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

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sound of words neither shall he speed any more then Esau of the blessing belonging to the first borne though he cryed with strong cryes and bitter Hee may wish indeed as Balaam Let me dye the dea h of the righteous but he cannot pray so is without fruit heereof these wishes differing so farre from faithfull prayer Differences betwixt praying and wishing 1. Because wishes are sudden and inconsiderate straightway ceasing as a ball rebounding when it is at the highest it falleth againe prayer is with deliberation and giueth not ouer without speeding of the thing desired 2. Wishes are without respect of the meanes and care of right or wrong in attaining the thing wished for Prayer is with submission to the vse of the meanes and care of preuailing by right onely 3. Wishes are for the most part of things worldly I would I had such an house such riches c. prayer is chiefly for things spirituall and heauenly one only petition of sixe being for things temporall 4. Wishes are sometime for things spirituall and heauenly but very inconstant as Balaams wish and that of Simon Magus pray vnto God that none of these things befall mee prayer perseuereth as Iaacob wrestling heereby will not let God depart vntill that hee yeeldeth to blesse him Esa 1.13 Prou. 15.8 Furthermore as a wicked man cannot pray so his saying of prayers is an abhomination to the Lord. Of the wicked Iewes Incense is abhomination to me saith the Lord and The sacrifice of the wicked saith Salomon is abomination to the Lord. The King or some noble person would disdaine it much to bee waited vpon at the Table with Clownes all miry and dirty and the King of heauen is no lesse offended if any wallowing in the mire of sinne come to giue attendance vpon him in prayer Woe then to wicked persons that will steale whoore prophane the Sabbath drinke oppresse and kill and yet come and worship in the Lords House This is so abominable that euen naturall men and Pagans doe abhorre it in Christians Penda an heathen king of the Mercians Hovvs Chron. pag. 67. would not suffer any Christians that liued contrary to their profession to goe vnpunnished So the Turke doth at this day See then here the horrible estate of wicked men pray they ought it being a common duty of all men and yet pray they cannot yea they sinne if they pray such a maze or Labyrinth doth sinne bring them into 2 Secondly from the person vnto whom we are directed to pray wee learne if wee bee such as can rightly call him Father to come with all boldnesse and confidence vnto him Father sometime and most commonly setteth foorth the first person in Trinity sometime but very rarely the second as where the prophet saith Hee shall call his name Emmanuell Esa 9.6 the euerlasting Father And sometime the whole Trinity as where the Apostle comparatiuely sayeth Heb. 12.9 Ought we not much more bee subiect to the Father of Spirits We may therefore pray vnto the whole Trinity but more properly vnto the first person God the Father in the name of God the Sonne by the assistance of God the holy Ghost But though we come before so high a maiesty he is our Father and doth accept vs for his children to our great incouragement not to bee afraid but to come often and with all filiall boldnesse vnto him Luc. 11 1●● If a sonne desireth saith Christ of any of you that is a Father for bread will he giue him a stone if hee aske a Fish will hee giue him a Serpent If yee then which are euill can giue good gifts vnto your Children how much more shall your heauenly Father giue the holy Ghost to them that desire him What boldnesse did Iaacob vse saying I will not let thee goe vnlesse thou blesse mee first and Moses saying rather blot mee out of the booke which thou hast written and Abraham disswading the Lord from destroying Sodome if fifty if forty if thirty if twenty if but ten righteous were found there Children ire bold aand confident to aske of their louing Parents and soae Gods ● children to aske of him Quest 119. Why doe wee say our Father and not my Father Answ Because J ought to pray for all other the children of God as well as for my selfe For whom we must pray Explan As we are directed for the person vnto whom so also for the persons for whom wee ought to pray and that is not for our selues onely or some few of our friends but for all our brethren and Sisters by grace that can call God as we do Father And these are to be distinguished into certaine ranks or orders 1. Wee must pray for all such as are effectually called by the preaching of the word these are already our brethren and fellow members of the same body of Christ they are of the houshold of faith and their welfare ought as much to affect vs with ioy as our owne 2. For all such as God in his eternall secret counsell hath appointed vnto life but are not yet called from their wandrings to be of one sheepe-fold vnder one shepheard the Lord Iesus Christ we must pray for them that God would hasten their vocation as Christ hath giuen vs example in his prayer for his sheepe Iohn 17.20 I pray not for them onely which thou hast giuen me saith Christ but for them also which shall belieue in mee through their word 3. For Particular persons of whom wee haue receiued benefit vnder whose gouernment wee liue or which bee more deare or neare in the flesh vnto vs. Thus S. Paul promiseth that for the liberality towards the poore Saints at Ierusalem there should bee thanksgiuing of many vnto God 2. Cor. 9.12 ● Tim. 2.2 and Le prayers saith he and suplications and giuing of thankes bee mad for all for Kings and for such as be set in authoritie And such people as with whom he had special acquaintance he professeth that he made often mention of them in his prayers and for the Iewes that were his kinsmen according to the flesh hee sheweth his great earnestnesse in prayer for their conuersion 4. For such as whose necessity is more specially made knowne vnto vs if they be in danger of sicknesse troubled in mind distracted vpon any dangerous enterprise or iourney or in any distresse Iames 5.14 If any be sicke saith Iames let him send for the Elders of the Church and let them pray for him 5. For men generally of all estates and conditions that they may be saued for this is good and acceptable saith Paul in the sight of God 1. Tim. 2.3 And likewise for men of all Countries and Nations for this cause wee Englishmen must pray for Gods ancient people the Iewes for Turkes Heathen and seduced Papists that they may come to the vnity of Faith 6. For our enemies and those that hate vs Matth. 5 44. Pray for
other villanies that they might not escape vnpunished Thirdly in the booke of Prophesies in which are things certainly and particularly foretold long before they come to passe farre passing the reach of any creature And these two the Prophet Esay produceth as maine arguments against heathen Gods for that they are both wanting in them and are onely to bee found in the great God of all Esay 41.23 Shew the things that are to come hereafter that we may know that ye are Gods doe good or doe euill that we may declare it Fourthly in the booke of Gods creatures wonderfully made and set in order and euer since their creation preserued when as the nature of the earth is to be heauy and there is no solid thing to vphold it for it is founded vpon the waters being sustained in the place onely by the hand of God the nature of the water is to ouerflow all the earth and the nature of the visible heauens to bee confounded with the waters 2. Pet. 3.5 from which they were raised Fiftly the consent of all Nations among which there is none so barbarous and brutish but acknowledgeth a diuine power gouerning the world beneficiall to mankinde and auenging sinne Nay the very nature of man doth so farre abhor direct Atheisme that rather then haue no God hee will make him a God of stone or wood Lastly in the booke of holy Scriptures being maintained without any fleshly arme against the rage of all tyrants especially since the incarnation of the Lord Iesus where euery page giueth some testimony of the god-head Quest 6. How many Gods be there Answ But one onely true God the rest are but Idols set vp by men Explan Strangely did men dote of old that followed a number of Gods our light is such thankes bee to God that in the darkest corner of this land men doe know that there is but one God And this is most cleare by the light of reason thus God is infinite but there cannot bee two infinites for then there should bee somewhat beyond the infinite and vncomprized in it whic● is a contradiction to it selfe Therefore there can bee but one God The like reduction vnto impossibility of plurality may bee made out of the attributes of omnipotency independencie supreme goodnesse and the like which are capable onely of vnity But heerein I rather referre to the sound Principles of true Philosophy vrged by some of the Platonicks and Schoolemen or rather to the tractates of the Fathers who haue spent much time heereabout in their writings and soundly proued the vanity of all other Gods Quest 7. What is God Answ Hee is a spirituall essence most simple infinitely present holy wise iust and mighty the Creator preseruer and onely gouernour of the whole world Explan Here I call God Essence Exod. 3.14 Joh. 4.20 because he alone hath being himselfe and can say I am other things are all of him spirituall because hee hath no body nor members of a body as we haue most simple that is most pure without mixture of any corporall thing Psal 139. Esay 6.3 infinitely present that is filling all places with his presence for he is euery where infinitely holy for the holiest Angels are not to be compared vnto him infinitely wise for he knowes all things Prou. 3.19 past present and to come and all secrets of all hearts hee knowes how to turne all things to the best for his owne glory and the good of his people infinitely iust Exod 34.7 Gen. 17.1 hee cannot bee corrupted he will not suffer sinners to escape vnpunished but will plague them to the third and fourth generation and infinitely mighty all power is of him the mightiest in the world are limited and goe no further then they are permitted hee alone can do whatsoeuer it pleaseth himselfe Gen. 1. the Creator of the whole world for hee made all of nothing both heauen and earth and the great waters with all creatures Psal 65. the preseruer it is hee that preserues and vpholds all things euer since they were made by him the earth is established that it moueth not the waters are maintained for nauigation and the Heauens with the Sunne Moone and Stars sustained aboue Act 17. for the comfort of this nether world by him the fruits of the earth are brought forth for the nourishment of man and beast and by him wee feede and liue and one generation is prouided to succeed another Lastly the gouernour for hee rules in all things by his prouidence both small and great Math. 10.29 a Sparrow falls not to the ground without him nor one hayre of our head Quest 8. Into how many persons is the God-head distinguished Answ Into three the Father Sonne and holy Ghost Explan It is not sufficient for the true knowledge of God to be seene into the nature of the Godhead which hath been already in some measure handled but wee must also know God as he is distinguished into three persons of which euery one is very God Therefore in this confession is distinct mention made of them all if wee vnderstand it thus I beleeue in God the Father c. that is I beleeue in God who is the Father and in God who is Iesus Christ his only Sonne and in God who is the holy Ghost Proofe Moreouer the holy Scriptures doe giue large testimony heereof First that God is the Father Sonne and holy Ghost Math. 3.16 The holy Ghost descended vpon him like a Doue and a voyce came downe from heauen saying this is my beloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased Heere is the Father speaking from heauen the Sonne baptized vpon earth and the holy Ghost descending from heauen to earth againe it is commanded to the disciples Math. 28.19 Goe teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost and plainely 1 Joh. 5.7 There bee three that beare witnesse in heauen the Father the Word and the Spirit Secondly that euery one is very God not onely the title ascribed vnto them but their very works do declare For what is the Creator of the world is it not God but such is the Father Gen. 1. In the beginning God created the heauens and the earth c. Such also is the Sonne Joh. 1.10 By him were all things made and without him was made nothing that was made and such is the holy Ghost Psal 33.6 By the word of the Lord were the heauens made and all the host of them by the breath or Spirit of his mouth Againe is the gouernour and preseruer of all things any other then God But as the Father is such without whom a little Sparrow falls not to the ground Mat. 10.29 Heb. 1.3 Psal 104.30 so is the Sonne for the word sustaineth all things and so is the holy Ghost Which is sent forth and reneweth the face of the earth Quest 9. If in the Godhead
in that I beleeue in him the holy Ghost I acknowledge his office of sanctifying and making holy the people of God for otherwise the Father also is holy and so is the Sonne but this is the peculiar office of the Spirit to sanctifie from hence hath hee this name of the holy Ghost Lastly I beleeue in the holy Ghost that is I put my whole trust and confidence in him as I doe in the Father and the Sonne for my preseruation and saluation and more especially as I depend vpon God the Father as my Creator and dayly Protector and vpon God the Sonne as my Redeemer and daily Mediator so doe I depend vpon God the holy Ghost as my comforter and the worker of grace and all vertue in me being of my selfe a lumpe of sinne and a masse of corruption 1 Proofe For the grounds of this Article and first that the holy Ghost is God S. Peter makes it plaine when as hauing told Ananias that hee had lyed vnto the holy Ghost Act. 5 3. verse 4. he added Thou hast not lyed vnto men but vnto God These last words expressing who the holy Ghost was of whom he had spoken before viz. God Act. 28.25 Esa 6 8.9 Moreouer well said the holy Ghost saith Paul by his Prophet Esay Goe make the heart of this people fat and say by hearing yee shall heare and not vnderstand by seeing yee shall see and not perceiue Whereas the Prophet tells vs that Iehouah the Lord God spake these words vnto him whence plainly followes that the holy Ghost is very God and Lord. 2 Proofe Secondly that the holy Ghost is equall with the Father and the Sonne and not inferiour or seruant as Macedonius wickedly taught is plaine from diuers reasons First because he is one with the Father and Sonne according to that of Iohn 1 Ioh. 5.7 There be three that beare record in Heauen the Father the Word and the Spirit and these three are one That is one substance and essence one infinite wisedome power glory and maiesty Secondly because hee is alike worshipped with the Father and Sonne as in that prayer put vp alike to them all The grace of Iesus Christ 2. Cor. 13.13 the loue of God and the Communion of the holy Ghost bee with you all Amen Lastly because hee is alike the Creator of the world and the preseruer of all things for when God in the beginning made the heauens and the earth c. the Spirit is said to haue moued vpon the waters incubasse by a word that signifieth to sit and hatch Gen. 1.2 and breed life as a Henne doth to bring forth her chickins And Elihu mentioned in Iob a man of an excellent spirit saith Iob 33.4 The Spirit of the Lord hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath giuen me life and in the Psalmes it is Psal 104.30 If thou send forth the Spirit they are created and thou renewest the face of the earth speaking of all other creatures which are so made and preserued by Gods Spirit the holy Ghost 3 Proofe Thirdly that the holy Ghost is the Sanctifier of the people of God will easily appeare if wee consider either this attribute holy euer to bee annexed vnto the Spirit as Iesus and Christ serue to set forth the Sonne of God in his office or the comparisons by which he is for the further declaring of the same compared for he is said to bee fire and therefore Iohn the Baptist speaketh thus of him Mat. 3.11 Hee that commeth after me viz. Iesus Christ shall baptize with the holy Ghost and with fire that is the holy Ghost who is as a fire purging away re●ning from the drosse of sinne as is further set forth where we are forbidden to quench the Spirit of God 1 Thes 5.19 Ioh. 3.3 againe hee is compared to water in that saying to Nicodemus Vnlesse a man be borne againe of water and the holy Ghost bee shall not see the kingdome of God that is of the holy Ghost in the vse of water in baptisme setting forth the power thereof viz. to clense from the filthinesse of sinne as water doth from the filth of the flesh Or if wee consider the workes of sanctification to be all wrought by the holy Ghost as first sauing knowledge which is all one with faith that most excellent and holy-making grace Rom. 8 ●6 1 Cor. 2.12 The Spirit witnesseth with our spirits that we are the children of God It maketh vs to know and beleeue those things that are giuen vs of God that is righteousnes in Christ through whom we are his adopted children and in the way to eternall life according to that This is life eternall Ioh. 17.3 to know thee to bee the very God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ Rom. 8.10 Secondly spirituall gouernment whereby euill is suppressed and that which is good increased in vs errour is auoyded and the truth in all things followed They which are in Christ Iesus to whom there is no condemnation walke after the Spirit and not after the flesh the spirit rules in them and causeth them thus to walke and all the sonnes of God are thus ruled and led Vers 14. for all that are led by the spirit of God as hee addeth are the sonnes of God Particularly the spirit so gouerneth by striuing against euill motions and by offering good for ●he spirit fighteth against the flesh Gal. 5.17 as the flesh fighteth against the spirit in our weaknesses it helps vs for when wee are vnable to pray acceptably it workes with vs and helpes vs to offer vp sighes that cannot be vttered Rom. 8.26 in our ignorances it directs vs for it leadeth vs into all truth Thirdly spirituall consolation Ioh. 16.13 Ioh. 14. in our seuerall afflictions tentations which is another part of holines for this he is called the Comforter whom Christ promiseth to send to mittigate the heauines of the disciples after his departture he is called the oyle of gladnes which maketh cheerfulnes euen to appeare in the face he is called the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Psal 45.8 Rom. 8.15 Father that is affecting vs with the assurance and comfort of Gods children when wee are feared and troubled Fourthly power commendably to doe the weightiest duties of our callings therefore it is said to be the spirit Num. 11. that was taken of Moses and put vpon the Elders of Israel that they might be able to iudge and decide controuersies arising amongst their bretheren it was by the Spirit Exod. 35.31 that Ahohab and Bezaliel were inabled to worke all curious workes about the tabernacle it was the Spirit that made the Apostles sufficient vnto a farre greater work about the spirituall Tabernacle viz. to preach the gospell effectually to men of all languages Act. 2. they being vnskilfull of any but their mother tongue and for this
the preiudice of our neighbours life thirdly all rayling and reuiling speeches fourthly all murdrous desires and affections of the heart as of anger malice hatred and enuie fiftly all crueltie towards the creature which sheweth a murdrous mind in vs. 328 Quest What are we heere commanded Answ Out of the loue which we beare to our neighbour as much as in vs lieth to preserue his life and health and specially the life of his soule by good counsell exhortation and admonitions 343 Quest Which is the seuenth Commandement Answ Thou shalt not commit adultery 347 Quest What is here forbidden Answ First all outward vncleane actions of adultery fornications c. Secondly all filthy and vncleane speeches singing of wanton loue-songs and reading of Books Ballads of this sort Thirdly all incontinent thoughts and lusts of the heart Fourthly whatsoeuer is vsually an occasion of vncleannesse as being present at filthy stage-playes putting on apparell of another sex mixt laciuious dauncing surfetting drunkennesse idlenesse c. 347 Quest What are we here commanded Answ To liue in temperance chastitie and sobernesse and so to keepe my body holy and pure as a temple of the holy Ghost 357 Quest Which is the eight Commaundement Answ Thou shalt not steale 361 Quest VVhat is here forbidden Answ All stealing which is first by violence or secret taking away that which is our neighbours Secondly by oppression and tyranny of the rich toward the poore Thirdly by deceit in buying and selling Fourthly by vsing any vnlawfull trade or way of gaine or gaming fortune-telling or selling drinke vnto drunkennesse Fiftly by prodigality for thus doe men rob their children and posteritie 361 Quest What more is heere forbidden Answ All couetousnes and vnmercifulnes the robbing of God in things dedicate tithes and offerings 370 Quest What are we here commanded Answ To do to all men as I would they should do vnto me and by diligent paines-taking to get mine owne liuing in that estate of life to which it shal please God to call me 379 Quest VVhich is the ninth Commandement Answ Thou shalt not beare false witnesse against thy neighbour 383 Quest What is here forbidden Answ All false witnes-bearing first by falsely accusing and witnessing against our neighbor before a Iudge Secondly by slandering and backbiting and by readinesse to hearken to such false reports Thirdly by flattering or soothing any for aduantage against the truth Fourthly by lying or telling an vntruth against our consciences 383 Quest What are we here commanded Answ As much as in vs lieth to preserue the good name of our neighbour and our owne good name stopping our eares against false reports and suppressing them alwaies whatsoeuer comes of it speaking the truth 393 Quest Which is the tenth Commandement Answ Thou shalt not couet thy neighbors house c. 396 Quest What is heere forbidden Answ All first motions of the mind vnto sinne though no consent be yeelded vnto them 396 Quest What are we commanded here Answ To keepe our very hearts and minds free from euill thoughts against any of the commandements of God 399 Quest Is any man able to keepe all these Commandements Answ No man vpon earth hath or euer can be able to keep them perfectly Adam only excepted in the state of innocencie and Christ who was both God and man 401 What is the breach of the law and the punishment of it Answ It is sinne which if it be but once committed only and that but in thought it makes a man subiect to Gods eternal curse which is euerlasting death in hell fire the torments whereof are vnspeakable without end or ease 404 Quest Is it not iniustice to appoint so great a punishment for euery sinne yea euen for the least Answ It is very iust and meet for the Lord to adiudge the least sinne to hell fire because his mark which is perfect holinesse set vpon man in his creation is hereby remooued and a marke with the Deuils brand is made vpon the soule of the sinner for which it is iust that the Deuil and not God should now haue such a soule 405 Quest If no man can perfectly keepe the Law wherefore serueth it Answ First to humble vs in regard of our miserable estate heereby discouered secondly to be a rule of good life vnto vs. 406 Quest How may we be saued from our sinnes Answ Onely by the bloud of Iesus Christ laid hold vpon by a true and liuely faith 407 Quest How is faith first begun and wrought in the heart Answ Ordinarily by the preaching of the Gospel the holy spirit inwardly opening the heart to beleeue those things that are outwardly preached to the eare 410 Quest How doth faith exercise it selfe and get more strength Answ By prayer the exercises of Gods holy word and by receiuing the Sacraments Concerning Prayer Quest What is Prayer Answ It is a lifting vp of the heart vnto God only in the name of Iesus Christ according to his will in full assurance to be heard and accepted at his gracious hands 412 Quest What need is there that the faithfull should pray seeing they are in Gods fauour hee knoweth their wants and hath pardoned all their sinnes Answ By how much the more we are in Gods fauour by so much the more needfull is it that wee should cheerefully pray both to pay the dutie that wee owe vnto God to obtaine the blessing promised and to renew our assurance of the pardon of sinne daily renewed through our great weaknesse 416 Quest What times are specially to be spent in Prayer Answ It is necessary that euery Christian make his prayers vnto God euery morning and euening sitting downe and rising vp from meale and at other times as the spirit mooueth or occasions and other necessities require to haue the heart lifted vp in prayer 418 Quest How and according to what Prayer ought we to pray Answ The patrerne and forme for our direction is the Lords Payer Our Father c. 422 Quest How many be the parts of this Prayer Answ The Preface Our Father The Petitions Hallowed be thy name and the conclusion For thine is the c. 429 Quest In the Preface why call you God Father Answ Because he is ready as a louing Father to heare me calling vpon his name whence I learne with boldnesse and confidence to come vnto him with prayer 429 Quest Why doe you say Our Father and not my Father Answ Because I ought to pray for all other the Children of God as well as for my selfe 432 Quest Why adde you in the Preface which art in heauen Answ Not for that I belieue God to be in heauen onely for he is euery where but because to bee in Heauen is an Argument of great glory whence I learne with reuerence to pray vnto him being my Father most glorious 434 Quest How many be the Petitions of this Prayer Answ Sixe whereof the three former concerne Gods glory the three latter concerne our selues 435
impatient Zipporah Secōdly what fitter time can be to impose names then when we begin to bee we are first borne and then haue the common name of man then we are borne againe and haue the speciall names of Christians The second thing in the answer the persons that giue the name Godfathers and Godmothers True it is that Parents were alwayes wont to propound the name Ioseph directed by the Angell told what the name of Jesus should be Zachary of his sonne Iohn and ordinarily Abraham Moses Ioseph in Aegypt also Hannah named Samuel Rachel Ioseph But the Godfathers following the direction of the parents haue vsed a long time to propound the name in publique when Iohn was to be circumcised it is said They call d his name c. But his parents had the greatest stroke in determining the name Obiections against Godfathers answered One writing against our custome herein alledgeth the Councell of Nice Can. 30. Let no faithfull man name his children by heathen names and that of Baronius My Parents called me Tarr●chus and out of Dionysius that the Priest was wont to aske the name at the Church doore and hence endeauoureth to proue that Parents and not Godfathers are to name their children neither at the time of baptisme but before for which he further addeth that they which were Adulti were wont to come before their baptisme and put their old names in the Register Vnto which I answere First that of the Councell of Nice is a meere forgery there being but twenty Canons in all or two and twenty at the most Secondly admit it to be true and that which followeth it is no more then we confesse that Parents haue or ought to haue the chiefest stroke in the names of their owne children Lastly for the Adulti holding their own names it might be through conniuency in some particular Church at some time onely For it is most euident that Godfathers were vsed amongst Christians euen in the Primitiue Church Higinus Bishop of Rome and Martyr speakes of them in his fift Decretall who was but 140. yeeres after Christs incarnation and the best reformed Churches doe allow of them One a learned Doctor of Germany defends this vse vpon these reasons * Zanch. in Eph p. 580. Reasons why Godfathers are vsed 1. It is not against the Scriptures 2. It is most ancient 3. It proceeds from loue of the parents procuring them of them vndertaking 4. It is to the benefit of the Infant if the Parents dye 5. It is an helpe vnto the Parents to which may be added that it is a meane to encrease mutuall loue amongst neighbours when they shall performe this duty one for another 3. The third thing in the answer is the addition Wherein I was made a member of Christ c. Which is not so to be vnderstood as though the outward washing of water did make the baptized partaker of these so excellent benefits for it is true of the Sacraments of the new Testament which was sayd of them of the old It is impossible Heb. 10.4 that the blood of bulls and Goats should take away sinne And in another place Circumcision auaileth nothing but a new creature Gal. 15. That the same may be said of Baptisme see in the Pharisies comming to Iohn his Baptisme O generation of Vipers saith hee Luk. 3.7 who hath forewarned you to flie from the wrath to come Where hee sheweth baptisme to be a meanes of escaping Gods wrath after an implicite manner but withall requires vertue which being away baptisme auaileth not And our Lord hauing commended baptisme to all excepteth yet saying He that belieueth not shall be damned The case herein is diuers Mark 16.16 First in those that are of ripe yeeres and vnderstanding there is required of them a due disposition of repentance and faith actually performed by and in themselues But in Infants it is enough that they pertaine to the Couenant being born● in the bosome of the Church and presented to the participation of gracious adoption by vertue of the Faith of their Parents The right vnderstanding then of this is that in our baptisme we are sacramentally or instrumentally made the children of God and really and truly when we are together baptized with the Holy Ghost if thou beleeue and be baptized thou art made Inheritor of the Kingdome of Heauen and this is ascribed vnto baptisme Joh. 3.5 Except a man be borne of water and the spirit c as conuerting begetting vnto Christ and building men vp in grace is ascribed vnto the Officers of Gods Church Wherefore let no man mistake this matter thinking himselfe safe when he is baptized for he may nay infinite numbers doe notwithstanding perish Baptisme confers not Grace Ex opere operato as the Church of Rome teacheth but euer in men of yeares as they were found in grace they were thought fit to be baptized Read of the Eunuch of Cornelius and his company of the conuerts amongst the Iewes at Peters preaching Act. 8 c. 10 chap. 2. Now then consider whether this be thy case or no Art thou indued with grace Art thou baptized with the Holy Ghost Art thou baptized into Christ Beleeuest thou with all thy heart repentest thou with a true and due compunction If it be thus thou hast put on Christ thou art buried with him by baptisme Rom. 6.2 into his death that like as Christ was raised from the dead so also thou shouldest walke in newnes of life O well is thee thou art a member of Christ and inheritour of Heauen If otherwise thou hast beene admitted to the water in vaine thou art still in thy sinnes But thou wilt say wherefore serues the remembrance of our baptisme then I answere to confirme that grace which is begun in a mans heart if he beleeueth he shall be hereby more confirmed if he be a true Christian hee shall bee hereby registred in the Catalogue of true Christians and all the fiends of hell shall not be able to blot him out againe If it be further demanded how can it be saide of all baptized that they are members of Christ seeing there are many Hypocrites who beare onely the badge of Christ but fight vnder the banner of Sathan I answere that our Church doth not vsurpe the gift of prophecy to take vpon her to discerne which of her children belong to Gods vnsearchable Election but in the iudgement of charity embraceth them all as Gods inheritanc● and hereby teacheth euery of vs so to beleeue of our selues by Faith and of others by charity St. Paul in his salutations styleth the whole visible Churches to whom hee writes by the title of Saints and yet it is likely that by his extraordinary discerning spirit he could haue differenced the goats of his flocke from the sheepe How much more ought we with our blessed Mother the Church of England at all chastenings presume that sacramentall grace doth like a soule
enquicken the body of the outward element and receiue these for our true fellow-members of Christ who haue beene made partakers of the same labor of regeneration Quest What did thy Godfathers and Godmothers then for thee Answ They did promise and vow three things in my name first that I should forsake the diuel and all his workes the pompes and vanities of this wicked world with all the sinfull lusts of the flesh Secondly that I should beleeue all the articles of the Christian Faith Thirdly that I should keepe Gods holy will and commandement and walke in the same all the dayes of my life Explan In this answere obserue foure points which are further to be opened First wherefore this promise is made of forsaking the diuell c. For the resolution of which Mans foure-fold estate 1 of Inocency Gen 1 27. Eccles 7.1 it is to be vnderstood that our naturall estate is carnall and sensuall yea a very subiection vnto Satan True it is that man by his first creation was holy and righteous witnesse the Spirit himselfe saying thus God made man in his owne Image in the Jmage of God created he him And God made man righteous and this estate of holinesse was accompanied with exquisite and almost Diuine knowledge for proofe wherof the creatures were brought vnto him to be named and as he named them so they were called now his names did so fit the creatures expressing partly their seuerall natures that if a most cunning Philosopher had studied all his life he could not haue done the like Besides this he being cast into a deepe sleepe when the woman was taken out of his side did rightly diuine how neere shee was vnto him saying This is flesh of my flesh and bone of my bone c. Againe Gen. 2.23 vnto his knowledge was added a sound estate of body from all diseases as death it selfe came in by sinne Rom 5.18 hee could labour without wearines for the sweat of the brow comes in after the transgressiō He could abstaine without preiudice to his health hee could haue multiplied yeares without gray haires for he was immortall All creatures did reuerence him the earth was all seruiceable vnto him without barrennesse bryars and thornes none of all the serpents and wilde beasts were noisome vnto him The woman was without sorrow in trauailing without paines in bringing vp her children without subiection to the man Both man woman were comely without blemish warme without cloathes naked without shame I dare not say that they should haue propagated without copulation with Gregory Nyss De Opis●● lôis cap. 17. 2 Of corruption Rom. 3.23 Now man is fallen from this estate sinne proceeding from one Adam hath ouerspread all men All haue sinned and are depriued of the glory of God There is in vs all so soone as we are a want of all grace and goodnes a pronenesse vnto euill and vntowardnes to doe that which is pleasing to the Lord as both St. Paul setteth forth in himselfe saying Rom. 7.15 Jam. 1.14 The things which I would I doe not which I hate that doe I. And St. Iames Let no man say that he is tempted of God Lust when it hath conceiued bringeth forth sinne c. And hence it commeth to passe that we are the diuels subiects For he that committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne Ioh. 8.34 Heb. 2.15 He is in bondage vnto the diuell all his life long The promise then which is made in our Baptisme is that wee shall come out of this estate of nature corrupt into the estate of grace which is when wee follow not the swinge of our owne dispositions neither suffer the God of this world to rule in vs but the law and word of God For heerein standeth mans restauration and bringing into a third estate which is the estate of grace 3. Of grace if the heart be purified by faith if hee faithfully beleeue all the Articles of the Christian faith and be sanctified to obedience of life if hee alwayes walke in the wayes of Gods commandements faith giuing him interest in this estate and obedience certifying that hee is truely interessed heerein according to that of the Apostle Shew me thy faith by thy workes Jam. 2.18 Eph. 2.2 Rom. 6. Ioh. 8.34 1 Joh. 3. Heb. 2 15. Luc. 1.7.4 Heb. 11.6 2. Cor. 8. And as our condition vnder sinne is most terrible so is this vnder grace most comfortable Then wee were dead in sinnes and trespasses now wee are dead vnto sinne and aliue vnto God in righteousnes then wee were seruants yea bondslaues now wee are set at liberty yea made sonnes of God then wee were euery day in feare now we serue the Lord all our life time without feare then our best workes did displease God now though wee faile in many things wee are accepted according to that we haue Eph. 2. and not according to that wee haue not then we were without God in the world to protect vs now wee are made neere Rom. 6.23 yea of the houshold of God to conclude wee were at the day of payment to receiue for our wages death now wee shall not tast of that death but haue the guift of our God which is eternall life And heere is the last end the fourth estate of man indued with grace which shall be without end 4. Of glory the first fruits of this are had heere halfe the haruest followes at euery mans particular death the soule being placed in Paradise and all is perfected at the day of Iudgement when both soule and body inioy the kingdome of God the Father Secondly we are further to consider whether we be able and haue of our selues power to forsake the diuell c. and if not whence wee are to seeke for this Eph. 2.2 Of free will The words indeed seeme to intimate such ability but they haue no such meaning for we are dead in sinnes and trespasses that is haue as little ability to doe any act of grace as a dead man hath to moue himselfe or to doe any thing that belongs vnto the liuing Wee are not sufficient of our selues to thinke a good thought as of our selues It is not in him that willeth 2. Cor 3.5 Rom. 9.16 or in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercy Where note that as nothing in the worke of our conuersion and turning from sinne is ascribed vnto vs so all is ascribed vnto God Wherefore Ieremie saith turne vs O Lord Lament 5.21 and so shall wee bee turned and the Apostle It is God that worketh both the will and the deed and it is rightly decreed in an ancient councell against the heresie of Pelagius Whosoeuer shall say Conc Milinit Can. 4. that by the grace of the Lord we are heerein holpen against sinne because that by this is opened vnto vs what wee ought to doe and what to shunne and that it doth not effect this
1.20 Hee set him at his right hand in heauenly places Moreouer the Apostles as hath beene already said Acts 1.12 Acts 7 saw him goe vp into Heauen bodily and Steuen saw the heauens open and the man Christ there and Paul though he sawe nothing yet he heard his voice from Heauen Saul Saul Acts 7 Why persecutest thou me And where he was then the Angels plainely told his Disciples he should remaine till at the last hee were seene comming downe visibly in the same sort that he ascended wherefore it followeth in the next Article From thence he shall come From whence I pray you is this The Vbiquitary must needes answere absurdly From euery where But the Apostle answers Thes 4.16 The Lord himselfe shall descend from Heauen with a shout with the voice of the Arch-Angell c. Likewise this refuteth the Papists who though they deny Christs body to be euery where yet are so bold as to faine it to be many where by the fiction of bodily presence in the Sacrament Surely Christs body is so in the Heauens that it is held and conteined there How then is it at the same time there and here vpon an Altar nay on many Altars which plurality of places must needs take away and destroy the Essentiall nature of a true body and so turne it to an imaginary phantastike body with the Marcionits Phil. 2.9.10 Againe that he is in highest honour there the Apostle sheweth in that he saith God hath highly exalted him and giuen him a Name aboue all names that at the Name of IESVS euery knee might bow of things in Heauen and earth and vnder the earth And is not that the highest honour which is cited in the Epistle to the Hebrewes out of the Psalmes Worship him Psal 97.7 Heb. 1.6 all yee Gods Lastly for the infinite power communicated vnto him and soueraignety ouer all things himselfe speakes as already in possession hereof All power is giuen vnto me Math. 28.18 both in Heauen and in earth Yea he is made King of all the world for Aske of me Psal 2 saith the Father and I wil giue thee the Heathen for thine inheritance and the ends of the earth for thy possession Psal 110.1 He hath power ouer all his enemies according to that Sit thou at my right hand till I make thine enemies thy foot-stoole And that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 15.25 Hee must raigne till he hath put all his enemies vnder his feet 1 Duty ●oy for Christ his honour To come now vnto the duties of this Faith The first is to exult for this exaltation of our head Christ Iesus for our nature thus honoured and graced Euen as Israel reioyced and shouted for ioy so that the earth rang againe when the son of Dauid Salomon was crowned King 1 King 1.40 and as Steuen in the middest of his persecutors now ready to be stoned ioyfully brake out and said I see the Heauens open and Christ Iesus standing at the right hand of God So the beholding of the same Acts 7.56 by the eye of Faith must cause the like gladnesse in vs euen in the middst of our greatest dangers If we haue Christ on our side who can be against vs If we haue him who is dead or rather who is risen againe sits at the right hand of God Rom. 8.34 If he be with vs whom all the Angels do worship before whose iron Scepter al his enemies are but as a potters vessel It is ioy enough for the wife Psal 2 if her Husband be crowned or inuested into any great dignity It is ioy enough for all good Subiects if their King subdue and get the vpper hand of his enemies It is ioy enough for a louing friend if his deare friend be any way aduanced but our husband Christ is here crowned our King Christ makes his enemies his foot-stoole our friend Christ is highly aduanced What then though wee bee poore afflicted and disgraced yet through him thus raised Wee are more then Conquerours we are aduanced Rom. 8.37 we are raised 2. Duty Reuerencing the name of Christ The second duty is willingly to yeeld obedience and to bee subiect to Christ Iesus euen as wee are willing yea desire to be vnder the Prince or some most noted person of honour for we count it a credit for vs so to be though some seruitude or attendance be required hereunto which otherwise we could be content to bee freed from For what Prince is so high in dignity as the Sonne of God the Prince of Heauen What person of honour may be compared with him Yea he excels all Phil. 2.9 in all things that may make vs willing with subiection and bowing the knee at his name which is inferred hereupon First in power and might whereby he is most able to doe vs good and to subdue our enemies vnder vs seeing as was shewed to Saul they that persecute his people Acts 9. doe but kicke against the prickes Secondly in the loue of his Subiects for that he doth not compell to his seruice but saith Jf yee loue me keepe my Commandements he is not rigorous and austere to the willing Iohn 14.15 if they faile in many things hee forgiueth vnto seuenty times seuen times he leaues them not to themselues to performe their hard taskes but giues them his Spirit to helpe their infirmities Thirdly in his facility and easinesse towards them hee presseth them not too heauily but his Yoke is easie and his burthen is light Matth 11.28 1 King 12. If it had beene thus with Rehoboam the sonne of Salomon towards the people of Israel they would for euer haue beene his seruants for they desired but to haue their yokes made more easie and why should we not then be seruants to this Sonne of God and offer ourselues much more readily to doe his will all our daies But alas most men are so blinded that they make no account of this as a preferment vnto them they thinke it better to bee the base seruants of sinne and the Deuill that they may haue a little pleasure of the vanities of this world and so by falsifying their promise made in Baptisme as formerly hath beene shewed they exclude themselues from the benefit of their baptisme For they are none of Christs seruants that liue in sinne Iohn 8.34 seeing that he that commits sinne is the seruant of sinne 3. Duty To vse Christ as Mediator onely 1 Iohn 2.2 The third duty is to come vnto the Throne of Grace in our prayers onely by Christ and vtterly to refuse the helpe of other Mediators whatsoeuer If any man sinne saith Saint Iohn wee haue an Aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is a Propitiation for our sinnes Hauing him therfore so good a friend yea and euer making request for vs perfuming our praiers Rom. 8.34 with the sweetnesse of his
cause he is called by the Prophet the Spirit of power Esa 11. 2. 1 Duty To keepe our bodies pure 1 Cor. 6.19 The duties of this faith are first to keepe our bodies holy and pure as temples of the holy Ghost and not to defile them by vncleannesse for our bodies are his temples as the Apostle teacheth This therefore wee are to doe with all readines as they to whose houses the King vouchsafeth to come or some great person by whose comming they are like to be bettered in their estate all their life after they will not haue any noysome or vncleane roome but their very entrances and courts shall be fit to giue contentment vnto those worthy guests for Gods Spirit is the King of heauen by his comming he makes vs the members of Christ but no dunghill is so loathsome as a body defiled by vncleannesse The body by whoredome is taken from being the member of Christ and made the member of an Harlot 1. Cor 6 1● the temple of the holy Ghost is made a stewes Wherefore let this and all smell hereof in thoughts incontinent and speeches filthy be farre remoued otherwise there is no faith in the holy Ghost When Christ found in the Temple at Ierusalem Mark 11.15 which was made but of stone buyers and sellers mony changers that made the house of God but an house of merchandize he waxed so angry that he whipped them all out and ouerthrew their tables how much more then will hee disdaine and scourge those that make the Temple of the holy Ghost this liuing Temple not an house of merchandize but a sinke of filthines and vncleannes On the contrary side when the materiall Arke was entertained into the house of Obed-Edom 2. Sam 6.21 the Lord blessed him and all that he had exceedingly how much more then will he blesse vs if we entertaine more nearely into the house of our body not an Ark made of Cedar wood but the Lord hereof himselfe the holy Ghost which is when wee keepe our bodies holy 2 Duty To beleeue the Scriptures The second duty is to beleeue without doubting whatsoeuer is contained in the holy Scriptures because that all were giuen by inspiration of the Holy Ghost and were set forth by holy men not of any priuate motion 1. Tim. 3.16 2. Pet. 1.21 but as they were moued by the Holy Ghost Now we cannot then beleeue in the Holy Ghost but we must also beleeue whatsoeuer comes from him We are therfore generally to beleeue the promises the threatnings the histories here contained to be true the doctrines precepts and prohibitions to be of God and necessarily to be obeyed particularly we are to beleeue places mysticall which passe humane reason and places seemingly repugnant in themselues in the reconciling whereof we cannot be so fully satisfied Such things as be historicall wee must not hold parabolicall as Porphyrius did the booke of Iob because he could not conceiue how so strange an history should be true Such things as be more vnpleasing we must not hold to haue come from an euill God and the more pleasing and sweet onely from our good God as the Manichees and Marcion did the old Testament for which they reiected it and receiued onely the new Such things as were written by men formerly scandalous but after their conuersion holy vertuous are not therefore to be reputed as vnworthy our beliefe as the Seueriani and the Ebionites did all the Epistles of Paul Such things as were written after not concurring in all circumstances with the former are not to be reiected as the Ebionites did all the Euangelists but Mathew and Cerinthus all but Marke And if there be any other that haue done the like they haue in stead of beleeuing in resisted the Holy Ghost and are therefore to be abhorred As for all such as truely beleeue in the Holy Ghost I may more confidently vse the words of Paul vnto Agrippa Act. 26.27 I know that they beleeue all the writings of the Prophets and Apostles and whatsoeuer pen-men of the Scriptures 3. Duty To vse our gifts to the honour of God The third duty is to vse all our gifts to the honor of God who is the holy Ghost from whom we receiue them all whether wit and learning whether agility and aptnesse whether courage strength and magnanimtiy or eloquence or diuers languages or any other for it is the Holy Spirit of God that makes men able to the duties of their callings as wee haue heard in the seuenty Iudges ioyned with Moses and in Aheliab and Bezaliel c. and as the Apostle doth more then affirme saying 1. Cor. 4.7 What hast thou that thou hast not receiued If then thou abuse thy wit vnto deceite thy power to tyranny and oppression thy language to ostentation thy learning to pride thine agility to cogging and cheating thy magnanimity to stoutnesse and stubbornnesse against Gods Word thy strength to strength of drinking Wine and of powring in strong drinke what dost thou else but turne the weapons wherewith the Spirit hath armed thee against thine enemies vpon his very face as if thou shouldest take the sword by a friend offered vnto thee in thy great necessitie and seeke to sheath it in his bowels Let vs therefore flye such monstrous ingratitude and vse our gifts according to his good pleasure let our learning wit and best cunning be strained to further our own and the sanctification of others let our might power and courage be bent for the strengthening and the encouragement of the feeble and faint-hearted let our agility and aptnesse be forced to a readinesse vpon all occasions of doing good 4. Duty To submit our selues to Gods Spirit The fourth duty is to submit our selues in all things to the gouernment of Gods Spirit and not to sticke in our owne wayes nor to follow the sway of our owne natures for whom should wee rather followe and bee ruled by then he vpon whom we place our confidence whom we beleeue to be the leader into all truth and our Guide For if we follow our owne thoughts they will deceiue vs 2. Cor. 3.5 We cannot thinke a good thought if what we imagine to be best we shall fouly erre for all the imaginations of mans heart are onely euill continually Gen. 6.5 Se what Gehazi gained when he thought by following his owne way 2. King 5 to get him geat riches and in the heart condemned his Master Elisha of folly and nicenesse who was led by Gods Spirit in refusing againe for doing a miracle vpon Naaman 1. Sam. 15 Looke vpon the misery into which Saul the King brought himselfe when he thought to deale more wisely in the matter of the Amalekites then Gods Spirit by Samuel directed him for he thought to please God well enough by sacrifices and to enrich himselfe also by that which God had appointed to perish by sword and fire And no lesse
which is noted Verse 23. not onely by the creatures vsed in the Lords Supper but by them rightly vsed according to his appointment as soon after he doth further alledge And for this cause was it that they met vnto the Lords table euery first day of the weeke according to that of S. Paul 1 Cor. 16. Euery first day of the weeke when yee are come together to break bread c. And this custome lasted long as Basilius the great and others doe testifie Basil Epist. 21. And thus the true marks of the Church are manifest without any suborning or glosing or wresting of sacred writings But as for these of antiquity visibility succession consent c. if these shall passe for certaine and perpetuall markes see what absurdities will follow heerevpon M●rkes of the Church set downe by Romanists refuted First t●e Church is only marked out vnto the learned and to such as haue beene long exercised in Ecclesiasticall histories a long time no simple person or barbarous can possibly come to the knowledge heereof for how should these know such things seeing that they depend vpon history large and much different in regard of the variety of writers some affirming some denying some reporting this way some that the same things Now the Church hath euer beene marked so as that supposing the admittance of the written word of God it hath beene knowne to the simplest though all writings of record made by man should haue beene burnt Secondly the primitiue Church in the Apostles dayes and their successors must by this reckoning haue been without any certaine marke whereby to bee knowne there being neither antiquity nor vniuersality nor succession in those times and the like might bee said of Abrahams time and Moses and Aarons c. Thirdly the Church of the Pharisees must haue beene the onely true Church of God in Christs time for they onely could plead antiquity c. they onely could alledge the consent of their Elders and succession of high priests for many yeares Whereas none of these absurdities will follow if wee acknowledge the Word and Sacraments the markes of Gods Church the simple may know it as well as the learned it is a marke common to the Apostles times these the Pharisees all heretiques are soone detected Again say that no such grosse things would follow heer vpon where haue you any testimonies for antiquity c. to be marks of Gods Church I am sure that in the most worthy of credit yee haue none at all Whereas the Lord himselfe giues plentifull testimony in his word to the other marks the name of this very Creed is an ancient monument of the Fathers of the Churches consent heerein viz. their calling it Symbol●m a badge or cognizance as who should say that the doctrine in this Symboll contained is a certain marke in thē of whomsoeuer it is receiued of Gods Church If any man shall yet stick because we doe not know who interpreteth the Scriptures truly receiues them according to the meaning of the holy Ghost so of the Sacraments O let not this be any hindrance to our receiuing of the truth because most are so vnripe in their vnderstanding and so vnacquainted with Gods Spirit Iam. 1. For if we aske more vnderstāding to know this the Lord will giue it vs if we aske his Spirit to direct vs to his own meaning Ioh. 14. he wil giue it also Moreouer we haue for helps this analogie or rule of faith to trie the truth by wee haue the forme of baptisme and of administring the Lords Supper plainly set down so that a discreet ordinary Christian may be sure when they are rightly vsed and when the faith is truely preached We haue the burthensome traditions of men plainely condemned Math. 15. Gal. 3. Gal. 5 17. Rom. 3. Gal. 4. the loue of Iewish of superstitious Ceremonies expressely censured Idolaters and Image worshippers adiudged to the pit of Hell workes in the case of iustification excluded and grace magnified him that seeketh to set vp himselfe aboue Gods that is Kings and Emperours pronounced Antichrist outward things vilified 2. Tim. 3. Marc. 7. Ioh. 4.20 Math. 10. and spirituall seruice commended will-worships disgraced doers of works supererogatory pronounced vnprofitable seruants persecutors detected as woolues c. If this will not serue to resolu vs but with Thomas we wil stil be doubtful let vs pray for some more special certificate the Lord sure wil vouchsafe vs his speciall fauor as he did Thomas according to our infirmity And let not weake Protestants be so vnstable as to be carried away herewith when they haue begun in the spirit to end in the flesh when they haue liued in the Church of God by reuolting to die out of the same Many cauells more wold be met withal about the promise of Christs building his Church vpon the Petra a rock of the constant remaining of this Church of his being present here alwaies to the end of the world to saue them from errour and to leade them into all truth of telling the Church in the case of offence which they say must needs therfore euer be visible on the contrary side of the noueltie of our Church our vnlawfull ministry in detracting from the first reformers c. but I haue been too long already for this briefe treatise and therfore will referre the reader to the learned writings of others of this argument purposely where hee shall finde them like chaffe blowne away by the spirit of Gods truth for that the rock vpon which the Church is built is not Peter 1. Cor. 3.11 but Christ for other foundation then Christ can no man lay S. Paul plainely teacheth againe his promise of the holy Ghost Obiections answered of being present with his Church vnto the worlds end proueth nothing for any particular place but for the persons of true beleeuers according to that When two or three are gathered together in my name there am I in the midst of them and these shall not be suffered to fall lie in damnable heresies but be led by the Spirit into all truth lastly his bidding Tell the Church proueth no more but only that where the true Church of God is formally gouerned by excommunications and other censures for sinne there obstinate and otherwise incorrigible offendors are to be complained of this discipline is to be exercised against them For if it proueth the being of Gods true Church visible alwaies it must also proue it in al places else when any person is thus grieued how shall we come to the Church to complaine and thus this rule shall remaine still vnperfect For our ministery and Church it is sufficiently iustifyed before it much matters not how lately the word began to be purely preached and the Sacraments rightly administred so that it now be so amongst vs this maketh vs a lawfull ministery and the true
remaine for euer seuered from the Church of Rome and as Philip said vnto Nathaniel concerning the Messias Come and see Ioh. 1.40 so let vs come and see by the markes the true Church of God and hauing found it amongst the Protestants though some be ready to thinke and say with Nathaniel Can any good thing come out of Nazareth Let vs lodge with it as the two Disciples did with Iesus all our dayes 3. Duty To be inwardly called Rom. 2.29 The third duty is not to rest satisfied with an outward calling vnto the true Church visible but to study and striue by attending vpon Gods ordinances to be inwardly called by being indued with a true faith which is to become a mēber of that which is the only Church before God For he is not a Iew that is one without according to the letter but he that is one within whose circumcision is of the heart 1 Cor. 9.27 all outward things will stand a man in no stead God may stil notwithstanding all these be displeased with thee and thou maist prooue a cast-away as the Apostle speaketh by his own example Dost thou beleeue therefore in word beleeue in heart and in truth also dost thou make cleane the out-side cleanse the inside also dost thou appeare to men to be a beleeuer O prouide that thou maist appeare such vnto the all-seeing eye of God 4. Duty to know the fundamentall points The fourth duty is to be wel acquainted with al doctrines of the foundation and that by comparing things written heereupon with the fountaine the word of God and not to hang vpon any mans sleeue lest if he fall into the ditch hee pull vs also after him For euery visible Church as hath beene shewed is subiect to erre Let vs therefore only follow the Church as it followeth Christ Iesus Take heed that in reading or hearing Rules of direction to be kept from errour thy mind be not forestalled with error thinke nothing conceiue nothing know and resolue vpon nothing vntill that thou findest it in the holy Scriptures Whatsoeuer thou hast learned hence walke still in humility be not puffed vp aboue others Pray heartily for the instruction of Gods Spirit and with Dauid looke vp to the Lord and say Lord open mine eyes to see the wonders contained in thy Law And lastly where the foundation is rightly layd where the substance of religion is held separate not thy selfe for trifles and by-matters for as the Apostle saith of meats and drinks that they neyther commend vs nor discommend vs before God so is it of all outward things they may be inconueniences but the greater is with Peter to goe from the company of our fellow Disciples for this is a degree to the deniall of Christ himselfe with the Israelites to goe vp to fight against the enemy Numb 14. without Moses and the Arke and ineuitably to thrust our selues vpon horrible destruction Quest 35. Which is the second thing that you learne to beleeue touching the Church Answ Secondly I learne to beleeue that Gods Church is holy that is sanctified and washed by water and the holy Ghost and such as daily proceedeth in holinesse vntill it come at the last to be presented before God without spot or wrinkle of sin Explan This thing is specially to be attended as another notable marke of the Church of God and lest any occasion of error be taken by them that seeke occasion the sense is first carefully to be opened which is 1. That the inuisible Church of God viz all true beleeuers are accepted for holy in Christ Iesus at the very first act of their conuersion vnto the true faith though before they were most vncleane by sin 2. That they are all indued with actuall holinesse through the operation of the holy Ghost viz. with a constant hatred and striuing against all sinne and with the loue of vertue and grace and with an earnest study and care to grow herein 3. That as they which are recouering from any dangerous disease that had brought them very low grow euery day stronger vntill they haue recouered their perfect health and strength and as children grow vp in stature and in the lineaments of their body till they come to be perfect men So doe true beleeuers grow in holinesse bringing forth daily more fruites hereof vntill that at the last in death all wickednesse be subdued and they be in holinesse perfected and so without spot or wrinkle presented before the Father 4. That euery true visible Church is holy also viz. in regard of the best members thereof though not in regard of the most or greatest therein 5 That howsoeuer the corruption of manners aboundeth yet the doctrine remaineth holy and pure reprouing these corruptions and vrging to all holines of conuersation For the grounds of holy Scripture setting forth all this 1. Proofe First that through faith all true beleeuers are accepted for holy in Iesus Christ at the very instant of their conuersion this appeareth plainely because that faith iustifieth that is Rom. 3.28 makes a man iust and holy Rom. 11.10 Gal. 3.17 faith ingrafteth into Iesus Christ and maketh vs partakers of his holinesse faith maketh that Christ dwelleth in our hearts Againe faith maketh vs to be the Sonnes of God for to such as beleeued in his name Ioh. 1.12 hee gaue power to be the sonnes of God it maketh vp the marriage betwixt Christ and vs that we become flesh of his flesh Eph. 5. and bone of his bone And what more can be said then to proue the holinesse of true beleeuers will any man deny any thing in Christ to be holy dare he say that the sonnes of God are not holy can it enter into his thought that the place where Christ dwelleth is not holy The Father imbraceth his Prodigall sonne at his very returne home vnto him the Master of the vineyard preferreth those that were called at the last houre of the day our Sauiour Christ receiueth the penitent theefe into Paradise the very day of his conuersion shall wee not thinke then that all these were holy which was not through any holinesse of their owne for they had done nothing but through their faith in Christ making his holines to be theirs 2. Proofe Secondly that they are endued with actuall holinesse the Apostle intimateth when he saith to the Romans that they were called to bee Saints and Saint Peter when in praise of Gods Church Rom. 17 1. Pet. 2.9 Eph. 2.9 1. Ioh. 3.3 he saith Yee are a chosen generation a royall Priesthood a● holy nation c And againe to the Ephesians Yee are Citizens with the Saints and Saint Iohn saith Hee that hath this hope purgeth himselfe euen as he is pure that hath called him Moreouer that all beleeuers are thus is plaine because they haue one common calling to be Saints whatsoeuer they shall plead at the last day if this be
wanting if they bee workers of iniquity Math 7.22 they shall be bidden Depart yee workers of iniquity I knowe you not for this are the holy Apostles so diligent in stirring vp hereunto Phil. 2.14 15 Doe all things c. That yee may bee blamelesse 〈◊〉 pure and the Sonnes of God without rebuke Haue your c●nuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which shall speake eu●ll of you as of euill doers may by your good workes glorifie God 1. P●● 2.12 and it is the plaine sentence of the Scriptures Without holinesse no man shall see God Lastly that this holinesse is a constant hatred and striuing against sinne and an vnfained loue of vertue and endeauouring thereafter and not onely an outward obseruation of holy duties nor yet on the contrary side habituall righteousnesse sufficient to iustifie vs before God All this is also plainely taught especially by St. Paul in his owne example Rom. 7. hee professeth of himselfe that he loued the good and did striue after it and that he hated the euil and eschewed it in such words as if hee would describe a man panting in his strife with most deadly enemies and grieued that they should any whit ouermaster him and therefore plucking vp his greatest courage and vniting all his forces against them And the same affections against sinne he sheweth to haue beene in the Galatians where hee saith The flesh fighteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh Gal. 5.17 so that yee cannot doe those things that you would and exhorteth all men to the like saying Take vnto you the whole armour of God Eph. 6.13 that yee may be able to resist c. Esa 29.13 More particularly that the holinesse of the faithfull is not onely an outward obseruation of holy duties as some peruert it but this earnest hearty endeauour against sinne appeareth because that this affected singular outward holines as being a meere Image to deceiue the beholders is reiected and the endeauour of the heart only as the substance is accepted The Iewes of old had otherwise beene holy enough when they drew ne●re vnto the Lord with their l●ppes their hearts being farre away and the Pharisees had beene the holiest of all for their fastings prayers and almes for their Sabbaths and Synagogues for their often washings Math. 6. Esa 1. and outward deuotion but they are condemned for most vaine their seruice is so distasted that they are bidden to bring no more oblations they are challenged for their incense new moones and solemne assemblies Math. 7. C●ap 6. For not the hearers of the word but the doers are blessed not the offerers vp of many prayers but the secretly deuouted are rewarded not the sacrificers but the mercifull doe the will of God the Father Againe that our holinesse is not righteousnesse sufficient to iustifie vs before God the Lord himselfe affirmeth when he saith If yee haue done all tha● yee can yee haue done but your duty 〈◊〉 are vnprofitable seruants and S. Paul hath spent many of his writings purposely here about viz. to shew that all such as seeke this way to be iustified shall surely misse of their marke let them colour it ouer how they will alleadging our vnion with Christ so as that our actions are meritorious and perfect through him I am sure that none of the Apostles doe giue any limit vnto this doctrine Paul notwithstanding his vnion acknowledgeth the imperfections of the flesh in him S. Rom. 7.18 1. Ioh. 1.8 Iames saith in many things we sinne all and S. Iohn If we say that we haue no si●n● we deceiue our selues and the truth is 〈◊〉 in vs. And if there be such a mixture of sinne with our holinesse how can any member of Christ trust at all to his owne righteousnesse Can he iustifie himselfe more then the very Apostles and the excellent Christians of their times nay let him take heede rather lest by so doing he be condemned seeing that 1. Cor. 11.31 if we iudge our selues we shall not be iudged and not if we iustifie our selues Eph. 2.20 Againe that the faithfull are euer growing in holines vntill that they come to be perfected in death and then shall be presented without spot or wrinkle Their growth is plainly taught in the Epistle to the Ephesians where speaking of Christ it is said In whom all the building being coupled together groweth to an holy Temple in the Lord that is as any building which becommeth sit for habitation groweth nearer perfection euery day till at the last it be fully finished so doth the Church of God Wherefore wee are often remembred hereof by Peter 2 Pet. 3.18 1. Pet. 2.2 who saith Growe in Grace and in the knowledge of Iesus Christ and where he exhorteth to desire the sincere milke of the Word that we may growe thereby Eph. 4.24 and by Paul saying Be renued in the spirit of your minde and put off the olde man and put on the new that is put him off more and become more holy and righteous Heb. 5. and againe where he reproueth the Hebrews for their weakenesse euen then when by reason of the time they might haue beene strong men in Christ to omit the Lords vpbraidings of his Disciples for that hauing beene with him long still they vnderstood not his parables they were yet weake in faith they had not yet growne in mortification of their fleshlinesse Gal. 5.17 Moreouer that perfection is not attained till death appeareth because whilst we liue we carry the flesh about with vs by reason of which we cannot doe those things we would we are but like a bad writer hauing his hand guided by a more skilfull master this scholler notwithstāding is vnable to write a perfect faire hand by reasō of his owne vntowardnes so the holiest of Gods children is short of perfection by reason of the fleshes weakenes though they be guided by Gods Spirit Phil. 3.9 And this they are not ashamed to confesse against themselues Both Paul I striue saith he after the marke not as though I had already attained it and Iames and Iohn as hath bin already shewed But in death all imperfections vanish away Eph. 5.27 then shall they be presented without spot or wrinkle for Christ therfore gaue himselfe for his Church that he might cleanse and Sanctifie it not hauing spot or wrinkle then the Bride is in her perfect beauty in a vesture of Gold of Ophir with needle-works all glorious she is then as a city Psal 4 5. the pauing of whose streetes is of Gold Reuel 21. the walls of pretious stones all things most bright and shining shee hath a siluer Pallace built vpon her if she be a wall if a doore Cantic 6 9. shee is enclosed with boards of Cedar if she be in any degree of true grace shee is perfected and made happy There is not need of an imaginary purgatory
leauing scarce sufficient for their owne maintenance Nor doth this fauour the Anabaptisticall Community of all things for we are not otherwise to conceiue of the Community of things in the Apostles times but onely that as any man did sell and dedicate any thing to the Apostles and Disciples which had not wherewithall else to liue so that onely so dedicated did remaine as the Church treasury out of which the faithfull that wanted were relieued there remaining vnto euery man still some things which were proper vnto himselfe or at least there remained a liberty to haue retained some parcell vnto himselfe As in all populous places abounding with poore there be stockes and treasuries at this day the onely difference is that then men being more deuoted the necessities of the Saints greater it was more aboundantly brought into this treasury but now more sparingly For if all things had beene common that exhortation to the Church of Corinth 1. Cor. 16. of laying aside for the poore euery first day of the weeke as God had blessed euery man had bin to no purpose there had bin no vse of their loue-feasts which were made by the richer for the comfort of the poore neither could some by excesse haue beene drunken and some hungry as they were when the vse of these feasts was corrupted amongst them 1. Cor 11. Col. 3.1 Sixtly and lastly for our Communion with the Saints departed it is first in our conuersing with them by heauenly thoug●ts according to that exhortation to the Colossians Set your affections on things which are aboue by holinesse of life according to that profession of the Apostle to the Philippians Our conuersation is in Heauen from whence we expect a Sauiour Phil. ● 20 and by sighing after Heauen according to that consolation of the Corinthians 2. Cor. 5.2 Therefore we sigh desiring to be cloathed with our house which is from Heauen Secondly in our like affections vnto Gods glory and against the enemies of the Church for as we pray for the aduancement of the one and the confusion of the other so much more doe they for they cry Reuel 6.10 How long Lord holy and true doest thou not iudge and auenge our blood-shed by them vpon the earth which they say not because they are indued with lesse charity towards their enemies and persecutors then faithfull Martyrs vpon earth who haue prayed for them but partly through the loue of their fellow-seruants still subiect to their fury vnlesse they be cut off and partly through their vnderstanding cleared to discerne reprobate persecutors and chiefely through the desire that Gods glory may bee magnified by taking away such maine lets and hinderances of the Gospels proceedings For it may well bee held that the Saints in Heauen doe cry vnto God in generall against Sathan and all his instruments at all times knowing their fury euen to the end of the world against Gods people in the world but the errour is to beleeue that they know our particular necessities or can heare vs vpon earth complaining of thē which is a property of the Godhead onely which is infinite and all-sufficient to such as call vpon him 1. Duty To renounce wicked societies Hauing thus at large dealt with the meaning of this Article and the grounds of holy Scripture from whence it is taken it remaineth now that we lay down the duties Of which the first is To abandon all wicked societies because we professe fellowship with Saints betwixt whom and these there is no agreement For What agreement is there 2. Cor. 6 saith the Apostle betwixt God and Belial betwixt light and darknes betwixt righteousnesse and vnrighteousnesse wherefore wee are forbidden to haue fellowship with such 1. Cor. 5 1● If any bee called a brother that is a Fornicator or Drunkard or Idolater through couetousnesse with such an one eate not and againe If any walke inordinately we command you that you withdraw your selues from them And 2. Thes● ● ● With the foole saith Salomon thou shalt learne folly and the companion of fooles shall be afflicted with many other places purposely restraining vs from such companions And indeede how canst thou beleeue thy selfe to be of the Communion of Saints and yet haue voluntary inward fellowship with the wicked Verely no more then those that liued among the Samaritans and had dealings with them could defend themselues to bee of the Iewes Common-wealth seeing as the woman of Samaria told Christ Ioh. ● the Iewes meddlenot with the Samaritans no more then they which haunt the Stewes daily can defend themselues to be chast and honest men seeing that such come not into these dangerous places It is true I grant that the Saints may come amongst vicious persons as amongst strangers to eat and to drinke to buy and to sell with them or they may vse their company to win them to Christ as S. Paul saith that to all men hee became all things that hee might winne some but to make them our choyce companions to delight in them and single them out to bee our consorts can no more stand with the communion of Saints then the Sunnes cleerest light with the most pitchy darknesse of the night Let vs abstaine then from such company with John the Apostle let vs cry Properemus hinc Let vs hasten hence lest the house fall vpon vs where an enemy of the truth is when hee vnderstood entring the bath that Cerinthus the Heretique was there 3. Duty To walke in the light The third duty is to walke in the light of Gods holy Word by vertuous liuing because of our fellowship with Christ through him with God the Father for God is light saith S. Iohn and if wee walke in darknesse and say that wee haue fellowship with him we lye and doe not truely 1 Ion. 1.7 So Christ calleth himselfe the light of the world and pronounceth this the condemnation of the world because light was come and men loued darkenesse more then light because their deeds were euill that is when hee came to inlighten them with his holy precepts of faith and repentance they neglected this and persisted in vnbeleefe and sinne which would bee their damnation Whosoeuer therefore treadeth in the same steps may well expect the same end they are not in Christ they are farre from any vnion with him for such walke after the spirit speaking in the Word and so there is no condemnation vnto them Rom. 8.1 This is the spirituall whordome of which the Prophet did so much complaine causing a diuorce betwixt the Lord and his people and so a depriuation of all goodly ornaments before bestowed so that as the case of a woman is which hath played the whore and for this is put away from her husband with shame and without all mercy burnt in the fire so is our case if wee neglect his will and follow our owne corruption our vnion with the Lord is
Law is also a Schoolemaster when we are come to Christ euer checking and correcting vs when wee walke not according to the straight rule thereof but the Gospel vpon our humiliation comforteth vs and assureth vs that al our aberrations and going astray are remitted so that there be an heart vnfainedly hating that euill which we doe Rom. 7. Now as there be differences betwixt the Law and the Gosspell so there be some things wherein they agree The agreement of the old Testament and the new Heb. ● 1 Mat 3. 1. In the author God not as the mad Manichees taught the bad God to be the author of the law and the good God the author of the Gospell for the same God which spake by his Son Iesus Christ in these last daies spake also at diuers times and in diuers maners in times past he that said from heauen this is my beloued Son heare ye him the same God spake all these words said from heauen I am thy Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt out of the house of bondage c. 2. They agree in the threatning of sin and vrging obedience vnto the Lord in all things but the Law vrgeth it for feare the Gospel for loue If ye loue me keepe my Commandements the Law as the meritorious cause of life the Gospell as most necessary signes of the life of faith and the way that God hath appointed vs to walke in vnto life the Law giueth no hope in the case of swaruing from the strict rule thereof the Gospell giueth hope to the penitent and where the like hope is giuen by the Prophets they doe rather play Euangelists then Preachers of the Law 3. They agree in this that howsoeuer the Gospell giueth hope to the penitent yet it denieth all hope to those that liue and die in transgression of the Law for against such most common are the threatnings contained in the Gospell They that doe such things Gal. 5.17 shall neuer inherit the Kingdome of Heauen 4. They agree in this that there is no contradiction betwixt them but as they come from one and the same spirit so there is a sweet harmony consent between thē the one only sheweth what God doth strictly require in his iustice the other how his iustice is satisfied and yet his mercy to sinfull man appeareth the one saith he that breaketh the Commandements shall die the other saith that because man through the weaknes of his nature could not but breake them one man that neuer brake any the least of them died in the stead of sinfull man and thus freed him that was the son of death from death and damnation 5. They agree in the Ministers of them both for they of the Law were to be without blemish their lipps were to preserue knowledge they were to liue of their seruice they were diuers sorts both Priests Leuits they were watchmen c. so ought the ministers of the Gospell they must be vnblameable apt to teach they that preach the Gospell are to liue of the Gospell 1. Tim 3. 1. Cor. 9.24 Ephes 4.12 2. Pet. 5.2 some are Doctours some Pastours c. they are Pastours watching and keeping their flockes as those that must giue accounts for them And thus much of the third generall The manner how this law was giuen Exod. 19.20 The next thing to be spoken of in generall is the manner how this Law was giuen and that is described in the nineteenth and twentieth of Exodus 1. First there was great preparation three dayes together the people were sanctified according to the manner of those times by washings and purifyings shewing both what need wee haue by prayer and reading of the holy Scriptures which may bring vs from worldly to heauenly meditations to prepare our selues euer before that we come to heare the Lord speaking vnto vs in the Ministery of his holy word and also how wee must euer be more and more doing away by the Spirit of Sanctification the blots and blemishes of our natures that we may be the fitter to come into the presence of the Holyest 2. Secondly a straight charge was giuen that neither man nor beast vnder paine of death should come neere the Mount whence the Law was to be deliuered but certaine marks were set beyond which none might dare to passe shewing as the Apostle hence noteth 2. Cor. 3.6.7 Heb. 12.19 how glorious was the Law now to bee deliuered and if such as passed the markes set them were without mercy to die the death that much more the transgressours of any of these precepts should die and find no mercy Heb. 12 2● Thirdly the Lord descended with great terrour the Trumpet sounding the earth shaking and Lightnings flying abroad insomuch as that the people are noted to haue run away and Moses himselfe to haue said I tremble and quake shewing that the things here vttered were graue and waightie and to be receiued into the heart with a feare of offending against them and also that when the time shall bee of calling the offenders to account with what wonderfull terrour the Lord will then come against them 4. Almighty God himself spake al these words in the hearing of al the people but whē they were too weak to beare his words and desired that the Lord would not speake any more for so they should die but promised obedience if Moses should speak two tables of stone were giuen vnto him written with Gods own finger that he might carry them to the people shewing hereby how stony-hard our hearts be and that Gods finger alone is able to imprint them there his speech from Heauen must worke in vs a reuerence of them otherwise we shal all be too negligent of his Lawes 5. When Moses had broken these Tables through zeale seeing how God was dishonoured in his absence by golden Calues which they had set vp and worshipped the Lord bad him hew two other Tables and therein he wrote all the words that were in the first shewing hereby that mans heart by Gods creation had all the lawes ready written in it as the Tables prepared by God himselfe had but the heart which he had gotten vnto himselfe by falling away from God is without any letter hereof in effect vntill that the Lord wrote them anew as it was with the Tables prepared by Moses 6. Lastly when Moses had been long with the Lord and came with these Lawes vnto the people his face shone so as they were not able to looke vpon him for which cause he vsed a vaile when hee came vnto them and put it off when hee returned vnto the Lord shewing hereby as S. Paul noteth 2. Cor 3.13 ●4 that the Iewes should not be able to see into the end of the Law Christ Iesus vntill the vale of blindnesse and hardnesse of heart were taken away by the Lord neither yet could any of the Gentiles without the same
his Law is broken Obiect Sol. If it be said the Lord will haue mercy and not sacrifice I answer this is in case of necessity not to be auoided hee meaneth not that if thou be poore he had rather thou shouldest worke vpon his Sabbaths but abstaine serue him faithfully and he will stirre thee vp mercy for thy reliefe Quest 75. Are wee bound to doe the holy duties of Gods seruice all this time without ceasing Answ No for we may refresh our selues with eating and drinking singing and musick and other honest delights whereby the mind is cheared vp and ioy and gladnesse befitting the Lords holy day expressed Hos 2.11 Explan Although we teach a strict keeping of the Sabbath vnder the new Testament yet it is not so to bee vnderstood as though wee were bound vpon this day to doe nothing but spirituall duties all the day long for in respect that we haue flesh as well as Spirit that would be wearisome to vs and would turne the Lords day which is for a delight into a heauy burthen I say therefore that wee haue liberty to refresh our selues with such things as cheare the outward man and expresse ioy befitting the Lords holy day For euery holy day of the Lord is a festiuall and ioyfull day for outward ioy and delight which is expressed by the Prophet Hosea saying I will cause all her mirth to cease her feast dayes her new Moones and her Sabbaths When hee threatneth iudgements against the land Nehem. 8.9.10 And Nehemiah inuiteth the people to eate of the fat and drinke the sweete reproouing them when they began to weepe because it was an holy day of the Lord. Whence it appeareth plainly that mirth and ioy euen externall doe well become the holy day of the Lord neither were the people of Israel euer reprooued for this but that through their couetous mindes they accompted the Sabbath a burthen and thought long to haue it gone that their seruants might goe to their labour and they themselues to their markets for in this respect they are threatned by the Prophet Amos Amos 8 5. Heare yee this that swallow vp the poore and say when will the new Moone be gone that we may sell corne and the Sabbath that we may sell wheate c. And some of them not staying the ending of the Sabbaths trod Wine presses and laded and carried out burthens against which Nehemiah prouideth being grieued hereat Nehem. 13.15 as at a great abomination Yet let no man vnderstand this so as though it were hereby tollerated to spend this day in outward and vaine bodily pastimes for for then how shall we improue it to the best aduantage of our soules as hath been already shewed wee had need and ought to doe but so farre forth we may vse bodily delight as it doth not hinder but further the hallowing of this day as it doth not expresse an heathenish feast such as were the old Bacchanalia but setteth forth a diuine feast kept in the honour of the Lord Iesus 1. Let no man therefore be eating and drinking and making merry when the publike seruice of God calleth for him Phil. 3 ●7 for that were truly to make a mans belly his God as the Apostle speaketh seeing he attendeth vpon that when he should attend vpon God in his seruice 2. Let no man so affect outward pleasure as that he should forget the chiefe pleasure and comfort of the soule by neglecting to prepare to Gods worship before or to meditate that it may sinke and take rooting in his mind after 3. Let euery man as hee is able exercise himselfe in priuate in reading and studying the holy Scriptures and praiers with other helpes to strengthen the inner man in grace and knowledge 4. Shunne and auoide all obscene and filthy pleasures which are rather corrupting then hallowing and all vnlawfull gaming or ouer laborious exercises which in the end do rather trouble and dull the Spirits then quicken and cheare thē vp Let there be no frequenting of Alehouses or Tauerns vnto riot no chambring wantonnes or in a word let there bee no mirth but what becommeth sober temperate and chaste minds fearing God and reuerencing his ordinances And that licentious persons may bee the rather restrained from their vaine pleasures vpon this day the Lord hath apparantly executed iudgement vpon diuers for contempt of this day Quest 76. Is this all that we are bound vnto to keepe the Sabbath our selues in ceasing from labour and doing the duties thereof Answ No but whosoeuer hath sonne or daughter man-seruant or maid cattell or stranger within his gates is alike bound to prouide that all as much as in him lieth obserue this day in their kind both man and beast Gen. 17. Explan The Lord the author of this commandement as in giuing other lawes he speaketh not vnto inferiours and the gouerned but vnto the gouernours as in the law of circumcision he commandeth all vnto Abraham both for the act to be done the time and manner in the law of the Passeouer he commandeth all vnto masters of families Exod. 12.21 and Moses openeth the matter vnto the elders onely so in commanding the obseruation of the Sabbath he layeth all vpon the gouernours saying Thou thy sonne thy daughter thy man-seruant thy maid thy cattell and stranger that is within thy gates Gouernours charged with children and seruants And not without iust cause because that 1. Parents and Masters of families are in Gods stead to their children and seruants and haue his titles vpon them which for what else is it but only to remember them so to bring vp those that are vnder them in all godlines and holinesse as if God himselfe did more particularly take vpon him the training vp and nurturing of them 2. Because of the neare relation betwixt gouernours and their people he is the head oeconomicall they the members of all which we know what care the head hath seeking stil to put more comlines vpon them and in these kind of members the greatest grace is holines and greatest meanes of breeding this the due obseruation of the Sabbath 3. Because of the corrupt nature wherein parents beget and bring forth their children into the world so that without grace they are fountaines of infinite misery vnto them they being by nature the children of wrath and vassals of the deuill Ephes 2.2 now what a corasiue must it needs be to the heart of any kinde-hearted father or mother to consider that they haue bred children to be fire-brands of hell and what a care then must this needs worke in them to helpe them to be deliuered here-from and the chiefest ordinary way vnto this is to bring them to the Sanctuary vpon the Sabbath to vrge them and helpe them by prayer examinations and instructions to the fruitfull obseruation hereof 4. Because they cannot looke for a blessing vpon those things about which they imploy their seruants and
this law some of these dayes for holy duties And a good construction may be made hereof and yet this stand for an vnder-commandement Six dayes shalt thou labour vnlesse the worship of God shall hinder and call thee from thy labour for we must in reason yeeld as much to the businesses of Gods seruice vpon the six daies notwithstanding the command of working as to bodily labours vpon the seuenth notwithstanding the command of resting therefore as when we are bidden to rest all the day we are not yet denied works wherunto necessitie or charitie call vs so when we are bidden to worke the six daies wee are not yet denied ceasing when religion and Gods worship call vs heereunto But for the further cleering of these things here arise certain weightie and needfull questions Quest. 78. Is it not lawfull then to forbeare working to attend vpon God in his seruice in the six dayes Answ Yes it is not onely lawfull but necessary to doe the duties of Gods seruice euery day of the weeke in priuate and in publike when iust occasion is offered 1. Thes 5.7 2 ●im 4 1. Deut. 6.7 Explan It is the corrupt maner of most men when the Sabbath is ended yea when publike seruice is done neuer more to call the Lord to minde all the weeke after or if they doe to performe their deuotion very slenderly and weakely as though they were sufficiently sanctified in two or three houres vpon the Sabbath for all the weeke after or as though they were Gods people only vpon that day and their owne only all the weeke after But this is great forgetfulnes by all meanes to be rooted out from amongst Christians for the Lord is to bee serued euery day of the weeke with the best heart and care that we can First wee haue for this his command Pray continually and in all things giue thanks and preach the word of God be instant in season and out of season and Thou shalt talke of the Lawes of God continually when thou tarriest in thy house and when thou walkest in th way as thou lyest downe and as thou risest vp So that duties of religion doe not onely tye vs semper all the dayes of our liues but ad semper also to euery day and time when good opportunitie is giuen we must expresse our deuotion by praying reading meditation hearing and conferring at fit times 2. We haue for this the example of holy men Daniel prayed dayly thrice a day and praised his God Dan. 6. ●0 and the Text sheweth that it was his manner thus to doe Dauid prayed early in the morning he wept in prayer euen in his bed Psal 5 2. Psal 6 6. Psal 22. ● Psal 34.1 so as that he made it swim with teares I call by day and by night sa●th he I will alway giue thankes vnto the Lord and his praise shall bee in my mouth continually Morning and euening and at noone-tide hee called vpon the Lord. Anna a good widdow is said to haue serued the Lord in the Temple Luc. 2.37 Acts 2.46 wi●h fasting and prayer night and day They were dayly together in the Primitiue Church with one accord in the Temple And Sozomen reporteth out of P●●lo Iudaeus Sozom lib 6. cap. 18. that the Christians in Aegypt continued all the six daies in deuotion so earnestly as that they forgat to take their food from morning till night and the people of Edessa would not bee terrified from their often meetings Ruff. lib. 2. c. 5. through the feare of death threatned vnto them Which I doe not rehearse as fauouring the Monasticall life which is wholly spent in blinde deuotion for euery man must liue in a calling not onely generall as hee is a Christian but specially as he is a member of a Common-wealth and if Anna did liue in the Temple shee had doubtlesse some other imployment besides prayer and fasting and for those of the Primitiue Church their time was extraordinary and most dangerous but I rehearse these examples to commend the general of omitting no day without giuing the Lord his due 3. We haue for this great encouragement giuen Hee is pronounced a blessed man Psal 1.1 Psal 119. ●8 Verse 99. that doth exercise himselfe in Gods word and meditae therin day and night Dauid saith that because Gods Commandements were euer with him he was made wiser than his enemies Yea saith he ● haue had more vnderstanding than all my teachers I vnderstood more than the ancient So that he which will be wise indeed must doe as Dauid did haue euer Gods Commandements with him and make Gods testimonies his daily meditation 4. We haue to vrge vs to holy duties our owne great necessitie euery day We are daily subiect to sin and therefore must daily seek the remission of our sins by praier according to the direction Giue vs this day our daily bread We haue daily businesses vpon which wee need but cannot looke for a blessing without daily earnest prayer otherwise we may build Psal 1 27. watch and worke but in vaine we are subiect to daily dangers either by reason of the Deuils rage the crie of our sins or our weak constitutions which we cannot look should be preuented without diligent prayer euery day prayer being our last greatest refuge Eph. 6. ●8 according to the Apostle and we daily receiue at Gods hands great blessings the course of which we shall cause him to breake off vnlesse we be daily in rendring praises to his holy name Ephes 6.17 Againe for the reading and meditating on Gods word our necessities do all so require that we should be somewhat emploied herein euery day The Word is the sword of the spirit without which how can we combat with our spirituall enemies that will not leaue vs vnassaulted any day The Word is the milke 1. Pet. 2.2 whereby we must be nourished and grow vp in regard of which we are as new borne babes how then can we in any day liue without it but be very Dwarffes in grace The word is the seed of God by which we are kept from sinning 1. Iohn 3.9 brought to be his beloued and holy children If this seed then be not daily in vs how shal we be kept from being ouergrowne with weeds and briars and so from being reprobate accursed ground The word is a light vnto our feet and a lanthorne vnto our paths how then can we walke on and be kept vpright without dangerous stumbling falling Psal 119.105 vnlesse we haue euery day this light set vp in our minds To say nothing of the readinesse and dexteritie in the Word of God which we shall grow vnto by daily exercising ourselues therein according to the prouerbe Vse maketh perfectnesse and how much the more apt we shal thus become for publike instructions to receiue them for our greater comfort Quest 79. It seemeth then that euery day ought to
2. Because God is offended for the same sinne may be to the offending of God and of our selues also because it is some iniury vnto vs as when a seruant neglecteth his masters busines behind his backe or spendeth his money at the Ale-house or when a people walketh stubbornly against their Minister or ruler in these and the like cases our anger must not be for our selues but for our God Here meek Moses himself erred at the waters of Meribah when the people murmured for water so that hee could not enter into the land of Canaan 3. It is not sudden but vpon deliberation 3. It is not sudden Iames 1.19 Theodor. 5. cap. 17. according to that precept Bee swift to heare slow to speake slow to wrath Thus Ambrose Bishop of Millaine obtained at the hands of Theodosius the Emperour after that he had greatly offended by sudden anger that he should not suffer any decree made in his anger to be executed till thirty dayes after 4. It doth not continue long Psal 03.89 Ephes 4.26 4. It doth not continue long but is soone ouer againe where there is repentance according to the example of our Lord who is slow to anger and ready to forgiue wherefore it is said Let not the Sunne goe downe vpon thy wrath 5. It ariseth from loue 1. Cor. 13. Gal. 6.1 5. It ariseth from loue and is guided by loue the loue of God and the loue of our neighbor that hath sinned for whatsoeuer is without this is sinne and if any be fallen by infirmitie saith the Apostle restore such an one with the Spirit of meekenesse When anger is thus ordered it is so farre from being a sinne as that it is necessary in all men it is zeale for Gods glory and out of this anger the disgracefull words of fooles wicked children sonnes of a whore c. haue rightly and without sinne been vsed as by the Prophets our Sauiour Christ and by the Apostles But out of these cases anger is fleshly and if it be more violent it is hatred if it dwelleth in a man to make him watch his opportunity to be reuenged it is malice if it causeth ioy when it falleth out ill vnto our neighbour and griefe when it is well with him it is diuellish enuy if it bee a perpetuall barre to reconciliation it is a reprobate affection as of such as cannot be appeased Rom. 1.30 Now as the very act of murther hath been shewed to be a most odious sinne so are these degrees of railing anger c. 1. First the heart and tongue is here set on fire of the fire of hell Iames 3. neither good men nor good Angels durst euer doe thus no not Michael the Archangell when he stroue with the Deuill about the body of Moses Iude verse 9. he durst not blame him with cursed speaking but said the Lord rebuke thee 2. To sinne thus is to be a murtherer before God euen as Cain was Iohn 3.15 for he that hateth his brother is a manslayer Rom. 3.13.14 3. It is a proper brand of the wicked His throate is an open Sepulcher the poyson of Aspes is vnder his lips his mouth is full of cursing and bitternesse 5. Properties of cruelty Prou 12.10 Cruelty in the lookes Gen. 4. Gen. 31.2 5. The fift sinne against this Commandement is al cruelty towards man or beast for the righteous man is noted to bee mercifull euen to his beast Cruelty is sometime in the very looke and countenance when it is cast downe towards any man thus was Cains towards Abel before his murther and Labans countenance expressed his malice against Iacob before his departure and this downeward looke is a sinne in any when an ill mind is hereby set forth as it is for the most part 2. In the behauiour there is cruelty when it is harsh In their behauiour and churlish as Nabals is said to haue been towards his seruants so as that they could not tell how to speake to him of him therefore it is said He was churlish 1. Sam. 23.3 and ill conditioned and this is an ill condition indeed and vnworthy a Christian seeing our lesson is Learne of me that J am meeke and gentle Matth. 11. Too much seuerity towards the poore 3. When any way too much seuerity is vsed by the rich towards the poore by officers towards malefactors dealing with them in all extremity by gouernours towards such as be vnder them vnreasonably correcting or otherwise expressing an hatefull mind against them This was a sinne in the Pharisees that brought the adulterous woman to Christ Iohn 8. breathing out cruelty against her and al they shal haue iudgement mercilesse that are thus without mercy 4. Cruelty is in the vnmercifull vsage of the dumbe creature Vnmercifull vsage of the dumb creatures working them without reason pinching them in things necessary beating or killing them without mercy or otherwise abusing them so as that they surfet or grow diseased hereby all these are wicked acts and shew wicked men Prou. 12.10 whose mercies are cruelty 1. Cor 9. For howsoeuer the Apostle saith comparatiuely Doth God take care for Oxen it is certaine that God doth take care for Oxen and Horses and for the very fowles of the aire Deut. 22.6 seeing that he hath made a law forbidding when a man findeth a birds neast to take the old together with the young It is therfore to be vnderstood that he doth not take care for Oxen principally and chiefely but subordinately as his care is towards all the creatures And hitherto of the sinnes against the bodily life The murther of soules 1. Cor 8.11 Now there bee sinnes also against the spirituall life and soule according to the teaching of Saint Paul who sheweth a case wherein a man destroyeth the soule of another viz. when he is an occasion of his stumbling and falling into sin Thus Ministers murther 1. In Ministers or at the least make themselues guilty of murthering the soules of the people committed to their charge when as through their default any of them perish This is plainely taught in Ezechiel Ezech. 3. whom the Lord told that he made him a watchman ouer the people and if the enemy which is sin should come and destroy any he not giuing them warning their bloud hee threatneth to require at his hands If any minister therfore either by neglecting to teach and watch ouer the people much more if by false doctrine or a wicked life he be an occasion that any die in their sins he shall vndoubtedly answer for this soule-murther if he endeauoreth being furnished with gifts necessary to saue them whosoeuer shal perish he is acquitted shal haue his reward 2 Parents and Masters Againe parents and masters and all priuate gouernours are murtherers if by their neglect or bad example their children seruants or pupils perish by ignorance prophanenes or any other
holy Ghost 1. Cor 6.19.20 Explan Hauing shewed the sinne the vertue to be imbraced followeth which is to keepe as the soule and mind so the body and members pure and holy without any adulterous spot and staine of vncleannes and the reason is yeelded by the Apostle Your bodies are not your owne yee are bought with a price and your bodies are the temples of the holy Ghost If a man hath an house of his owne he may vse it as he thinkes good but if the pallace of some noble person or Prince be committed to his keeping to which that great person doth vsually resort he dareth not let it lie slouenly or vncleane no more will a Christian man or woman his body but keepe it pure for the great person of Gods Spirit who doth daily come to him as to his pallace and temple Wherefore when the Apostle would in short deliuer what the will of God is he saith This is the will of God euen your sanctification 1. Thes 4.3 and that yee should abstaine from fornication And distinguishing men into some married and some vnmarried he willeth them to bee all alike minded for this seeking by puritie to please the Lord. 1. Cor 7.29 Now that we may the better be preserued thus pure and holy consider first the parts and then the meanes The parts are modesty and sobriety Modesty is a decent and comly carriage of our selues in all things 1 Modesty wherin it standeth Iob 31.1 First in the eyes when they are stayed and not wandring as the adulterous eyes spoken of before but as Iobs tied by couenant and stedfast purpose of not sinning herewith Secondly in the countenance when it is bashfull and not impudent to expresse which maids were vailed in old time Prou. 7.11 Thirdly in speech when it is sparing for the harlot is a babler when it is submisse and low for the harlot also is loud and when with the best words and becomming a modest spirit in speaking of things shameful in themselues as is the phrase of the Scripture Adam knew his wife Euah 1. Tim. 2.9 Fourthly in apparrell when it is such as becommeth men and women fearing God not strange to the disguising of the person as the Courtiers at Ierusalem whose strange apparell the Lord threatneth Z ph 1.8 saying I will visit the Princes and the Kings ch●ldren and all such as cloathe themselues with strange apparrell not exceeding a mans degree and calling not light and vaine nor ouer curious as the apparrell of the daughters of Ierusalem against which it is threatned therefore That instead of a sweet sauor Esay 3.24 there shall be stinke in stead of a godlie a rent in stead of dressing of the haire laidnesse and instead of a stomacher a girding with sackcloth and burning in stead of beauty 2 Sobriety wherein it standeth Luke 21.34 2. Sobrietie is Christianly and temperately to carry our selues in the vse of meates and drinkes First by auoyding excesse Take heed least at any time your hearts be oppressed with surfetting and drunkennesse saith the Lord and when thou sittest downe to eate with a ruler saith Salomon if thou be a man giuen to the appe●ite Prou. 23 1. put thy knife to thy throate Secondly by honest mirth seasoned with some holy good speeches as the feasts were vnto which Christ was called and the eating and drinking together of the first Christians Luke 14. Acts ● 46. Thirdly by eating and drinking at fit times and not still euer as we are inuited by company or disorderly appetite for necessity and not for fashion for woe be to thee O land saith the Wise man when thy Princes ea e in the morning Eccles 10.16 Verse 17. Blessed art thou O land when thy King eateth in season for strength and not vnto drunkennesse Fourthly by a sanctified vse of meates and drinkes which is when prayer and thanksgiuing are vsed before and after them Meates God hath created to be receiued with thankesgiuing ● Tim. 4. ● 5 for euery creature of God is good and nothing is to bee refused if it be receiued with thankesgiuing for it is sanctified by the word and prayer If these rules of modesty and sobrietie bee obserued out of a conscience of puritie then all acts repugnant vnto these will much more bee auoided as being too grosse not onely for such as are Christianly but euen ciuilly modest and sober The meanes to be preserued thus pure and holy are either generall belonging to all or speciall some for married persons some for the vnmarried The generall preseruatiues are 1. To consider the neere vnion betwixt God and vs Ephes 5.30 Preseruatiue● generall so great is his loue as that hee hath married vs to himselfe insomuch as that he is our husband and wee are his spouse and as there is good reason he is most iealous ouer vs and cannot indure any impurity in vs if there be hee doth in the very instant of vncleannesse cast vs off as the members of an harlot 2. To consider that God is holy and pure and the Deuill an vncleane spirit vnto whom he is ioined in fellowship that sinneth by vncleannesse Iob 31.1 2. Cor. 7.10 Thirdly to tie and bind our selues by couenant and vowes from the occasions which as sparkles of fire doe light vpon the tinder of our corrupt nature as Iob I haue made a couenant with mine eies why then should I thinke on a maid otherwise where is that Christian care of not si●ning of which Paul speaketh What care 1. The speciall preseruatiues of single persons are First 2. Cor. 9. ● 7 Preseruatiues for single persons to beat downe the body and bring it into subiection as the Apostle did to bee abstemious especially from such meates and drinkes as inflate and lift vp the body and prouoke to fleshlinesse and in case of fleshly motions to pray heartily for grace against them as also did the same Apostle Secondly 2. Cor. 1● to absteine from the company of a woman in priuate and alone and in the dark Gen. 39. as Ioseph with al speed went out from the presence of his mistresse who in this case tempted him Thirdly if notwithstanding these meanes thou canst not containe but art troubled with fleshly motions then flie to Gods ordinance which is the last remedy for single persons 1. Cor. 7.1 according to the doctrine of S. Paul To auoide fornication l●t ●u●●y m●n haue his owne wif● and euery woman h●r owne husband This is the rule of Gods spirit therefore whereas in some sinister respect many young gallants in these times very incontinent yet wil not marry but rather burne in lust or wallow in the mire of vncleannesse with harlots because they are younger brethren or their parents be liuing and the inheritance is not yet come vnto them so that they cannot marry so richly or because they will not be tied to a wife
I shew the manner of paying tithes rightly in all such as would liue by rule and keepe a good conscience Leuit. 37 31. First they are to be paid without diminution either when they are paid in kind or a price is giuen for them If any man among the Israelites would buy his tithes he must adde a fifth part to the price if hee payeth it in kinde it must not bee changed giuing a worse for a better for if it bee changed then both it and that for which it is changed Leuit. 27.10 shall be holy he shall forfeit both Contrary to which is the corrupt manner now adayes wherein for the most part either the worst or least is paid for tithe or lesse money then the tithe is worth it being a common reckoning of worldlings that the tithe is not so much worth as one of the nine parts And yet this is one of the least abuses if wee consider the customes by which in stead of giuing a fifth part more onely a fifth or fourth part is paid six pence for a tithe worth two shillings and six pence or a peny or three halfe-pence for that which is worth a shilling or more and he thinketh that he dealeth honestly with God that doth thus But let any man indifferently consider this Law and hee shall finde that no such custome ought to bee amongst men fearing God although Gods Minister for quites sake bee content to accept of it and no more hath been paid a long time for the thing and not the custome is to bee regarded if thou wilt goe by the rule of Gods Law which can onely order thy going aright Leuit. 27.30 Secondly tithes are to be paid yearely euery yeere of the increase of corne of cattle of fruit c. for All the tithe of the Land both of the seede of the ground and of the fruit of the trees is the Lords and euerie tithe of bullocke and sheepe c. Deut 14.22 Numb 18 21. Thou shalt giue the tithe of all yeere by yeare For I haue giuen saith the Lord all the tenths of Israel vnto the children of Leui for an inheritance and the reason is added for their seruice about the Tabernacle Deut. 14.24 Now whereas it seemeth to be put in the mans power so that hee duly pay his tithes to impart hereof vnto the poore and to eate and drinke and bee merry herewith he and his family because the Lord saith If the way be too long for thee thou shalt put it into mony and carry it and when thou commest at the place which the Lord shall chuse thou shalt bestow the money for whatsoeuer thine heart desireth c And againe whereas it may seeme that it was sufficient to doe thus once in the three yeares because it is said Deut. 14 28. At the end of the three yeeres thou shalt bring forth the tithe of all thine increase the same yeare c. We must for the right vnderstanding hereof haue recourse to the originall law by which as hath been shewed the tithes are appointed for an inheritance to the sonnes of Leui they dedicating the tenth of them vnto God now if they were their inheritance then no priuate man could haue any power in the disposing of them more then the Leuite had power ouer the land giuen to any other tribe for inheritance I take it therefore that the man thus appointed to bring his tithe in money had not any part of the worth of it in his power to dispose but putting more hereunto as was prouided a fifth part or more according to Gods blessing vpon him he had power in this to make prouision and to eate and drinke hereof and reioyce before the Lord Deut 16.16 and to impart of it to the needy For thrice in a yeare did the Lord appoint feasts and willed them not to come to his house emptie but to bring euery man according to Gods blessing vpon him a gift of his hand to feast therewithall And for the tithe of the third yeare I take it that the Law hath none other meaning then hath been said viz. that out of the abundance of Gods blessing as some thing should be taken to feast withall at the Lords house so priuately the Leuit and poore should be refreshed herewith at home Some hold that the tithe of the third yeare was a tithe arising out of the nine parts for charitable vses which question I need not debate any further hauing been large in this point Mal. 3.8 Thirdly touching things dedicate to an holy vse if any man shall presume to take them and turne them to a priuate vse hee stealeth from and robbeth God according to that challenge made by the Prophet saying Yee haue robbed mee and yet say Wherein haue wee robbed thee In tithes and offerings And the same Law maketh things dedicate sacred also and such as it is a robbing of God to take them from the Church Leuit. 27.28 For Euery thing saith the Lord separate from common vse whether it be man or beast or land is most holy to the Lord it may not be sold nor redeemed And it is destruction to a man saith Salomon to deuoure that which is sanctified and after the vowes to enquire What is to be thought then of Impropriations whereby both glebe and tythes of many townes are taken into the hands of meere Lay men some small Vicaridge or pension being allotted to the Minister I cannot with beating of my braines deuise how to excuse these vsurpers from sacriledge or robbing of God and therefore many thriue thereafter that haue them True it is that the first authors hereof haue the heauiest answere to make as being directly guilty of this sinne but this is no excuse euen for such as haue purchased impropriations knowing the very glebe lands to be dedicated to God and by gift voluntarily but irreuocably made holy and that Tythes as in themselues holy by originall institution which if they were vnknowne the case were otherwise They therefore that sinne least this way offend first by consent vnto their predecessors Church-robbers for if thou didst not thinke it lawfull to buy and sell these things to alienate them from holy vses wouldst thou meddle with buying them in the same manner Secondly they offend by impouerishing the Ministers of Gods Word to their great discouragement taking their things vnto whom they ought to communicate their owne things Thirdly by vsurping the Ministers duty vnto whom as it properly belongeth to Minister about the holy things so to possesse things hallowed and dedicate for which it may be said vnto them as the spirits said vnto the Coniurers Jesus I know Acts 19.13 and Paul but who are yee Fourthly they offend by oppression taking the tithes of the people for nothing hiring for small pension some simple cheape Sir Iohn vnder whom the people perish for want of knowledge What is to bee done then by such
Sanctification Secondly sanctification is the vertuall diffusing of his bloud in our hearts and in euery corner thereof by the working of his holy Spirit to the cleansing of them from sinne so as that it hath no more dominion ouer vs Rom. 6.3.4 For all wee that are baptized into Christ are baptized into his death Wee are buried then with him by baptisme into his death that as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father so we also should walke in newnes of life Rom. 8. ● 2. Cor. 5.77 And such as are in Christ are described thus Which walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit Jf any bee in Christ hee is a new creature old things are passed away all things are become new It is a vaine thing therefore for any man to perswade himselfe of deliuerance from sinne and death by Christ his bloud vnlesse his conscience bee heereby purged from dead workes of sin in newnesse of life to serue God No price paid for the ransome of a flaue can set him at liberty if he stil beareth a slauish mind that he will serue his old master alwaies neither can any friend though he will die for him that deserueth death saue him if he will still desperately cast himselfe vpon mortall danger nor yet can any water of Iordan clense from the foule leprosie if the precepts of the Prophet bee not obeyed No more can that man be any better then a slaue of the Deuill though Christs precious bloud hath been paid for ransome if hee will still liue the seruant of sinne and of the Deuill neither can he be saued from death though our dearest friend Christ hath once died for man that stil by sinning runneth vpon the danger of death Nor lastly can any be cleansed from the leprosie of sin vnlesse his precepts bee obeyed who onely can and doth direct rightly to vse the streames of his bloud for this end and purpose Oh mad men then that hope for deliuerance from sin but haue sinne ruling and raigning in them How happeneth it that being so wise for things worldly and temporall yee haue no more vnderstanding for things spirituall and eternall How is it that yee looke for deliuerance from death by Christs bloud when no power of this death is seene to mortifie and kill sinne in you What word haue yee What promise of God to build this confidence vpon As verily as God is truth yee haue none at all from God Whence then is the ground of your hope What doe you build your comfort vpon vpon a shadow vpon nothing Bee ashamed in time of this your folly flatter not your selues in vaine yee sinners but lay hold vpon saluation whilest it is offered being sanctified and washed by vertue of Christ his bloud in your hearts so that all iniquity being expelled thence it may by power of the same bloud be expiated and neuer appeare to your condemnation at the day of account Now as Christ his bloud alone purgeth from sinne so it of 〈…〉 must be applied by the sinner vnto his own soule by the hand of faith All the water of all riuers will not make a man cleane vnlesse with hands he bee washed with the water no more will Christ his bloud make cleane the soule vnles with the hand of faith it be applied vnto it For this cause as the bloud of Christ is said to clense from all sinne so faith is said to purge the heart from sinne and to iustifie a sinner That precious bloud purgeth 1. Iohn 3.3 Rom. 3.28 and iustifieth as the cause materiall faith as the cause instrumentall Q. 111. How is faith first begun wrought in the hart Meanes of working Faith Answ Ordinarily by the preaching of the Gospell of Christ the holy spirit inwardly opening the heart to belieue those things that are outwardly preached to the eare Rom. 10.17 Explan Finding that Faith is the instrument of our iustification and saluation it is necessary to consider how or by what meanes this instrument is purchased that if it be wanting it may bee sought here if it bee already attained the meanes and giuer hereof may bee magnified and honoured The meanes therfore I say is the Gospell published and made knowne vnto vs which the spirit opening the heart it beleeueth For Faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the word of God and this word thus working faith is the Gospell the Law driueth to despaire the Gospell erecteth by hope the Law threatneth and filleth with feare the Gospell promiseth and filleth with comfort the Law sheweth our miserable estate and what need we haue of a Sauiour the Gospell sheweth a remedy against this misery and pointeth out vnto vs our Sauiour Then must be a kind of faith or assent to belieue the Law also but this is not the Faith by which wee are saued from the Law but when this is and the Gospell is preached euen as a man at deaths dore through extreame sicknesse at the newes of some soueraigne remedy lifteth vp himselfe taketh it and is recouered So the sinner euen dead by the Law at the newes brought in the Gospell of a remedy lifteth vp himselfe with hope and by faith taketh it and is recouered out of his danger And being so sicke of sinne and weake as that he cannot of himselfe doe it the holy spirit is ready holding vp the hand and opening the mouth of the soule to enable it to receiue this wholsom medicine as in the case of Lydia of whō it is said that A certaine woman named Lydia Acts 16.14 a seller of purple of the City of the Tbyatirians which worshipped God heard whose hart the Lord opened that she attēded to such things as Paul spake Q●●st 112. How is faith encreased Ans Chiefly by prayer reading preaching and hearing of the word and receiuing the Sacraments for if these be well attended we will not be wanting in workes of mercy and righteousnesse Exercises of Faith Rom. 10.14 Explan Of Prayer the Apostle speaketh as of a chiefe fruit and exercise of Faith for How shall they call vpon him saith he in whom they haue not belieued So that if there be faith that setteth a worke presently to pray When the disciples belieued a chiefe care which they had was to be taught to pray wherfore they come to Christ saying Lord teach vs to pray as Iohn also taught his disciples And great reason is there Luke 11.1 that faithfull people should pray often prayer being a proper worke of faith euen as to speake is proper vnto man whence it is that the Kingly Prophet saith I belieued and therefore I spake or prayed as if he should say I had vtterance and therefore I vttered for what difference betwixt the tongue of man and beast but in the speech and what difference betwixt the beleeuer and the atheist if he prayeth not 1. Tim. 4.5 Againe as faith purgeth man so
any man shall thinke as some doe that this is presumption without set wordes to come to God in Prayer when as to a mortall Prince wee dare not hee is greatly deceiued and sheweth to haue little vnderstanding of the faithfull mans neerenesse vnto God and acquaintance with Gods holy Spirit For will such as wait about the Kings person euery day and talke continually with him study set wordes afore-hand what to speake they will indeed thinke of the matter concerning which they would speake but for wordes they would not especially if they had alwayes some eloquent person at their elbow ready to prompt them and to tell them what to say in like manner faithfull men doe continually attend vpon the Lord and talke with him by Prayer and the most eloquent Spirit of God is alwayes ready to prompt and helpe them wherefore so that the matter to be spoken of be thought vpon before it is no presumption to come without set wordes in such as by experience doe finde some sufficiency by Gods gracs to talke thus with their heauenly King and Father Quest What desirest thou of God in this prayer Answ I desire my Lord God our heauenly Father who is the giuer of all goodnes to send his grace to me and to all people that wee may worship him seeue him and obey him as we ought to doe And I pray vnto God that he will send vs all things that bee needfull both for soule and body and that he would bee mercifull vnto vs and forgiue vs our sinnes and that it will please him to saue and defend vs in all dangers ghostly and bodily and that he will keepe vs from all sinne and wickednesse from our ghostly enemy and from euerlasting death And this I trust he will do of his mercy and goodnesse through our Lord Iesus Christ and therefore I say Amen So be it Explan Heere in briefe are set downe the most needfull things contained in the Lord● Prayer with such plainnesse as that euen children may attaine some good vnderstanding of the prayer heereby which was the laudable intent of our Church in prouiding this wholsome milke for tender babes I shall not need therefore to adde any explanation of these words of our Catechisme being so plaine and euident of themselues other then by poynting at the parts of the Lords Prayer secretly diffused through this Answer The first parcell whereof compriseth both the meaning of the Preface that he vnto whom we pray calling him Father which art in heauen is the Lord God of heauen and earth our common Father by faith and heauenly most glorious and full of maiesty from whom euery good thing descendeth and the meaning of the first Petitions that by our worshipping him hee may be glorified and his name hallowed by our liuing as his loyall subiects and faithfully seruing him his kingdome may come and by our readines to obey him in euery thing his will may be done in earrh as it is in heauen and not onely by such a● readily obey but by all people his ouer ruling power compelling the disobedient and stubborne The words next following are the interpretation of the rest of the petitions that he would giue vs all things needfull both for soule and body which is to giue vs this day our dayly bread to forgiue vs our sinnes is the next petition to saue and defend vs from all dangers c. is not to lead vs into temptation but deliuer vs from euill from all sinne and wickednesse from our ghostly enemy and the end and reward of being led heereby euerlasting death The last clause And all this I trust he will doe c. serueth to explaine the conclusion for thine is the kingdome c. thou art a most gracious King full of mercy and goodnesse in Iesus Christ and this thy mercy and goodnesse shall thus bee more glorified wherefore I trust and assure my selfe that thou wilt doe these and in this confidence I say Amen Quest 117. How many bee the partes of this Prayer Answ Three the Preface Our Father which art in Heauen the Petitions Hallowed be thy name thy kingdome come c. And the conclusion For thine is the kingdome the power and the glory for euer and euer Amen Eccles 4.17 Exod. 3. Explan This Prayer being an absolute forme of direction for vs hath in it all things needfull both for beginning proceeding and concluding the petitions are not nakedly set down without a preface neither are they left without a conclusion hemming them in on both sides to shew both the necessity of preparation when we addresse our selues to prayer and of obseruation when wee haue prayed Preparation to prayer there must needs be otherwise we shall be ready to offer the sacrifice of fooles wee shall draw neere to the flaming bush with shooes on our feet and tread on holy ground with vncleane feet and compasse the Lords Altar with vnwashen hands Obseruation there must bee when wee haue prayed to giue God the glory of our petitions granted otherwise we shall deale deceitfully with God mocke him Gal. 6.7 which he wil not heare pretending his glory and kingdome but the sequell shewing when we rest at the blessings receiued that we intend our owne ease and pleasure Quest 118. In the Preface why doe you call God Father Answ Because he is ready as a louing Father to heare mee calling vpon his name whence J learne with boldnesse and confidence to come vnto him in my prayers Explan Hauing shewed the necessity of preparation vnto prayer in generall heere follow the parts of this preparation in particular And the first is to consider rightly vnto whom we pray and with what faith and affiance Hee vnto whom is called Father teaching vs both who can pray and what faith is required in praying First he only can pray aright and as a true Christian that can call God Father by adoption grace through Iesus Christ It is not sufficient that hee be thy Father by creation for so is he the father of the spirits now damned in hell but he must also be thy Father by regeneration through the preaching of his word casting thee into a new mold of righteousnes and holines according to his Image Rom. 8.25 wherein man was first made For wee haue receiued saith the Apostle not the spirit of bondage to feare againe but the Spirit of adoption whereby wee cry Verse 16. Abba Father And the same spir t beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the children of God So that there must be a Spirit in him that will pray making him the childe of God by adoption 1 Ioh. 3.3 purging him to become holy as he is holy 1 Ioh. 3.9 Whence it followeth that a wicked man liuing in sinne cannot pray seeing he which is borne of God sinneth not who only is indued with the Spirit of Prayer All his praying therefore is a vaine beating of the ayre with a
fore-knowledge of God and against his disposing will it is not possible that wicked men and wicked Angels should do any thing But in this there is little comfort as to the gally-slaues of the Turkes being compelled to their taske the comfort onely is when from the heart willingly and chearefully Gods will is done namely his reuealed will and Law To doe Gods will Heb. 11.6 Esay 1. Now for this it is necessary that a man be first of this kingdome Without faith it is impossible to please God All duties done by the vnsanctified Iewes liuing in sinne are reiected as abominable Their new Moones their Sabbaths their incense their sacrifices without these a man cannot so much as thinke any thing pleasing vnto God 2. Cor. 3.5 euen as they that yeeld alleageance to the Pope or to the Turke or any enemy of our King cannot please him their lawfull Soueraigne how officious soeuer they bee So they in whom the power of darkenesse is not yet shaken off but are still through infidelity and the loue of sinne vnder the Prince of the ayre and not subiects of the kingoome of heauen cannot please God what duties soeuer they seeme to the world to performe with zeale and deuotion This then serueth first to shew vs the fountaine of all our goodnes the grace of God the mercy of our heauenly King who maketh vs able to serue him and crowneth our seruice with glory t●at for no seruice which wee doe we presume to challenge ought at his hands as the merit of our worke but reiect this as Popish arrogancy and acknowledge when wee haue done al that we can we are vnprofitable seruants which is Christian simplicitie 2. Not to rest in any outward act or duty which we doe but labour for true faith for hearts rightly seasoned as hearts of the subiects of his kingdome otherwise it is lost labour whatsoeuer we doe in vaine are ye iust mercifull or deuout vnlesse the seruice of Satan be in heart renounced vnlesse there be faith purging inwardly 2. The Kingdome of God For the sense of the words Thy kingdome the obiect of this desire is first to bee considered and then the act let it come Gods kingdome is the rule that hee doth exercise ouer his creatures and is generall ouer all and speciall ouer the elect Generally his kingdome doth comprehend the whole world with all things therein which he ruleth and gouerneth by his prouidence making one to be for the preseruation or punishment of the other thus vpholding things in order euer since the first creation Psal 48.2 Psal 93.1 In this sense God is called by the Psalmist the great King and God is King be the Heathen neuer so impatient and againe the Lord reigneth c. and vnto his First-borne Christ the Heathen are giuen for inheritance Psal 2. and the vttermost ends of the earth for a possession Specially Gods Kingdome is ouer the Church howsoeuer dispersed into many places yet making but one Kingdome and this Kingdome is partly in Heauen partly vpon earth till the last great day when in Heauen onely it shall flourish That part of his Kingdome which is vpon earth is the whole multitude of all such people as outwardly embrace the Christian religion though many be prophane or hypocrites and this part is called the Kingdome of Heauen Matth. 13. both in the Parable of the Sower of the Draw-net and of the Field wherein the enuious man sowed tares c. Wicked men being for a time mixt amongst the godly but at the last day to bee seuered and singled out and left the godly onely being taken and this is Gods speciall outward Kingdome which in speciall manner he defend●th from Infidels holding vp the Scepter of his Word and giuing them lawes whereby to be gouerned Now besides this there is an inward spirituall Kingdome of God which is ouer all those in whose hearts these lawes are written to doe them and the holy Spirit ruleth and beareth sway and happy is that man which is thus of his Kingdome for when Christ did highly extoll Iohn the Baptist saying that a greater then he was not borne of women hee affirmeth yet that the least in the Kingdome of Heauen is greater then hee the least of those that are inwardly called greater then hee by his most excellent office euen as they which doe the will of God in Heauen are more then mother brethren and sisters of Christ then Mary as shee was dignified to be his mother according to the flesh That part of the Kingdome which is really in Heauen consisteth of Angels and Saints and is imperfect till the last day when in a more speciall manner the Kingdome shall bee deliuerd vp to God the Father that he may bee all in all 1. Cor. 15.24 And thus much for the meaning of the obiect The act Let it come This is first of the generall Kingdome whereby the world is most prouidently ruled let it stand let wickednesse be punished and godlinesse rewarded 1. The Kingdome of grace commeth by foure degrees Secondly of the speciall Kingdome the comming whereof is in foure degrees 1. Let it be erected where it is not send thy word send Labourers to worke in thy haruest let thy Word sound to all parts of the earth to the Iew to the Turke to Infidels in all places plant a Church there this specially is the praying for al men vnto which Saint Paul exhorteth that the Gospell may shine amongst them that it may shine to their hearts who are yet in darknesse 2. Let it be confirmed and continued where it is let it not be abolished by persecution corrupted by heresie vanish by hypocrisie or degenerate and grow into the contrarie by prophanenesse 3. Let it be restored where it is decaied or corrupted in doctrine or manners restore such as are falne by weaknesse purge the errours of such as are seduced 4. Let it be perfected made compleat by hastening the marriage day wherein the new Ierusalem may bee in all points as a Bride trimmed for her husband which shall onely bee at the last day when death and the Deuill and euerie enemie shall be destroyed and God alone shall absolutely raigne ouer his people guiding them in and out euerlastingly and communicating his heauenly most glorious Kingdome vnto them 3. For the scope The supplication is 2. The scope of the words 1. For Gods generall Kingdome not that it shall faile whilst the world endureth bur because it is Gods will that we should pray for such things as make for his glory wee are directed to aske here the exercising of Gods soueraigntie and dominion ouer the world whereby his power wisedome and goodnesse may appeare to the sonnes of men of the great creatures the irrationall the Heauens Earth and Seas being still contained in their proper places properties and operations of the rationall the obstinate and rebellious being by his iust iudgement punished and the
humiliation and repentance before God his wrath bee turned away So that man may for his part forgiue trespasses and yet they may be retained still before the Lord and on the contrarie side though man will not forgiue through the hardnesse of his heart the trespasse may be forgiuen before the Lord the trespasse being acknowledged and pardon craued or if there be ability satisfaction offered and the heart being turned thorow a purpose of not offending any more 3. For the scope of the Petition in the supplication What we pray for wee pray for the forgiuenes of our sinnes and whatsoeuer tendeth hereunto and to make vs iust and righteous in the presence of God Wherefore wee craue first the knowledge of our sinnes that we may vnderstand the infinite number of our offences and our wofull case in regard of them for without this knowledge the tongue may pray for the pardon of sinne but the heart cannot Hee that knoweth not himselfe to be sick cannot seeke for remedy to cure his sicknes neither can he seek to fortifie himselfe against the enemie that knoweth not the danger wherein hee standeth no more can a sinner seeke remedie against his sinnes if hee bee ignorant of them The Church of Laodicea is censured for saying that shee was rich and wanted nothing when as the holy Ghost testifieth saying Reuel 3.17 Thou knowest not that thou art poore wretched miserable blind and naked And many poore and miserable soules through ignorance not seeing this say forgiue vs our trespasses but cannot pray it because they know not that they haue any such need of forgiuenesse Prou. 28.13 Secondly wee craue grace to acknowledge our sinne For Hee that confesseth and forsaketh his sinnes shall haue mercy but hee that hideth them shall not prosper All men that know their sinnes doe not confesse them or if they doe they will not confesse and put away their beloued speciall sinne but rather seeke to iustifie themselues in them because all men are sinners and in many things we offend all But such craue not the pardon of their sinnes so as that they may bee in hope to speede the confession and putting away of all sinne onely haue a ground to build comfort vpon When there was sinne in the congregation of Israel specially noted Ioshua 7.10 but in one Achan Ioshua could not be heard without remouing it first much lesse can that man be heard to haue his sinnes forgiuen that loueth any one sinne though it be most secret and small and laboureth not to put it away from him Ought this confession to be before the Lord onely and not vnto men also In some case it ought to bee before men who are wise and holy viz. when our mind is inwardly troubled and wee cannot by our selues find any ease or comfort confessing them vnto the Lord Iames 5 16. In this sense Saint Iames willeth vs to acknowledge our faults one vnto another But to doe this vpon absolute necessity as if there were no saluation without it and to performe it not vpon particular grieuance of conscience but for formality at a certaine time in the yeare which the Papists call the time of Shrift and to confesse before the Priest al our particular sins with the circumstances is superstitious and auaileth not but to make way for more licentiousnesse as experience teacheth and to establish the Popes Hierarchy ouer the world and to the increase of his reuenues by buying pardons Thirdly we craue grace to be truly humbled for sinne that in the sense of Gods curse due for it Rom. 7.14 Matth 11.28 wee may crie out with the Apostle Miserable man that I am who shall deliuer mee from the body of this death Come vnto me saith the Lord all yee that are weary and loaden and I will refresh you If any man therefore commeth to aske forgiuenesse of his sinnes and is not humbled for them but is without a contrite spirit to offer in sacrifice vnto God he cannot pray to speed but is still in his sinnes Rom. 4.25 Fourthly we craue iustification through the death bloudshedding of Iesus Christ who was deliuered to death for our sinnes and rose againe for our iustification that the Lord would not therfore require our sinnes at our hands either holding vs guiltie or punishing vs therefore in this world or in the world to come but that the sacrifice of Christ may be a perfect attonement for vs and his precious blood effectuall to clense vs from all sinne Now of this iustification there are two degrees the first whereby of sinners wee are made righteous in the very act of our conuersion the second whereby our daily infirmities and failes are done away and wee are still notwithstanding them reputed righteous The first we pray for and desire to be confirmed in it through Gods grace that our estate may be comfortable the second wee pray for as wee haue need to preserue our peace and comfort when wee view our estate before God Euen as a bankrupt debter finding great fauor with his creditors to forgiue his great debts and being ready still daily through his extreame want to run vpon the score againe is a daily sutor for mercy vnto them to continue this their fauour in forgiuing all Fifthly wee pray for loue and charity towards our neighbours through which wee may bee ready to forgiue them their trespasses against vs for our heart naturally is a corrupt fountaine and wee are implacable when wee are offended especially if it be spitefully done against vs or by an enemy Wherefore wee pray that when wrongs are done vnto vs we may consider how much and often wee haue offended the Lord to what griefe of his holy Spirit and with what hatefull hearts preferring Sathan and his seruice before the seruice of the heauenly Maiesty that as we would notwithstanding haue all this forgiuen vnto vs wee may frame our minds to forgiue the greatest offences against vs hee which hath done them acknowledging his fault Thus Christ being asked Should I forgiue my brother if he sinneth against me seauen times in a day Matth 18.21 answereth If he turneth againe and saith it repenteth me I say not vntill seuen times but vntill seuenty times seuen times And for this cause he bringeth his Parable of the Lord forgiuing ten thousand of talents to his seruant but finding him with rigour to exact the hundreth pence due vnto him from his fellow-seruant shewing hereby how vaine all our prayers are for the pardon of our sinnes against God if we refuse to forgiue the sinnes of our fellow-seruants against vs. Let no man therefore deceiue himself by keeping malice and seeking reuenge vpon men for wrong done vnto him but through loue let him forgiue all for if there be not this loue towards his brother there is no loue towards God and then it is sure that God beareth no loue towards him his loue of God being an inseperable reflexion of
What we pray for preseruing vs from sin and damnation the first whereof is the spirit of grace for which we haue Dauids example Psalm 51. Establish me with thy free spirit This grace is threefold First light of vnderstanding of the holy Scriptures whereby we are made able to vse them as the sword of the spirit against our spirituall enemies We pray therfore Ephes 6.17 that when we are tempted we may be able to handle this weapon as our Lord did cutting off the weapons vsed against for sin 2. Stedfastnes of faith whereby as by a shield the fiery darts of the Deuill are repressed and kept from hurting vs which also is of vertue to purifie the heart 3. Patience in bearing any crosse or affliction whereby wee are tempted at any time that in stead of sinne the issue thereof may bee hope according to that of Paul Tribulation bringeth forth patience Rom. 5.3 patience experience and experience hope and hope maketh not ashamed because the loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts 2. We pray for the helping hand of the Lord to turne euil into good vnto vs according to the experience of former times Rom. 8.28 Wee know that all things worke together for the best of those that loue God that are called of his purpose That in the middest of temptation wee may haue the comfort of the Apostle vnto whom praying against temptations it was answered My grace is sufficient for thee 2. Cor. 11.10 for my power is made perfect through weakenesse For though wee be tempted and euill be intended against vs yet the Lord who can raise light out of darkenesse can turne this very euill into good vnto vs whether it bee distraction of mind sicknesse of body priuation of any member or sinne it selfe And this he doth Euill turned into good how First by humiliation and casting vs downe vnder and for these things as Nebuchadnezzar the proudest and Saul the bloudiest persecutor yea when through the aboundance of reuelation hee was ready to bee exalted aboue measure hee hath a check hereby giuen vnto him to keepe him downe Secondly by alienating and estranging our affections from the world and worldly things whilest the Lord doth hereby mingle wormewood and gall as it were with them euen as nurses do towards their children to weane them from the dugge Psal 119.71 Thirdly by framing to more carefull obedience for the time to come as Dauid acknowledgeth Jt is good for me that I haue been afflicted that I may learne thy statutes euen as scholers that haue been beaten for their faults or spent their time passed negligently are afterwards the more carefull and industrious 1. Cor. 11 28. Fourthly euill is turned to our good by preuention the Lord punishing vs in this world that wee may escape in the world to come as the Apostle teacheth to the Corinthians 3. We pray for euerlasting life that God for his mercies sake would bestow this good of all goods vpon vs in regard of which all the things of this world are but as a messe of pottage as drosse and dung Heb. 12 16. Phil. 3.8 other things being common to the Reprobate and to Gods peculiar people this is the right of the first borne other things bringing a little ioy with much sorrow this infinite ioy free from all sorrow other things being temporall and momentary this eternall and euerlasting 3. The thanksgiuing is for Gods spirit of grace making vs in any measure to resist sinne and purging vs thereof for the good arising to vs by temptations for deliuerance from the punishments by our sinnes deserued and for part giuen vs in the inheritance immortall and most glorious So that Leade vs not into temptation is as much as if more expresely the deprecation and to euill insuing thereupon the supplication Giue grace that wee may not bee preuailed against but haue power to resist all temptations and be finally crowned with glory the thanksgiuing thou hast not led vs into temptation but assured vs of finall deliuerance from hell and death blessed be thy name therefore Quest 130. Wherefore serueth the Conclusion For thine is the Kingdome c Answ It is added as a reason of all the Petitions to strengthen our faith that God being both able and willing doth grant all our requests made vnto him in the name of Christ and therefore in the end we put to a note of confidence and say Amen Explan Here we haue also to be obserued the order the sense and the scope of this conclusion 1. For the order it followeth all the Petitions and containeth a kind of promise to giue glory to God and to bee thankfull our requests being granted whence wee learne that it is necessary to obserue the Lords dealing towards vs when wee haue called vpon his name how graciously he heareth and helpeth vs that out of a speciall apprehension of his former mercies wee may build assured confidence of future and be duely thankfull to his holy name Thus Dauid kept a Register of the Lords dealing towards him and is confident against the Giant Goliah and for thankfulnesse it is required as much as prayer Psal 50.14 Call vpon me in the time of trouble and I will heare and deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me thou shalt remember this as thy duty hauing receiued deliuerance to note it and to be thankfull Pray continually and in all things giue thanks thus did Moses 1. Thes 5.17 Deborah Barak Samson and all the faithfull The not obseruing of Gods mercies granted at our request blunts the edge of our zeale this way and causeth that the Lord hath none but a formall thanksgiuing at our hands which is abominable it maketh vs without confidence and feruency triuiall and idle in our prayers euen as an idiote or senseles man that hath not reason to know note and acknowledge his benefactors and such as doe for him 2. For the sense of the words Thine is the Kingdome that is both generall ouer the world and speciall ouer the Church and chosen neither is there any kingdome but is ruled by thee as by the supreme constitutor and appointer thereof and in this faith doe we pray vnto thee submitting our selues as thy subiects and liege people The power that is the Almighty power whereby thou art able to doe all things whatsoeuer thy people aske and beg of thee there is nothing out of thy power neither life nor death things present nor things to come no power can withstand thee either of men or Diuels but thou art able to doe for vs mauger them all wee are without all power and might in our selues to help our selues wee know not what to doe but our eyes wait vpon thee And the glory that is thou doest so moderate thy Kingdome and power doing good to all thy people that thou art the most glorious King and most excellent not strange to thy subiects suing vnto
Explan Considering the solemne ordination of the Lords Supper in a time of so great need when the bridegroome was now to be taken away from the childrē of the mariage chamber and they should mourne it is worth the considering how great the benefit hereof is and hereof it will not be amisse a little to delay the Reader in shewing the extrauagancies of the Church of Rome in extolling the supposed sacrifice hereof If it be vsed that is if the masse be vsed vpon Saint Gregories dayes it delivereth soules out of Purgatory if vpon S. Rochell● day from the plague if vpon S. Antonies it saueth Cattell if vpon Sigismun●s it cureth the Ague if vpon S. Anthonies of Padua it restoreth things lost if vpon Saint Apollonius it cureth the tooth-ache if vpon S. Lucies day it cleareth the eyes if vpon the holy Spirits day it giueth a goodly husband or wife as a learned writer hath gathered together of late and set these their fooleries vpon the stage Another hath noted 1. that they teach it to be auaileable as for the liuing so for the dead 2. to be carried about the Church 3. to be carried about the streets 4. to be carried into the fields that the corne and grasse may grow 5. to be caried to the wars for the obtaining of victory 6. before the Pope when he goeth forth 7. at the comming of Kings into cities And which might more be added to houses on fire and to waters ouerflowing as Clement the fift cast it into the Riuer Tyber to asswage the swelling thereof Thus do these men as led with the spirit of lying triflingly deale with this blessed Sacrament and seeking too highly to extoll it make their vse of it vaine and ridiculous and when as euery good Christian should follow his master Christ they differ altogether from him He commanded Doe this in remembrance of me they in remembrance of the dead Christ tooke it and gaue thankes they breath vpon it Christ brake it they hang it vp in a pyxe Christ gaue it to his Disciples they most commonly eate vp all alone and so it is no communion properly so called of the faithfull together Christ took bread and gaue bread they take bread and giue flesh Christ gaue it to confirme faith they to redeeme departed soules Christ gaue it to bee eaten they to bee adored Christ spake plainely in a knowne tongue they in Latin which is not by the vulgar vnderstood Not to aske them therefore which is but lost labour what the benefit is wee say that it is the strengthening and refreshing of the soule More distinctly whatsoeuer benefit redoundeth to the corporall life from the Bread and Wine the like redoundeth here-from to the worthy receiuer by vertue of Christs body and bloud as before hath been particularly declared This made them in the Primitiue Church to seek so earnestly after it that though Christ in body was now absent from doing these good offices vnto them yet they might be supplied by this visible signe of his continuall presence to the worlds end Speciall benefits of the Communion Againe yet more distinctly wee haue hereby communion with Christ and through him with the Father wee becomming flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones as the bread and wine being eaten and incorporated into vs. 2. Strength of faith it being as it were an hand a mouth and stomack with these signes receiuing Christ as hath been said 3. All other graces and blessings which together are therby conueyed vnto vs this being the conduict through which we receiue Chr●st and all things also as he is heire of all 4. Communion with one another and with all the faithfull in all ages we becōming by Christ one body though diuersly dispersed in the world as many cornes and grapes are brought together to make one loafe of bread and one cup of wine All which benefits are so great as that it should set a most sharpe edge vpon the desires of all men vnto this heauenly duty that euen for loue and earnest desire of these benefits we may gape after them as the thirsty ground for raine and neuer through neglect depriue our selues of such comforts when by Gods Minister they are offered Qu●st What is required of them which come to the Lord Supper Answ To examine themselues whether they repent them truly of their former sinnes stedfastly purposing to lead a new life haue a liuely Faith in Gods mercy through Iesus Christ with a thankefull remembrance of his death and be in charity with all men Explan The benefit of this Sacrament being so great it is necessary to know how euery man may dispose himselfe hereunto that he may be made partaker of this benefit for this is certaine that all obtaine it not that eat this supper seeing there is an vnworthy as well as a worthy receiuing and the vnworthy eate and drinke their owne damnation For the worthy and right receiuing therfore a rule is here set downe of things to be done before and in the act of receiuing Before there must be an examination in the time of receiuing a remembrance or meditation to stirre vp thankfulnesse for Gods great mercy herein expressed The distinct consideration of which because it is so necessary I haue here subioyned in some distinct questions and answers Quest 134. What is required in those that come to the Lords Supper Answ To bee rightly disposed both before and at the receiuing hereof Quest 135. What ought a man to doe before his comming Answ To examine himselfe for his faith in Christ 1. C r 1● ●8 Explan Let a man examine himselfe saith Saint Paul and so let him eate of this bread and drinke of this cup for he that eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth and drinketh his owne damnation where you see that vnder paine of damnation a man must prepare himselfe to the Lords Table and that hee is an vnworthy receiuer that prepareth not by fore-examination Such was the man that came vnto the feast without a wedding garment of whom it is said Bind him hand and foote Matth. 22.12 and cast him into vtter darkenesse Such pulleth vpon himselfe 1. Cor. 11. as the Corinthians sundry plagues and sicknesse and vntimely death And verily though there were no such danger great reason there is that euery man comming to this Sacrament should prepare himselfe 1. Because euery man is most vnfit and vnworthy to come thus familiarly to communicate with the Lord of glorie as when rhe Lord was to descend to giue the Law they were vnfit without a three dayes preparation to heare him speaking vnto them Wee are herein to imitate the most curious women when they came to any honourable place or meeting they spend much time in decking themselues and putting on all their ornaments and behold themselues in the glasse very diligently that nothing may be amisse or vnseemely In like manner seeing wee are to come into the presence of the highest
all creatures that is Gods but such are the holy Scriptures as appeareth by these the like Prophesies Ergo c. for no created vnderstanding can of it selfe reach to things to come to say certainly thus it shal be some may coniecture or being appointed as instruments of execution may declare what themselues shall performe as the Deuill did to Saul but God onely hath made it so proper to himselfe to foretell independently absolutely and infallibly what shall come afterwards as that it may well be said Let them tell what shall come let them doe good or euill and say that they be Gods 5. The same is further proued by the Argument handled in the Scriptures which is altogether graue holy tending to the setting forth of all vertue and against all vice wheras as Iustine Martyr hath obserued the writers of the Heathen gods and religion Iustin Martyr were either ridiculous Poets which deriue the beginning of all from the waters handle the quarrels and filthy loues of the gods or Phylosophers more ridiculous for that the very chiefe of them were vncertaine of the beginning of things Now such as the writing is such must needs be the Author from whom it first commeth true it is that he which is vnholy may write things holy good but then they come not from him but first from some other fountaine therefore the most holy who is God must needs be the Author of the holy Scriptures 6. This is proued by the testimony of Heathen men themselues The Law of Moses against Images Numa Pompilius the chiefe religious Emperour amongst the heathen Romans approued of Numenius a Pythagorean Phylosopher saith of Plato that hee was none other but Moses speaking in the Atticke tongue Euseb de prepar Euang. The Oracle of Apollo confessed that the Christians onely had the truth and acknowledged the true God saith Eusebius Tribellius Pollio writing of Moses saith that hee was the only man familiar with God Cornelius Tacitus confesseth the truth of that History in Exodus telling how Pharaoh after many plagues let the children of Israel goe though hee thrust in some absurd fabulous lyes concerning the Iewes Procopius testifieth of Ioshua that for feare of him the Phoenicians left their country Linus and Homer write of the Creation of the world in sixe dayes Ouid of the generall deluge as also of the Gyants rearing of mountaines vp to heauen which is an allusion to the Tower of Babell Abidenus Sybilla and Hestiaeus of the long liues of the Ancients Epolemus of Abraham and how he fought for Lot Plato confesseth that he learned the most excellent precepts of wisdom of the barbarous meaning Moses and the Prophets Now whence commeth this consent of men of contrary minds to the truth of the Scriptures Verily from Gods prouidence that no man might deny that which by the light of nature is acknowledged of naturall man viz the truth and Diuinitie of the Scriptures 7. The same is proued by the single drift of the Scriptures which is only to giue all glory to God nothing to man seeing that the faults of the best are ingenuously and without flattery set downe neither is any mans fauour affected or sought for in any of these books which cannot be said of any humane writings 8. The same is proued by the consent of all the books of holy Scripture though written by diuers men at sundry times Neuer was the like to be found touching mens writings but euen the same Author hath been oftentimes noted to differ from himselfe Wherefore the Writers of the holy Scriptures were vndoubtedly guided by one spirit of truth and what they wrote came from this spirit which is God If any differences seeme to be in these holy writings this is through the weaknesse of our conceit and misvnderstanding and not indeed Quest 147. Hauing this Word of God written is it not sufficient for our saluation without any other helpe euen as to haue a Booke of Statutes sufficeth to be kept from the danger of the Law to those that will Answ It is not sufficient but it must also bee set forth by preaching that the hard places may bee rightly vnderstood wee may bee kept from errours and haue our dull hearts stirred vp to imbrace the holy precepts hereof Explan Many there be who acknowledge the Scriptures to be Gods word but doe not so much regard the preaching of this word prosuming vpon their owne ability to make a good vse of it in priuat by reading for their edification and saluation And some colour of reason there is also for this seeing that the word serueth to acquaint vs with the wil and law of God as a statute booke with the Lawes of the land and knowing these Lawes if we will not obey all preaching cannot bring vs to obedience or doe vs more good But this is a deceitfull colour First because a Statute book is not like vnto Gods booke that being humane and the penalty sensible this diuine and spirituall and not vnderstood by a naturall man so that a man may read much here but remain still as destitute of vnderstanding Actes 8. as the Eunuch who asked How can I vnderstand without an Interpreter Secondly because preaching is the meane by which God hath wrought in all ages and will principally and most powerfully worke by this ordinarily for our saluation 1. Cor. 1.18 1 Pet. 2 2. Thirdly because no man can receiue the word to his comfort vnlesse he reuerence and esteeme of the preaching therof seeing that the word it selfe doth so highly commend and vrge to attend to preaching Fourthly because the Lord who onely can giue light by his word doth direct such as be in darknes to the Preachers of his word Saul to Ananias Cornelius to Peter the Eunuch to Philip c. refusing otherwise to giue them any light Lastly because men are naturally dull and backward to that which is good when they know it so that reading only they are still frozen in their sins it is necessary that by the exhortation of preaching they should bee stirred vp and by the zeale and heat of others bee warmed and become agile and chearefull to doe accordingly In all things wee say for comfort Two are better then one and why should it not be so in this also A man reading alone is forgetfull and letteth it flip soone out of his mind which he readeth a faithfull Minister of Gods word preacheth vnto him and bringeth continually to his remembrance hee is like a sticke lying by a firebrand ready to goe out the Minister stirres vp the fire and layes the stickes together he hath bread by him but is feeble because he cannot breake it in pieces to eate some of it the Minister breakes it vnto him for his comfort I conclude therefore that it is necessary to exercise the hearing of this Word preached besides the priuate reading thereof and hee that hauing the meanes contemneth them wandreth
still in sinne and blindnesse Quest 148. What is the preaching of the Word of God Ans It is properly the expounding of some part thereof the teaching hence the duties to be followed and the sinnes to be auoided and exhorting to doe accordingly Nehem. 8.9 Explan Some there be that moue as much trouble about preaching as others that deny the necessity hereof and content themselues onely with reading some affirming the bare reading of the Scriptures to be preaching some talking hereof one neighbour to another and some the reading of Homilies or Sermons But the preaching of the word to speak properly is more then all these as may appeare both by the practise in the dayes of Nehemiah when it is said that the Priest stood vpon a place higher then the people and read the Law of God plainely and expounding the sence gaue the vnderstanding of the Scriptures And also in the new Testament where after the Lecture of the Law and the Prophets it is said that the Rulers of the Synagogue sent to Paul and those with him saying Act. 13 15. Men and brethren if there be in you any word of exhortation vnto the people speake From hence ariseth plainelie this description of Preaching to be an expounding c. as in the Answere Now for reading the Scriptures though in a large sense it be a kind of preaching because that the truth is hereby set forth and the Gospell and meanes of saluation made known to him that readeth or heareth it read yet it is properly no more preaching then reading is an Oration neither is hee that doth thus any more a Preacher then such an one an Oratour For when the question is made whether reading be preaching it is not meant whether by reading is not the truth set forth and may not sauing grace be wrought in the hearers but whether reading bee the preaching practised by the Ministers of Gods word vnder the old and new Testament which is so much commended for the liuely operation being Gods special and greatest ordinary power to saluation and whether the reading bee that which wee haue charge to intend when we are bidden go preach the Gospel For vnlesse they striue to make their reading such a preaching they question about nothing if to make it such a preaching they striue against the streame the whole current of examples recorded in the Word being against them yea that speciall place which they think a most sure ground for them Moses hath of old such as preach him when he is read in their Synagogues euery Sabbath day Acts 15.26 doth plainely rebuke their negligence seeing that it may well be hence gathered that at all times vpon the Sabbath when the Priests read Moses they expounded and gaue light vnto the people by teaching as in Nehemiahs daies Much more might bee said for the confute of such grosse opinions but because I propounded to bee briefe in all things thus much shall suffice briefly for this Let vs all lay aside partiality whereby wee are carried to fauour our selues and seeke our owne ease and this corrupt fountaine of such troubled opinions being dammed vp I doubt not but wee shall with one consent endeauour to preach in another manner then by reading and familiar talking applying our selues to the right vnderstanding of the Scriptures that we may giue the right sense after the sense find out sound and profitable doctrines strengthened with good reason conuincing the iudgement and after the doctrines frame some forcible exhortations to bring and bow the affections to the light set vp in the vnderstanding that Gods people may haue more grace and his holy name more glorie Quest 149. Who may preach the Word of God Answ Onely such as are outwardly sent of God ordinarily and when extraordinary necessity doth require all such men as are inwardly stirred vp and inabled by the spirit of God Who may preach Explan Hauing shewed what the preaching is it followeth what Preachers are viz. either in times ordinary or extraordinarie ordinarily we are to account him as a fit Preacher who is outwardly sent of God and none other that is in a Country where the Gospell is maintained by the higher powers and an order for the sending forth of preachers is established he is a lawfull preacher of the word that is sent forth according to this order and if any preach being not thus sent they are intruders and not labourers sent into the Lords haruest And this I say for the satisfaction of the people that they may haue a sure ground to rest vpon against al cauils of those that would make thē belieue that the licensed Preachers of the Church of England are no lawful Preachers either because they which make them had not ordination at the first from such as could lawfully giue it which is the cauill of the Papists or because some forsooth misliked ceremonies are vsed in their ordination which is the dotage of the Brownists For admit that Bishops and other Ministers of the Gospell should faile so that there were none to giue orders or that all were so corrupt as that they would not to any that embraced the truth what should there neuer then be any more lawfull Ministers of the Gospell God forbid for so the Lord should be tyed necessarily to outward meanes of sending forth Preachers and if he wanted vnder-meanes his Haruest should be vnprouided of Labourers But the Church of England God be thanked needeth not to flie to this refuge We can and doe proue our Ordination and succession of Bishops Canonically inuested and continuing the ofspring of our inferior Ministery without interruption mauger the barking of lewd Romanists against our Church whose very Popes haue been many of them meere open intruders Secondly for the reformed Sectaries what other then decent and commendable ceremony can their pure wisdoms carp at in our Ordination Againe admit that some errors should creepe into the ordination of Ministers what shall the Ministers bee disabled hereby and become no lawfull Ministers God forbid for thus the maine vertue of such as take orders should depend vpon some outward circumstance making them if it bee right marring them if otherwise and the people that know not the circumstances of euery mans ordination should bee held in doubt whether they be Gods lawfull Ministers and to be heard or not Rom. 10. Wherefore I say that he is a lawfull Preacher that is outwardly called and sent prouided alwaies that hee preach the truth and no heresies which are errors stiffely defended contrary to the plaine euidence of the Scriptures and if he doth preach heresie which thou thinkest may bee so proued by some fa●re fetcht Argument yet this maketh not him to cease from being a lawfull Preacher yea though he maintaineth heresie plainely against the word in a Church where the truth is by the higher powers maintained he is stil a lawfull Preacher vntill that by publike authority he be inhibited And the
there bee three persons and euery one be very God how say you then that there is but one God Answ Although there be three persons yet is there but one onley God in substance one infinite power and one eternity Explan This point is very mysticall and therefore hath bred many heresies in some denying the Sonne to bee God and some the holy Ghost because they would not subiect humane reason to diuine misteries But the Scriptures are most plaine for it First because they teach but one God only Secondly because they teach this very point in so many words These three are one Thirdly Job 5.7 because that euer when they expresse the Lord God it is by these words Iehouah Elohim properly englished The Lord Gods that is God in more persons which is but one Lord. Augustine sheweth by a comparison that this may be in naturall reason The light of the Sun the light of the moone and the light enlightening the ayre are three lights and yet but one Sunne But what should we enter comparison betwixt things finite and made and the infinite Creator of all betwixt terrestriall generations and supercelestiall Why should we seeke to tye him to the law of nature who is aboue nature It is no argument man cannot beget a sonne sibi Contemporaneum which begins to bee so soone as himselfe and of whom it can bee said he makes but one man together with him therefore neither can the Lord for so the Lord should bee like man when as in respect of him not men onely but euen all the world is as a droppe of water It is farre more absurd Esay 40.15 Mark 12.18 then that of the Saduces comparing our present fraile estate with the spirituall and eternall to come Serm. 15. ad frat in eremo Aristodemus a Philosopher saith Augustine laboured many yeares in finding out the nature of a Bee neither finally could hee and how then should wee comprehend the Trinity See more in my Tractate vpon the sixth to the Romanes lib. 2. cap. 5. Sect. 3. cap. 6. Sect. 1. Quest 10. What doe you learne heere to beleeue concerning God the Father and in which words Answ I learne to beleeue that God is my Father able to doe all things the Creator of the whole world and the Lord and gouernour of the same In these words I beleeue in God the Father Almighty maker of heauen and earth Explan In the handling of these Articles of our Faith particularly my purpose is to followe one and the same method throughout viz. First to shewe the meaning of the words then the ground of holy Scriptures out of which they are taken and lastly how wee are to expresse in our liues our faith in euery Article First therefore touching the sense of this Article I beleeue that is I my selfe doe particularly know and beleeue whatsoeuer is here set down and acknowledge it my duty so to doe and not to rest contented with a generall faith beleeuing as the Church beleeueth without knowing the things beleeued or with a generall faith beleeuing these things generally to be true without applying them to my selfe Jam. 2.19 For there is one kinde of faith which doth onely beleeue these things to bee true such as is the faith of the Diuell who is said to beleeue and tremble and this faith is naturall and historicall reprobates doe attaine vnto it there is another which beleeueth these things to be true but yet in the application is altogether doubtfull and onely hoping well in regard of Gods mercy which is the vncomfortable faith of the Church of Rome and this can neuer speed at the hands of God if that common speech of Christ be true According to thy faith be vnto thee that of Iames If any man want wisedome let him aske it of God Jam. 1.5.6 The right Christian faith and let him aske in faith without wauering The true sauing faith exceeds all this and certainely resolues the beleeuer though in regard of sinne there doe oftentimes arise doubtings but these are only weakenesses in beleeuers not of the essence or nature of faith To proceed I beleeue that God is my Father that is I doe not onely beleeue that God is the Father of the Lord Iesus Christ nor that he is onely the Father of all things by creation but that he is my Father by adoption and grace and that I am his childe though by nature I be the child of wrath so that he is a Father by generation by creation and by regeneration or adoption My Father able to doe all things that is all things which it pleaseth him all things that are arguments of infinite power without exclusion of the Sonne or holy Ghost for the Sonne also is able to doe all things and so is the holy Ghost and thus I beleeue him to bee the creator of the world also and the gouernour for that this is ascribed vnto the Father as his proper worke as the proper worke of the Sonne is the redemption of his people and the proper worke of the holy Ghost their sanctification neither of them being excluded from hauing to doe in the worke of creation redemption and sanctification According to that maxim in diuinitie Opera trinitatis quoad extra sunt indiuisa The workes of the Trinitie without are all indiuisible And onely within haue the seuerall persons their peculiar workes heere the Father onely begets the Sonne onely is begotten and the holy Ghost onely proceedes and thus much for the meaning Proofe God is Father Psal 2.7 Heb. 1.6 Math. 3.16 Secondly for the grounds of this Article and first that God is a Father and first by generation Hence it is that he calleth Iesus Christ his Sonne Thou art my sonne this day haue I begotten thee and his first borne When hee bringeth in his first begotten hee saith Let all the Angels worship him and This is my beloued Sonne And in this generation doe three wonders concurre First he that is begotten is equall in time with him that begat him for hee is the Eternall God without beginning The generation of God Secondly hee that begat communicates to him that is begotten his whole essence for the essence of the God-head cannot bee diuided part being communicated to the Sonne and part retained still to the Father Thirdly the Father begets the Sonne within himselfe not without for there is no place without him he containes all places within himselfe Secondly that he is a Father by creation is plaine For Hee created the heauens Gen. 1. Psal 104. and the earth Hee laide the beames of his chambers in the waters hee set the earth vpon her foundations c. And this his worke of creation was wonderfull and far surpassing all other workes of the greatest in the world besides First in regard of the matter out of which the world was made viz. Nothing for all was made of nothing Secondly in regard of litle or