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A68467 A treatise of the sacraments according to the doctrin of the Church of England touching that argument Collected out of the articles of religion, the publique catechism, the liturgie, and the book of homilies. With a sermon preached in the publique lecture, appointed for Saint Pauls Crosse, on the feast of Saint Iohn Baptist, Iune 24. 1638. / By T.B. Pr. Pl. Bedford, Thomas, d. 1653. 1638 (1638) STC 1789; ESTC S113179 66,854 266

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The promise is made to you and to your children the same did St. Paul preach to the Gentiles when they were converted And how should they confirm the truth of this to them but by baptising their children Neither by children can we with the Anabaptist understand their youths of discretion only but their Infants also for in Act. 2.39 and Cor. 7.24 the word is generall to comprehend all their issue and of-spring Another Pattern is probably collected out of Mar. 10. the gospell read in the Liturgy at the Administration of Baptism The children there mentioned were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Infants such as men do hold in their arms Christ indeed baptised them not but probable it is that he might deliver them to his Disciples to be baptised as some think or rather that they had been baptised already doubtless it was a pious act of the Parents to bring them to Christ and who can much doubt of this but that the Parents having been by Iohns Baptism directed to Christ when they knew him brought children to him to receiv a further blessing from him and thus much for answer to the first and main Argument of the Anabaptists The second Argument of the Anabaptists WIthout Faith say they none ought to be baptised Mat. 28. Mar. 16. Act. 8.36 Which also the English Catechism doth allow But Infants want faith Ergo they ought not to be baptised Let the Minor be granted tho if a man deny it as some do I see not how they can prove it but gratifie them in this the Major is utterly fals for neither do these texts prov it nor the English Catechism Besides there are good reasons against it The texts prov it not indeed they prov the Affirmativ That whosoever beleeveth may be baptised But from thence to draw a negative conclusion is against Reason Thus out of Iohn 3.16 it is manifest that whosoever beleeveth shall be saved but will the Anabaptist thence conclude Infants beleev not ergo they shall not be saved God forbid Reasons are against it First In respect of Infants There needeth none actuall faith in children as a previous disposition to fit them for the grace of Baptism for why In the Baptism of Infants the spirit worketh not as a morall Agent to proffer grace to the will but as a naturall or rather supernaturall Agent to work it in the will to put grace into the heart conferring upon them seminall and initiall grace which doth not presuppose faith but is it self the seed of faith To Parents converted Baptism conveyed as did Circumcision to Abraham a superaddition of further grace to what they had extraordinarily received But to their children Baptism conveyed as did Circumcision to Isaac the first seeds of grace and Regeneration Add this that the faith of the Parent is sufficient to qualifie the child for Baptism yea for the grace of Baptism the child I say in whom as yet corruption of nature being scant active calleth for no act of Personall grace to remove the barr of guilt polluted he is but by the act of another not by consent of his own therfore the faith of the Parent sufficeth to procure for the child the Sacrament and the benefit therof They cavill and say every man must live by his own faith and not by anothers True we say so to only the words of the Prophet are misalleaged and misapplyed the text doth not add that clause not by anothers nor doth it speak simply of the benefit it self gained by faith viz. Justification Salvation Preservation but of the pre-assurance of it But not to strive hereabout we see in Matt. 9.3 the sick man fared the better for the faith of his friends even in the remission of sins Parents are nearer to their Infants and have more interest in them than one friend in another Infants are a part of their Parents so that the promise of grace mentioned in the Covenant betwixt God and the Parent is not ratified to the whole Parent except also it extend to his Infant It is then the faith of the Parent laying hold of the promise which qualifieth his Infant for incorporation into the mysticall body of Christ. And this is a point of good comfort to the parent to consider the goodness of God to him having provided for him that as he hath been a naturall instrument to convey to his child the guilt of sin and seminall corruption so may he also challenging Gods Covenant by faith be made a voluntary instrument to procure pardon of sin and seminall grace a just remedy for the former malady The consideration wherof were it well and advisedly thought upon might cure that supine negligence found in Parents who seldome think of this and consequently shall one day heare the just curses of their condemned children crying woe worth the negligence of our careless Parents who having begotten us for their pleasure therby conveyed to us guilt and corruption but never took care to cure us of this malady yea the consideration of this might provoke them to intend the act of their faith and not only in the Church cursorily of custome to present their children to God but also actually by the prayer of faith challenge Gods promise for the good of their Infants for doubtless even in this as in all other occasions the more intentive mans faith is and earnestly set upon the promise to challenge it the sooner doth it prevail and obtain the desire To return to the Anabaptist since the faith of the Parents sufficeth since the spirit worketh in Baptism as a supernaturall Agent there needeth no actuall faith to be found in children consequently they are deceived who defend that none may be baptised without faith inherent Secondly In respect of Men grown the want of faith doth not barr them from Baptism i. e. the Church may not deny water to them that desire the Sacrament if they profess to repent and beleev tho peradventure their heart be naught See then herein the unreasonable dealing of the Anabaptist who will barr Infants from the water of Baptism for want of Faith when as hath been shewed not so much the actuall Inexistence of these graces as the formall profession of them doth qualifie even Men grown sufficiently for what the Church can do in the administration of Baptism Two things are usually objected against this in the heat of contention which I shall briefly touch for the satisfaction of sober minds and so return to the former doctrin of preparation First say they children are as farr from Profession of faith as from performance consequently to be barred from Baptism To which I answer that Profession is either actuall or virtuall An actuall profession of Repentance and Faith is required of them who by the acts of reason formerly abused have multiplyed their personall transgressions but for Infants a virtuall profession is sufficient and such a profession we find in them in respect of their Propagation They are
Baptism as it were by an ante-dated pardon is dangerous no no we may not say so what is past before Baptism is pardoned and mortified viz. originall sin in children actuall in men-grown not sins to come and uncommitted these are not pardoned we speak not of the intention of God to pardon but of actuall Remission not actually remitted till by repentance the soul of man be as it were re-baptised in the blood of Christ Briefly then to the question propounded I would give this Answer that Baptism doth profit us in respect of sinns committed afterwards not becaus they are pre-remitted or that in Baptism there is an ante-dated pardon granted but becaus in Baptism the blood of Christ is communicated to be a remedy at hand ready for application which application must daily be made by the hand of faith if we desire dayly pardon hence we are taught in the fift petition to pray for our daily pardon wherin doubtless we pray for what we want and not for what we have already yet because this remedy is not de Novo given every day but once for all in Baptism therefore we say That the Efficacy of Baptismall Remission doth in some sence extend it self to the sinns of afterward This for Remission REGENERATION is intended in those words of the Church A new birth to Righteousness As sinn is purged away so also the Spirit of grace bestowed in Baptism to be as the habit or rather as the seed whence the future Acts of grace and holiness watered by the word of God and good education may in time spring forth This Spirit is promised to be conveyed by Baptism Act. 2.38 wherupon Saint Paul calleth Baptism the washing of Regeneration and renewing of the holy Ghost This was confirmed visibly in the Baptism of Christ. The holy Ghost descended on him comming up out of the water Matt. 3.16 Nor only then but in the Acts of the Apostles we find the sensible manifestations of the Spirit still mentioned with relation to Baptism which doubtless the providence of God did so order and dispose of that by their sight and sence their faith might be established touching the efficacy of the Sacrament This is that immortall seed wherof Saint Peter speaketh and which Saint Iohn mentioneth as the preservative of the faithfull from the sinn of finall Apostacy the sinn unto death Hereupon our Church remembring that our Saviour joyneth water and the spirit in the work of Regeneration doth in her Liturgy of Baptism pray for the Infants that they may be baptised with water and the holy Ghost that God would please to sanctifie them and wash them with the holy Ghost that they may receiv Remission of sinns by spirituall Regeneration that God would give his holy Spirit to these Infants that they may be born again that not only the old Adam and all carnall affections may dy in them and be buried but also that the new man and all things belonging to the spirit may be raysed up may live and grow in them that so they may have power and strength to prevail against to triumph over the Divell the World and the flesh finally that they which are then baptised in this water may receiv the fulness of his grace hereupon our Church looking upon the gracious promise doth after the act of Administration of Baptism give thanks for this benefit that it hath pleased God to regenerate the Infant with his holy Spirit Thus much for the Benefits of Baptism CHAP. IX The Benefits of the Lords Supper AS by Baptism we are incorporated into and made one with Christ So by the Lords Supper is this Union continued It is the exhortation of our blessed Saviour to his Disciples whom he compareth to branches ingrafted into the Vine saith he Abide in me and I in you using this as a Motive As the branch cannot bear fruit of it self except it abide in the Vine no more can yee except yee abide in me And his prayer for them he concludeth with this That the love wherwith thou O righteous Father hast loved me may be in them and I in them By which places and passages is intimated a mutuall and reciprocall incorporation of Christ in us and of us in Christ. Now if we ask how this is wrought and how discerned heare Saint Iohn hereby saith he we know that he abideth in us by the spirit which he hath given unto us and again more fully hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his spirit It is then the spirit which is the immediate worker of this mutuall union betwixt Christ and his Church But further would we know how and by what ordinance the spirit doth work this union The Apostle Paul helpeth us saying by one Spirit are we all baptised into one body and have been all made to drink into one Spirit Thus plainly manifesting the Sacraments to be the Instruments of the Spirit in working this Union and Communion but of all the rest most full is that text of our blessed Saviour he that ●ateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him that is becometh one with me and I with him This is so much more manifest in this Sacrament if we mark the analogy betwixt the sign and the thing signified bread and wine the food of the body becometh one with the body So is it here Christs body and blood united to us and made one with us by an un-speakable and unseparable conjunction Only here is the difference that bread of Earth is changed into thy body because thou art more excellent than it but this bread which came down from heaven is more excellent and active than thou art and therfore by little and little doth spiritualize and as it were change thee into it By all which it is evident that the primary grace and benefit conferred by the Sacrament is as I said before our incorporation into Christ our union with him The secondary and so the peculiar grace of the Lords Supper is as the Catechism hath well expressed it the strengthning and refreshing of our souls by the body and blood of Christ as our bodys are by the bread and wine Bread doth nourish and strengthen the body Psal. 104.15 Hence that phrase the staff of Bread becaus as a staff doth uphold and strengthen the weak and feeble knees so doth bread strengthen the drooping spirits So doth the body of Christ well and worthily received strengthen the soul in grace and holiness Wine cheareth the heart and quickneth the spirits So doth the blood of Christ revive the drooping soul gladdeth the heavy heart causeth spirituall joy and exultation Thus that naturall quality which God hath placed in the Elements to work upon the body doth most excellently manifest that spirituall efficacy which is in the body and blood of Christ to work upon the soul even to produce