ in Heauen the Prophets and the Apostles with the rest of our fellow-seruants in Heauen our riches our ioy and our crowne in Heauen and our deare Country and pleasant dwelling places no where but in Heauen How is it then that wee so farre forget our selues as to bee sensuall and earthly and haue so little sauour of heauenlinesse in vs Why doe wee not hang downe our heads and bee ashamed that the Lord should see our hearts and tongues so basely taken vp so estranged from our deere Husband Father Brethren and Countrey where so excellent things are prouided for vs Quest 45. What meane you by the forgiuenesse of sinnes Answ That wonderfull grace of God in Iesus Christ whereby he accounts of sinne as if it had neuer beene committed Explan We shall not neede to be so large about this Article because it is easie to be vnderstood The meaning is nothing else but as is laid downe in the answere viz. that the Church of God and euery member thereof hath all their sinnes so done away that they shall neuer be laid vnto their charge no more then if they had neuer by them beene committed and all this through the meere grace and onely mercy of God in Iesus Christ Proofe For the proofes of holy Scripture here is plainely set downe First that the forgiuenesse of sins is a wonderfull fauour for He is blessed saith the Psalmist Psal ●2 1 to whom his sins are forgiuen and good cause is there why he should be counted blessed indeede who attaineth vnto this seeing that he is forgiuen ten thousand of talents of which he was not able to pay one penny and so stood euery houre in danger to be cast into prison to lie there in misery perpetually Ma● 18.24 Deut. ●7 Againe he is deliuered from the curse of God which attendeth vpon sinners for Cursed is he that continueth not in all things written in the booke of the Law to doe them and this curse is death according to that Rom. 6 The wages of sinne is death the death of the body which is terrible for death came in by sinne and all such punishments as doe hasten vnto and be fore-runners of this for Rom. 5. Lament 3 3● man suffereth for his sinnes and which is most terrible of all the death of the
pardon of our sinnes For the duties of this faith The first is to pray vnto God earnestly euery day aboue all things of this world for the pardon of our sinnes because this is so great and wonderfull a grace For if a man were greatly endebted and for his debts imprisoned or sold for a slaue euer so to continue in most hard bondage would hee desire either good cheare or apparell pleasures or fits of ease wealth or health in comparison of freedome from this miserable estate in like manner seeing wee bee so farre indebted by our sinnes and thus made miserable slaues of the diuell why doe wee craue so earnestly against worldly wants and for worldly good things and not rather against our sinnes and for this blessednes to be deliuered from them And the rather because if our sins be vnremitted we cannot looke to speed in any other desire for our sins do separate betwixt our God and vs. Esa 5● 2. Ios 7. All the time that sinfull Achan was in the Israelites campe they could not preuaile against Ay 1 Sam. 28. when Saul had sinned he could get none answere at Gods Oracle either by vision by Vrim or by Prophets so whilst wee are in our sinnes we may aske indeed but wee shall not haue we may make many prayers but not be heard for the prayers of the wicked are abomination to the Lord. Wherefore let this bee the first and chiefe thing which wee pray for in all our supplications and as we will vse all humility and importunity to speed of some speciall benefit and renew our ●uite from day to day that wee may speed so let vs neuer giue ouer praying vnto the Lord for the pardon of our sinnes being a benefit of benefits and the most necessary thing for vs in the world 2 Duty To loue the Lord. The second duty is to loue the Lord and our Sauiour Iesus Christ with all our hearts and with all our might because God is the Author of this great grace Christ Iesus hath merited the same for vs. A miserable bankrupt owing a thousand pound if hee should haue all forgiuen him if some rich man would vndertake the payment of his debts for him and set him vp that he might liue a freeman againe and exercise his trade in as good manner as euer hee did before were a most ingratefull wretch if hee should not loue so great a benefactor and that vnfainedly all his life but much more vngratefull should wee shew our selues when as the Lord hath raised vs from our bankrupt estate being indebted not a thousand pounds but ten thousands of talents yea millions without count and made vs blessed and happy if we shal not loue his Maiesty without all dissimulation and therefore study to please him all our dayes With what thankfulnesse doth S. Paul exult for his deliuerance from sinne by Iesus Christ when being but euen now at the point of despaire he presently lift●th vp himselfe through faith of the pardon of his sinnes hauing cryed out miserable man ●hat I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death hee presently answereth himselfe Thankes bee vnto God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Rom. 7 14.2● How desirous is he by publishing Gods mercy to the world to expresse his wonderfull thankfulnesse for this wonderfull grace when so openly hee confesseth When I was a Persecutor and a blasphemer and an oppressor God had mercy on mee ● Tim 1. ●3 And thus greatly affected should we be not in word but in deed in that wee study to set forth his glory as hee did and in all things not to please men but God they which doe otherwise loue not the Lord whatsoeuer they say but as the Gentiles who by their sinnes dishonoured him are said to haue beene so are these haters of God and hated of him Rom. 1. 3 Duty To cease from sinne The third duty is to breake off all our sinnes by righteousnes and not continue any longer therein because wee haue beene already enough endangered through sinne nay if wee liue in sinne we are still in the same danger seeing the workers of iniquity are shut out of doores whatsoeuer they plead for themselues If a man through surfet hath fallen into any dangerous disease which had like to haue cost him his life but be againe recouered he will take heed of falling into the same againe and likewise if hee had fallen into a deepe pit or into any other great euill so should we being restored from the surfet of sinne being lifted vp from the dangerous pit of wickednesse hauing escaped through Gods great mercy the greatest euill that could haue befallen vs wee should I say bee at defiance with this euill and aboue all watches watch against sinne And the rather because wee doe otherwise still remaine indangered through this deadly surfet wee still lie and are like to lie without all helpe in this horrible pit till wee exchange for the pit of hell The Lord hath not so much as promised or spoken any syllable tending to a promise of forgiuing sinnes but to such as forsake their sinnes He is often in these and the like comfortable speeches Ezech. 18. When a wicked man shall turne from his wickednesse and doe that which is lawfull and right hee shall saue his soule aliue He ●hat confesseth and forsaketh his sins shall haue mercy c. Prou. 28.23 but where is it to be found that men liuing in their sinnes shall saue mercy that such as goe on in their wickednesse shall haue their soules aliue not any where in Gods booke but the cleane contrary that they shall die in their sinnes that they shall haue iudgement without mercy according to that Thou which after thy hardnesse of heart that cannot repent doest heape vp to thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath Rom. 2 4. so that it must needs then be the diuels booke whence men learne that they shall bee forgiuen although they goe on in adding sinne vnto sinne and so neglect all holy admonitions of breaking off their euill course of life Quest 46. What is meant by the resurrection of the body Answ That although the body after death lye rotting in the graue yet at the last day it shall be raised againe by Gods great power and being ioyned to the soule shall stand before Gods iudgement seat to giue accompt of all that it hath done whether good or euill and bee rewarded accordingly Explan This last article as it consisteth of two members the one the resurrection of the body the other the life euerlasting so haue I propounded to speake seuerally of them because they are both weighty points and deepe misteries Touching the resurrection of the body it is nothing else but that first I do acknowledge that our bodies are all fraile and weake and how many yeares soeuer they continue yet fall to the ground they shall at the last euen as they were taken
are cast into the ground euery one draweth vnto it selfe that vertue and sappe which is necessary for the nourishment though it be alike common vnto them all so men in the resurrection shall receiue these parts and all that substance which doth seuerally belong to them although in the meane season they lye in common together in the bowels of the earth and thus farre out of that learned Father Gregory of Nyssen Epiph. lib. de trino vno Deo 14.24 de Resur Another also handling the same matter reckoneth vp many things as types of the resurrection the day succeeding the night the seede of the earth that springs vp after corruption the locust reuiuing againe the nayles of our hands when any goe off the haires of our head being cut and growing againe the Ring-doue reuiuing againe and a little beast called Myoxus the Phoenix an Arabian foule which burneth it selfe at fifty yeeres of age and after three dayes ariseth againe out of her owne ashes 1. Cor. 15.52 And that this generall resurrection shall bee in one moment it is the plaine doctrine of the Scripture In a moment in the twinkling of an eye at the last trumpet The Lord shall need no space of time to effect it but as at the time of the Assises all the prisoners are brought forth so at these generall assises of the whole world all shall come out of the prison of the graue And lastly for the end of the resurrection that the workes of all men shall be made manifest and all secret thoughts that they may be rewarded accordingly hath beene already handled and proued vnder the sixth branch of the seuenth article touching Christ his comming to iudgement and therefore the Reader is to be referred thither to see more and also for the time when these things shall be But for the further vnderstanding of the doctrine of the resurrection I haue thought it not amisse further to annex here two or three questions more Quest 47. What manner 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 againe spirituall not subiect to death any more as now they be nor sustained by naturall meanes of meates and drinkes warmth and sleepe or the like 1. Cor 15.35 Vers 36. Explan This question is euen thus moued and answered by the Apostle to the Corinthians But some man will say how are the dead raised with what body shall they come forth Hee answereth that euen as corne being cast into the ground springeth vp againe and the Lord giueth euery graine its owne body whether wheat or some other So in the resurrection of the dead euery man shall haue his owne body the onely difference is that it is sowen a naturall body Vers 43. Vers 44. but raised a spirituall body it is sowen in dishonour raised againe in honour sowen in weakenesse raised in power c. Now the variety of words here vsed of honour and power serueth specially to set forth the manner of the rising againe of the faithfull all others shall also haue spirituall bodies like vnto the damned spirits in hell that is euer continuing seeking death through the greatnesse of the misery but not being able to finde it That we shall haue the same bodies Iob also testifieth saying I shall see him not with other but with these eyes Iob 19.25 And good reason it is that as our bodies haue together with our soules beene instruments either of Gods glory or of sinne to his dishonour so together with the soules they should partake of glory or misery Quest 48. Amongst those that dye some be crooked through age some tender infants some blind and some lame shall their bodies then at the resurrection be the same Answ No for all these are weakenesses which shall be done away to the faithfull and strength perfection and comlinesse shall be to euery one of them Explan This also is good to be knowne because the holy Scriptures doe speake hereof to the comfort of Gods people where we are taught that the body shall bee ralsed in power and in honour there must then needs be instead of the weaknesse of decrepit old age and infants strength and might in stead of deformity beauty in stead of lamenesse agility instead of blindnesse the sight which could neuer here be attained vnto viz. Whereby wee shall see the most glorious God of all As for other questions about the knowledge of one another of the cessation of the difference of sexes c. For that they be not so necessary nor very profitable we will wade no further herein 2. Duty To liue as those that expect the resurrection For the duties of this faith The first is not to liue as they which are euer to continue in this world for wee must all die we must first fall and then shall wee afterwards rise againe the strongest and stoutest could neuer bee priuiledged from death no not one day or houre by any strength of nature Wherefore we are not to vse any vnlawfull meanes to get any of the goods of this world either by carking and caring by robbery and stealth by fraud and oppression for who can tell that he shall liue to enioy them yea who can tell that his very enemy shal not reape the fruit of his labors and then what shall it profit a man by his toyle to scrape together mountaines of gold If a man liued in a Countrey where he were in danger of publique Officers euery day to be drawne out of his house and to be spoiled of all his goods he would not I suppose take any great pleasure in gathering together and increasing his wealth much lesse would he seeke to pull from others seeing this were nothing else but to procure more enemies by making the booty greater for the spoilers but this is our estate in this world we liue in this earthly countrey subiect euery day to be pulled out of our houses by Death the common all-conquering Officer and to be spoyled of all our worldly goods Oh what madnesse is it then in vs to rob and to deuoure one another to be vnsatiable in our heaping vp of wealth and without end in our delight in worldly vanities for men could not more exceede in their affectation of worldly things if they should liue heere euer then the men of this generation who haue no sooner gotten any thing but they are ready againe by death to be depriued of it all 2. Duty The second duty is not to liue as they that deny the resurrection whose hope onely is in this world viz. like bruit beasts eating and drinking as saith the Apostle 1. Cor. 15.32 because that to morrow they should die and then they should be cut off from all pleasure for we hope for a resurrection in which they that haue done good shall arise vnto life Ioh. 5.29 they that haue
him Math. 10.28 who is able to destroy both body and soule in hell 3. For trust and confidence 3. Duty To trust in God Psal 20 8. Psal 125. they which trust in other things either men or horses strength or wit shall bee confounded onely hee that putteth his trust in the Lord shall stand stedfastly he shall be as Mount Zion that can neuer be moued Wherefore all other trust is straightly forbidden and this alone euery where commanded as being a most mighty and strong arme and tower 4. For seeking to the Lord by prayer 4. Duty To seeke vnto him by Praier Psal 50 14. which is also an action of the heart the lifting vp of the soule we are hoth directed vnto him saying Call vpon me in the time of trouble and J will heare and deliuer you and vnto him onely where it is said Thou shalt worwip the Lord thy God Deut. 6.13 and him onely shalt thou serue And by the examples of holy men mentioned in the Scripture of which not one is to be found negligent in this duty not one that did the Lord this dishonour to make the lifting vp of his heart common to any other Saint or Angell And truely there is great reason that wee should thus set vp the Lord in our affections For who is to be found so worthy of loue as he Iam. 1.17 seeing that he is our maker and euery good gift and euery perfect guift commeth downe from him the Father of lights and if excesse of loue require the like in those who are thus affected then the very loue of God towards vs if there were none other motiue may constraine vs to this excesse of loue towards his Maiesty Rom. 5. Psal 10.3 For he loued vs yet being enemies he loueth vs with that loue with which Parents doe loue their deare children Esa yea with greater then tender-hearted mothers for though they should forget their children the fruit of their owne wombes yet God will not forget his people Who so mighty as the Lord God Esa 40. Againe who is so terrible as the Lord and so worthy to be stood in awe of Princes are but grasse-hoppers and all the world but as the drop of a bucket in comparison of him When he commeth downe the earth trembleth and quaketh the brightest body of the Heauens for feare couer themselues with blacknesse His voyce is thunder casting downe the strongest things and making the very Hindes to calue for feare Psal 29. his breath a smoke and consuming fire his chariot the strong tempestuous windes for he rideth vpon the wings of the winde his rod an iron Scepter beating in pieces whole Nations as a potters vessell his eyes as flames of fire casting forth lightnings his hands such as that hee can span the earth and hold all the waters of the Seas within his fist the Heauens are his Throne and the earth his foot-stoole his armies are Angels twenty thousand thousands let him but begin to speake Exod. 20. Exod. 33. and all men will run away let him but shew himselfe and no flesh can liue yea let but one of his Angels come and we shall tremblingly fall downe like dead men Who then is to be feared like vnto him with him wee may take courage and say Rom 8.33 who can be against vs but hauing him against vs it will no whit auaile though all the world be on our side None to bee trusted in but God Prou. 23.5 1. Tim. 6.17 Moreouer what is there to be trusted in besides the Lord not riches for they haue wings like an Eagle and will flye away great substance is the vncertainty of riches not friends amongst men for they ebbe and flow as we be in prosperity or aduersity their breath is but in their nostrils as a light they are soone put out nor amongst the Saints departed for they know not of vs and of our cases not cunning wit Esa 64.13 for Ahithophels wit is soone turned into foolishnes not our owne strength courage and preparation for an horse is but a vaine thing to saue a man our strength is but as grasse that is soone cut downe and withereth The Lord only then is a sure Towre of defence a Fortresse and strong Castle to such as flye vnto him Of this had Iehoshaphat experience when his enemies comming vpon him he said 2 Chron. 20. Wee know not what to doe but our eyes waite vpon thee O Lord and so he put them to flight without striking one stroke And the like experience had Ananias and his brethren who did rather then fall downe before Nebuchadnezzars golden Image offer themselues to the fiery fornace being seauen times hotter then at other times because they knew that God was able to deliuer them and so escaped vntouched of the fire What should I further speake of Iaacob Ioseph Daniel the Prophets and Apostles Was there euer any that trusted in the Lord in vaine No verily examine all histories and you shall finde none But contrariwise Martyrs reioycing against their exposing vnto wilde beasts vpon tormenting racks and in the middest of fiery flames and oftentimes saued out of strong Prisons and the very iawes of death innocent soules wonderfully iustified and their aduersaries shamed men distressed and almost famished miraculously prouided for and whole Nations vniustly attempted by the proud enemy with helpe from Heauen deliuered and their enemies confounded and all this when they haue put their trust in the Lord. Gen. 17.1 Lastly can it enter into any reasonable soule to think that he had need to pray to any other sauing to the Lord only seeing he alone can thus powerfully saue needeth no helper Indeed when we seeke succour from humane wit counsell strēgth friends or allies it is good to make our side as strong as we can by seeking vnto many but grosse impiety because wee should thus ioyne vnto him fellowes and partners and thurst subiects as it were into the chaire of their Prince when he alone requireth all our heart we should giue room to others a thousand times inferiour to him when he commandeth that we should serue him only worship him we should sacrilegiously communicate our seruice vnto creatures also Neither doth it helpe which is alledged that we do not ioyn the creature with the Creator but only vse him in his place being neare deare vnto the Lord that through his mediation we may the rather be accepted for God is not lyke earthly Princes vnto whom a poore subiect vsually cannot haue accesse without the help of some neere about him or if he be he is like vnto the best onely such as the Emperour Rodulph was anno 1273. who was wont to say to those about him Giue leaue I pray you and roome Cant. 13. to my subiects to come vnto me for I was not therefore made Emperour that I should be shut vp from men as it were
is the King my father 2. For a Superiour in knowledge and in wise counsell thus the counsellours of State are Fathers of the State as Ioseph Pharaohs chiefe Councellour speaketh of himselfe God hath made me a father vnto Pharaoh Gen. 45 8. and Pharaoh caused the name Abrech that is Father to bee proclaimed before him and the Senatours of Rome were commonly called Patres conscripti reuerend Fathers 3. For a Superiour in priuate and houshold gouernment thus masters of families are called Patres Familias Fathers of the Familie as Naaman the Syrian is called Father by his seruants 4. For a Superiour 2 King 5.13 in the inuention of any Art or Science Gen. 4. thus Iubal is said to be the father of all that play on the Organs and harpe and Iabal the father of all that make tents 5. For a Superiour in things spirituall towards God thus the Ministers of the Gospell are called Fathers in Christ because that through that spirituall knowledge and grace exceeding others they beget men vnto God 1 Cor. 4.5 as Paul who therefore cals the Galatians his little children and professeth to the Corinthians that hee onely was their father for J begat you saith hee vnto Christ 6. For a Superiour in holinesse and power with God thus the King of Israel calleth Elisha Father saying of the Hoast of the Syrians 2 Kings 6.21 Shall I smite them my Father 7. 2. Kings 2.12 For a Superiour in ouersight and instruction thus Elishab called Elijah who brought him vp in the knowldge of prophesying My father my father the chariots of Israel and the horse-men thereof 8. For a Superiour in estate and condition thus rich men vsing their riches aright are fathers of the poore Iob 31.28 From my youth hee hath growne vp with mee as with a father saith Iob. 9. For a Superior in age and yeares thus the gray-headed is called a father and the ancient are as fathers to be exhorted and not to bee rebuked 10 According to the common acception amongst children 1 Tim. 5.1 there is a naturall father and mother which beget beare and bring vs foorth and vp in the world and if one of them dieth or he or shee that suruiueth bee married againe and hee or shee vnto whom is now made also thy father or mother though not by nature yet by law and there is an honour due vnto them Superiours diuers wayes To honour is to giue that reuerend respect which is due to euery superiour whether in authority and power in place and calling or in worth and dignitie 1. In authoritie and power some are superiors by the law of nature some by the law of nations and some by the law of contract By the law of nature our naturall father and mother who are instruments of our very being by whose tender care wee are preserued in our infancy when we cannot help our selues they are therfore to be recompenced by our giuing of due honor vnto them Ephes 6.1 Col 3.20 And this is first obedience in all things in the Lord Children obey your parents in the Lord. Children obey your parents in all things for that is well pleasing vnto the Lord and he is an vnnaturall beast and no childe that giueth not this obedience vnto both father and mother 2. To beare their corrections with submission of this the Apostle speaketh as of a most common thing euen in children that haue nothing but nature to guide them Heb. 12.9 Wee haue had the fathers of our bodies correcting vs and wee gaue them reuerence 3. To reuerence them in giuing them all outward respect which is due to chiefe superiors and fearing to offend them for from hence the Lord taketh his comparison Mal. 1.6 A sonne honoreth his father and a seruant his master if I then be a Father where is mine honour if I be a master where is my feare 4. To cherish them and to giue them maintenance in time of need When the Pharisees did by their traditions vnder a pretence of holines dispence with this duty they were reproued by our Sauiour Christ for hypocrisie saying Why doe yee transgresse the commandement of God by your tradition Matth. 15.3.4.5.6 for God hath commanded Honour thy father and thy mother But yee say Whosoeuer shall say to father and mother by the gift that is offered by me thou mayest haue profit though hee honour not his father and mother shall be free That is if he dedicate his goods and suffer them to want whereas hee might therewith haue relieued them If a Widdow hath children or nephewes saith Saint Paul let them learne first to shew godlinesse towards their owne house 1. Tim. 5.4 and to recompence their kindred for that is an honest thing and acceptable before God Which he further expoundeth afterwards saying Jf any faithfull man or woman haue widdowes that is Verse 16. to their mothers or aunts let them minister vnto them and let not the Church that is other Christians bee charged And God hath made the Storke a wonderfull example to condemne children that are this way vnnaturall to their parents in their age for she nourisheth and bringeth food to her parents in their old age wherefore she hath the name Chesidah Pious or Mercifull in Hebrew And in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth this kind of mutuall retribution being deriued from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth a Storke In these things consisteth the honour due to father and mother and for examples wee may take Iacob who obeyed his father and mother in the choyce of his wife and Shem and Japhet who reuerenced their father Noah and went backward and couered his nakednesse and Ioseph who recompenced his father Iaacobs care with prouiding for him in his old age and all holy men who haue readily performed these duties They are wicked children therefore and accursed as breaking this Commandement in the head that do continually greeue their godly parents by their disobedience and light esteeme of them liuing out of all good order being Drunkards and Swaggerers and plunging into the estate of marriage without yea contrary to their liking The Lord prouided of old that such should be put to death If any man hath a disobedient son Deut. 21.18.19.20 which will not hearken to the voyce of his father nor the voyce of his mother and they haue chastened him and he will not obey them Then shall they take him and bring him out And all the men of the City shall stone him with stones vnto death Honour due to Magistrates Rom. 13.1 The Superiours in authority by the Law of Nations are Magistrates and Gouernours of the Common-wealth The honour due to them is 1. To be subiect vnto them according to that precept Let euery soule bee subiect to the higher powers And againe 1. Pet. 2.13.14 Submit your selues to all manner ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether
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
of sinnes and eternall life is sealed vnto them as well as vnto their Parents euen as an Estate or Conueyance in law is made sure vnto a child together with the father by some ceremony vsed vnto it when it vnderstandeth not what is done Ez●k 18.18.10 Againe it is further added which they themselues when they come of age are bound to performe Because that howsoeuer in their infancy before they doe good or euill their parents estate is reckoned theirs as hath been said yet in their elder age they are taken as distinct persons subsisting by themselues and standing or falling to themselues if therefore in this due time they doe not actually beleeue and repent their Baptisme is made frustrate and vaine vnto them For then commeth the time of which the Prophet speaketh If a righteous man beget a sonne that is a thiefe or a shedder of blood c. he shall die the death Verse 20. The righteousnesse of the righteous shall bee vpon him and the wickednesse of the wicked shall bee vpon himselfe Wherefore it standeth euery man in hand now to looke to himselfe seeing that how holy Parents so euer hee hath and how soeuer religious his beginning hath been yet if these things bee wanting hee is altogether in his sinnes and vncleane If hee dyeth before wee are to account him holy and vndoubtedly in Gods fauour To whom belongeth the office of Baptizing To the Ministers onely and to none other that is not ordained to that sacred office by the successours of the Apostles and is thereby himselfe made a successour of the Apostles and partaker in that generall Commission which shall neuer bee cancelled till the end of the world Goe and teach all Nations baptizing them c. Are Lay-men are women the teachers of Nations Wee read that our Sauiour himselfe baptized not but his Disciples did which is to bee taken exclusiuely that none baptized but they namely his Apostles and other of the seuenty Disciples who were called to the Ministeriall function If it bee said that priuate persons circumcised of old yea euen Zipporah a woman circumsised her sonne and the Master of euery family killed the Passeouer in his priuat house and distributed it vnto his family whence it may seeme to be lawfull euen for priuate persons now adayes to administer the Sacraments I answere that when Circumcision and the Passeouer were first ordained there were no Priests specially appoynted but the eldest man of euery family was a Priest vnto God and did both sacrifice and performe all other Priestly duties but after that the Tribe of Leui was taken these things were done by them and not by any of other Tribes Now vnder the Gospell Christ hath ordained some from the beginning to preach and administer the Sacraments and therefore it is a confusion and disorder for others to doe those Whence it appeareth that our Communion Booke doth very iudiciously explaine that in time of necessity or danger priuate Baptisme is to bee performed by a lawfull Minister least Midwiues or others should intrude into this function Quest Why was the Sacrament of the Lords Supper ordained Answ For a continuall remembrance of the sacrifice of the death of Christ and of the benefits which we receiue thereby Explan After Baptisme the Sacrament of Initiation followeth the Lords Supper the Sacrament of Consolidation for as the one bringeth the soule into the societie of the faithfull so doth the other feed it and comfort it with heauenly comforts Math. 26. Now considering that both the Sacraments are Seales it is worthily propounded for a question why this particular Sacrament of the Lords Supper was ordeined and it is answered for a continuall remembrance For this is intimated by the Lord to be the proper end of this Institution when he saith Doe this in remembrance of me 1. Cor. 11.26 For as often as yee eate this Bread and drinke this Cup saith the Apostle yee shew the Lords death till hee commeth And this remembrance is so effectuall as that before whomsoeuer it is made it is as if Christ were visibly crucified in their sight Gal. 3 1. for to this purpose saith Saint Paul to the Galathians to whom Christ Iesus was plainely described before your eyes and amongst you crucified In Baptisme there is also a remembrance of Christes death in that as the water floweth so did his blood in streames runne out but this is not the particular end of Baptisme to represent Christ crucified but as he is vertually in vs clensing our soules and making vs to dye and to be buried vnto sinne besides Baptisme doth not so fully set before our eyes Christs grieuous passions as doth the Lords Supper wherein are to be remembred all things about his sufferings The Bread and Wine are first prepared the one by threshing grinding and baking in the fiery ouen the other by cutting downe casting them into the Wine-presse and treading with the feet of men Againe when there is thus made a loafe of bread it is diuided and broken that it may become food and when wine is thus made it is powred out to be drunke and which is a principall Analogie the corne and grape out of which they are made are the meere fruits of Gods blessing and not of mans labour and lastly this threshing and grinding and treading of these creatures are by man for whose sustenance they serue and when they are made ready can affoord no comfort to such as haue them but by Gods effectuall blessing according to that Deut. 8.3 Man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God So wee are to remember heere that Christ is the Sonne of Gods loue towards vs sent from Heauen according to Gods eternall purpose for our comfort and saluation not through any labour or seeking of ours 2. Cor. 3.5 seeing wee were all enemies euer since the trangression and dead in sinne so as that wee could not so much as thinke a good thought 2. Wee must remember that Christ was threshed with many strokes of affliction ground in the milne of sorrowes and baken in the hoat ouen of Gods wrath when through the feruency heereof his sweat ran downe from him like drops of blood Luke 22.44 that he was cut downe and trodden in the wine-presse of Gods wrath due to vs for sinne 3. That his bodie was broken and his blood shed out of his hands feet and sides that he might be vnto vs bread indeed and drinke indeed 4. That all these sufferings came vnto him from man for whose comfort hee was sent from heauen sinne being the cause and sharpening the Speare and Nayles against him and mens handes being instruments thus to torture and torment him Lastly wee must remember that as Gods mercy sent him so his blessing must cause that we may liue by him otherwise wee are still subiect to perish in our sinnes that we may alwayes lift vp our
so they be few and cheape and not like the ceremonies of the Law which were a costly and burthensome yoake that the forefathers were not able to beare for such was it fit that in fulnes of time should be appointed vnto sonnes Gal. 3. and heires and not to be kept any longer vnder the rudiments of the Law as vnder tutors and gouernours Quest 3 Is there no care to be had of other circumstances for conformity vnto the first institution so that we vse bread and wine in the right forme with thanksgiuing as for the leauen the water which it is likely was mixed with the wine for the gesture sitting c It is not required that we obserue all circumstances no more than that the Iewes in keeping the passeouer should continually stand with staues in their hands and shooes on their feete according to the first institution for Christ himselfe did otherwise keepe the Passeouer Now all men I suppose doe yeeld herein for most circumstances of the place in an vpper chamber of the persons a few disciples men only in the time of the night after supper but it is questioned about the leauen water sitting though little reason to make question about these 1 Cor. 11.17 First if we confider that they are no where precisely expressed though they may be gathered from the place where the institution is described nay which is more where the Apostle repeateth the institutiō though he remembreth the time the night wherein he was betrayed the persons his Disciples yet he speaketh not of leauened bread or water mixed with wine nor yet of sitting Secondly if it bee considered that as the standing at the Passeouer the night c. were taken vp occasionally not purposely as Sacramentall so was the leauened bread this kinde of bread being at hand and sitting or rather leaning downe along which is implyed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luc. 22.14 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 26.20 that gesture being the position of the body at that time Thirdly if it bee considered that as the night season the persons and place are without any intended signification so is the leauened bread and sitting If it bee said sitting doth set forth our Communion with Christ I answere take heede of inuenting this or the like significations which are beyond the word least thou bee such an one as addeth vnto the word of God and least herein thou rashly censure all those Churches wherein standing walking or kneeling is vsed Indeed some circumstances there be which are not only expressed but commaunded also as Sacramentall and these are alwayes necessary in the Lords Supper First the giuing of thankes whence it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Eucharist or Thankesgiuing for when he had giuen thankes it is said that he brake the bread Acts 2.23 Secondly the taking of the bread and of the cup whereby may be signified how the Lord tooke his deare Sonne and set him apart to be crucified and slaine for the sinnes of the world euen from the beginning of the world for hee was not by the Iewes taken and slaine as being by them ouer-powred but hee was deliuered by the determinate counsell and fore-knowledge of God hee was the Lambe of God slaine from the beginning of the world Thirdly the breaking of the bread whereby is set foorth the Lords submitting of himselfe to the death of the Crosse where he was pierced hands feet and side so that the bloud ranne out abundantly from him Fourthly the distributing of the Bread and of the Wine to his Disciples whereby is set foorth how Christ is giuen by the Father vnto all faithfull Christians to nourish their soules vnto eternall life according to that of the Apostle Hauing giuen vnto vs Christ Iesus how shall hee not together with him giue vs all things also Math. 26.26 Verse 27. Fifthly the forme of wordes in deliuering the bread and wine Take eate this is my bodie doe this in remembrance of mee Drinke ye all of this This is my blood of the new Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sinnes Which words are not the same precisely recorded by euery Euangelist but yet so as that the record of any one doth set foorth the signification the vse and the end of this Sacrament So that if a forme of words bee vsed according to these it is rightly done and according to rule as in our Church Eate this in remembrance that Christ died for you c. the precise wordes as they are recorded by Saint Paul being placed immediatly before Now that these things besides that they are expressed are commaunded is to be noted from the command giuen to the Disciples Doe this in remembrance that is not as some interpret it make this my body but doe in all these things as yee haue seene me doe giue thankes take breake distribute and say according to this forme As for other things yea euen for gesture they may be as shall seeme best vnto the particular Churches of God which haue power to appoint any most lowly reuerent gesture such as kneeling seeing that euen in praising God wee are inuited by the Kingly Prophet O come let vs worship and fall down and kneele before the Lord our maker and the people of Israel in Egypt hearing the good newes of Gods appearing to Moses to deliuer them bowed themselues and worshipped so that as well in receiuing a benefit as in asking this lowly casting downe of the body doth well become vs. The chiefe obiection heere against for all else are friuolous is that kneeling was brought in for adoration of the bread transubstantiated for answere vnto which first I say that it is indeed to bee graunted that they kneeled vnto the supposed body of Christ but it is to be prooued that hence it began first otherwise it is as good an argument they kneeled in praying with their heads therefore we ought not to kneele in our prayers they came to the Masse at Easter therefore wee ought not to come then to the Communion but at some other time c. What superstitious Idolaters haue done in the seruice of their idols marreth not what we do like them the fault not being in the thing or gesture vsed but in the end their kneeling being to an Idol ours to the God of heauen giuing his Sonne to our hearts by faith Quest 132. What is the inward part or thing signified Answ The body and blood of Christ which are verily and indeed aken and receiued of the faithfull in the Lords Supper Explan The inward part of the Lordes Supper is the bodie and bloud of Christ which are present to all the faithfull In handling whereof three questions 1 Cor. 10.16 First how is the Lords body and bloud there for that hee is receiued by the faithfull is plaine both because he saith This is my body and my body is meate indeed and my blood drinke indeed
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