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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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in the very Proeme of his prayer doth admonish us of mutual love 1. Because there is no true praying without the true love of our Neighbor neither can we be perswaded that God heareth us 2. Because without the love of our Neighbor there is no true faith and without faith there is no true prayer Christ willeth us to say Our Father not My Father for these Reasons 1. Thereby to raise in us a confidence and full perswasion that we shall be heard for because the whole Church doth with one consent pray unto him he doth not reject her for his Promise sake 2. To teach us that we hold each member of the Church as our brother Gen. 13.8 3. That in prayer we must consider Christ and his Church as one body and make him our Father who is the Father of Christ our elder brother his by generation ours by regeneration his by Nature ours by Grace 4. That we must pray as well in charity for others as for our selves James 5.16 Now they whom we are to pray for may be distinguished into this rank or order 1. All such as are effectually called by the preaching of the word 2. For all such as God in his eternal secret Counsel hath appointed unto life but are not yet called from their wandrings to be of one sheepfold under one Shepherd Joh. 17.20 3. For particular persons of whom we have received benefit under whose Government we live or which be more dear or near unto us in the flesh 2 Cor. 9.12 4. For such as whose necessity is more specially made known unto us as of danger or distress Jam. 5.14 5. For men generally of all estates and conditions 1 Tim. 2.3 as Jews Turks Heathen and seduced Papists 6. For our Enemies and those that hate us Matth. 5.41 God the Father is the Father 1. Of Christ 1. By Nature begetting him as he is the Son of his own Substance before all worlds by communicating unto him his whole Essence or Godhead 2. By the Grace of personal Union as Christ is Man for the Manhood of Christ doth wholly subsist in the Godhead of the second Person and therefore Christ as he is Man not his Manhood which is a Nature not a Person may well be called the Son of God 2. Of us not by Nature or in regard of personal Union but by the Grace of Adoption in Christ Gal. 4.4 5. And this Grace we receive when we truly believe in his Name Joh. 3.12 Gal. 3.26 The Name of Father in this place is taken Essentially for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the Name of Father is not here put with another person of the Godhead but with the Creature of whom he is invocated 2. The invocating of one person doth not exclude the others when mention is made of their eternal and outward works 3. We cannot consider God the Father but in the Son the Mediator 4. Christ hath taught us to invocate him also and he giveth the Holy Ghost For we have received not the spirit of bondage to fear again but the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father And the same Spirit beareth witness with our spirits that we are the children of God Rom. 8.15 16. Again God is called Our Father 1. In respect of our Creation Luke 3.38 2. In respect of our Redemption and receiving into favor by his Son our Mediator for whose sake we are adopted 3. In respect of our Sanctification or Regeneration by the Holy Ghost in Christ The Instructions arising from this Title Father here given to God 1. We must hence learn whom to direct our prayers unto not to Saints Angels or any other creature but to God alone for these Reasons 1. Because this is a perfect patern of true prayer wanting no direction for the right performance of this part of God worship 2. Because God onely is the Author and giver of all good things Jam. 1.16 therefore we must ask them of him alone 3. Because the Lord onely who is Infinite and Omnipotent can hear all mens prayers at all times and in all places 2. We may hereby see in what order we must direct our prayers unto God the Father in the Mediation of the Son by the Assistance of the Holy Ghost neither severing the persons from the Godhead nor the Godhead from the Persons whereof the Father is first the Son is the second the Holy Ghost the third in order though not in time or greatness Thus must we worship him even one God in three Persons and three Persons in one God 3. In this Title Father we see the true ground of that boldness wherewith Gods children come before God in prayer namely that interest in the Covenant of Grace in Christ in whom God is become their Father 4. We are hereby taught how to dispose our selves towards God when we come before him in prayer namely as children and this stands especially in four things 1. In due reverence both of heart and gesture 2. In true humility from our hearts renouncing our own merit and our own wills and relying wholly on Christs Righteousness and on the will of God in him 3. In true contrition and sorrow of heart for our own sins whereby we have offended God who hath been so gracious and merciful a Father unto us in Christ 4. In a sound purpose of heart to break off the course of all sin and to walk before God in new obedience to all his Commandments The Instructions arising from the words Our Father 1. We must apply to our selves all the Promises of God in Christ touching Righteousness and life everlasting for he that makes them is our Father therefore they belong to us that be his children 2. This teacheth us when we pray to be mindeful of Gods whole Militant Church and People 3. Hence we learn how we must come affected towards our Brethren when we pray to God namely lovingly and peaceably as to children of the same Father 4. Here we see that all true Believers whether high or low poor or rich are in equal condition in regard of God for here Christ teacheth every one to say Our Father Hence it followeth That wicked men living in sin cannot pray all their supposed praying is but a vain beating of the Air with a sound of words neither shall they speed otherwise then Esau did though they cry aloud with strong and bitter cryes yet pray they ought it being a common duty required of all men but pray they cannot yea they sin if they pray such a maze or labyrinth doth sin bring them into but true Believers with confidence approach the Throne of Grace and in an holy boldness say Our Father Father a word of Faith doth seem to be And Our no less importing Charity The one proclaims If thou wilt live Do this The other says Believe and thou hast bliss The Law and Gospel both comprised be In this most happy short Epitomy Bless'd Savior in two words thou hast taught us
History or to maintain discourse not to be edified in faith or to have their sins mortified 5. Such who in searching out the true sense of Scripture trust to their own skill wit and understanding and neglect the preaching or Ministery of the Word 6. Such who do all they can to be expert in Gods Word but with a trayterous minde to fight against the truth thereof as Hereticks and such like Three points to be observed in interpreting of the Scripture 1. That the phrase be considered and the proper sense of the words found out 2. That the order and coherence of the members or parts of the Doctrine which is contained in the Text of Scripture be declared 3. That the Doctrine be applyed to the use of the Church which it hath in confirming true opinions or refuting errors in knowing of God our selves in exhorting in comforting in directing our life The way how to decide doubtful places of Scripture 1. To respect the Analogy of Faith that is to receive no Exposition which is against the ground of Doctrine that is against any Article of Faith or Commandment of the Decalogue or against any plain Testimony of Scripture 2. To examine the Antecedent and Consequent matter of that place which is in question 3. To resort to such places of Scripture as teach the same more clearly 4. To confer like places together where though the same words be not spoken of the same thing yet the like words and form of speaking are used of the like things 5. When the Controversie is thus judged we may lawfully also descend to the consent of the Church 6. An ardent and daily invocating of God that we may be guided and taught by his holy Spirit The two proper effects of the Scriptures are 1. To teach Doctrine 2 Tim. 3.16 By 1. Laying out of Truth 2. Confuting of Errors 2. To exhort out of it 1 Tim. 6.2 By 1. Stirring up to God 2. Turning back from evil The chief Graces which are obtained by the Scriptures 1. Vocation we are called by the Spirit inwardly and by the Word outwardly 2 Thess 2.14 2. Justification which is an action of God imputing the righteousness of Christ to us which is apprehended by Faith which cometh by hearing the word Rom. 10. 3. Sanctification for we are sanctified by the word of God Joh. 15.3 4. Knowledge which is by the word 1 Joh. 4.6 5. Faith which comes by hearing the word preached Rom. 10.17 6. Repentance Peter preached the word and converted three thousand Acts 2.38 41. 7. Hope for by patience and comfort of the Scriptures we have hope Rom. 15.4 8. Love for it cometh of God by his Word and Spirit 1 Joh. 4.7 The consideration of the Scriptures Author being God presents us with a fourfold use 1. That they want not nor stand in need of the confirmation and approbation of the Church or of men 2. That God himself who is the inspirer of them is the best interpreter of them and the sole and soveraign Judge thereof 2 Pet. 1.20 1 Cor. 2.10 11. 3. That the Minister must preach unto the people not the invention of his own brain not the conceits of his own wit not the excellency of words not the inticing speech of mans wisdom but in the plain evidence of the Spirit and of power 1 Cor. 11.23 1 Pet. 4.11 4. That it belongeth as a special duty to the people of God to receive reade study reverence obey and keep the Doctrines delivered in them forasmuch as they proceed from such an Author Heb. 2.2 3. All our words actions must be directed by this precious Word of God in the holy Scriptures which is also of a fourfold use much resembling the former 1. To teach us the perfection and All-sufficiency of the word of God not needing the rags of Popish Traditions to be patched unto it 2. To direct and inform the Ministers what to teach the people the people what to believe wherein to rest whereupon to build their Faith and to settle their Conscience 3. To reprove those that desperately rush on in the course of their life not caring what they do never consulting with God or resolving as from God or his Will 4. To admonish us to be careful how we reade the Scriptures to take profit by reading them that so we may have direction in all our ways and learn how to please God and to abstain from all things that do displease him The manifold use of the Scriptures appears by the admirable benefit of well using it there being no Error in judgement but may be refuted no Corruption in life but may be redressed not any true sound Doctrine but may be proved and maintained not any Vertue or Duty but may be warranted and the practical performance thereof directed hereby 2 Tim. 3.16 yea it is a light to the blinde a guide to the wanderer a comfort to the distressed a counsellor to the doubtful Ps 119. and a teacher to the unlearned Prov. 1.4 Lastly our Savior Christ the Prophets and Apostles all by the Spirit of God have here revealed unto us more then all the wise men of the world did ever know whence we have just reason to magnifie the Books of Scripture far above all humane writings the choycest whereof compared with this holy Writ are but waste Paper for these sacred Books fully set out unto us the nature and estate of true felicity when the profoundest Tract of humane works could never yet reach to the shadow thereof Let us therefore in reading hearing expounding conversing practising in every action that concerns this sacred Word always account of it as the Word of the Ever-living God and with the joynt powers and faculties both of soul and body maintain it against all devilish Atheists that in word or life deny it seducing Hereticks that corrupt it and all enemies that oppose it or rebelliously rise against the Scepter of it Lo here the sacred Oracle of God The just man's Anchor and the sinners Rod The lame man's Crutch the blinde man's Eye the Tree Of Life or Type of Immortality A Well of living Waters Drink of this And thou shalt thirst no more but after Bliss The depth whereof the Natural man ne're saw Pray then thou mayst have wherewithal to draw Heav'ns Library Gods Spirit th' Author Take heed Tempted Man with what Spirit thou dost read §. 3. The Law and Gospel THe Law of God is a Doctrine delivered of God at the Creation written in Adams heart published by the Ministery either of Angels or of men and afterward repeated and renewed of him by Moses and the Prophets teaching what we ought to do and what not to do binding reasonable Creatures always promising to perfect performers of obedience eternal life condemning eternally them who perform not this obedience except Remission be granted for the Mediators sake Before the Fall this Law was possible to all men as to Angels and if now it be
Faith unto the Sacrifice of Christ finished on the Cross as to the onely ground of our Salvation the Holy Ghost teaching us as much by the one and assuring us it by the other For as by Baptism God doth witness that we be received of him into Covenant through the communion of Christ and his gifts So by the Supper he assureth us that we be held and kept in until we be received into the heavenly life yet hath not God tyed his Grace to the Sacraments so that the want of Baptism doth not condemn but the contempt of it And this Covenant between God and man is a mutual Promise and Agreement made by our Mediator confirmed by solemn Tokens which are these Sacraments whereby God bindeth himself to remit their sins unto them that believe and to give unto them everlasting life for and by his Son our Mediator and men binde themselves to receive this so great a benefit with true Faith and to yield true obedience unto God The matter signed and signified in both Sacraments is Jesus Christ the Covenant of God and the Righteousness of Faith according to the Promise of the Gospel the Signs being as was said appointed of God to be as his Seals to confirm and assure us That he will give us according to his Promise the things which are signified and assured unto us by them The Rites and Ceremonies which are not commanded or are not instituted to this end as to be Signs and Tokens of the Promise of Grace are not Signs and Tokens of the Church for a Sign can confirm nothing but by his Consent and Promise from whom the thing promised and signified is expected and looked for no Creature therefore can institute any Signs or Pledges of Gods will And if in a Sacrament any other then the right outward Sign be used or though the right outward Sign be used yet if it be changed into the inward grace it ceaseth to be a Sacrament The right use therefore of the Sacraments is then when as the faithful keep those Rites which God hath commanded to those ends for which the Sacraments were instituted by God The institution consisteth in the Rites Persons and Ends the violating whereof breedeth an abuse Sacraments are as it were visible words in the institution whereof three things are to be observed 1. The Signs and Sacramental Rites 2. The Spiritual and invisible things signified by the Signs 3. The Analogy or Agreement of the Signs with the thing signified Three conditions required in true Sacraments 1. That they be ordained of God 2. That there be a Commandment of God for us to use them 3. That there be also a Promise by the which it is assured that we shall be partakers of the things that are represented by them Or thus God alone hath Authority to institute and ordain a Sacrament which institution containeth two things 1. The appointing and commanding of the Rites and Ceremonies 2. The Promise of Grace annexed to this Rite whereby God promiseth that he will give the thing signified unto such as lawfully and rightly use the Sign that is with Faith and Repentance Again the conditions required in a Sacrament of the New Testament properly so called are these 1. It must have for the original cause Christ instituting 2. For the matter and form a visible Sign or Element and an audible form of words 3. For the end and benefit of it it is a Seal of saving Graces 4. For the extent of it it must be common and necessary to all Christians of what degree soever at one time or another In Sacraments the Signs differ from the things signified 1. In substance for the Signs are Corporeal Visible Earthly the things signified are Heavenly Invisible Spiritual 2. In the maner of receiving the Signs are received by parts of the Body and therefore also of unbelievers the things signified are received by Faith onely and the Spirit and therefore of the faithful onely 3. In the end or use the things signified are given for the possessing of life eternal they are indeed some part of the beginning thereof The Signs are received for the Sealing and Confirming of our faith concerning the things themselves 4. The things signified are necessary and necessarily received of all the Members of the true Church The Signs are received onely of them who are able to receive them To the difference of Sacraments from other sacred things appertain these two properties 1. That they are ordained and instituted of God 2. That they are instituted to this end that God may by them seal and assure unto us his Promise The Sacraments do differ from the Word in these particulars viz. 1. In substance nature as thus 1. Words signifie according to the appointment of men whom it pleased that things should be so expressed and signified Signs signifie according to a similitude which they have with the things signified 2. Words we hear and reade Signs we perceive by feeling seeing and tasting 3. Words signifie onely Symboles and Signs confirm also 2. In the Persons for the word of the Promise and Commandment is proposed without any difference to all To the unregenerate that they may either begin to believe and be regenerate or may be left without excuse to the regenerate that they may the more believe and be confirmed The Sacraments are given onely to the members of the Church The Word is preached to all at once the Sacraments are given to every member severally 3. In their Use for the word is the instrument of the Holy Ghost whereby he beginneth and confirmeth our Faith therefore the Sacraments must follow the word The Sacraments are the instruments of the Holy Ghost whereby he beginneth not but onely confirmeth our Faith and therefore the word is to go before them 4. In their Necessity the word is necessary and sufficient unto Salvation in them who are of an understanding age for Faith cometh by hearing but the Sacraments are not precisely and absolutely necessary unto all for not the want but the contempt of them condemneth 5. In the Maner of working the Sacraments by gesture the Word by speech declareth unto us the will of God 6. The Word may be without the Sacraments as both in private and publike expounding of the Scripture and that effectually also as was apparent in Cornelius Acts 10. but the Sacraments cannot be so without the Word 7. The Word is that which is confirmed by Signs annexed unto it the Sacraments are those Signs whereby it is confirmed 8. The Word is to be preached unto those onely who are of understanding but the Sacrament of Baptism may be given unto Infants so was the Sacrament of Circumcision in whose room Baptism succeeded but the uncharitable Anabaptist will not strike sail to this Truth The Sacraments and the Word agree in these particulars viz. 1. Both exhibite the same things unto us the same benefits the same grace the same Christ 2. Both are from the
not actually and to be born in the Church of believing Parents is unto Infants in stead of profession of Faith and Repentance Hence may it appear how far from this Sacrament of Baptism the Anabaptists derogate by making it but an idle Ceremony acknowledging indeed some of the ends and uses thereof but restraining the efficacy thereof and so take away the chiefest comfort and truest benefit the Church reaps thereby Many indeed are Baptized which receive not the Graces propounded and offered therein but the fault is not in that no Grace accompanieth that Sacrament but in that they receive it not but afterwards when they come to years of discretion they reject the Grace which appertaineth thereto What if some believe not shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect God forbid Rom. 3.3 and Baptism is no natural means of working Grace as if the Grace which is sealed up thereby were inherent in the water or in the Ministers act of sprinkling it but it is onely a voluntary instrument which Christ useth as it pleaseth him to work what Grace or measure of Grace seemeth best to him so as Grace is onely assistant to it not included in it yet in the right use thereof Christ by his Spirit worketh that Grace which is received by it in respect whereof the Minister is said to Baptize with water but Christ with the Holy Ghost Mat. 3.11 So that unto true Baptism must concur a death unto sin in him that is Baptized and a new birth unto righteousness otherwise his Baptism is vain for it is not the washing away of the filth of the flesh but the stipulation of a good Conscience 1 Pet. 3.21 The use of this Sacrament without faith doth not save therefore with faith it doth save the want of this Sacrament doth not condemn yet so as that want be without contempt so some may be saved which are not Baptized but none can be saved which do not believe For the bare water in Baptism is not sufficient unto Salvation neither is it changed into the very Blood of Christ neither is the Blood of Christ present in the water or in the same place with the water neither are their bodies who are Baptized washed therewith visibly neither is the Holy Ghost by his vertue more in this water then elswhere but in the right use of Baptism he worketh in the hearts of them who are Baptized and Spiritually sprinkled and washeth them with the Blood of Christ and useth this external Symbole or Sign as an instrument and as a visible word or promise to stay and stir up the faith of them who are Baptized Now all they and they alone receive Baptism to the right use who are renewed or renewing and are Baptized to those ends whereto Baptism was by Christ instituted And as the Covenant once made with God is also afterwards after sins committed perpetually firm and of force to the Repentant So also Baptism being once received confirmeth and assureth the Repentant all their life time of remission of sins and therefore it ought not to be reiterated nor deferred neither yet are all those who are Baptized with water whether they be of understanding or Infants partakers of the Grace of Christ for the everlasting Election of God and his Calling into the Kingdom of Christ is free And as for the wickedness of the Minister Baptizing it makes not the Baptism void or of no effect and force unto them so Baptized so that it be administred into the Promise and Faith of Christ and therefore also the true Church doth not Baptize them who have been Baptized of Hereticks but onely must inform and instruct them with true Doctrine concerning Christ and Baptism Lastly touching the use of Godfathers and Godmothers it is not at all necessary nor by God required to the Sacrament of Baptism for Christ hath not in any of his Institutions so much as intimated the use of such Sureties and the whole Congregation are witnesses of the childes admission into the Church the Parents being bound to perform what is required for the childes education The words used in Baptism signifie 1. That Baptism was instituted by the Commandment and Authority of the three Persons in the Godhead 2. That these three Persons confirm unto us by their own testification that they receive us into favor and perform that unto us which is signified by Baptism which is Salvation if we believe and be Baptized 3. That he which is Baptized is bound to the knowledge faith worship trust honor and invocation of this true God who is the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost Baptism comprehendeth 1. The Sign which is water 2. The Ceremony as the sprinkling of water 3. The things themselves which are 1. The sprinkling of the Blood of Christ and the imputation of his Righteousness 2. The mortification of the old man and putting on of the new 3. The quickning of the new man into a certain hope of the Resurrection to come by Christ 4. The Sign which not onely signifieth but also confirmeth 5. The Sign which hath that authority and power of confirming from the Commandment of God That Baptism testifies and confirms the will of God touching his bestowing Salvation on us may appear thus 1. Because we are Baptized in the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost that is we are assigned deputed and claimed to be his own 2. Because God hath promised Salvation to him who shall believe and shall be Baptized 3. By several Testimonies of Scripture as Acts 22.16 Mark 16.16 Rom. 6.3 Tit. 3.5 1 Pet. 3.21 The use of Baptism is twofold 1. It serves to be a Pledge or Token of Gods favor towards us 2. It serves to be a notable means of our death unto sin Baptism is a Pledge of Gods favor to us principally three ways 1. It sealeth to us the free pardon and forgiveness of our sins Acts 2.38 2. It is a Pledge of the vertue of Christs death Rom. 6.3 4. 3. It is a Pledge unto us of the life of Christ and of our fellowship with him Baptism is also a means of our death unto sin three ways 1. By putting us in minde of mortifying the flesh and crucifying our own corruptions 2. It causeth us to dedicate our selves wholly unto God in Christ 3. It causeth us to labor to keep and maintain peace and unity with all men but especially with Gods people To be Baptized into the death of Christ is 1. To be partakers of Christs death no otherwise then if our selves were dead 2. To dye also our selves which is to mortifie the lusts of our flesh This mortification God promiseth us in Baptism and bindeth us unto it Baptism is a means of our sanctifying and cleansing in these respects viz. 1. In that it doth most lively represent and set forth even to the outward senses the inward cleansing of our soul by the Blood of Christ and sanctifying us by the
Word is no sufficient note of a true Church for the Israelites had circumcision and yet the Lord saith they were not his people Hos 1.9 Again they overturn the inward power of Baptism by denying Justification by Faith alone in Jesus Christ And as for the bastard-Rites and Ceremonies invented and patched by men to Baptism as hallowing of the Water Tapers Exorcisms Chrism Salt Crosses Spittle and such like they are not of the true Church but a corruption of the Sacrament And as these men attribute too much to this Sacrament holding that it gives Grace ex opere operato so on the other side there are other giddy heads who number Baptism among things indifferent and so to be used or refused at our discretion Lastly seeing the administration of the Sacraments is a part of Ecclesiastical Discipline or rather Doctrine indeed they that are not called thereto and especially women may not in any case usurp the power and authority to Baptize Christs Herauld sent by Proclamation To enter our Initiation Sprinkled the Water and the sacred Blood Made the faithful though sinful appear good This is Bethesda 's Pool or Siloam's stream Whereof the frothy Anabaptists dream The right use to Infants daign'd may not be Though some of Abrahams Posserity Thus Christ himself they proudly Countermand Whose word when all the world 's dissolv'd shall stand §. 3. The Lords Supper THe Lords Supper is a Sacrament instituted and appointed of Christ unto the faithful for a memorial of him whereby Christ doth certainly promise and seal unto the faithful That his Body was offered and broken on the Cross and his Blood shed for them as truly as they see his Bread broken and Cup distributed to them and that he doth as certainly with his Body crucified and his Blood shed feed and nourish the Souls of the faithful unto everlasting life as certainly as their bodies are fed with the bread and the cup of the Lord is received from the hand of the Minister which are offered to them as certain Seals of the body and blood of Christ and binde them to mutual dilection and love The Evangelists shew it was instituted of Christ the same night he was betrayed after that he had supped and had eaten the Easter-Lamb according to the Law yet is it so called not so much because it was the night wherein Christ was betrayed as to shew that it is indeed a Spiritual Supper given of God unto the faithful It is indeed the Sacrament of our Redemption by Christs death insomuch as to such as worthily and with faith receive the same the bread which is broken is a partaking of the body of Christ and likewise the cup of blessing is a partaking of his blood Such therefore as declare themselves in confession and life to be Infidels and ungodly are not to be admitted to this Supper lest thereby the Covenant of God be prophaned and the wrath of God stirred up against the whole Assembly 1 Cor. 11.20 Wherefore the Church by the commandment of Christ and his Apostles using the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven ought to drive them from this Supper till they shall repent and change their life and conversation The Signs of the Lords Supper are twofold 1. Representing Signs as Bread Wine the breaking and pouring out 2. Applying Signs which do appropriate the same as the giving and receiving of bread and wine the first serves to renew our knowledge the other to confirm it As the Signs in the Lords Supper are 1. Bread broken and eaten 2. Wine distributed and taken So the things signified are 1. Christs body broken and blood shed 2. Our Union with Christ by faith The breaking and communicating of Christs body is signed by the breaking and receiving of the bread for two causes 1. Because Christ commandeth those Rites unto which we ought to give no less credit then if Christ himself did speak unto us 2. Because he annexeth a Promise That they who observe those Rites with a true faith must be assured and certain that they have communion with Christ The similitude or proportion of the Signs with the thing signified viz. 1. As the bread and wine nourish our body to temporal life so the body and blood of Christ nourish our souls unto life Spiritual and Eternal 2. As the bread and wine are received by the mouth so the body and blood are received by faith 3. As the wine is severed from the bread to signifie the violence of Christs death so his blood was sundred from his body signified also by the breaking of the bread and as the bread is eaten being broken so the body of Christ is received being sacrificed 4. As in corporal food is required an appetite unto it so in this Spiritual food is required faith 5. As of many corns is made one loaf so are we being many made one body The maner whereby Christs body blood doth nourish us is 1. The respect of his merit for us Christs body is given and his blood shed for us and for the body and blood of Christ we have eternal life given unto us 2. When we receive that merit that is when we believe with a true faith that for it we shall have eternal life 3. When the same Spirit uniteth us by faith unto Christ and worketh the like in us which is in Christ for except we be grafted into Christ we do not please God The remembrance we are to have of Christ in receiving the Lords Supper consists 1. In the memory of Christs benefits 2. In faith whereby we apply Christ and his merit to our selves 3. In thankfulness or publike confession of his benefits The Sacramental Rites of the Lords Supper are twofold 1. Respecting the Minister which are twofold 1. To take the bread and wine to break the one and to pour out the other that is that Christ suffered for our Redemption 2. To give the bread broken and to deliver the wine poured out that is that God doth offer and give Christ unto us together with all his benefits 2. Respecting him that cometh to the Lords Table it is required that he receive eat and drink the bread and wine given unto him that is that in the Supper we do truly receive Christ eat his body and drink his blood by the which we are nourished into the hope of eternal life if we do not cast him from us through unbelief The properties belonging to a fit guest at the Lords Table 1. He must be bidden Luke 14.8 2. He must be humble Luke 14.9 3. He must have knowledge of the person to whose Table he comes 4. He must bring a Spiritual appetite to eat 5. He must put on Christ his wedding garment Rom. 13.14 6. He must be ravished within himself concerning the use of these mysteries 7. He must be sober in using them 8. Chearful in receiving them 9. Loving to his fellow-guests 10. Thankful to the Master of the feast To the right use
is any bread or wine remaining 5. In the Mass the Papists make other gifts to be then which are found in the Word and Sacrament or in the Promise annexed unto them as Merit even by the work it self wrought Remission of sins for the dead and healing of Men Oxen Swine and Cattel diseased 6. The Mass is repugnant to Christs Priesthood because he is onely the High Priest who hath power to offer himself yet his Unholiness the Pope with his companions most impudently pulleth this honor to himself 7. The Mass is repugnant to the Doctrine of Grace and Justification which teacheth That in this life onely is the time of obtaining favor by faith alone for the onely Merit of Christ but the Papists neglecting faith and rejecting Christs Merit have substituted in place thereof this Idolatrous Mass 8. The Mass most ridiculously imagineth that Christs body doth descend into our bodies and there remaineth so long as the forms of bread and wine remain but the Supper teacheth us That we are made members of Christ by the Holy Ghost and ingrafted into him Bread is called the Lords body and wine his blood for these Reasons 1. That all the faithful may acknowledge the dignity of this Sacrament 2. That we remain not in the outward bread and wine but be intent upon the thing signified 3. That we may come with the greater devotion to this Sacrament 4. That we may be most firmly assured That as outwardly we are partakers of bread and wine so inwardly we are partakers of Christ and his benefits Rules to be observed that we may in receiving the bread wine rightly discern the Lords body 1. Take every thing in its own nature and kinde do not with Papists take the Sign for the thing signified nor the earthly thing for the heavenly 2. Use every one of them in the maner appointed by Christ and with such reverence as is due unto them 3. Use them to their right ends as 1. A commemoration of Christs death 2. For a nearer communion with Christ The difference between the Lords Supper and Baptism 1. In Ceremonies and Rites 2. In the circumstances of the institution and use or in the signification of the Ceremonies for Baptism is a Sign of the Covenant entred and made between God and the faithful the Supper is a Sign of the continuing of that Covenant The same thing that is washing away of sins by the blood of Christ is sealed both in Baptism and the Supper but the maner of sealing is diverse and the one is but once the other often 3. In Baptism is required confession of faith and repentance in the elder sort newly converted in Infants it is sufficient if they be born in the Church but in the Supper is added a further condition of examining himself and of remembring the Lords death It is not absolutely necessary as some superstitiously suppose to come fasting to this Sacrament and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the Paschal Lamb was not so eaten 2. Because Christ did it after Supper 3. Because in the Primitive Church many places observed Christs time to communicate at the evening especially at Easter and Whitsontide 4. Because some are so weak that they cannot stay so long fasting 5. Because many abstained in superstition as thinking they eat the very body and drink the very blood of Christ 6. Because our preparation standeth rather in the purifying of the heart then purging of the stomack The ends of the Lords Supper 1. That it might be a confirmation of our faith that is a most certain testification of our communion with Christ 2. That it might be a publike distinction or mark discerning the Church from all other Nations and Sects for the Lord appointed it for his Disciples and not for others 3. That it might be our testification to Christ and the whole Church which is a publike confession of our faith and a solemn binding of our selves to thankfulness and the celebration of this benefit 4. That it might be a Bond of the Churches Assemblies and Meetings 5. That it might be a Bond of mutual love and dilection for it testifieth that all are made the members of Christ under one Head Lastly remember that the right and lawful use of this holy Supper consisteth in these three things especially 1. When the Rites and Ceremonies instituted by Christ are retained and observed 2. When the Rites are observed of those persons for whom Christ did institute them not for his enemies but his Disciples which are the faithful 3. When the Supper is received for the right end which chiefly is the commemoration of the Lords death History tells us That Victor the Third Bishop of Rome was poysoned by his Sub-deacon when he took the Cup and Henry the Seventh Emperor of Luxelburge was also poysoned in receiving the Bread at the hands of a Monk I hope the blasphemous Idolaters of Rome will not presume to say That that Wine which Pope Victor drank and that Bread which the Emperor did eat was the very Body and the very Blood of Christ Again they who eat Christ in the Lords Supper as the Fathers before his Incarnation did eat him in Manna and the Paschal Lamb cannot be said to eat Christ corporally for at that time he was not born now all the faithful eat Christ in the Lords Supper as the Fathers before his Incarnation did eat him in Manna and the Paschal Lamb 1 Cor. 20.3 4. therefore the faithful can no way be said to eat Christ corporally yet we hold that the faithful in the Supper do truly receive and eat but by the Spirit and by Faith the very true Body of Christ the which was crucified for us and so far forth as it was delivered up for us and that they drink his Blood which was shed for us for the Remission of sins and that indeed the Body is present and the Blood is present but unto the Spirit and unto the inward man for unto the Spirit all things which he receiveth by faith are in truth present according to that That Christ dwelleth in our hearts by faith And no distance of place can effect that the things we receive by faith should be absent from us even as the Sun cannot properly be said to be absent from the eyes of which it is perceived This is the Bread of life this is the way Our blessed Savior doth himself convey Into our hungry Souls when he combines His Grace unto the Elemental Signs Make room then purge thy Soul of every sin That so the King of Glory may come in With Angels food Alas they when they fell Fell without it to our just portion Hell Feed but with faith remember what it cost Without thy wedding garment thou art lost CHAP. III. §. 1. Prayer TRue Prayer may briefly be decribed to be that which is poured out from the heart the Holy Ghost stirring it unto God with this confidence upon the true perswasion of
taken away God is as well in the field and in the private house as in the Church and yet Churches are ordained and used in a godly policy because a Congregation may more conveniently there meet to their mutual edification in the publike exercise of the Word and Prayer otherwise private houses were as good places for Gods worship as Churches if they were decent and convenient for edification for now in all places men may lift up pure hands unto God 1 Tim. 2.8 where it plainly appears That after the coming of Christ by whom the partition wall was broken down and both made one people to God all places were sanctified for prayer so as under the Gospel no one place is more holy then another yet it being Gods will to be worshipped publikely needful it is that there should be places fit for that purpose Thus the Corinthians had one place to worship God in 1 Cor. 11.20 though certain of the Inhabitants of Philippi went out to a Rivers side to pray on the Sabbath day Acts 16.13 but that was in time of persecution The Father Son and Holy Ghost is to be prayed unto we may pray unto the whole Trinity but more properly unto the first person God the Father in the Name of God the Son by the assistance of God the Holy Ghost So we pray unto the whole Trinity yet as the first person is the Fountain of the Deity we pray the Father by the Son through the Holy Ghost nor is it strange that we pray unto Christ for whose sake onely we are heard in our prayers for we pray unto him as he is the second person we have our prayers heard through him as he is our Mediator thus distinguishing his person from his office Prayer in general is twofold 1. Publike wherein words must be always used in a plain known distinct voyce 2. Private wherein the voyce is profitable but not simply necessary Two Rules of gesture in publike Prayer 1. It must alway be comely modest decent and uniform 2. It must serve as much as may be to express the inward sincerity of the heart without hypocrisie Again there is a twofold Prayer 1. One that is the voyce of our own spirit 2. Another that is the voyce of Gods Spirit in us that is when the Holy Ghost hath so sanctified the heart when he hath put it into such a holy frame of Grace that the heart comes to speak as it is quickned acted and moved from Gods Spirit This Spirit of Adoption makes us 1. Earnest and fervent in prayer 2. Bold and confident to God as to a Father so that we may know the voyce of Gods Spirit in our prayers by our boldness to and confidence in him for wicked men come to God as to a stranger the Saints as to a friend Prayer is one part of that holy worship of God called Invocation whereof there are four parts 1. Supplication when we intreat God to remove some evil from us 2. Prayer whereby we beg at the hands of God the gift of some good thing unto us 3. Intercession when as we intreat the Lord to grant some good thing unto our brethren or to remove some evil from them 4. Thanksgiving whereby we give laud and thanks to God for blessings received either by our selves or by our brethren The distinctions of Prayer in regard of the maner thereof viz. 1. Mental which is an opening inwardly of the desires of a mans heart to God without any outward manifestation of the same by word Neh. 2.4 Exod. 14.15 1 Sam. 1.13 2. Vocal and is that which is uttered with words 1 Kings 8.23 3. Sudden when upon some sudden occasion present the heart is instantly lift up unto God whether by sighs or words they are called Ejaculations of the heart and argue a holy familiarity with God yea a heavenly minde 4. Composed when a Christian setteth himself to make some solemn prayer unto God whether it be in the Church family closet field or any other place Dan. 6.10 to this kinde of Prayer preparation before-hand is very needful Eccl. 5.2 5. Conceived being that which he who uttereth the prayer inventeth and conceiveth himself which is very expedient and needful for these Reasons 1. It manifesteth the gift and power of the Spirit who can give both matter and maner words and affections who can suggest what to pray and how to pray 2. Every day we have new wants new assaults new sins and our petitions must be made according to our present wants our supplications according to our particular assaults and our confession according to our several sins 3. As God daily continueth and reneweth old blessings so also he addeth new to them 6. Prescribed when a set constant form is laid down before-hand and either conned by heart or read This is a good help to weak Christians if they endeavor to pray with the Spirit and with understanding 7. Publike when an Assembly of Saints publikely with one joynt-consent call upon God by the mouth of the Minister Joel 2.16 17. Neh. 8.1 6. For the maner of which publike prayer two things are very requisite viz. 1. Unanimity respecting the heart and affections for which an audible and intelligible voyce is necessary 2. Uniformity respecting the outward reverent carriage and humble gesture in prayer 8. Private which is made by one alone or by some few together 2 Kings 4.33 Luke 9.28 Acts 10.30 This especially belongeth to the Master of a Family 9. Secret which is made by one alone none being present but God and he that prayeth This may be in a close chamber or closet Mat. 6.6 or on a desolate Mountain Mark 1.35 or in a secret field Gen. 24.63 or on any house top Acts 10.9 or in any other place 1 Tim. 2.8 10. Extraordinary which after an extraordinary maner even above our usual custom is poured out before God consisting partly in ardency of affection as in Christ Luke 22.44 Heb. 5.7 in Moses Exod. 32.32 and in the King of Nineveh Jonah 3.8 and partly in continuance of time as Jacob a whole night Gen. 32.24 so did David 2 Sam. 12.16 and Christ Luke 6.12 Moses a whole day Exod. 17.12 so did Joshua and the Elders of Israel Josh 7.6 We must pray 1. For the glory of God always and that without any limitation or condition 2. For our own good 1. The salvation of Soul and that without any condition 2. In this present life but with this condition so far forth as it may stand with Gods glory and be for our own good The conditions and circumstances of true prayer viz. 1. A direction of it unto the true God and him onely 2. In the mediation of Christ not without a Mediator as Pagans nor in the name of any other Mediator as Papists 3. The knowledge of Gods Commandment in requiring us to pray else we doubt of being heard 4. The knowledge of those things which are to be asked else we mock
our natural estate we have no ability to pray 2 Cor. 3.5 2. In our regenerate estate we are no longer able to do any good thing then the Spirit helpeth and assisteth us we have still need of the present effectual and continual work of Gods holy Spirit Phil. 1.6 3. Though we knew how to pray yet would not our prayers be acceptable to God except they came from his Spirit for as God knoweth the meaning of the Spirit so the Spirit knoweth the will of God Rom. 8.27 The means to pray aright in the Spirit 1. Labor for Gods sanctifying Spirit which is gotten by the Ministery of the word 2 Cor. 3.8 2. Having the Spirit we must go along with him and follow his good motions pouring forth those desires which he suggesteth unto us giving unto God that which is Gods Mat. 22. 3. We must take heed that at any time we grieve not the holy Spirit of God which may be done two ways 1. By quenching the good motions thereof through carelesness 1 Thess 5.19 2. By resisting the Spirit through our rebellion Acts 7.51 Prayer must be alway accompanied with thanksgiving the matter whereof may be thus distinguished viz. 1. In regard of the nature and kinde of benefits and they are either Good things bestowed or Evil things removed 2. In regard of the quality of them viz. 1. Spiritual blessings which are 1. Bestowed here on earth in the rank whereof must be accounted these four 1. The ground of them which is Election 2. The meritorious cause of them that is our Redemption under which must be comprised 1. The price of our Redemption which is Christs Blood 2. The special fruits thereof as Reconciliation Adoption Remission Imputation of Righteousness c. 3. The means of applying the benefits of our Election and Redemption namely the effectual operation of Gods Spirit under which are comptised Vocation Regeneration Sanctification and such sanctifying Graces as we finde and feel in our selves wrought as Knowledge Faith Hope Love Repentance Patience New-Obedience c. together with the blessed fruits of them as Peace in Conscience Joy in the Spirit holy security c. 4. The means which he Spirit useth to work encrease all these Graces are to be remembred as The Ministery of the Word and Sacraments and other holy Ordinances of God together with liberty of the Sabbaths of good and faithful Ministers of publike Assemblies and the like 2. Reserved in heaven such as eye hath not seen nor ear heard nor hath entred into the heart of man 2. Temporal therein such as concern 1. Mankinde in general 2. The whole Church 3. The Common-wealth 4. Families 5. Our own persons 3. In regard of the maner of bestowing them 1. Already given 2. Promised to be given 4. In regard of the persons on whom they are bestowed viz. Our selves Others Evils removed for which thanks is to be given are Publike Both Spiritual Private Both Temporal In like maner thanksgiving is Publike For Good things bestowed Private For Evil things removed Proofs of Scripture applied to particular occasions of thanksgiving viz. 1. For all maner of Spiritual blessings in general Eph. 1.3 c. 2. For the Author of them all Christ Jesus Luke 2.13 14. 3. For the outward means of working these Spiritual blessings Coloss 1.3 4 c. 4. For the inward efficacy of Gods Spirit 1 Thess 1.2 5. 5. For Temporal blessings Christ gave thanks for food Joh. 6.11 Hannah for a childe 1 Sam. 2.1 Jacob for riches Gen. 32.10 and Abrahams servant for prospering his journey Gen. 24.48 6. For blessings on others thus the Queen of Sheba praised God for his blessings on Israel 1 Kings 10.9 and the Christian Jews for the Gospel revealed to the Gentiles Acts 11.18 7. For publike blessings concerning the Church Col. 1.3 6. Acts 2.47 4.24 8. For the Commonwealth 1 Kings 1.40 8.62 66. 9. For general blessings on mankinde Psal 8.1 6. 10. For blessings on ones Family thus is Jacob thankful Gen. 35.7 11. For private blessings Leah praised God for a son Gen. 29.3 and Hezekiah for his health Isa 38.19 12. For evils removed Exod. 15.1 c. Psal 124.6 13. For publike Spiritual evils removed as Idolatry in Hezekiahs time 2 Chron. 29.30 14. For private Spiritual evils prevented 1 Sam. 25.32 15. For adversity Job blessed God and the Apostles rejoyce for suffering Acts 5.41 16. For good things promised and not enjoyed Heb. 11.13 General directions for thanksgiving viz. 1. That we lift up our eyes unto the Author of all blessings being perswaded that they are brought unto us by Gods good guiding Providence and not by chance or fortune 2. That we be well instructed in the ground or cause which moveth God to do the good which he doth even his own Free-grace Ezek. 33.19 A gift the more free it is the more praise-worthy 3. That we take particular distinct notice of Gods blessings and so particularly acknowledge them and accordingly give thanks unto the Lord for them 4. That we accept Gods blessings as tokens of his love and favor and accordingly rejoyce in them Psal 138.2 5. That we observe what God hath bestowed on us above others and what others want that we have Psal 147.19 20. 6. That we duly weigh how unworthy we are of the very least of Gods favors even the least crumb we eat or drop we drink Thus did Jacob Gen. 32.10 Particular directions for extraordinary and solemn thanksgiving viz. 1. A day must be set apart and sanctified thereto Thus was it in Esthers time Esth 9.17 c. 2. Assemblies must meet together Thus Jehoshaphat assembled the people on a day set apart to praise God solemnly 2 Chron. 20.26 3. The solemn worship must on that day be performed to God 4. The sanctification of that day must be helped by preaching the Word which help the people of God desired and obtained in Ezra's time Neh. 8.1 c. 5. A solemn Vow and Covenant must then be made with God to binde us more carefully and more conscionably to testifie the truth of our thankfulness by our constant and faithful subjection to his will 2 Chron. 15.12 c. 6. Psalms of praise must then be sung This help the Psalmist doth much press Psal 81.1 2 c. 7. It is meet that feasts be then made in time of Rejoycing the creatures may be more liberally used then at other times but with respect to sobriety and charity By prayer is love wrought four ways 1. It obtaineth it for when we cry earnestly God will not deny us 2. It brings us to communion with God to converse and be familiar with him which breeds love 3. In prayer God shews himself when we are much in calling upon and praising God he delights to shew himself to such a man yea at such a time for the most part 4. It exerciseth love if thou wouldst be abundant in love be fervent and frequent in prayer The properties
no notice of others necessities of such complained the Church of the Jews in her captivity Lam. 1.12 These bewray too much self-love 2. Such as who though they take notice yet are not at all moved to any compassion of such the Prophet Amos complaineth Amos 6.6 These discover too great senslesness and plain inhumanity 3. Such who though they be moved yet perform not this duty because they think it an idle frivolous thing nothing available and profitable of such Job speaks Job 21.15 These manifest too much distrust in God and plain Atheism They are not to be prayed for whom we know our prayers cannot help These are 1. All such as are dead for their estate is unchangeable 2. They which sin against the Holy Ghost 3. They concerning whom God hath given an express command and charge to the contrary and who are expresly and apparently rejected of God for who pray for such gainsay the revealed will of God Thus we read not that Samuel prayed for Saul after the Lord expresly forbade him 2 Sam. 16.1 and thus the Lord forbade Jeremiah to pray for the people Jer. 7.16 Motives to publike prayer 1. The more publike prayer is the more honorable and acceptable it is to God because it is an honor to him even when one faithfully prays unto him and that it is the more acceptable his promise shews Matth. 18.28 2. It is more powerful thus to prevent a Judgement or rather to remove it the Prophet assembles all the people together to pray Joel 2.16 17. So did the King of Niniveh Jonah 3.8 3. It is a sign of communion an outward sign whereby we manifest our selves to be of the chosen and called flock of Christ 4. It is an especial means of mutual edification for thereby we mutually stir up the zeal and enflame the affection of one another 5. The neglect of it is a note of prophaneness from which blame Seperatists and Schismaticks though they would seem very Religious cannot well acquit themselves they are not of Davids minde who mourned when he could not come into the house of Prayer Psal 48.1 c. These would too untimely seperate the Tares from the Wheat before the Harvest Prayer in a Family is very necessary because 1. A Family hath need of peculiar blessings beside the common which in the Church are prayed for yea and hath received many for which peculiar thanks is to be given 2. A true Christians house if Gods worship a principal part whereof is Prayer be there from time to time performed is made Gods Church which is a great honor unto a Family Rom. 16.5 Phil. 4. 3. By prayer a Christian brings Gods blessing into his house for where God is called upon there is he present to bestow his blessings as he blessed Obed-Edom and all his houshold while the Ark was in his house 2 Sam. 6.11 It is very needful that secret prayer be added both to publike prayer at Church and private prayer in a Family and that for these Reasons 1. Hereby we may more freely pour out our whole hearts to God and make known our minde 2. This kinde of prayer affordeth the truest tryal of the uprightness of a mans heart for a man may a long time continue to pray in the Church and in a Family and his prayer be meer formal even onely for companies sake 3. This argueth great familiarity with God 4. It bringeth greatest comfort to a mans heart and they which content themselves with Church and Family-prayers have very just cause to suspect themselves 5. Such Wives Children Servants and other inferiors as live in any house under prophane Governors that will not have prayers in their Families may by this kinde of prayer make supply thereof unto their own souls for none can hinder secret prayer The difference betwixt praying wishing viz. 1. Wishes are sudden and inconsiderate straightway ceasing Prayer is with deliberation and giveth not over without speeding of the thing desired 2. Wishes are without respect of the means and care of right or wrong in attaining the thing wished for Prayer is with submission to the lawful use of the means and care of prevailing by right onely 3. Wishes are for the most part of things worldly Prayer is chiefly for things Spiritual and heavenly one onely Petition of six in the Lords Prayer being for things Temporal 4. Wishes are sometimes for things Spiritual and heavenly but very unconstant as Balaams wish Let me dye the death of the righteous but Prayer persevereth like Jacob wrestling with God Reasons to enforce us to the practice of this duty of prayer 1. Prayer is one of the most principal parts of Gods worship for herein we acknowledge him to be the Giver of all good things the Searcher and knower of all hearts and hereby we testifie the Faith Hope and Confidence we have in God it is called The calves of our lips Hosea 14.2 because it is a Sacrifice well-pleasing to God 2. By prayer we do obtain and also continue and preserve unto our selves every good grace and blessing of God specially such as concern eternal life for God promiseth his Spirit to them that ask it by prayer Luke 11.13 3. The true gift and Spirit of prayer is a pledge of the Spirit of Adoption and therefore the Spirit of prayer is called the Spirit of Grace Zech. 1.3 4. By prayer we have Spiritual communion and familiarity with God for in preaching of the word God speaks to us and in prayer we speak to God and the more we pray the nearer and greater fellowship we have with him 5. It is specially commanded of God as a special means to obtain all blessings 1 Thess 5.17 6. The gracious Promises God hath made unto effectual prayer may allure us to pray Mat. 7.7 7. Consider the efficacy power and force of prayer Jam. 5.16 8. The excellency thereof and the priviledge we have by it to have free liberty to come to God 9. The profit of prayer for it hath the promise of this life and of the life to come Rom. 10.12 10. The necessity thereof for without it we shew our selves destitute of Grace and so in the state of condemnation Jam. 4.2 Motives to prayer repeated 1. Gods express charge and command David obeyed it Psal 27.8 and indeed this of it self were fully sufficient without any other motives 2. Gods worship Prayer being the most principal especial and proper part thereof 3. The honor of God for he is not by any thing more honored then by Prayer by which we do acknowledge him to be 1. Every where present and in every place to hear his children 2. To be the Fountain of all Blessings therefore we give the praise thereof to God 3. To be a God full of pity and compassion which maketh us to lay open our griefs distresses to him 4. To be an Almighty God able to give whatsoever we desire 5. To be a bountiful God who giveth to all liberally
are not spoken circumscriptively as though God were contained in the Heaven or as though if the Heavens were not God could not be as the Inhabitants of the Earth cannot be when the Earth ceaseth for God was before all Heavens and Earth and Creatures but because his glorious Presence and Attributes are most eminently visible in Heaven and also to set forth his most mighty power Psal 115.3 he is by an excellency said to be in Heaven Heav'n is thy Throne Great God how then dare we Who but the Creatures of thy Footstool be Look Heaven-wards and cast an eye aloft Or lift hands to ' gainst which we have so oft This Charter thou hast seal'd us by thy Son The Priviledge of our Adoption Heav'n thy Throne Vanish distrust carnal fear Thou canst our Prayers grant as soon as hear But teach us by thy Spirit this holy skill To ask in Faith what answers to thy will §. 5. Hallowed be thy Name BY the Name of God is meant the whole worship of God or Gods Name is any thing that may be referred unto God in which he may be considered as his Word his Sacraments his Servants and his Works So that by the Name of the Lord we are to understand That whatsoever it is whereby the Lord is made known unto us according to his most glorious Attributes as Wisdom Power Justice Mercy c. and this may be either by his Titles his Word or his Works Now we must know That Gods Name cannot be more sanctified in it self then it is but the sanctifying of it that we here pray for is That it may be sanctified in us which may be when it heareth well by our walking worthy of this holy Name which is amongst us called upon and professed for contrariwise it is said to be blasphemed Rom. 2.24 And whereas thy Name O Lord is used as unholy by prophane worldlings vindicate and deliver it from such abuses and make us to stand for thine honor against such and provide for the preservation of the same from being used as a common thing working in all thy people an holy consent to hallow it together abstaining from all common unworthy usage thereof And open our eyes that we may know thee aright and may discern thy Power Wisdom Justice and Mercy and enlarge our hearts that we may sanctifie thee in them by making thee our Fear Love Joy and Confidence and open our lips that we may bless thee for thy goodness yea open our eyes that we may see thee in thy Works and strike our hearts with reverence of thy Name appearing in them and grant that when we use any one of them we may honor thee in our sober and sanctified use thereof This Petition comes in the first place because it is the end and scope of all the other for the end of all things must be Gods glory and it is placed before Thy Kingdom come to teach us That no man can be a true Subject of Gods Kingdom unless that in his heart he maketh principal account of Gods glory Thus the first of the three first Petitions in the Lords Prayer concerning God immediately concerns Gods glory it self The other two the means whereby Gods glory is manifested and enlarged amongst men For Gods glory is then manifested and his Name hallowed among men when his Kingdom doth come and his Will is done And this order of the Petitions that the first three concern Gods glory the other three our selves teacheth us how gracious the Lords is towards us sinful men allowing us if we come with one request for the advancement of his glory to come with another for our own benefit if with three for him with three for our selves also but first in order are his three for if we seek our selves first and chiefly we ask in vain The order of placing the Petitions concerning Gods glory first and then those concerning our selves teacheth 1. That God is absolutely to be respected and for himself but Man for Gods cause 2. That the first and main thing by the Lord intended in Creating all is his own glory and whatsoever is good for man is subordinate to this and onely so far forth to be sought after as it maketh for Gods glory 3. That the glory of the Lords Name is so dear unto him as that he did not onely make it his Mark in the Creation but in every particular duty done by man he setteth it still as his Mark as here in Prayer in giving the Law in the Gospel at the very Nativity of the Blessed One the Angels are heard lauding and glorifying God The Name of God signifieth 1. God himself Psal 116.13 2. Gods Commandment and Charge his Divine Will and Authority Mat. 28.19 3. The Divine Attributes Properties and Works of God in which signification it is here principally understood Holy signifieth 1. All the Properties of God for all the vertues of God are holiness 2. That holiness which is in his Creatures that is their conformity with God which is begun in the godly and is perfect in the Angels 3. The ordaining and appointing of things to holy uses The word of Hallowing is here taken in all these three senses To hallow or sanctifie is in Scripture used three ways viz. 1. Of us 1. When we hallow or sanctifie our selves and others that is when as touching external and outward things we prepare our selves and others to glorifie God 2. When we hallow and sanctifie God that is 1. When we acknowledge God to be holy or to be such as he hath declared himself in his word and works 2. When we profess God to be holy and so magnifie him according to his will both in minde and word as also in deed and works 3. When we refer the true Doctrine knowledge and profession of Gods holiness and likewise our Prayers and actions and even our whole life unto that end whereunto we ought and whether God hath commanded it to be referred that is to the glory and worship of God himself 2. Of God when he doth sanctifie others 1. Inwardly by his holy Spirit 2. Outwardly by his word which he effectuateth 1. By seperating them from their sins 2. By reviving and quickning them by his holy Spirit 3. By the continuing of both 3. Of Christ 1. Passively because 1. The word was ordained and consecrated by the Father to the Office of the Mediatorship 2. The humane Nature of Christ was consecrated out of that whole lump or mass that is was selected from among all Creatures to the union with the Word 3. His humane Nature was preserved from sin for the performance of the Mediatorship 4. Because Christ is hallowed and sanctified of us 2. Actively because he sanctifieth 1. Himself 1. As he is the Word the Word did sanctifie with his Father that flesh which he took by preserving the same from sin and by endowing it with all gifts 2. As he is Mediator he sanctified himself by his voluntary
by fire at the execution of this Judgement there shall be a change of this present state and a purifying of the creatures but not a consuming of them 4. This change shall come suddenly 5. There shall be a casting of the wicked into everlasting pains and an advancing of the godly into everlasting happiness and glory Why God would have us certain of the last judgment viz. 1. In respect of his glory that we may be able to refute Epicures who account this heavenly doctrine of the divine Judgment to come for a fable 2. For our comfort that amidst our evils and miseries we may know there shall come a time when we shall be delivered from this corruption and rottenness 3. That we may retain and keep our selves in the fear of God and our duty and that others also may be reclaimed from evil 4. That the wicked may be left excuseless for they are warned sufficiently that they should be ready at every season For what Reasons God would not have us certain of the time of the last Judgement 1. That he might exercise our faith and patience 2. That he might bridle our curiosity 3. That he might keep us in his fear in godliness and in exercising of our duty Why God deferreth the last Judgment 1. To exercise Faith Patience Hope and Prayer in the godly 2. That all the Elect may be gathered unto the Church 3. That he might grant unto all a time and space of Repentance as at this time and that he might leave the wicked without excuse Rom. 2.4 There are a certain sort of people that superstitiously sit up all night at certain times of the year fondly conceiting that Christ will come to Judgement on one of these nights but such most grosly erre and that these four ways especially 1. In that they prescribe certain set times for Christs coming whereas no man knoweth it Mat. 24.36 42. 2. In that they conceit he shall come in the night from that Text Luke 17.34 which is uncertain the night being there taken as a part for the whole by the figure Synecdoche and he calleth it the Day Luke 17.30 3. In that they imagine That they which are asleep when Christ cometh cannot be well prepared to meet him whereas Repentance maketh the soul prepared at all times 4. In that they interpret the Precept of Watching to bodily watching of the Eye whereas it is not meant of that onely but of the heart also This Judgement shall be in the end of the world whereof there are three parts The one before the Law another under the Law the third under the Gospel or under Christ which is called The end of the world The end of days The last time because there shall not be so long space between Christs first coming and his second as was from the beginning of the world unto his first coming But of that day Christ himself as Man knoweth not Mark 13.32 Tremble O Earth Tremble and be afraid Behold the Son of God he that was laid At first in Swathing-bands then in a shrowd Comes with Thousands of Angels in a Cloud To judge both Quick and Dead Silence Who may Language the Joy or Horror of that Day When all from Adam shall be chang'd or rise To meet their Judge or Savior in the Skies To hear the Sentence of Eternal Rest Or that which is too sad to be express'd §. 8. I believe in the Holy Ghost WHich is as much to say As I acknowledge the Holy Ghost to be God and so confess him to be one with the Father and the Son also I acknowledge his Office of Sanctifying and making holy the people of God And as I depend upon God the Father as my Creator and daily Protector and upon God the Son as my Redeemer and daily Mediator so I depend upon God the Holy Ghost as my Comforter and the worker of Grace and all Vertue in me being of my self a lump of Sin and mass of Corruption yet I acknowledge not three Gods but one God a Trinity of persons in Unity of Godhead So that the Holy Ghost is the third person of the true and onely Godhead proceeding from the Father and the Son and Coeternal Coequal and Consubstantial with the Father and the Son and is sent from both into the hearts of the Elec● to sanctifie them unto eternal life And though extraordinary Revelations are ceased yet the Holy Ghost in and by the Word revealeth some things unto men for which cause he is called and that truly The Spirit of Revelation Now that the Holy Ghost is very and eternal God appears from his creating of all things Gen. 1.2 Psal 104.24 29 30. And Christians are to be Baptized in the Name of the Holy Ghost Mat. 28.19 as well as of the Father and the Son As God he chooseth assigneth and sendeth forth men for the Ministery of the Gospel Acts 13.2 4. As God he decreeth Orders for his Church and People Acts 15.28 As God he is to be invocated and prayed unto as well as the Father and the Son 2 Cor. 13.13 The Holy Ghost is of one Substance Majesty and Glory with the Father and the Son for these three the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost are one 1 Joh. 5.7 who proceedeth from the Father and the Son for the Father sendeth the Comforter in the Name of the Son Joh. 14.16 and the Son sendeth the Comforter the Spirit of Truth from the Father Joh. 15.26 And whereas we believe the Holy Ghost to have proceeded from the Father and the Son understand Proceeding is here a communication of the Divine Essence whereby the third person onely of the Godhead receiveth from the Father and the Son as the Spirit from him whose Spirit it is the same whole Essence which the Father and the Son have and retain Of God the Holy Ghost three things are to be considered by us viz. 1. What the Holy Ghost is viz. of the same Essence with the Father and the Son a distinct person proceeding from both 2. The Office of the Holy Ghost which doth sanctifie us many ways 1. Because he is the key of all heavenly Treasures illuminating our understanding to receive the Mystery of Faith 2. Because he is the Earnest of the Promises 3. Because he is the Seal wherewith the Truth of the Divine Promises is signed and sealed in our mindes 4. Because he is the Minister of Truth guiding us in the way of all Truth 5. Because he is the Author of light expelling the darkness gathered by sin 6. Because he is the Fountain of Wisdom and Understanding 7. Because he is the water that purgeth us from all filth consecrating us into the Holy Temple of God fertilizing us to bring forth the fruits of Righteousness 8. Because he is the Fire that purgeth away the corruption of our mindes enflaming our hearts with the love of Righteousness 3. Our Faith in the Holy Ghost 1. That we believe in God the
Holy Ghost 2. That we believe the Office of the Holy Ghost 3. That by our sins we grieve him not Concerning the Holy Ghost we believe 1. That he is true and coeternal God with the Eternal Father and the Son Gen. 1.2 1 Cor. 3.16 2. That he is also given unto us Mat. 28.19 to make us through a true faith partakers of Christ and all his benefits Gal. 3.14 To comfort us Acts 9.13 and to abide with us for ever Joh. 14.16 That the Holy Ghost is a person of the Godhead is proved by these Reasons 1. By his visible Apparitions Luke 3.22 2. Because he is called God 1 Cor. 3.16 Acts 5.3 4. 3. Because he is the Author of our Baptism and we are Baptized in his Name 4. The Properties of a person are all attributed unto him Luke 12.12 Joh. 16.13 5. Because he is plainly distinguished from the gifts and graces of God 1 Cor. 12.4 11. The Holy Ghost is a person distinct from the Father and the Son for these Reasons 1. He is called a Spirit and none is his own Spirit his own Father his own Son 2. The Holy Ghost in express words is called Another from them both Joh. 14.16 3. He is sent of the Father and the Son Joh. 15.26 therefore another from them both 4. The Holy Ghost hath distinct Attributes or Properties personally from them both That the Holy Ghost is equal with the Father and the Son is thus plainly manifested 1. The Essence of the Father the Son is communicated unto him 2. It appears by those Divine Attributes and Properties which are attributed unto him 3. The same Divine Works that are attributed to the Father and the Son are also attributed unto him Job 33.4 4. Equal and the same honor is given to the Holy Ghost as to the Father and the Son 1 Joh. 5.7 5. Those things which are spoken in the Old Testament of God or Jehovah are applied to the Holy Ghost in the New 6. The Holy Ghost is the Father and the Sons Spirit and there is but one God Why this third person of the Godhead is called Holy 1. Because he in himself by himself and of his own nature is holy 2. Because he is the immediate Sanctifier of others For what reasons this third person of the Godhead is called a Spirit 1. Because he is a Spiritual Essence or Substance Incorporeal and Invisible 2. Because he is inspired of the Father and the Son they move by this Spirit 3. Because himself inspireth and immediately worketh motions in the hearts of the Elect. 4. Because he is God equal with the Father and the Son and the same God and God is a Spirit The several Titles of Commendation given to the Holy Ghost in Scripture viz. 1. The Spirit of Adoption because he assureth us of the Fatherly good-will of God in Christ towards us 2. The Earnest and Seal of our Inheritance because he assureth us of our Salvation 2 Cor. 1.21 3. The Spirit of life because he mortifietli the old man and quickneth the new Rom. 8.2 4. Water whereby he cleanseth us refresheth us nigh dead in sin and maketh us fruitful to good works 5. Fire because he consumeth daily our concupiscence in us and kindleth in our hearts the love of God and our Neighbor 6. The Fountain because all celestial Riches do flow unto us from him 7. The Spirit of Prayer because he is the souls voyce in the chosen 8. The oyl of gladness because he cheareth and refresheth us in all our troubles 9. The Comforter because by working faith in us he causeth us to exult in afflictions 10. Intercessor because he maketh requests for us with sighs and groans that cannot be expressed Rom. 8.26 11. He is called The Spirit of Truth of Wisdom of Joy of the fear of God of Boldness and the like Joh. 14.16 Now some of the ungodly may have the Holy Ghost as concerning some gifts of the Holy Ghost as Saul and Judas had but they have not the Spirit of Adoption for the same Spirit doth not work the same things in all for he worketh Adoption and Conversion in the Elect onely The operations of the Holy Ghost are twofold 1. External common to all men for he illuminates every one that cometh into the world 2. Internal special and proper to the godly not onely illuminating their mindes but proceeding to their hearts moving the affections and becomes unto the whole man 1. A Spirit of Sanctification 2. A Spirit of Intercession 3. A Spirit of Consolation The Office and Operations peculiarly attributed to the Holy Ghost in Scripture viz. 1. To teach and illuminate Joh. 14.26 16.13 To enlighten mens mindes with the knowledge of the Gospel and to reveal unto them the good will of God and way to happiness whence he is called The Spirit of Revelation Eph. 1.17 2. To perswade their hearts of the truth of those things which he hath revealed to their understandings by the vertue whereof they taste of the good word of God Heb. 6.5 3. To Regenerate that is to work Faith and Repentance in the hearts of the chosen Joh. 3.5 4. To conjoyn us with God and Christ and to make us partakers of all his benefits 1 Cor. 6.11 5. To Rule and guide that is to instruct and encline us to all duties due to God and Man 6. To Comfort Joh. 14.16 in all perplexities and miseries whatsoever 7. To Confirm to make courageous and bold in and for the maintenance of the Truth being moved to acknowledge and profess the Gospel to be the Word of God Many other are the Works of the Spirit but that Unpardonable Sin against the Holy Ghost is committed against him in regard of these Operations of the Spirit so as it is against the Truth of God which the Spirit hath revealed to a man and evicted and perswaded his heart of the certainty thereof How the Holy Ghost is 1. Given 1. After an ordinary way by the Ministery of the Word and the use of the Sacraments 2. In manifesting himself unto us through the studying and meditation of the Gospel 3. He is given by working a desire of him in the Elect for he is given to them that desire him Luke 11.13 and is received by faith 2. Retained 1. By meditation in the Doctrine of the Gospel and by studying to prove it thereby Psal 1.2 2. By continuance and increase of Repentence and amendment of life that is by a desire of bewaring to offend against our knowledge or Conscience Matth. 13.12 3. By daily and earnest prayer and invocation Luke 11.13 4. By applying Gods gifts to their right use that is to his glory and our Neighbors good Luke 22.32 3. Ecclipsed in its present comforts 1. By neglecting the Word and Doctrine and by neglect of Prayer 2. By carnal Security and by giving our selves to commit sin against our Conscience 3. By abusing the gifts of the Holy Ghost as when they are not imployed
aright The duties following upon our faith in the Holy Ghost 1. To keep our bodies holy and pure as the Temples of the Holy Ghost and not to defile them by uncleanness 2. To believe without doubting whatsoever is contained in the holy Scripture because that all were given by inspiration of the Holy Ghost and were set forth by holy men not of any private motion but as they were moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Tim. 3.16 2 Pet. 1.21 3. To use all our gifts to the honor of God for it is the holy Spirit of God from whom we receive them all 4. To submit our selves in all things to the government of Gods Spirit and not follow the sway of our own Natures for he is our guide and will lead us into the way of all Truth Eternal Breath O let thy blessed ayr Imbreathe us with new life or else repair The ruines of our Souls Blow and refresh Our dim-burning Zeal but blow out the Flesh New-mould us fit for Mercy and make good The Charter Christ hath seal'd us with his Blood Vnscale our Vnderstandings make us see The Crown of Hope ' yond hope Faith's Mystery Inflame our Souls with holy fire and then Our Souls thy fire shall flame thee back agen §. 9. The Holy Catholique Church Concerning the holy and Catholique Church of Christ we believe That the Son of God doth from the beginning of the world Joh. 10.11 Gen. 26.4 to the end thereof Rom. 8.29 gather defend and preserve unto himself by his Spirit Isa 59.21 and Word Acts 2.46 out of whole Mankinde Mat. 16.18 Joh. 10.28 a company chosen to everlasting life 1 Joh. 3.21 and agreeing in true faith And that we are lively Members of that Company 1 Joh. 2.19 and so shall remain for ever 1 Cor. 18.9 To believe in which holy Catholique Church is to believe the Doctrine thereof wherein she followeth Christ the Prophets and Apostles the onely sure ground and pillar of Truth and that in this visible Company and Society are some true Repentants and truly converted and my self to be a lively Member of the invisible and visible Church So that to believe and confess the Doctrine of Salvation taught and delivered by the Prophets and Apostles is an infallible and inseperable note of a true Church of God for Gods Church is nothing else but a company of Gods people called by the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles unto the state of Salvation so that out of the Church there is no Salvation ordinarily In which regard Noahs Ark was a true Type of the Church none being saved from drowning that were out of it And none but such who are of Christs body shall partake of the benefits of his Office for himself saith He prays not for the world Joh. 17.9 In which respect also out of the Church no Salvation for the body being the true Catholique Invisible Church he that is not a member of this body is out of the Church and so hath not Christ to be his Head and Savior Yea the Church is also Christs Spouse the many espousal Titles which in Scripture are given to Christ and the Church in mutual relation of one to another evidently declareth as much He is stiled a Bridegroom she a Bride Joh. 3.29 He Well-beloved she Love Cant. 1.13 15. He an Husband she a Wise 2 Cor. 11.2 He an Head she the Body both one flesh Eph. 5.23 31. Thus the Church being the Communion of Saints sanctified in Christ Jesus confessing him the Son of the living God in every place knit in one Church as the Body and every Member unto Christ as unto one Head it is most evident that no man can be saved out of the Church for whomsoever God hath chosen and elected to the end which is eternal life them he hath chosen to the means which is the inward and outward calling But here note That Infants born in the Church are in charity to be reputed of the Church till at their mature Age their life notoriously express the contrary The Church is called Catholique or Vniversal because it is not now tyed to any certain place or people as it was under the Law before the coming of Christ Now the Doctrine of the true Church consisteth in the Sentences and Decrees which we are bound by the Commandment of God to believe and obey and no Doctrine is to be proposed to the Church that is repugnant to the holy Scripture or not contained therein And the Church hath Authority to judge and determine in Controversies of Faith according to Scripture to interpret and expound the Word of God with respect to the Analogy of faith Rom. 12.6 And though she be the Witness and Keeper of Gods written Word yet may not inforce any thing to be believed as necessary to Salvation that is either contrary or beside the Word of God The visible Church is a company among men imbracing and professing the true and uncorrupt Doctrine of the Law and the Gospel and using the Sacraments aright according to Christs Institution and professing Obedience unto the Doctrine in which company are many ungenerate or hypocrites consenting notwithstanding to the Doctrine The invisible Church is a company of those which are Elected to eternal life in whom a new life is begun here by the Holy Ghost and is perfected in the world to come They which are in this invisible Church never perish neither are any hypocrites therein And it is called Invisible not that the men are invisible but because their Faith is so that we cannot certainly discern the godly from the hypocrites And although this Universal invisible Church is that Militant Church which remaineth as yet in the field and is fighting on Earth yet it is and lieth hid in the visible Church so that in this respect there is as it were no more difference between them then between a whole and a part Now those visible Churches which refuse to be governed by Christs Word but are by Humane Traditions playing the Adulteresses by committing Idolatry are not of this Catholique Church which is subject to Christ neither are Infidels that defie Christ Hereticks that deny him Ignorant persons that know not his Will Prophane persons that despise Worldlings that lightly esteem him nor any that persecute or scorn him in his Members Thus many have a Name of being of the Church who indeed are not And as for the Church of Rome they are departed from the Truth they have denyed the Faith they have defiled themselves with Idols they will not have Christs Righteousness imputed to them they set up their own Works and seek Justification by them they will not receive Christ to be their onely King and Priest they will merit Salvation for themselves and therefore they are not a true but a false Church The word Church signifieth an Assembly called together which calling is twofold viz. 1. Outward which is common to all that make profession of the Gospel in this respect
resteth secure for Salvation 2. A Spiritual Joy of heart in regard of the benefit of Faith 1 Pet. 1.8 2. A clear Conscience that is a faithful endeavor to approve our selves unto God by doing what is acceptable and avoiding what is offensive to his most excellent Majesty The ground of this clear Conscience is Love for a sense of Gods Love worketh love to God and it is always accompanied with a pure heart 1 Tim. 1.5 2 Cor. 1.12 These two things are especially Requisite as Helps to Faith 1. A faithful Remembrance of Gods Promises 2. A right Application of them For the right application of Gods Promises three things are to be observed viz. 1. The matter contained in them 1. General concerning supply of all good things and deliverance from all evil Gen. 3.15 22.18 Rom. 8.28 1 Cor. 3.22 2. Particular fit for our particular estates and needs and they concern 1. This life therin 1. Temporal things as 1. To Supply things needful 2. To Remove things hurtful 2. Spiritual things Jer. 31.33 c. Luke 11.13 2. The life to come for which heavenly and glorious things are promised Luke 23.43 1 Cor. 15.22 Phil. 3.21 Mat. 25.34 2. The kinde or quality of them viz. 1. Absolute which God hath simply and absolutely determined to accomplish even as they are propounded so all saving and sanctifying Graces being absolutely necessary to Salvation are promised to all Gods children 1 Cor. 1.5 and eternal life Joh. 10.28 2. Conditional which are no farther promised then God in his wisdom seeth to be most for his own glory and his childrens good and are no otherwise to be prayed for by us Thus conditionally are promised 1. All Temporal Blessings which Lazarus an holy man wanted Luke 16.20 2. Freedom from all Crosses and troubles what Saint hath not had his part in some of them 3. Freedom from all Temptations as our Head was tempted so have his members been from time to time 4. Less principal Graces which are called Restraining Graces These the Spirit distributeth severally 1 Cor. 12.8 Not all to every one some to one some to another 5. The measure of sanctifying Graces for though every Saint hath every saving Grace in him yet have they not all a like measure some have a greater and some a less 3. The maner of propounding them 1. Expresly declared and they are either Generally propounded to all Or Particularly applyed to some particular persons 2. By consequence imployed in the Examples Prayers of Saints 1. By those Blessings which they have enjoyed 2. By those which they have prayed for in Faith and obtained Our laboring to strengthen Faith is of much use to us especially these three ways 1. In getting Assurance of Pardon after some sin is committed 2. In Conflicts with strong Lusts 3. In want of Spiritual Graces The use of Faith in Prosperity viz. 1. It maketh us acknowledge That it is the Lord who hath so disposed our estate 2. It maketh us rest upon God for the time to come that all shall go well with us for Faith hath eyes whereby it doth after a maner see that to be true which yet it seeth not accomplished Faith hath also a double use in Adversity viz. 1. It upholdeth us in the present distress when else we know not what to do 2. It maketh us patiently wait for deliverance Hos 6.1 2. for God having promised to give a good issue Faith resteth upon it even as it were now and already accomplished The Vices repugnant unto Faith and forbidden in this first Commandment viz. 1. Unbelief which assenteth not to such Doctrine as is heard and known concerning God 2. Doubtfulness which neither stedfastly assenteth to it nor altogether gainsays it 3. Distrust which applyeth not unto it self the knowledge which it hath of God and his Promises and doth through fear of Gods forsaking us surcease the doing of that it should do 4. A Dissembling or Hypocritical Faith 5. Temporary Faith or a Revolting from Faith 6. A Tempting of God stubbornly and proudly provoking him to anger 7. Carnal Security without thinking of God his Will or our own miserable estate under sin Faith doth the Sun in 's Zenith far out-shine Inflames with Love and makes us all divine Cancels our Debts makes all our Reck'nings ev'n Takes wing at Christ and flies us up to Heav'n Lifts us above the World and does advance Hope ' yond Hope and rests us in Assurance Which first sucks life from Faith returns back then The sap much stronger to the Root agen He that hath Faith hath Heav'n onely does stay To take a Death and Cross or two in 's way §. 3. Of Humility HUmiliation is the fruit of Faith and the first effect whereby Faith which lies hid in the heart doth appear And in the very instant when a sinner begins truly in heart and conscience to humble himself before God he is then entred into the state of Salvation Now if a man finde himself hard-hearted and of a dead Spirit so as he cannot humble himself as he ought or as he would such persons if they humble themselves must be content with that Grace which they have received for if thou be truly and unfainedly grieved for this That thou canst not be grieved thy Humiliation will be accepted And though it may be thou art more humbled and hast a greater grief for an earthly loss then for thy committed sins yet mayest thou even then be truly humbled and grieved for thy sins too because the one is a bodily natural and sensible loss and the other a supernatural insensible and spiritual Now sensible things do more affect and urge the minde then the other The heart of man cannot be lifted up in Assurance of Gods favor to the apprehension of heavenly things unless it be first abased by true Humiliation brought to nothing in it self To this must be added Faith for in the practice of a Christian life the duties of Humiliation and Faith cannot be severed Till the heart be throughly by Humiliation prepared by being broken with the sight of sins and Gods wrath Christ and the Gospel is preached to it in vain and though some drink in the Truth of the Gospel with their Education yet such usually hold not out without also sound Humiliation Thus by the Spirit of Elias is meant a sharp Ministery to shew men their sins that they may be throughly humbled and prepared else they will never take Christ so as to keep close to him for without sound Humiliation sin is not accounted the greatest evil nor Christ the greatest good We cannot love Christ till upon the consideration of our sins we are humbled for them and are become poor in Spirit and then the Lord regards us highly and will raise us up but the want of sorrow for sin is a greater Argument of the want of love to Christ then the sin it self Now Humiliation is not required as a Qualification antecedent and precedent to
not things unlawful unpossible and unwarranted by the Word of God not things whereof we are uncertain whether they please God or not but such things as the Scripture warranteth being the true Rule of all right ways the Record of Gods Revealed Will. 5. That being thus made it is carefully to be kept and religiously to be performed having an eye to that party with whom we have to deal For as Vows are to be made with reverence so are they to be performed with care and diligence otherwise we grosly abuse the Majesty of God and take his Name in vain So that Vows are not in themselves unlawful or to be condemned so as they be restrained and bounded in the compass of the Law of God Consider farther in Vows these Particulars viz. 1. If they be made of any thing flat against the Word of God they cannot binde or tye us to the performance thereof for all the force and power of binding us is to be borrowed and derived from the Word of God otherwise they have no strength or efficacy to constrain or command 2. They must not be made of such persons as want sufficient Reason Judgement Discretion and Understanding as Children Fools or Furious persons 3. They must be so made as they may stand with Christian Liberty for we may not in any sort make that absolutely Necessary which God hath left free unto us ensnaring the Conscience and abridging the Liberty which Christ hath purchased contrary to the Commandment of the Apostle Gal. 5.1 4. That a Vow made of a thing unpossible is no Vow at all but an intolerable presumption and a wilful tempting of God 5. They must not be against a mans general or particular Calling that is neither against his calling as he is a Christian neither against that special calling wherein he liveth 6. They must not be rash heady sudden idle or unadvised but made with Advice Meditation and Deliberation for rash Vows are not lawful though the things vowed may be done lawfully 7. They ought all to be of great moment and importance not idle and trifling toys like the Popish Vows whereof one voweth a Pilgrimage to the Saints another to fast or eat no Flesh at such a Feasts Even whereof the one is superstitious and the other devilish 1 Tim. 4.1 3. 8. They must not be made for false and wrong ends as conceit of Merit and opinion of deserving the favor of God and Everlasting Life For the ends which we respect must be good as to exercise and stir up the gifts of Faith Prayer Obedience Repentance and other graces of the Spirit and to testifie our Thankfulness to God for Blessings received at his hand They must not be to binde God unto us but us the closer unto him in a more strict course of life 9. They must come from a free heart performed willingly and chearfully unto God 10. We must pay our Vows without delay we must not put off the time Gen. 33.1 Exod. 5.3 lest the Lord hold us guilty of taking his Name in vain The blister'd Tongues of men scarce ought can vent Without the Breach of this Commandement We cannot sigh reprove admire nor fit Expressions to the fancy of our Wit Without the Breach thereof Courtiers sick For want of words make it their Rhetorick And Poets swear they are undone unless They may have license for some Prophaneness But let all such as Take Gods Name in vain Take heed they Take not Hell too for their pain The Fourth Commandment Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath day Six days thou shalt labor and do all that thou hast to do c. THe Sum of this Commandment setteth out a certain Day wherein God will have men to sever themselves from their ordinary labors and to apply themselves wholly to his Service As God rested the Seventh day after the Creation So Christ having ended the Work of the New Creation rested on this day from the Work of Redemption And as Christ did substitute the last Supper in room of the Passover So he substituted the First day of the Week in room of the Jews Sabbath to be a day set apart to his own Worship From Adam to our Savior Christ the Sabbath was the Seventh day of the Week but from Christ and his Apostles it is the First of the Week that is the Lords day which was instituted for the Seventh day or Sabbath day in respect of Christs Resurrection Now Christ in changing the Sabbath day from the Seventh day to the Eighth did not change the Moral Law for that change was no change of the Substance but of the Circumstance of Time for the Substance of that Law is the enjoyning of a Seventh days Rest unto the Lord now though a Seventh day from the Creation be not kept yet a Seventh day is kept still Hence then doth the Sectarist vainly hold That all days are now alike and none more a Sabbath then another For whereas they alledge We are free from the Law Rom. 7. it is meant of the Ceremonial Law the heavy yoke whereof Christ took from our shoulders and if in any place freedom from the Law be spoken of it is either meant of the Ceremonial and Judicial or of the Rigor of the Moral Law enacting perfect Obedience in every point or else threatning condemnation Neither is that true which is alledged Every day is a Sabbath to a Christian for it is Gods express Command Six days shalt thou labor yet not excluding our daily Service to God This continual Sabbath will not be till we come to Heaven Isa 66.23 Neither may it be in the liberty of the Church to change the Sabbath day again for as it was not at the first changed without Christs Authority so it can receive no further change without him And if the Church had this power then might it be said to be Lord of the Sabbath yet without adjoyning any opinion of such necessity of this unalterableness in the Church as to think it the least part of any ceremonial Worship it being now the Lords day no Jewish Sabbath And this is an unchangeable Rule That one day in Seven neither more nor less is Moral and Perpetual And although the Jews that believed changed the day which was ceremonial yet altered they not the Morality of one in Seven For in the first change they kept two Sabbaths together the Jewish the Seventh day of the week past in memorial of the Work of Creation which was past the Christian the First day which was immediately next the other and the First of the week to come in Remembrance of the Work of Redemption being our Sabbath at the Resurrection of Christ for the time following which is impossible ever to be changed again That which is shadowed forth in the Legal Sabbath is begun in the Spiritual and is perfected and consummated in the Heavenly Sabbath The Breach of this Sabbath is the main sin of the world nay Humane Inventions
conscionable dealing in all our actions amongst men Reasons that may enforce us to labor for this Sanctification viz. 1. It is the Will of God that we should be holy all impurity being contrary to his Will 1 Thess 4.3 2. It is the end of our Vocation and Calling not to live in filthy lusts and uncleanness 1 Thess 4.7 3. It is the end of our Election Eph. 1.4 we are not elected to live as we list 4. Because hereby we like obedient Children resemble our heavenly Father who is Holiness it self 1 Pet. 1.15 16. 5. Without this Holiness we have no part in the New-Birth Rev. 20.6 6. Without this Holiness we shall never see the Lord Heb. 12.14 VIII A Doption ariseth from our Union with Christ and is that whereby they which are justified are accounted of God as his own children it is annexed to Justification and thereby all such as are predestinate to be Adopted receive power to be actually accounted the Sons of God by Christ Eph. 1.5 from whose Obedience whereby he stood in subjection to the Law this Adoption springs Hence it is that we are freed from under the Law and have given unto us even the Adoption of Sons And this alone is that whereby we stand before the Tribunal Seat of God which also we are to oppose to the Judgement of God to Hell Death and Condemnation In this Grace of Adoption there be two Actions of God the one is Acceptation whereby God accepts men for his children the other is Regeneration whereby men are born of God when the Image of God is restored in them in Righteousness and true Holiness The outward means of Adoption is Baptism not Baptism alone but Baptism joyned with Faith for the Scripture speaking of Baptism comprehends both the outward and the inward Baptism which is the inward Baptism of the Spirit Mat. 3.11 1 Pet. 3.21 Now this Adoption gives us Assurance of Salvation for he that is the Adopted Son of God shall undoubtedly be saved Rom. 3.2 Moses had an higher esteem of this Grace of Adoption when he chose rather to be the Childe of God then the Heir of an Earthly Prince Heb. 11.25 So did David who though a King yet regardless of his Royalty setteth it at nought in regard of the Blessing of Adoption who otherwise could never have said That the Lord not the Kingdom of Israel was his Portion Psal 16. And so also must we have an high esteem thereof if we hope to have Heaven thereby Two Testimonies of our Adoption whereby we may know that we are Adopted viz. 1. The Spirit of God dwelling in us and testifying to our Spirit that we are the children of God 2. Our Spirit that is our Conscience sanctified and renewed by the Holy Ghost Six Notes of our Adoption out of the six Petitions of the Lords-Prayer viz. 1. An earnest and hearty desire in all things to further the glory of God 2. A care and readiness to resign our selves in subjection to God to be ruled by his Word and Spirit in thought word and deed 3. A sincere endeavor to do his Will in all things making conscience of every evil 4. Upright walking in a mans lawful Calling yet still by Faith relying on Gods Providence 5. Every day to humble a mans self before God for his offences seeking his favor in Christ 6. A continual Combat between the Flesh and the Spirit for otherwise Corruption would prevail over the whole man The Benefit the Children of God have by Adoption viz. 1. The Elect childe of God is hereby made a Brother of Christ 2. He is a King and the Kingdom of Heaven is his Inheritance 3. He is Lord over all the Creatures except the Angels 4. The holy Angels minister unto him for his good they guard him and watch about him 5. All things yea grievous afflictions and sin it self turn to his good though in its own nature it be never so hurtful 6. Being thus Adopted he may look for comfort at Gods hand answerable to the measure of his afflictions as God hath promised 7. God will provide all things necessary for the Souls and Bodies of his Adopted ones Mat. 6.26 So that they who drown themselves in worldly cares distrusting the Providence of God live like fatherless children 8. In that we are children we have liberty to come into the presence of God and to pray unto him Eph. 3.12 9. Nothing shall hurt them that are the children of God Psal 91.13 10. God will bear with the infirmities and frailties of them that be his children if there be in them a care to please him with a purpose of not sinning Mal. 3.17 Let not any man hence sin ' cause Grace doth abound Duties from Adoption viz. 1. If ye be the children of God then walk worthy your Profession and Calling for if we live according to the lusts of our flesh as the men of the world do whatsoever we profess we are in truth the children of the Devil Joh. 8.44 1 Joh. 3. 2. We must use every day to bring our selves into the presence of God and we must do all things as in his sight and presence presenting our selves unto him as Instruments of his Glory in doing of his Will This is the honor the childe of God owes unto him Mal. 1.6 3. Our care must be according to the measure of Grace to resemble Christ in all good Vertues and holy Conversation for he is our eldest Brother and therefore we should be like unto him 1 Joh. 3.2 3. 4. We must have a desire and love to the Word of God that we may grow thereby in Knowledge Grace c. This is the food whereby God feeds his children 1 Pet. 2.2 5. When we are under the Rod of Correction for God corrects all his children we must resign our selves to the will and good pleasure of God This is childe-like obedience and herewith God is well pleased IX REgeneration is a renewing and repairing of the decayed estates of our Souls or an Act of the Holy Ghost in Gods Elect whereby they are entred into a constant and faithful exercise of a godly life No general Preventing Grace in us which we have in our own power to use or refuse but the special Grace of the Spirit onely worketh in us Conversion the want whereof causeth in us our continuance in sin for it is God alone who worketh in us both to will and to do yet there is not one Effect ascribed to the Holy Ghost another to mans Will but the same to both unto the Holy Ghost the Principal Cause unto Mans Will as a Secondary and Instrumental Cause Like that vertue proceeding from that Art in the Artificers minde which guides the Instrument to frame this or that the which without it could not be done which invisible passage or secret influence we see not otherwise then in the Effect or like the vertue that directs the Arrow just to such a Mark so far and
all to do it meritoriously 2. A Work that it may be meritorious must not be a Debt or Duty for then the doer deserves nothing but man when he hath done his best hath done no more then what by duty he was bound to do and having done all is but an unprofitable Servant 3. To make the work meritorious there must be a proportion betwixt the Work and Life Eternal the reward of the Work but man cannot do a work proportionable to Eternal glory for he takes all of God and can give nothing to him besides man is a Creature and therefore whatsoever he hath or can do is no more then what he oweth to God Again the End of good works is threefold especially viz. 1. In respect of God that his Commandment may be obeyed 1 John 3.22 That his will may be done 1 Thes 4.3 That we may shew our selves to be obedient children to God our Father 1 Pet. 1.14 That we may shew our selves thankful for our Redemption by Christ Tit. 2.14 That we may not grieve the Spirit of God Eph. 4.30 But walk according to the same Gal. 5.22 That God by our good works may be glorified Matth. 5.16 That we may be good followers of God Eph. 5.1 2. In regard of our Neighbor that he may be helped in worldly things Luke 6.38 That he may be won by our example to Godliness 1 Pet. 3.14 That we may stop our adversaries mouths 3. In respect of our selves that we may shew our selves new Creatures 2 Cor. 5.17 That we may walk as the children of Light Eph. 5.8 That we may have some assurance of our Faith and of our Salvation 2 Pet. 1.8 10. That the punishments of sin may be prevented Psal 89.32 And the promised reward obtained Gal. 6.9 Again more particularly thus we are bound to do good works in respect of God for these Reasons 1. Because of the Commandment of God who requires them at our hands 2. For the glory of God which is hereby in others also exalted 3. Because of that thankfulness which the regenerate owe to God as well for his Mercies temporal as his Blessings spiritual We are bound to do good works in respect of our selves for these Reasons viz. 1. That by our good works we may be assured of our Faith Matth. 7.17 2. That we may be assured that we have obtained remission of sins through Christ and are for Christs sake justified before God 3. That we may be assured of our Election and Salvation 2 Pet. 1.10 4. That thereby our Faith may be exercised cherished strengthned and advanced 5. That thereby we may shew forth an honest Life and Calling Ephes 4.1 6. That we may escape Temporal and Eternal punishments Matth. 7.19 7. That we may obtain Corporal and Spiritual rewards 1 Tim 4.8 We are bound to do good Works in respect of our Neighbor for these Reasons viz. 1. That we may be profitable unto them by our good Example and so edifie them 2. That Offences may be avoided Mat. 18.7 3. That we may win Unbelievers and by our words and deeds and example convert them unto Christ Luke 22.32 A more large explication of the Proofs of this Assertion That Good Works cannot Merit viz. 1. Our best works are imperfect Gal. 5.17 Works indeed good neither are nor can be performed of us without our renewing by the Holy Ghost neither proceed they from our selves but are the Gifts and Effects of God in us and we his Instruments unto whom he communicateth his Blessings in us as in the Subject by us as the Instruments The purity of which actions are supposed to be no farther pure then the purity and light of their Mindes may be supposed to be Thus on the light of Nature may follow actions morally good upon Spiritual light follow actions also Spiritually good or Good Works upon imperfect illightning imperfect Obedience on perfect illightning perfect Obedience also followeth which though in this life is not but deferred till the life to come 1 Cor. 13. yet are the godly in whose hearts the life of Faith is kindled pure in the sight of God when he beholdeth them in Christ though their good Works cannot be perfect so long as themselves who work joyntly with the Spirit are not perfect yet shall not their Imperfections nor the Imperfections of their works be imputed to them but the Perfection of their Saviors Satisfaction 2. The Good Works whatsoever we are able to do are all due Luke 17.10 therefore no man ought to be beguiled to slacken his strictness in avoiding any sin or his Conscionableness in performing any bounden Duty by a Suggestion of Satans that he may be over-just Eccl. 7.18 For in true Righteousness a man cannot be over-just but for a man to make a Righteousness unto himself which is not grounded on Gods VVord and therein to be strict is to be over-just and to perform more then is due unto God To count such things to be sin which by Gods Law are not made sin is to be over-just and to be censorious without just ground is to be over-just but we regulating our selves by Gods VVord when we shall have done all those things which are commanded us must say We are unprofitable servants and have done but that which is our duty to do and therefore far from meriting 3. Our VVorks are impure and vicious however they seem most good Isa 64.6 for if any works proceed good from us they are not ours but Gods good works in us as the Subject and by us as the Instruments neither are they good works which are imagined by us as seeming by us to be right and good or which are commanded by men but such onely which are done by a true Faith according to Gods Law and are referred onely to his Glory yet though the Righteousness of the holiest Saints considered in it self and compared with the perfect Rule of the Law be exceeding defective or opposed to the Righteousness of Christ be as nothing yet as it is a work of Gods holy Spirit in us proceeding from an heart purified by Faith all the imperfections thereof being covered with the perfect Righteousness of Christ it is acceptable to God and such a thing as we may receive much comfort by but not glory in or think to merit ought thereby 4. If we do any good VVorks they are not ours but are belonging to God onely who worketh in us both to will and to do of his own good pleasure Phil. 2.13 and therefore good VVorks in us can merit nought unless it be a Curse for those imperfections and defilements which are inseparably in them by reason of that staining quality which remains in our depraved Nature 5. No Creature whatever he do can merit of God by order of Justice even because the Creature can never do sufficient to merit the work and benefit of his Creation at the hands of his Creator 6. There can be no proportion betwixt our Works and the
And this way were we Redeemed by Christ for the Devil did hold us Captive by right for Sin till Christ paid his Blood Eph. 1.7 Col. 1.14 Christ is said to Redeem us three ways viz. 1. Because he alone is both God and Man so is neither the Father nor the Holy Ghost which was necessary to the Work of our Redemption Acts 20.28 2. He alone was appointed of the Father to work our Redemption Heb. 3.2 3. In the Redeemer two things are required viz. 1. Power and ability to encounter and overcome the Enemy This power was in Christ 2. The right of Redemption which is twofold viz. 1. The Right of Propriety This Right Christ hath in us as True God it belonging to the whole Trinity 2. The Right of Propinquity and this Christ hath as True Man and this he hath alone Christ taketh away our sins three ways viz. 1. By Imputation whereby our sins become his and his Righteousness made ours 2 Cor. 5.21 2. By Expiation and Propitiation whereby he removed them out of the sight of God 1 Joh. 2.23 3. By Mortification thereby removing them from us in this life and in death by perfect Sanctification Or thus Christs Blood doth save us from all sin 1. By Expiation which is the satisfying of Gods Wrath due to sin by bearing the heavy burthen thereof Phil. 1.8 He laid down his life for us 1 Joh. 3.16 2. By Sanctification which is the virtual diffusing of his Blood in our hearts and in every corner thereof by the working of his Holy Spirit to the cleansing of them from sin so as it hath no more dominion over us Rom. 6.3 This Redemption by Christ is Eternal in two respects 1. In regard of Eternal Predestination which was before the Foundation of the world 2. In regard that the vertue of this Redemption doth extend it self from the beginning of the world unto the end thereof neither is there any other to be looked for In this doctrine of Redemption consider 1. Who are Redeemed and they onely the Elect of all sorts of people both before and since the coming of Christ 2. Who hath Redeemed us that is Christ alone the onely-Mediator between God and us as being the onely Head of the Church 3. That this Redemption is Spiritual from sin the cause of Death Eternal and from Satan the Author of Sin and all the ill consequents of sin 4. Onely by the Blood of Christ the onely purgation from sin 5. The cause moving Christ thus to Redeem us which was the riches of his Grace Christ Jesus hath made an Atonement between God and us by his Blood and is thereby become our Advocate and Redeemer 1. Because thereby God is well pleased and his wrath appeased so that he accounteth Christs Death as a full Price and sufficient Ransom paid for our sins Mat. 3.17 Eph. 5.2 2. Christ took the whole burthen of our sins upon his shoulders presenting himself before God in our person and offering us to God in his person So that he took upon him our Unrighteousness and imputed to us his Righteousness Isa 53.4 12. 3. There could otherwise be no Remission of sins So that it is the Blood of Christ in the Suffering of the Cross that purgeth away our sins Heb. 9.22 4. Nothing but the Death of Christ could quench the scorching wrath of God as a consuming fire kindled against us and countervail his severe Justice Heb. 9.5 In that Christ is said to be the lamb slain from the beginning of the world is signified 1. That he is in respect of the Application of his Merit a perpetual Sacrifice satisfactory although the slaying it self is at a certain time 2. He was slain typically from all Ages in Types and Figures which did shadow forth his Death to the life 3. He was slain from the beginning in his Members the Saints as Abel the Prophets c. 4. By the Eternal Decree of God the Father he should expiate the sins of the world The Doctrine of the Eternity of Christs Redemption is a threefold Use 1. Not to doubt of the Salvation of the Fathers in the Old Testament before Christ came 2. Not to Judge Censure or Condemn our Brethren 3. Not to despair of Gods Mercy The delivery we have by Christs Redemption is fourfold or Christ hath Redeemed us from a fourfold Bondage viz. 1. From the Bondage of Blindeness and Ignorance by the light of his holy Spirit Ezek. 18.2 Tit. 3.3 2. From the Bondage of Sin enduing us with a lively Faith and regenerating us From Sin which is the perfect both pardoning of Sin that it may not for ever be imputed and also abolishing of it in us by Regeneration or Newness of life which is begun here but to be perfected in the world to come 3. From the Bondage of Death and Corruption by the work of his Redemption Rom. 8.21 1 Cor. 15.54 From Death both from Desperation or the Feeling of Gods Wrath which being in the wicked here begun shall continue everlastingly and from Corporal Death and all Calamities and Miseries by our Resurrection and Glorification 4. From the Bondage of the Law by taking away the exaction and strict urging of perfect obedience Gal. 3.13 The use that we are to make of our Redemption 1. To hate loath and detest all sin whatsoever 2. To glorifie Christ both in Soul and in Body 3. To live wholly unto him not to our selves 4. To take heed of defiling our selves again with sin 5. To love Christ unfeignedly willingly perpetually 6. To live and walk as becometh those that are Redeemed The use that we are to make of the Freeness of Christs Redeeming us without any desert of ours viz. 1. Not to abuse Gods Mercy by Carnal Presumption 2. To accept of it and Repent more speedily 3. Never to Despair of this Mercy finally and totally 4. To give all possible Praise and Thanks for ever for this unspeakable Mercy V. VOcation is that General Calling whereby a man is called out of the world to be a Childe of God a Member of Christ and Heir of the Kingdom of Heaven This Calling belongs to every one within the compass of the Church not any one excepted for this General Calling is the Calling of Christianity which is common to all that live in the Church of God An effectual Calling or a Calling to Grace effectually is whereby a sinner being severed from the world is entertained into Gods Family Eph. 2.17 19. Now though all the Called are Members of Christ yet we must know That of the Members of Christ some are living some dying A living Member of Christ is every one Elected which being ingrafted by Faith and the Spirit into Christ doth feel and shew forth the power of Christ in him A dying or decaying Member is every one truly ingrafted into Christ who hath no feeling of the power and efficacy of the quickning Spirit in him he is like to a benumm'd Leg without Sense which indeed
is a part of mans body and yet receiveth no nourishment They who are effectually called are onely the Elect for whom God Electeth them he calleth in the time appointed for the same purpose This Calling of the Elect being nothing else but a singling and a severing of them out of this vile world and the customs thereof 2 Thess 2.13 14. to be Citizens of the Kingdom of Glory after this life Eph. 2.19 And this severing or chusing of the Elect out of the world is then performed when God by his holy Spirit endueth them with true saving Faith Col. 2.7 Joh. 15.19 This effectual Calling to Christ and to his Gospel in which the Elect are onely called is a benefit and effect of our Predestination because it is by the Purpose and Grace of God which is given us in Christ 2 Tim. 1.9 Rom. 8.30 it is not Universal to all for Christ is Hidden Manna Rev. 2.17 therefore effectual Vocation is definite and particular and those onely whom God had before predestinate them he called Rom. 30. So many as were ordained to life everlasting believed Acts 13.48 that is were called unto the faith It is not given to all to understand the mysteries of the kingdom Mat. 13.11 These things are hid from most of the wise of the world and revealed unto Babes Mat. 11.25 All therefore are not called effectually The Calling of God is threefold viz. 1. Gods general Calling whereby he calleth all men to Repentance by the Gospel and so to life Eternal Rom. 8.30 11.29 2. His particular Calling when he calleth and assigneth men to some particular estate and duty in Family Church or Common-wealth 3. God calleth some men to some private personal Duty which he designeth not to others but to be done by them alone Such a Calling had he assigned him that would needs be perfect Go sell all that thou hast c. And to Abraham when he called him to leave his Countrey his Kindred his Lands and Possessions c. Heb. 11.8 For the better conceiving of the Nature of Effectual Vocation consider these 6 Points viz. 1. The Ground and Foundation of it namely Gods eternal free Election of us unto life Everlasting 2 Tim. 1.9 2. The means thereof both Preparing Instrumental 1. The Reading of the Scripture serving to beget a general Historical Faith 2. Afflictions in Body Goods Name Friends or otherwise tending to humble a man and prepare his heart as soft ground 3. The denouncing of Gods Judgements and Threats of the Law 4. The Preaching of the glad Tidings of the Gospel which is the most principal and effectual means of this special and effectual Vocation 2 Thess 2.14 3. The Persons that are called those are mentioned Rom. 30. namely those whom he had before predestinated 4. The Time of this Calling The particular time of any mans Calling is not revealed but laid up in the Secret Counsel of God in whose hands Times and Seasons are some at the Sixth hour some at the Ninth and others at the Eleventh c. Defer not therefore but accept the Acceptable time 5. Wherein this effectual Calling doth consist viz. both in the outward and inward Calling especially in the inward when the heart is pierced Psal 40.6 from stone changed into a heart of flesh made tractable and plyable Ezek 11.19 a heart like that of Lydia's Acts 16.15 6. The Excellency of this Calling being a great work as was the Creation of man at first Rom. 4.18 2 Cor. 4.6 yea this effectual Calling goes beyond the work of our Creation for here a man is taken out of the first Adam and set into the second in the Creation God onely called things that were not as though they were but here God calls not onely things that are not but things that would not and refuse to be To raise a man out of the Blood of Christ is more then to raise Eve out of Adams side to raise a dead Soul from the death of Sin far more glorious and powerful then to raise a dead body from bodily death to raise a man to supernatural life far greater then to a Natural onely The means whereby God executeth this effectual Calling viz. 1. The Saving Hearing of the Word of God that is when the Word preached comes savingly to one dead in his sins and does not so much as dream of his Salvation Ezek. 16.6 Isa 55.1 John 1.12 Rom. 7.7 1 Joh. 2.27 Acts 16.14 Psal 40.6 2. The Mollifying of the Heart which must be bruised in pieces that it may be fit to receive Gods Saving Grace offered unto it Ezek. 11.19 The heart is mollified by the Spirit of God and bruised by the knowledge of the Law of Sin and the Punishment due for Sin by a feeling of the Wrath of God for the same sins and by a holy desperation of a mans own power in the obtaining of eternal life Acts 2.37 3. Faith which is a miraculous and supernatural Faculty of the heart apprehending Christ being applied by the operation of the Holy Ghost and receiving him to it self Joh. 1.12 The main duty of a Christian Calling are most chiefly these 1. Invocation of the Name of God in Christ Acts 9.14 1 Cor. 1.2 2. As much as possible we can to further the good estate of the true Church of God Psal 122.6 3. That every one become a Servant to his Brother in all the duties of Love 1 Cor. 9.19 Gal. 5.13 4. To walk worthy that Calling whereto God hath called us Eph. 4.1 The use we are to make of Gods Calling viz. 1. Seeing we are called of God himself in the Ministery of the Word we must labor to joyn the inward Calling with it which is higher then that by having first a grief because we cannot believe next a ready minde then an endeavor to believe and lastly a sorrow because we believe no more and fail so much in the Service of God 2. We must walk worthy of our Calling being holy in our conversation as he that hath called us is holy and there must be the same end of our lives which is of Gods Calling that is to bring us to Heaven The end of our being in the world is to be called out of the world VI. JVstification is that benefit whereby God doth pardon and forgive us all our sins for Christs sake and doth acquit us and absolve us from the guilt of them and doth accept us as Righteous before him in Christ So that Justification is the Absolving of a sinner believing in Christ from sin and the guilt thereof and the Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ unto him and the Acceptation to Life Eternal freely for the Merits of Christ with application of Christ on our part by Faith The Papists say That Faith and Works both are required to Justifie we say That nothing is required but Faith and that Works follow Faith They say Faith and Works we say Faith onely but it must be an effectual Faith
Object represented unto it 4. The Will doing one of the two upon former deliberation 5. The Will doing it of her self or having the cause and beginning of her motion internal this is to do by her own proper motion 6. Not being constrained by any external Agent This Faculty or Power of the Soul is called Free in respect of the will for these Reasons viz. 1. The Will doth of her own accord follow the judgement of the Minde and Understanding 2. Because it is by Nature equally fit to receive or refuse 3. Because it moveth her self by its own proper motion 4. In this Election or Rejection it suffereth no impediment or constraint of any external Agent There are four degrees of Free-will in Man which are distinguished according to the diverse states and conditions of mans nature viz. 1. In Man not fain before sin when man had perfect liberty to continue good or to fall and though most free yet not so strong but he might fall God not assisting him which denial of Gods Grace was no cruelty but a way to greater Mercy nor any compulsion to make man fall for he had Free-will to stand 2. After the Fall in man not Regenerate in which state it is a proneness in man to chuse onely evil which evil necessity came from man voluntarily and by his own will 3. In Man Regenerated in this life wherein the Will useth her liberty not onely to do evil as when the work is not done according to Gods Commandment but partly to do evil partly to do well as when it does it as God hath commanded his Spirit working by the will giving him power to will what he commandeth and approveth 4. In Man perfectly Regenerated after his Glorification in this state the will shall be onely free to chuse good and not to chuse evil and this liberty is greater then the first before his Fall because this excludeth all possibility of falling the other did not The disterence between the liberty of Gods will and ours viz. 1. God knoweth all things of himself perfectly and perpetually but the Creatures know neither of themselves neither all things neither the same at all times but at such or such a time and onely so much as is revealed unto them 2. In the VVill the will of God is governed or moved or depending of no other Cause but it self our wills are depending of him 3. In the Understanding and the VVill God determined all things which he will from everlasting and wills them unchangeable we determine what we will in time and many times change from that which we first determine In the Will are two things common both to Angels and Men with God viz. 1. To do things upon deliberation and advice 2. To will without coaction those things which they have considered and thought of that is their will being by Nature fit to will the contrary or diverse from that which it doth will or also to defer and forbear the action doth encline to the other part of its own accord The use of the doctrine concerning the diversities of liberty of the will in God and in Man and of the diverse degrees of the liberty of Mans Will viz. 1. That this glory may be given to God That he alone is the most free Agent whose liberty and wisdom dependeth on no other 2. That we remember That they who wittingly and willingly sin or have cast themselves into a necessity of sinning are not at all excused and so not God but their own wills declining of their own accord from Gods Commandments to be the true and onely Cause of all their sins 3. That we may know God alone to be of himself and unchangeably good and the Fountain of Goodness but no creature to have more then God works and keeps in him 4. That remembring what we are faln from we may deplore our unthankfulness and magnifie Gods Mercy in restoring us 5. That knowing the naughtiness of our disposition if God leave us to our selves we may be humbled in his sight and crave his Assistance 6. That knowing the liberty into which the Son of God restoreth us we may the more desire his Benefits and be thankful unto him for them 7. That knowing we alone are severed from them that perish we be not lifted up with a any conceit of worthiness in our selves but magnifie the free Bounty of God to us more then others 8. That acknowledging the weakness and corruption that still remain in the Regenerate we may seek for Justification in Christ alone 9. That knowing of our selves we are not able to withstand Temptations we may ardently and daily desire to be preserved and guided by God 10. That understanding we are not preserved against our wills but with our wills we may wrestle with Temptations and endeavor to make our Calling and Election sure having received the Grace of Conversion whereof we now again proceed in a word or two Conversion is twofold 1. Passive which is an action of God whereby he converteth man being as yet unconverted In this Man is but a subject to receive the impression of Grace and no Agent at all for in the creating setting and imprinting of Righteousness in the heart and Holiness in the inward man Will can do nothing 2. Active which is an action whereby man being once turned of God turns himself in all his thoughts words and actions This Conversion is onely of Grace for Grace is the Principal Agent and Will but the Instrument of Grace for being first turned by grace we can then move and turn our selves And thus there is a co-operation of Mans Will with Gods Grace He that made thee without thee will not save thee without thee In the Conversion of a Sinner there be three works viz. 1. The Holy Ghost who is the principal Agent enlightning the Minde with true knowledge softning the Heart and changing the Will from evil to good 2. The VVord which is the Instrument of the Holy Ghost for now he worketh not by Revelation or special instinct but ordinarily in and by the VVord 3. Mans VVill which though by Nature be evil and dead unto Grace yet being renewed by the Holy Ghost in the very first act of Conversion moveth and striveth to be turned It is not like wax onely passive but as fire so soon as it is fire doth burn and so soon as it burneth it is fire So the VVill though by Nature it move not yet being renewed by Grace it moveth and so soon as it moveth it is renewed There is a fivefold Grace bestowed in the true Conversion of a sinner viz. 1. Preventing Grace whereby God inspireth into the Minde of the sinner that is to be converted good thoughts a good purpose and a desire of supernatural Grace 2. Preparing Grace whereby it is given us to consent unto God offering Grace or whereby the Minde and VVill are prepared that they may yield Assent and Obedience to the Holy Spirit 3.
VVorking Grace whereby we are delivered from the Dominion of Sin and are renewed in Minde VVill and Affections having received power to obey God 4. Co-working Grace whereby God conferreth and perfecteth the Grace of Renewing being received And without this Grace following the first is unprofitable 5. Persevering Grace whereby after that we have received the Grace of Renovation we do also receive a will to persevere and continue constantly in that good which we can do even by this gift of Perseverance The Object of Conversion is 1. Sin or Disobedience from whence we are converted 2. Righteousness or New-Obedience whereunto we are converted The subject or matter of conversion viz. 1. In the Minde and Understanding a right judgement concerning God his VVill and VVorks 2. In the VVill an earnest and ready desire purposing to obey God in all his Commandments 3. A good and reformed Affection Mans Conversion consists of these two parts viz. 1. In mortifying the Old Man that is to be truly and heartily sorry that thou hast offended God by thy sins and daily more and more to hate and eschew them 2. By quickning the New Man that is to live to God through Christ and an earnest and ready desire to order thy life according to Gods will and to do all good works The Causes of Conversion viz. 1. The Principal Efficient Cause of Conversion is the Holy Ghost 2. The Instrumental Causes or Means are first the Law then the Gospel the next Instrumental Cause is Faith 3. The Furthering Causes are the Cross and Chastisements as also Punishments Benefits Acts of Providence and Examples of others 4. The Formal Cause is the Conversion it self and the Properties thereof 5. The chief Final Cause is Gods Glory the next and subordinate end is our own good and the Conversion of others When thou art converted confirm thy Brethren How the true Conversion of the godly differs from the false Repentance of the wicked 1. In their Grief the wicked are grieved onely for the punishment ensuing not for that they offend and displease God the godly are specially grieved that God is offended 2. In the Cause the wicked repent by reason of a despair and distrust so that they more and more offend God but the godly repent by reason of Faith and a confidence they have of the Grace of God and Reconciliation in the Mediator 3. In the Effect for in the wicked New-Obedience doth not follow Repentance which always accompanieth the Repentance of the godly so that the Repentance of the wicked is no true no sound no saving Repentance The former part of Conversion is called Mortification and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because as dead men cannot shew forth the actions of one that is living so our Nature the Corruption thereof being abolished doth no more in such sort shew forth or exercise her evil actions For Mortification is by the grace and operation of the Spirit a decay and perishing of the deeds of the flesh which are evil Actions and carnal Affections 2. Because Mortification is not wrought without grief and lamenting and for this cause Mortification is called a Crucifying consisting in the subduing by a holy Discipline our inordinate lusts which rebel against God and in a patient bearing of the Cross of Christ The latter part of Conversion is called Quickning viz. 1. Because as a living man doth the actions of one that is living so Quickning is a kindling of new Faculties and Qualities in us 2. In respect of that joy which the converted have in God which indeed is such as words are not able to express nor any heart conceive but his who hath it Quickning comprehendeth those things which are contrary to Mortification 1. A Knowledge of Gods Mercy and the applying thereof in Christ 2. A Joyfulness thence arising for that God is pleased and New-Obedience is begun 3. An ardent or earnest endeavor or purpose to sin no more arising from Thankfulness and because we rejoyce that we have God appeased or pacified towards us a desire also of Righteousness and of retaining Gods love and favor being now converted from sin which next comes to be spoken of XI SIN in its proper nature is an Anomy that is a want of Conformity to the Law of God The nature of sin lies not in the action but in the maner of doing the action and sin properly is nothing formally subsisting or existing for then God should be the Author of it but it is an Ataxy or Absence of goodness in the thing that subsisteth whereupon it is truly said in Schools In peccato nihil positivum whatsoever a man doth whereof he is not certainly perswaded in judgement and conscience out of Gods Word that it may be done is sin Original Sin is the Corruption of the whole man and chiefly of the Soul of man and is not onely an absence of goodness but also a real presence of an evil property and disposition and this infection of Nature doth remain yea in them that are Regenerated For the Principle of Flesh that is in holy men may sometimes prevail mightily upon them yea so as to make them do as evil actions as the worst of men for this is a true Rule A man that excelleth in Grace may sometimes excel in ill-doing but he allows not himself therein nor is it properly he that does it but sin that dwelleth in him as the good that evil men do it cannot be said that they do it Gods Spirit may be there to help them to do much but the Spirit dwelleth not there so a man may do good and not be good On the other side things though commanded yet in the unregenerate become sins it is sin when a wicked man giveth Alms because it proceeds not from Faith and Love yet the Moral actions of the unregenerate are not to be omitted by us because in them they are sin but we must avoid the sin and perform the action avoid not the works of Hypocrites but the hypocrisie of their works Thus is sin the Corruption of a Nature created good of God but not any Creature made of God in man for it is onely an accidental Quality or natural Property of man corrupted but no substantial Property nor of the nature of man simply as he was first created Solomon hath drawn the picture of Sin to the life in the Description of an Harlot the Fawns Flatters Pleases Delights but in the end Destroys it speaks to us in Joabs language to Amasa 2 Sam. 20.10 and his kisses are as mortal or in Jaels language to Sisera Judg. 4.18 5.26 27. but the Butter in the lordly Dish will not balsum the wound it gives All sin is like the painted Harlot or the beautiful forbidden Fruit he that sucks the Honey-comb of sin sucks the Poison of Asps it is a golden Hook baited with all the Glory of the World All sin is foul filthy unclean infectious contagious and loathsom in the sight of