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A49797 Magna Charta ecclesiæ universalis the grand charter issued out and granted by Jesus Christ for the plantation of the Christian faith in all nations ... / by George Lawson ... Lawson, George, d. 1678. 1686 (1686) Wing L708; ESTC R37962 90,290 226

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will seek their temporal and eternal good relieve mine enemies do good for evil and overcome evil with good pray for them that despitefully use me bless them that curse me think none evil and have charitable thoughts till I have evidence of the truth to the contrary I will endeavour to reform such as do amiss and wander out of the right way I will do all the acts and good offices of love and will not do any thing contrary to true love and charity Thus I will love not only my private but my publick Neighbour and I will not deny it to strangers or enemies and out of this love will endeavour to do as I would be done unto and be perfect as my heavenly Father is perfect and follow the example of my dearest Saviour These are the moral Laws of my Saviour which by my Baptism I am bound to observe By them I understand my sins to be many and grievous and my self guilty and liable not only to temporal but eternal punishments even the regenerate Children of God cannot obey them perfectly but have their failings and sometimes grievously fall so that by the works of the law no man living can be justified yet this is my comfort that my Saviour by suffering for these my sins hath made them pardonable and the punishments deserved by them avoidable And he not only dyed for mine offences but rose again for my justification makes intercession in heaven and pleads his blood for all penitent sinners These things I verily believe and according to this belief I rely upon my Savirous propitiation and intercession and renewing daily my supplications before the throne of grace hope to obtain remission of all my sins against this Law and his other commands I acknowledge it a great unspeakable mercy that my God hath made faith and not perfect obedience the condition of life As this Law doth discover my sins so it is a rule of my life and as I will renew my repentance daily and seek remission of sin past so I will daily pray for the sanctifying power of his Spirit to write th●se Laws more and more in my heart to strengthen me against all temptations enable me to observe them willingly and with delight beseeching him to accept my poor endeavours and to look upon me as washed in the blood of my Saviour There is another positive and ceremonial Law of my Saviour which I by Baptism am bound to observe together with these morals and that is the Sacrament of the Eucharist which is to be Celebrated by all Christians to the worlds end in remembrance of the Sacrifice sof Christ death Therefore I promise with an humble penitent and believing heart to come unto this heavenly Table when I am invited and called to eat the blessed Bread in remembrance of my Saviours body which was broken and offered for me and drink the blessed Cup in remembrance of his blood whereby the New Covenant is confirmed as being shed for the remission of my sins And as my God by his Ministers giving this Bread and this Cup doth seal and confirm anew his promises unto me to strengthen my faith and hope so I will by receiving these Elements according to the first institution solemnly renew and confirm my engagement for the performance of the conditions of the Covenant and thereby I will testifie my union with the Church my charity to all my thankfulness to Christ and will never forget his unspeakable love to my poor soul manifested in his sacrifice of everlasting vertue and will hope according to the integrity of my heart though my failings be many that he will increase my graces and heavenly comforts upon the receiving of the same Chap. 8. Of Prayer one of Christs Commandments Sect. 1. PRayer is a duty required in the moral Law of God especially as it is understood Evangelically and is to be used both by every Christian both in private and publick and also by the universal Church whilst Militant on Earth until it become triumphant in Heaven when all prayers shall be turned into praises and petitions into thanksgiving It s a part of Gods worship both moral and ritual for neither Word nor Sacraments can be rightly dispensed without it and this is the reason why it takes up so great a part of our Liturgies and Forms of Worship To pray alwaies is one of Christs Commandments and without prayer we can neither observe his Commandments nor persevere in our profession because without prayer we cannot expect grace which is necessary to enable us to do both And because it is continual a necessary and an excellent piece of service I intend to speak of it more particularly and distinctly And for order sake I will 1. Premise some generals 2. Expound the Lords Prayer 3. Reduce the matter of it into a form of Prayer 1. Prayer may be described thus It 's a part of God's Worship wherein we represent our minds unto God As it is a part of God's Worship it 's to be ranked amongst the duties of the first Table and in several respects to be referred to the several commandments of it It looks at God as supreme Lord of infinite and eternal excellency and perfection as all other religious acts do yet it considers in God some particular perfections more then others as shall be shewed hereafter The more particular nature of it is a presentation of our minds to God The matter thereof is something in our minds which we desire and propose to make known to God and the act of it is the representations of these to his glorious Majesty Therefore the School-men make prayer to be an act of the understanding presupposing the heart first affected with those things which are the matter of our prayers which were nothing to purpose without the affection of the heart which may be said to animate and give life unto them yet we must not think that we can inform God who knows our thoughts afar off of any thing which he is ignorant of Therefore the intention of prayer is not only to honour him but to move and affect him with the matter represented This is the nature of prayer largely taken so as to include in one continued Speech Petition Praise Thansgiving Therefore Praise and Thanksgiving are said to be parts of Prayer which in respect of the representation of our minds is said to be a speaking unto God and a conference with him For in all these we address our selves to God approach to his Throne and express our minds unto him and pour our hearts out before him Petition ascends mercies descend praise and thanksgiving are returned unto him again Prayer strictly taken is an humble presentation of our petition unto God as able and willing to effects them This may be made either unto a false God or the true God and to the true God either according to the Law of Nature or the Light of Grace and that either implicitly in the name
the cause of our own eternal misery 4. If the benefit be so great and so redounds to us that we have a great part and share in it then our obligation to thankfulness is very great If we knew our own unworthiness and our woful condition the greatness of the benefit would more clearly appear and stir us up to thankfulness Therefore le ts consider these things more seriously and acknowledge the benefit with all humble thankfulness use the means of grace vouchsafed unto us and receive Christ upon those gracious terms he is offered unto us Shall God come so near to us and shall not we come near to him Shall he seek us first and we not seek him this were a grievous sin and the highest degree of ingratitude I must needs tell you that to receive a message of eternal peace from heaven and not acknowledge so great a mercy to enjoy the means of conversion and not use them to have Christ offered and resist him are the greatest sins deserve the greatest punishments make salvation impossible and damnation unavoidable Chap. 4. Of teaching all Nations and of teaching in general and the Matter to be taught and of Christian confession Sect. 1. The Second Proposition is this 1. Christ commanded the Apostles to teach all Nations AS they must go to all Nations so they must teach them except they go they cannot teach therefore this going as was formerly observed is subordinate to this work of teaching without which the former is in vain And as they were bound to the former so they were to this latter much more and the persons to whom they must go the same they must teach But for the better understanding of this Proposition we must enquire 1. What this teaching is 2. What 's the matter to be taught 1. Teaching is a communicating our knowledge to others and this done by certain outward signs and expressions which God hath appointed for that end For he hath given us the gift of speech and writing to signifie our mind unto others To teach in St. Mathew and St. Mark is to Preach which seems to be somewhat more But both imply that they were endued with certain and sufficient knowledge of such things as they must make known unto the Nations of the World and as their knowledge was certain so Christ had promised the Spirit for to guide them infallibly in their teaching and preaching whether by word or writing And there was a special reason why Christ should thus direct them for their doctrine must be the rule of Faith and practise unto the whole Church not only for a time but till time shall be no more But to teach in this place seems to be teaching with success so as to cause the persons taught to learn that is to receive their Doctrine understand it approve it be convinced of the truth of it and be converted by it so far as to be made Christians Therefore some have thought fit to turn the place thus Go and Disciple all Nations and the Persian translator so understands it For he makes this work to be a reducing of the whole World to the Religion and Faith of Jesus Christ. It s true that their Doctrine had not this success with all persons to whom it was sent For some opposed and blasphemed it some heard it and neglected it to some it was foolishness to others very offensive and a scandal but by vertue of the spirit it was to many the power of God unto Salvation This is teaching which must be not only private but publick they must Preach Preachers anciently were called amongst the Heathens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Messengers from Heaven and also publick Officers imployed by their Soveraigns to signifie their Will and Pleasure unto their sujects Their work was to go into all parts of their Dominions and solemnly with a loud voice and sometimes with sound of Trumpet to publish their Edicts and let their subjects know their Princes mind But it its very likely the Evangelists took the expression out of the Old Testament and therein did allude to the Proclaiming of the year of Jubilee as may appear from the Prophet Esay 61. 1 2. where the word is used In respect of this act the Apostles might be truly denominated Messengers Cryers Publick Officers yet sent from Heaven and not from Earth From God and not from Men. They were eminent Officers of Christs kingdom Their works was to Proclaim and publish his Laws promise peace perswade men to Repentance and Faith and so make them Subjects unto their blessed Saviour and Redeemer This teaching both for the matter and mannor was extraordinary wonderful and plainly Divine was accompanied with the blessed spirit and wrought wonderfully upon the hearts of men and had rare effects and proved the mighty power of God unto Salvation This will be more evident from the 2. Thing which is the matter commanded to be taught which according to St. Mark is in one word the Gospel Mark 16. 15 16. Go ye unto all the World and preach the Gospel unto every creature He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved but he that believeth not shall be damned The matter therefore in general is the Gospel in particular the Doctrine of Christ Faith Baptism and Salvation of Unbelief and Damnation According to Luke Luke 16. 46 47. its concerning Christs suffering Resurrection Repentance Faith Remission of sins In this Evangelist its the Doctrine of God the Father who made heaven and earth and so loved sinful man that he gave his only begotten Son for his salvation concerning Jesus Christ who was incarnate suffered died rose again for our Resurrection concerning the Holy Ghost by the word converting us making us capable of remission and sanctifying us to Eternal Life Sect. 2. Thus we understand what teaching and preaching is 2. What the Doctrine to be taught Now I will take the liberty to enlarge and manifest 1. That this is our Saviours Creed 2. That its the ground of the Ancient and Apostolical Creed 3. That that which is called the Apostles Creed is agreeable unto this of our Saviour 4. That it is the abridgement of the Scriptures 1. This is our Saviours Creed delivered in these words unto his Apostles as the substance of the Doctrine which they must teach and a form of Faith to be professed by all such as by Baptism are to be solemnly admitted into the number of his Disciples Not that he had not often and more at large taught the same as we may read in his Sermons and conferences related by the Evangelists I will instance in one passage of his discourse with Nicod●mus The words are these 3. 16. God so loved the World that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life This Text begins with God and ends with everlasting life as many confessions do And therein we may observe 1. God the Father who created the
means of Conversion of the Word Sacraments Sabbaths Ministery of Information and Instruction Promises Threatnings Conmands Reproofs Exhortation good Examples Afflictions and many other things used by God in the vocation the power of the spirit accompanying these means and working upon the heart of the sight and sence of sin of godly sorrow fear hope prayers tears hearkning unto the word receiving it into the heart longing after Christ some beginning of comfort faith and conversion To this place also reduce the Scriptures which speak of the contrary as God passing by a people and denying them the means of conversion of such as to whom the means is vouchsafed yet they refuse to receive them despise them blaspheme rebel persecute Gods messengers and seek the abolition of Gods Laws and Kingdom Of such as seem to receive these means yet do not use them or if they use them yet not diligently and aright but are like to the high way the stony or the thorny ground Such places as speak of impenitency hardness of heart unbelief neglecting the day of Visitation unfruitfulness under the means of Salvation Hypocrisie Apostacy all neglect or resistence of any motives unto repentance deferring the time of conversion after conviction and falling off from any resolutions to repent or any degree of grace To that of Justification which presupposeth not only Gods mercy and Christs merit but also the sinners Repentance Conversion and sincere faith may be reduced all Scriptures which speak of Christs Intercession Remission Regeneration Reconciliation Adoption Manifestation of Gods special love hope of glory a right unto eternal life peace of conscience joy in the Holy Ghost freedom from condemnation removal of judgements the earnest and first fruits of the spirit abiding in us the guardance of Angels near communion with God Gods special care of the justified the turning of every thing to their good mortification of sin sanctification continued good works heavenly affections divine vertues patience and perseverance in Hearts Afflictions Persecutions Martyrdom Conflicts with sin Satan the world fastings falls recoveries increase of heavenly vertues longing desires to be with Christ watching praying providing for removal hence and the last account comfortable death conveyance into Abraham's bosom the secure expectation of the Resurrection freedom from all sin misery temptation and troubles of this life To this Head must be referred all such Scriptures as speak of the contrary as of Gods desertion after disobedience to his heavenly call withdrawing the light of the Gospel taking away his blessed spirit leaving the parties thus deserted to the power of Satan delivering them up to a reprobate mind security in sin despair terrours of conscience loss of all the former mercies and graces or rather a dinial of them exemplary judgments as forerunners of eternal destruction abiding under Gods eternal displeasure a cursed death and a reservation of the parts thus dead unto final condemnation and that sad condition till that time To the last of Glorification refer such places as speak of the universal Resurrection of the power and spirit of God raising us the manner of this Resurrection the nature and excellent qualities of the body raised as being immortal uncorruptible glorious spiritual and like the body of Christ our final Justification and glorious reward of ejoyment of the blessed presence of God and Jesus Christ our full and final Sanctification by the spirit our Society with Saints and Angels our spiritual glorious pleasant Paradice our full joys eternal pleasure unspeakable content freedom from all sin temptation sorrow songs of praise and the certainty and security of the continuance and perpetuity of full bliss Here also must come in those parts of Gods word which speak of the contrary as of the resurrection of such as are designed to eternal death upon their final impenitency of the immortality of their bodies that they may eternally suffer in body and soul their appearance before the dreadful Judge their condemnation their ejection out of Gods blessed presence into utter darkness and unquenchable fire their society with the Devil and his Angels their everlasting and intollerable sorrows and pains and the certainty of the continuance thereof without any hope of ease intermission deliverance Sect. 7. After that I have first declared the substance of the Scripture abridged in the Creed and secondly given some directions how to reduce the principal particular places of the word of God unto the heads of the Creed I now proceed to reduce the former particulars into the form of a Confession in this manner I believe in God the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost who is only One Infinite Incomprehensible Eternal infinitely and eternally Wise Just Holy Powerful Glorious and every way Perfect and perfectly knows and loves himself from everlasting and is blessed in himself unto all eternity I believe that this One Glorious God did by his wisdom contrive and by his will decree to do many things out of himself and when he thought good he issued out with his Almighty Power to effect those things which he had before contrived and first he created Heaven and Earth and all things therein and the most glorious place which he made was the Heaven of heavens and the most excellent creatures were Men and Angels intellectual immortal free capable of Laws and of an eternal estate Man for his body was created of the dust of the earth and by the breath of God became a living soul and he was sanctified by the holy Spirit endued with heavenly gifts and virtues whereby he was righteous and holy and like unto his God and capable of eternal bliss tho his present estate was not immutable he might stand he might fall When this great work was finished by his Word Spirit without any pre-existent stuff any assistant any tool or instrument he continued by his Almighty power to support and preserve all things which do subsist by that word whereby they were created at the first By creation he manifested his eternal power and God-head became the absolute surpreme and universal Lord of all things and so continues by his preservation I believe that as he preserves all things created so he orders all things preserved in such a manner as that a Sparrow falls not to the ground without his will And as he created all things in an excellent order and gave them their inclinations power moving and tending to some end so he by his wonderful Wisdom directs every thing unto its several end and all things to the supream which is the manifestation of his glory In this ordination the government of his most noble creatures Men and Angels which he orders by certain Laws and Judgements unto an eternal estate as most excellent and wonderful to both he gave certain laws which they were able to observe and upon the observation they might certainly expect a confirmation in that blessed estate for which they were created many of the Angels sinned and were
The thing petitioned for in these words 1. The will of God is sometimes his decree sometimes his command or law this will here intended is not his decree but his law the matter of the decree is something that God will do the matter of the command is something that man must do and the effect of this will once signified is the obligation of man unto obedience or upon disobedience unto punishment and by this will here is meant the Laws of God Redeemer in force under the Gospel And these Laws by some are reduced to repentance faith obedience to Gods Laws continued after our first faith and conversion and this according to the parts of the vow made in Baptism All well ordered Kingdoms have their laws which all such as will be admitted subjects or will receive protection and enjoy the priviledges of that Government must observe And so it is in the Kingdom of God Redeemer and these Laws are moral yet Evangelically understood or positive and ceremonial The moral are fundamental or superstructive The fundamental is that which requires subjection aad fealtv to the Soveraign Christ Jesus and submission to his power the superstructive are such Laws moral as are grounded upon this such are all the Commandments following the first And whereas some understand this will as well of the Executive will as the Legislative yet that 's not proper though true in some sense 2. To do this will doth presuppose that the Laws be published and that by the same the will of God be made known that none but such as are negligent or wilful may be ignorant This being presupposed 1. We must have a certain knowledge of the Will of our heavenly Father For if in every action of a man as he is a man and a rational creature knowledge be requisite and necessary much more in this obedience To do that which is commanded by God and not to know its Gods command is no obedience unto God 2. After this Will is once known there must be a free and full consent and stedfast resolution for to conform unto it and that not only because the commands of God are just and holy the doing them is pleasing unto him and beneficial unto man but for this very reason because we know them to be the commands of God 3. Because neither of these can be done except we renounce our own conceits imaginations lusts and corrupt inclinations of our own hearts therefore we must resign up our understandings to the wisdom and our own wills wholly to the Will of God 4. This doing doth not stay and rest in knowledge and good affection but must proceed to endeavours and if our power fail not to the doing prosecuting and finishing of the things commanded for our obedience should reach to the full measure of the command 5. This will is observed not only in doing good but in suffering evil and that with patience and thankfulness 6. We must submit unto the executive will of God and be content therewith even then when the works of Gods providence do cross us and seem to be contrary to his Laws For they may seem sometimes to be so though they never are so yet they may be above these Laws and beyond the reach of our understanding No man can do this will by nature except he be regenerate by grace And because our knowledge is imperfect at the first and our spiritual ability poor therefore we must improve them more and more 3. The manner how this will must be performed and the measure of our obedience is expressed by a pattern given us in heaven For we are taught to pray Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven This implies that God hath Subjects in Heaven 2. That these do his will more perfectly 3. That we must follow this Example and aim at that perfection These Subjects are not the Stars and Lights of Heaven as some do understand the words Though its true that these observe a constant regular Motion according to an order preferred in the Creation and never were Exorbitant or swerved from the rule since the beginning Only if God do command them to stand they stand or go back they go back or withhold their light they refuse to give it But these are not intelligible creatures or capable of Laws yet they may be witnesses against us confound us and make us for ever ashamed of our disobedience Therefore the words are meant of Angels which are Spirits Intellectual and most noble creatures and their proper place is Heaven and therefore styled in Scripture the Angels of Heaven Of these its written That they do Gods Commandments hearkning to the voice of his pleasure Psal. 103. 20. The perfection of their obedience is in this that they never sinned but always obeyed God from the first moment of their creation They did Gods will 1. Always and in all times 2. They did it in all things 3. They did it freely readily and with joy and delight 4. They did it in the highest degree of their perfection So that their obedience was constant universal free and perfect This example we must follow striving to attain their perfection though we cannot reach it and never rest till God hath fully sanctified us and made us perfectly Righteous and Holy as they are This pattern doth not exclude that of Sanits and Martyrs though it come short yet we have a more excellent and glorious example of Christ which is more perfect then that of theirs because they never denied themselves and bare the Cross as he did 4. In these words 1. We confess our ignorance errours blindness corruption inclination to sin aversness to good and our impotency which by nature is such that of our selves we can do nothing 2. We pray for Gods preventing regene rating co-operating assisting and consummating grace and that he would enlighten us inspire and sanctifie us so that we may clearly unsterstand and effectually do his will from our hearts aiming at his glory 3. That we would sanctifie us more and more that we may dayly improve our knowledge and Obedience 4. That he would strengthen and assist us continually that we may persevere in an universal obedience to the end This sanctifying grace we desire as merited by Christ to be given us by the Spirit according to his promise yet we do not expect it so from him as though he should do all things and we do nothing we must use the means he hath appointed exercise the power he hath given us hearken unto the Doctrine of the Gospel meditate in the same and continually pray for his assistance we must be diligent careful watchful continually depending upon him To this position we may and must refer all the prayers of Gods Saints recorded in Scripture wherein they seek of God knowledge understanding wisdom faith charity and all other heavenly vertues with the increase of them and Gods perpetual assistance and direction And though our perfection be
wonders and glorifie thy name for ever and give all glory praise and thanks to thee that so all Atheists Idolaters prophane persons Apostates and rebellious wretches may be convinced or confounded 2. That thy name be the more hallowed and we sinful wretches eternally saved let thy Kingdom come that Christ at thy right hand may powerfully and gloriously reign till all his enemies be made his footstool O let thy word and spirit so mightily prevail that all Nations may be converted submit themselves to Christ their Saviour thy Church enlarged from Sea to Sea and from the river to the worlds-end till the number of thy Saints be finished and made perfect and thou mayest rule in our hearts till sin and the power of Satan be wholly and forever destroyed Raise up a continual supply of faithful and godly Ministers and good Kings and Magistrates which may be Defenders of the Faith and nursing Fathers to thy Church and pour down the gifts of thy Spirit in great plenty upon all flesh break in peices the power of Satan and all persecuting enemies let death the last enemy be destroyed make all thy Saints immortal and bless them with eternal joy and peace that so they may sing an eternal Hallelujah to thy name in the heaven of heavens where there shall be no sin no sorrow no pain but fulness of joy in thy presence and pleasures for evermore at thy right hand 3. That we may enjoy the priviledges and attain the eternal felicity of thy Kingdom we desire that thy will may be done on earth as it in heaven we do confess that by nature we are blind and ignorant and have no power to do thy heavenly will All our spiritual knowledge wisdom and power of obedience is from thee our God and the good spirit of Christ. Seeing therefore this is our condition as born of Adam and brought up in a wicked world and Christ hath given himself for us to redeem us from all iniquity and purifie to himself a peculier people zealous of good works we beseech thee open our eyes and enlighten our understanding that we may more clearly know thy heavenly Laws and sanctifie our hearts more and more that we may constantly and freely with joy and delight observe all thy holy and blessed Laws O raise up our thoughts and affections that we may seek that glorious and eternal estate which thou hath prepared for those that love thee and so renew our hearts that we may be zealous of thy glory mortifie sin bring forth the fruits of thy spirit abound in good works give good example unto others make our calling an Election sure manifest that we are born from Heaven that so following the example of thy blessed Angels and aiming at their perfection may in the end be partakers of eternal bliss together with them 4. Whil'st in this vale of tears we seek thy Kingdom and endeavour to do thy holy will we have need of many earthly comforts as food and raiment and such things as without which we cannot live we therefore pray thee give us this day our daily bread we acknowledge that we have neither life nor health nor a morsel of bread nor any place where to lay our heads but from thee our heavenly father Be pleased therefore out of our fatherly goodness to give us good government peace safety seasonable times a comfortable and competent Estate and a quiet enjoyment of the same If we should ask for superfluities dainties and abundance to spend them for to maintain our pride and seusual pleasures we confess it were just with thee not to hearken unto us thou mights justly deny them but we are contented with food and rayment and other necessaries and seek them from thee that we may without distraction seek thy heavenly Kingdom O pity the sick the poor the weak the widow and the fatherless the stranger and such as are in want and oppressed feed the hungry cloath the naked deliver poor captives and relieve thy persecuted and distressed Saints These mercies thou hast promised in order to our eternal happiness whil'st we are in this vale of tears until we come to our abiding city where we shall have no need of these things And we seek these at thy hands with hope to receive them because thou hast promised them yet we are resolved that howsoever thou shalt deal with us we will submit unto thy will and be contented 5. O heavenly Father tho' we should do thy will always and from our heart in all things yet we have often sinned and done evil in thy sight made our selves guilty and liable to eternal death and have great need of thy mercy in Jesus Christ therefore we pray thee forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us We do confess that both in the state of Nature of Grace we often offend thee and transgress thy holy laws and besides the guilt of the first sin which lies heavy upon us and our inbred corruption we are guilty of many actual transgressions And these have been committed not only out of ignorance or infirmity or upon surprizal or violence of temptation but many of them against knowledg and some of them are very hainous and of a crimson die some are publick some private som open some secret neither is this all but we harden our hearts in them against the light of thy Gospel the dictates of thy Spirit thy patience and long-suffering against thy mercies and deliverances against thy chastisements and many gracious invitations against thy dearest love and the bitter sufferings of our Saviour And these are the more hainous because committed by us who have received so many mercies enjoyed for a long time so many powerful means of conversion and have vowed better things O how much hath thou done to convert us and we are not converted how miserable have we made our selves what fearful punishments have we deserved Oh take away these stony hearts of ours give us hearts of flesh and make us sensible of our sins that we may loath our selves and that our hearts may inwardly bleed because we have offended thee so good a God Remember thy tender mercies the bitter sufferings of our Saviour and thy gracious promises in him unto poor sinners Shall he dye on earth and plead his blood in heaven and we confess our sins and yet not obtain mercy O pity spare forgive turn away thy wrath cast us not out of thy presence take not thy holy Spirit from us deny us not the joy of thy salvation And this mercy we desire with the greater hope because we desire to forsake our sins put our sole and whole confidence in our blessed Saviour and are willing to forgive and be reconciled to such as trespass against our selves 6. O Lord thou knoweth our frailty the great danger of temptation which is such that though we be sanctified and sin past pardoned yet we may fall into sin again and so contract
did give the promise and he was only fit to do it for there can be no doubt either of his fidelity or power as he was able so he was resolved to make good what he had said and his word was his deed and will be so unto the end He and he alone could procure the Spirit and send him down from heaven the Angels were at his command all creatures at his beck and as he had begun so he was resolved to finish the work of mans salvation This his purpose he might have concealed or reserved to himself a liberty yet he was willing to promise and by a promise not only to signifie his mind that they might know it to their comfort but also to bind himself unto them And now he cannot go back This promise is a ground of unspeakable comfort and encouragement to all faithful Ministers and doth assure us the Church shall continue to this worlds end Sect. 4. The third thing to be considered is the thing promised and that is Christs certain presence with them to the worlds end where we have 1. His presence 2. The continuance 3. The certainty of it 1. His presence is signified in these words I am with you which implies that he will not be against them nor will he be absent from them for there are enemies who are against us and there are friends which are absent and far from us but Christ will not be an enemy or a Friend at distance 2. It 's Christ that will be present I will be with you and that 's more then if all men and Angels should be for us and ever present with us 3. This presence is not bodily for Christ was justly after this promise taken up into Heaven bodily and the Heavens must contain him till the restitution of all things 4. It s a spiritual presence and the same far more excellent than that of his body for though a body may at several Times be present in many places yet it cannot be present in more places than one at one time but Christ by his Spirit might be with them in all places at all times for he promised before his death and passion to send the Comforter which should comfort their hearts in his absence teach them and lead them into all truth and upon Penticost he sent down his Spirit upon the Apostles which hath continued and will continue in the Church for ever 5. This is not a bare or meer presence for so this Spirit is present in all places at all times neither is it a presence with some general power for so he is with all things to preserve them But it s a special presence with a special active power for spiritual ends to produce spiritual and supernatural effects It is a presence not only to comfort strengthen assist and deliver them but also a powerful presence to make their Ministrry effectual for the eternal Salvation of mens Souls This Holy Ghost discended and rested upon Christ when he was ready to preach the Gospel and execute publickly his Offices When he first sent these Apostles he gave them the gifts of this Spirit After his Resurrection he breathed on them saying Receive ye the Holy Ghost commanded them to stay at Jerusalem and wait for this Spirit upon the day of Pen●ecost as before this Spirit came upon them By this Spirit all the Members of the Church are sanctified the Ministers qualified the Word and Sacraments made effectual and sentence of the Church so valid and of such mighty force Take away this spirit you take away the life and soul of the Church the power of the Ministry the efficacy of Word and Sacraments and without it all the Preaching Praying and other works of the Ministry will not be able to convert or comfort one Soul It s said I will be with you that is with you mine Apostles and your Successors in the Ministry to assist and bless and guide you in the discharge of your trust and execution of your office Dispense you the Word and Sacraments by the faithful observance of my mandate endeavour to save poor Souls and in that work I am with you no ways else so that such as are most faithful and diligent are most certain of his gracious presence Here is no promise made unto any particular Church or Ministers more than to others here is no express mention or intimation of the Bishop or Church of Rome or Jerusalem or Antioch or Constantinople The promise is made to the Church in general and their Ministers especially to such as are most faithful in their place and office Sect. 5. This is the presence the continuance of this presence is the second thing observed and is expressed in two words 1. Always or every day 2. To the worlds end 1. Always signifies that there shall be no intermission or interruption of Christs presence and assistance He will not absent himself or neglect them or desert them for a day so that they shall never have any cause to complain or say where is my Saviour now whether is he gon why hath he forsaken me There may be sad and woful times wherein Christ may seem to hide his face and to have forgotten them for a certain time yet even then Christ is with them and his faithful Ministers though he doth not appear and instantly manifest himself He must be with them always or else he breaks his promise and that he will never do Let us therefore do our duty always and Christ will be always with us 2. He will be with us to the worlds end this may be a longer this may be a shorter time Some understand the last period and end of that present generation the destruction of Jerusalem and the death of the Apostles and the reason of this opinion may be because some take the promise to be personal and to be made only to the Apostles for their lives yet this is rather a conceit than any solid well grounded truth especially seeing the end of the world in other places signifies either a far longer time than the life of a mortal man on earth unto the consummation of the creatures and to all eternity So the person or the time of the final judgment when the world shall be no more but Christ shall raise the dead deliver up the Kingdom to the Father and God shall be all in all for when the number of Gods Saints is finished there will be no need of Word or Sacraments or Ministers and then this promise is performed to the full But whilst these continue as they shall continue to the end Christ is bound and will certainly be with them that he may make his redemption effectual by them in the 〈…〉 sion and salvation of poor sinners 〈…〉 3. The certainty of this perp 〈…〉 seems to be implyed in the note of attention Loe and in the verb of the present tense for Christ doth not say I will be but I am with you for nothing is more certain than that which is present Besides some Copies have Amen added which is a strong confirmation of the promise But this certainly doth chiefly depend upon the power and fidelity of Christ who hath made the promise and hath kept it in all times unto this day And the particle Loe doth require as their so our special attention and serious consideration both of the person promising and the thing promised that they might be fully assured of performance to the utmost By vertue of this promise it is come to pass that in the midst of the tumults and confusions of the world and af ter the ruine of so many glorious kingdoms of so many potent Empires and of so many flourishing Churches of particular Nations yet an universal Church with Word Sacraments and Ministry do continue to this day and the gates of Hell could never yet prevail against it so that we may take up the Words of the Psalmist Come behold the works of the Lord what desolations he hath made in the earth the Lord of Hosts is with us the God of Jacob is our refuge for this God is our God for ever and ever he will be our guide unto death Amen FINIS
MAGNA CHARTA Ecclesiae Universalis THE Grand Charter Issued out and Granted by JESUS CHRIST FOR THE Plantation of the Christian Faith In all NATIONS Registred and Enrolled Mat. 28. 18 19 20. Chosen for the subject of the ensuing Discourse By GEORGE LAWSON Rector of More in the County of Salop. The Second Edition Corrected LONDON Printed by T. M. for Jeremiah Lawson And are to be sold by Tho. Newborough at the Star in St. Paul's Church-Yard 1686. IMPRIMATUR Caroulus Alston R. P. D. Hen. Episc. Lond. à Sacris Martii 22. 1685 6 THE PREFACE THough it be no ways needful to usher in this little Treatise with a Preface or Epistle yet I will premise a few things concerning the occasion matter method use and end thereof When I considered the multitudes amongst us who profess their Faith in Christ own the name of Christian and seem to glory in that title and yet are ignorant not only of the original and ground of Christianity but of the very first Principles and Rudiments of Religion and also highly guilty of the breach of that Covenant whereby they solemnly in the sight of men and Angels bound themselves to be loyal and obedient unto Christ their Saviour I thought it might be a service acceptable to God and profitable unto the Church to mind them of their sin and give them some directions with an exhortation to amend betimes that so they may avert Gods judgments and escape the wrath to come therefore I took occasion to single out this Text compose this brief Treatise submit it to the judgment of the Church and upon approbation make it publick And first I bring the Reader into the sacred Arches where the Monuments of eternal saving truth are kept and shew him the very place where the grand Charter of our profession is enroled for we find it in the words of our blessed Saviour related by the Evangelist St. Mat. ch 28. v. 18 19 20. Where we have a commission issued out from Christ to his Apostles and Successors and the same grounded upon a far higher Patent whereby all power in heaven and earth is derived immediately from his heavenly Father and given unto him And seeing as Tertullian observes we receive our Christian Religion and Faith from the Apostles the Apostles from Christ and Christ from God it must needs be from heaven and here we should take special notice of and admire the excellent wisdom of Christ our Lord and Saviour as far above all the wisdom of men and Angels who could in so few words and in such excellent order contract so many high mysteries and matters of greatest weight and concernment for here ' in a very narrow compass we may find the Credenda all the Articles of our Faith and the Agenda all the commands of Christ Here we have the original Creed and perfect form of Confession which was the ground of all the ancient and Apostolical Creeds here we have the sum and substance of all that excellent Doctrine which is dispersed here and there through all the Books of Moses the Prophets Evangelists and Apostles Here we have the institution of sacred Orders for the dispensation of Word and Sacraments and the application of the benefits of Redemption Here we have the institution of Baptism with a certain form of words the Eucharist and Prayer as parts of Divine Worship are to be reckon'd amongst the commandments of Christ So that here is a Rule of Faith of Obedience of Worship and something of Discipline implied All these things I make clear then proceed to say something of that form of Confession we call The Apostles Creed and of the principal points of Scripture in order to the same teach the Reader how to refer the several parts and passages of Scripture unto the general heads of the Creed and reduce the matters of Faith into a form of a larger Confession This I conceived a ready way to understand the publick Catechism so much despised by many to improve our knowledge of the Word of God and of the particulars of that Faith which by our Baptism we are bound to hold and profess unto the end After this I go on to the Agenda the Commandments of Christ and shew how they are in several parts of Scripture contracted how all are performed in Love give a more full explication of the moral Law which is to be understood Evangelically as including Repentance and Faith in Christ and then bring them into the form of a Vow that so we may have a more explicite knowledge of the last part of our promise made to God in Baptism be more sensible of our obligation and more careful of performance and obedience formerly urged upon most effectual reasons Amongst the Agenda I reckon the Sacraments and Prayer and after I have declared the nature end and use of the Sacraments from the Institution I single out that Prayer of Prayers the pattern of all our Devotions which is commonly called the Lords Prayer and having explained it in all the parts I reduce the particulars into a larger form of Prayer The former makes it clear how comprehensive and methodical it is as being a wonderful abridgment of all Scripture Prayers the latter teacheth us how to reduce all the parts of our publick Prayers unto the heads thereof and to enlarge upon them in our private Devotions Something 's in my Theopolitica are here repeated yet they are but few and are here improved handled there more largely here more briefly there in one manner here in another and for another use and immediate end Here I single out a certain Text and confine my self unto it and fit it to the capacity of the common sort and weaker Christians for whom it was principally intended I further conceived that many who will not meddle with a greater Volume may yet buy a lesser Book or Manual such as this is and read it through Now if after these and many other helps we continue ignorant or if not ignorant yet impenitent we shall render our selves highly guilty of Rebellion against Christ's Power of Disobedience to his Commands and of perfidious violation of the Covenant of God but if we diligently use the means and exercise the power God hath given us and pray continually for Grace there is comfort and hope of mercy for here we have a promise That Christ will be present with the Church unto the end and assist us with his blessed Spirit to whom with the Father and the Son be given all Glory Honour Praise and Thanks for ever and ever Amen Matthew 28. 18 19 20. And came and spake unto them saying All power is given unto me in Heaven and in Earth Go ye therefore and teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you annd loe I am with you alway even unto the end of the
who hath redeemed thee and God the Holy Ghost who sanctifieth thee so that the Covenant of grace which was made effectual and immutual by the death and blood of Christ being first made between God and the party to be baptized the proper effect of this rite of Baptism is a solemn confirmation of this Covenant in respect of both parties This confirmation being finished both the parties are more strictly and highly bound to performance God to make good his promises man to make goods his vows For God is bound not only by his promise in general but by this rite to the person baptized in particular And man is bound not only in general but by name not only by the command of God and his own vow but also by receiving of this solemn rite and being baptized Upon this obligation follows a more particular and certain right unto the mercies merited by Christ and promised in the Covenant and a nearer relation unto and a more special interest in that God who made him loved him and redeemed him by Christ and sanctifies him by the Spirit yet the actual enjoyment of these mercies depends upon the performance of the conditions to which man is bound yet because this performance depends upon the sanctifying power of the Spirit therefore God in his infinite mercy gives the Spirit to the party baptized that so the Covenant should not be in vain For God nulling the Covenant of works which had no promise of grace and making a Covenant of free-grace as a Father a Redeemer and Sanctifier and promising and really intending to save man must needs by vertue of this promise give him the Spirit which is absolutely necessary to salvation and also merited by Christ for such as believe in Christ to abid in them and enable them to perform all duties necessary to Salvation This is the reason why Baptism and the Spirit are s● often joyned together yet the giving ●● this Spirit is not absolutely tyed and limited to the very time of Baptism but is given sometimes after and sometimes before and sometimes in or at the time of Baptism This Covenant is made by way of stipulation and restipulation and when the answer of a good conscience is made the Spirit may be received the more speedily By all this we may easily understand how willing God is to strengthen our weakness and confirm our hope and how deeply we that are baptized are bound and engaged to our God and to him alone so as to renounce all other confidences and to relie upon him as a Father loving us and his Son redeeming us and the Holy Ghost sanctifying us And here it s to be remembred that those supernatural effects which in the Scripture are given to Baptism are properly and principally to be ascribed to the love of the Father the merit of Christ and the power of the Spirit as by this Sacrament we subject our selves unto God alone as our Supreme Lord so we renounce the Devil all other false Gods profess our selves Christians and separate from all other Religions For Baptism is one of the bonds which ties the members of the Church together in one body a badge of our profession and character whereby we are didistinguished from all Idolaters Mahumotans and unbelieving Jews Sect. 7. Thus we understand what Baptism is the next thing to be inquired into is who may lawfully by this commission administer this Sacrament The Text doth plainly determine the person For he that must teach the same must baptize It 's true that this power as universal and extending to the Gentiles was given immediately unto the Apostles yet unto them as first dispensing the word yet because the word was to be dispensed and preached not only by them but also by their successours unto the worlds end therefore the ordinary pow●● of preaching is continued to all such as a 〈…〉 lawfully called to the Ministry and so the power of baptizing too So that according to these words of our Saviour they w●● are trusted with the dispensation of the word are trusted with the administratio● of the Sacraments for the promise of asistance in the dispensation of both is mad● only unto them as they are Ministers o● Christ to be imployed in the calling an● conversion of sinners and the applicat 〈…〉 on of Redemption These are the fitte● and most able to prepare them for the S 〈…〉 craments and should be most able to ju 〈…〉 who are rightly qualified for the receivi 〈…〉 of them It 's true that unworthy and insufficient persons may be admitted into the Ministry and others though more sufficient may be careless negligent yet these must answer for their infidelity betraying of their trust However it 's evident that the persons who may lawfully baptize in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost are the Ministers of the Gospel Sect. 8. The third and last thing to be examined is who are subjects capable of this Sacrament and have a right unto Baptism by the rules of divine institution and according to the Text they are such as are taught and made Disciples for neither the Apostles nor their successours have any warrant from Christ to baptize any but Disciples for here it 's said Go and teach or disciple all Nations baptizing them that is these who are discipled For we must know that the Apostles were sent not to gather Churches out of Churches and to find the Nations made Christians to their hand but to call men out of darkness into light and perswade men unbelievers to believe that of no Christians they might be made Christians They must not first baptize and then teach but first teach and then baptize and so prepare them for Baptism yet to be taught was not sufficient they must learn understand profess their faith in God the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost promise to obey Christs commands and desire by Baptism to be admitted into the Church yet a Simon Magus may do all this and so obtain Baptism and Phillip was bound to receive him for God doth not bind the Minister of the Gospel to try the hearts and reins of any man for that he could not do but he must perswade them in the name of Christ to profess and promise sincerely from their hearts yet if they do not this and it appear to him to do it so that he knows nothing to the contrary he not only may but must baptize such if they desire it yet Baptism is little advantage unto such for though they may be admitted and received into the visible Church yet they are not members of Christ nor heirs of Gods Kingdom but such as come with an upright heart and make the answer of a good conscience inwardly believe with their souls as they profess with their lips may certainly expect the Spirit of Regeneration and the benefits promised in the Covenant But in all this discourse upon this part of
Commandments of Christ whatsoever Christ had commanded his Apostles 4 As these and as these alone and all these must be taught so they must be taught and represented unto them as to be observed and that freely constantly and with delight out of love unto their dearest Saviour If they teach any other Commandments but these the knowledg of them will be in vain if they teach some and not all their knowledg will be imperfect if they teach all these so that their knowledg should be perfect and yet not effectually stir them up to obedience their knowledg will be in vain if they exhort them to observe some and not all their obedience will be short and not reach the end for which these Laws and Commandments were given Sect. 5. But because many may be ignorant o● these Laws I will 1. Premise some general observations 2. Note some places of Scripture where the morals are contracted 3. Shew how Love is the performance and fulfilling of them all 4. Deliver the Doctrine of the Eucharist 5. Reduce the matter of these Commandments into the form of a vow 1. The observations are these 1. That the Commandments of Christ are either moral as the precepts and the prohibitions of the moral Law or ceremonial as the two Sacraments of Baptism and the Eucharist which we call the Communion of the Lords Supper 2. That the morals are to be understood Evangelically in which respect they admit of divers additions whereby they differ much from the morals as given to Adam in innocency or to Israel in the Wilderness for they were given to Adam by God as Creator to Israel by God as choosing them and bringing them out of Egypt but they are given in the Gospel especially since the exhibition of Christ by God as redeeming us by Christ already come therefore called Christ's Commandments and so obedience in them must be performed unto God not only as Creator but as Redeemer 3. The blood of Christ's death made the transgressions against these morals pardonable and the punishment due unto the transgressors avoidable upon certain terms but according to the Covenant made with Israel and the Law of Works neither was transgression once past remissible nor the punishment possible to be avoided 4. According to the Law and Covenant of Works perfect personal perpetual Obedience was the only condition of life according to the Gospel Faith in Christ is the condition so that though the sins of man against this Law may be many heinous yet upon Faith in Christ they are no● only pardonable but shall be pardoned 5. Obedience to this Law was to be perform'd by Adam according to that sufficient power which he had received in his creation and lost by his transgression bu● obedience of Believers is performed according to the power of the Spirit restored in regeneration 6. Tho' our obedience under the Gospel be imperfect and therefore by it we cannot be justified yet it 's accepted of God and rewarded ugon the account of Christ's Merit and Intercession 7. We are strictly bound under the Gospel unto these morals and therefore the sincere and constant obedience unto them is so much urged and professed by Christ and his Apostles in the New Testament For Christ died not to free us from obedience to these Laws but to sanctifie us that we may keep them better and that upon our transgressions we should renew our Repentance and Faith 8. Though these moral Laws are more at large expressed and made known unto us by Moses the Prophets the Evangelists both in the Old and New Testament yet in many places they are contracted in a few words and reduced to a few heads Sect. 6. These things premised I will in the second place observe some places where they are contracted 1. We are informed tha● in the Decalogue published upon Mou● Sinai all moral Duties are reduced to towords or heads and that in an excelle● method and manner And indeed upo● due consideration it will appear that th● model of the Law was from God as bein●●ar above the wisdom of men and Ange●●● Because every Commandment hat●●egative and an affirmative consideratio● and consists of a Precept requiring goo● and a prohibition of the contrary ev 〈…〉 erefore we find this moral Law contr●c●ed divers times to two Heads the 〈…〉 ewing of evil and doing good Psal. 14. Isa. 1. 16 17. 3. Because that ma● whom this Law is given hath relation God and man his Neighbour there●● the whole is reduced to two parts the Ou● duty towards God 2. Our duty tow 〈…〉 Neighbour therefore the whole b● of the Law is reduced to these two heads according to that of the Prophet He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly and love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God Micah 6. 8. Where to do justly and love mercy is our whole duty to man to walk humbly with God is our whole duty to God 4. But that contraction of the whole to one head which is Love is most excellent yet this Love is two-fold 1. The Love of God 2. Of our Neighbour For our blessed Saviour determined the first and great Commandment to be the Love of the Lord our God and the second which is like unto it is to love our Neighbour as our selves Yet though this latter be like unto yet it 's not equal with the first for there is so great an inequality between the love we owe to God and that which we owe unto man that if the love of man come in competition with our love to God so that they cannot consist together we must hate Father and Mother and nearest Relations for Christ's sake Our Saviour further adds that upon these two Commandments hang the Law and the Prophets that is all the moral Duties mentioned in the Law and the Prophets are comprized in these two Mat. 22. 37 38 39 40. The Apostle tells us that love is the fulfilling of the Law Rom. 13. 10. that is of the second Table 5. Because man is indebted to himself to his Neighbour to his God therefore some think the Law is contracted in the words of the Gospel which teacheth us to live soberly in respect of our selves righteously towards man and godly towards God Tit. 2. 12. 6. The Divine Apostle Disciple whom Christ loved comprehends all in two Commandments Faith and Love saying And this is his Commandment That we believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and that we love one another as he hath commanded us 1 3. 23. 7. And here we must observe that prohibitions reproofs threatnings examples exhortations dehortations promises denuntiations and executions of judgments belong and are to be referred to the Law of God 8. Repen●●nce Faith in Christ Self-denial bearing Christ's Cross are duties not naturally but supernaturally moral and may be reduced to the first Commandment Evangelically understood Repentance as it hath God Creator
of Christ as before his Ascension or explicitly as after They must be made especially by us Christians in the name of Christ who by his blood hath satisfied Gods justice made him propitious the Throne of grace accessible hath merited all mercies promised to be our Advocate and to sollicite our cause in heaven and procure for us whatsoever we ask in his name They must also be made by the Spirit who alone doth sanctify us and qualifie our hearts for this duty and enables us to perform it so as that it may be effectual and when we know not how to pray as we ought he stirs up in us sighs and groans which cannot be uttered by which he makes intercession for us to the Father who not only understands these dark expressions but is much moved and affected with them So that a Christian effectual prayer is a presenting of our petitions to God the Father in the name of Christ by the Spirit And how powerful must that prayer be which is offered to the Father in the name of his Son by the power and grace of his Spirit A prayer may be made inwardly in the soul without any words of the Mouth and it may be ●o qualified as to prevail very much with God who principally looks at the heart It may be made outwardly and that without any understanding sense and inward affection and this is but a Carkase of prayer and not regarded of God though delivered in most excellent expressions and as it were in the language of Angels This outward prayer whether said or sung in Prose or Verse if made in publick or in company must be in a language and in terms more easily understood by the people with whom we pray that they may say Amen which they cannot if they understand not And though they understand yet if their hearts be not affected with the matter and rightly disposed towards God it s to no purpose For all outward prayer should be joyned with the inward and issue from an heart rightly disposed A prayer of a righteous man may sometimes be ineffectual because it s not made by him as righteous Sect. 2. These things concerning prayer in general observed I proceed unto the Lords prayer we find many particular prayers praises and thanksgivings in the Scripture and many forms both for publick and private devotion taken out of this blessed Book yet all these seem to be but so many branches of that excellent form which our Saviour taught his Disciples wherein he contracted the substance of all lawful prayers and that in an excellent method It was taught and prescribed in the days of his humiliation and was suitable unto their present light and condition For herein he gives no direction how to ask any thing in his name and the reason was he was not yet glorified nor made Advocate general in heaven nor possessed of his glorious Kingdom This may seem to be intimated in that petition Thy Kingdom come For then to him and so to them it was to come In it we may observe 1. The Entrance or Preface 2. The Body and Matter 3. The Conclusion In the entrance we may take notice of 1. The parties who must perform this duty 2. The parties for whom Prayer must be made 3. The party to whom Prayer must be made 4. The qualification of the Prayer it self 1. The parties who must perform this duty are persons living on Earth who have not lost their interest in God upon whom all and every one depends and our necessities are many and great and prayer is Ordained as a means whereby all things we need may be obtained and that more certainly because we have a Promise Besides its an universal Command and all Men are bound in that respect to pray and by prayer to worship and glorifie God For by it we acknowledge that God is the supreme Lord the fountain of all goodness the Father of Mercies willing freely to give us what we need and that we are miserable and indigent persons and that God is no ways bound to relieve us or supply our wants but only he promised to hear and help and this promise was freely made Some will not pray some cannot some can pray but not effectually yet all these are bound to pray and therefore their sin or misery must be very great 2. The persons for whom we must pray are our selves and all others who are capable of any benefit by our prayers For we are directed to say Our Father and in this word Our we include our selves and others too As we must love our Neighbour as our selves so we must pray for our Neighbour as for our selves And by Neighbour we must understand not only our Acquaintance and Friends but strangers and Enemies For we must pray for them which despitefully use us So Christ prayed for such as did Crucifie him saying Father forgive them for they know not what they do yet as we must love some more then others so we must pray more especially for some then others most of all for the Church and our persecuted Brethren For Christian charity in our prayers doth enlarge it self and abhors partiality and self-love 3. The person to whom we must pray is God and God is our Father in heaven Father is a word of power and pity Father in heaven is a term of supreme power and infinite pity And if all the power and pity of all Fathers even the best were united in one yet all were nothing to the pity and power of our God This Father loved us and gave his Son for us when we were Enemies and called us when we were dead in Sins and Trespasses greater love never was manifested to any creature and greater love to any creature there cannot be And how much must he love us when once we begin to love him as our God! What cannot a Father in heaven what will not a father in Christ do for his Children seeing in him meet in one power and pity might and mercy greatness and goodness which include all his perfections Thus we must conceive of God to whom we address our selves to whom we direct our prayers 4. The qualifications of prayers are many 1. One is faith whereby we believe that he is present in all places at all times hears all prayers knows all things and with what heart we pray that he is just holy wise of infinite goodness and unspeakable mercy in Christ who makes intercession for us in heaven that his power is Almighty and his dominion over all things is supreme 2. In respect of his infinite and eternal excellency and supreme dominion we must come into his presence with all humility and reverence adoring his eternal Majesty 3. As he is holy we must be holy and draw near with pure and upright hearts 4. As he is just we must petition for just things 5. As he is a father we must be obedient Children 6. As he is full of love so we must
pray in charity and love towards others 7. As he is Almighty and Almerciful in Christ in whom he hath promised all things we must pray in greatest confidence 8. Because our necessity is great and we seek great and necessary things from him so we must be instant importunate wrastle with him and not let him be quiet till he hear help and bless us Sect. 3. In the body of the prayer we must observe the Method and excellent order to which he hath reduced all matters to be prayed for To understand this we must consider that he hath made two general heads and parts of petition the 1. Of supplication the 2. Of deprecation In the former we petition for all good we can justly desire In the latter we seek deliverance from all evil where unto we are subject The good we pray for is spiritual or temporal the spiritual respects Gods glory in 1. Hollowed be thy name or our spiritual happiness in the coming of his Kingdom 2. In doing of his will Temporal good we pray for when we say Give us this day our daily Bread Deliverance from evil is two fold either from sin or affliction The evil of sin is either guilt of sin past or temptation to sin in time to come The former we seek in these words Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them who trepass against us The latter in these Lead us not into Temptation Deliverance from evil we pray for when we say Deliver us from evil Sect. 4. We begin our petitions with these words Hallowed be thy Name where by name we must understand the excellent Majesty and supream Dominion of God our heavenly Father in respect of which all honour glory power and praise are due to him and ought to be ascribed unto him by men and Angels for ever yet all this doth not make him more glorious and excellent then he is in himself for what can be added to that which is infinite This excellency and supream dominion we profess to believe in the first Article of our Creed and promise to acknowledge in the first commandment of the moral Law And here we pray for the universal acknowledgment in the first Petition for such must be our respect to him as that above all things his name may be glorified therefore in these words we pray that his name and supream excellency may be manifested more and more both by his Ordinary and Extraordinary works of creation and providence and also by his blessed word especially by the Gospel of Christ. ● That being manifested to us and to all others it may be more and more clearly known 3. That being known we and all others may acknowledge it and submit with all our hearts to him as supream Lord and that he may be glorified in the eternal destruction of such as will not honour him as supream Lord. In these words we pray against all Atheism Idolalatry Profaneness Rebellion Apostasie and the usurpation of divine power 2. We pray Thy Kingdom come where we have 1. A kingdom 2. The coming of it 3. A petition for the coming of it Gods Kingdom is two-fold 1. Universal and general over all 2. Special over men The latter here is meant this second Kingdom respects Men as sinful and ready to perish yet as having some hope of Salvation by the Redemption of Jesus Christ therefore it s the kingdom of God Redeemer looking upon Man as first redeemed and so ordinable unto everlasting salvation for sinful Mans happiness begins in Gods love which moved him to give Christ to death for the Expiation of our sins for this was the laying the foundation of Eternal Life The coming of this Kingdom is the exercise of his power to make redemption effectual for then this kingdom comes to any person or persons when God Redeemer begins to reign by his Word and Spirit and by them calls men to repentance and faith The end where at this government aims is the ruine of all enemies and the eternal peace of all such as shall submit unto his power and continue to be loyal and obedient subjects Thus God did alwayes reign since the first promise of Christ made unto Adam but this reign advanced and became more glorious after that Christ was ●et at the right hand of God sent down the Holy Ghost revealed the Gospel and it shall be consummate when all enemies shall be subdued and Gods chosen Saints fully and for ever glorified Some make two degrees of this Government the first of grace and the second of glory The one begins with our first conversation the other with the resurrection In this petition therefore we do not seek of God the coming of Christ nor the conquest of Sin and Satan upon the Cross nor of death by his resurrection nor his exaltation to the right hand of God nor the beginning of his reign for all these are past But we pray that our heavenly Father would 1. Send his Ministers with the Gospel and the power of his Spirit into all nations who sit in darkness and the shadow of death and contrive the means of conversion to all people who enjoy them and in particular to us 2. That he would make these means effectual to the conversion of many 3. That he would justifie sanctifie adopt all such as are converted 4. That he would do these things more and more till he hath subdued all sin in them 5. That he would hasten to subdue death the last enemy by the resurrection and the last change of mortal bodies 6. That all enemies being conquered he may reign perfectly and that when Christ hath delivered up the kingdom God may be all in all his Saints and give them perfect holiness full joy and peace everlasting 7. That he would by degrees and at last totally and finally destroy all the power of Satan Sin Death wicked Men which oppose our Salvation and Eternal Peace The principal thing desired is first eternal life then all means which conduce unto the end The principal effect of this Government is destruction of Rebels and Enemies and the conversion and salvation of his People To this head may be referred all Petitions for the ruine of Babylon and Antichrist persecuting Enemies both open and secret for good Magistrates Ministers and Governours in Church and State for powerful preaching of the Gospel for good discipline and due administration of the Sacraments and here is to be observed that the more his Kingdom comes the more his name is hallowed and glorified 3. Yet because no man can enjoy the benefits peace and priviledges of any Kingdom tho never so excellent except he will submit unto the power of the Prince observe his Laws and do his will therefore that we may attain to the eternal peace and felicity of this Kingdom we pray that the will of our heavenly Father may be done where we have 1. The will of God 2. The doing of it 3. The manner or pattern of doing 4.
deluded our first mother Eve perswaded her that in transgressing Gods law there was no fear of death but certain hope of high advancement as he is subtle so he is malicious restless raging knows our weakness takes all advantages and seeks our everlasting ruine Besides the Devil there are the wicked men of the world who are his agents who by their evil example customs laws promises threats preferments persecutions and many other ways seek to draw us unto sin therefore if any person either fear men more then God and temporal miseries more then eternal punishments or love himself more then God and the world more then heavenly glory and eternal life then a little temptation will easily draw such an one into transgression We are also said to be tempted in this respect by our own lust or concupiscence for when any occasion is offered we are easily moved and overcome Such is our ignorance and blindness that our understanding is easily deluded Such is the corruption of our wills that we are easily perverted This makes us like tinder and we take fire at every spark of temptation nay we are so vile by nature that our own corruption inclines us unto sin and sometimes when there is no temptation from without carries us violently into iniquity 2. To be led into temptation is not meerly to be tempted but something more for one may be tempted and yet be in no great danger because the party tempted may be so armed and prepared that the temptation may be overcome and that sometimes with ease so that in such a case there is no great danger but one may be said to be led into temptation when the party tempted is weak or surprized or deserted or over-powred or brought into such straits that there is great fear of a foil and little hope of escape because of the advantage gained by the tempter and disadvantage befallen the person tempted In this case the danger is great and the temptation difficult if not impossible to be overcom This is to be brought into the midst of potent enemies plunged into the depth of great waters and cast into the mouth of the Lion and so sin is unavoidable 3. In these words we pray 1. That God would so order all occurrences and events that we may not be brought into straights for this petition implies that nothing can come to pass without the providence of God doing or permitting what he pleaseth and ordering all events Without his permission neither man nor devil can tempt us without it Satan could not touch Job nor be a lying Spirit in the mouth of Ahab's Prophets nor enter so much as into the Herd of Swine And the event of all temptations depends upon his will 2. That when we are too weak he would restrain the malice and power of Satan 3. That he would not suffer us to be secure and so easily surprized 4. That he would continually arm and strengthen us that we may not only resist but overcome 5 That he would not suffer us to presume upon our own strength or despair of his assistance 6. That he would not desert us in the day of trial and great danger 7. That he would so inflame us with the zeal of his glory possess us with the fear of sin and his wrath and the desire of heavens glory that no earthly prosperity may much affect us or any earthly affliction much daunt us yet he requires that we acknowledg all our strength to be from him that the issue of all temptations depends upon him that renouncing our own strength we trust in him that we continually watch and pray and use all means to provide for our safety and when we see and consider the fall of David Peter and other eminent Saints how great cause have we to fear and be careful This must be our daily prayer and our earnest petition 4. To deliver us from evil may be understood to be a distinct petition from the former or part of the same In the former sense evil is not the evil of sin from temptation but the evil of affliction And in this sense we desire God so to perfect and bless us as either to prevent the miseries troubles afflictions and adversities of the world or if we fall into them that he would sanctifie them unto us for our spiritual good give us strength to bear them with patience and in the end deliver us out of them and hasten that day and time when there shall be no sorrow pain crying but eternal peace and joy when all sorrow shall flee away and all tears be wiped from all faces yet though God by these doth chastise and try us yet the devil by them takes advantage to tempt us unto many sins and discourage us in the ways of godliness So great is the frailty of man that both in prosperity and adversity he is in danger and in both hath need to pray to be delivered from evil therefore the wisdom of God mixeth our joys with sorrow and our prosperity with adversity For thine is the Kingdom c. Some make this no part of the body but the conclusion of the Prayer We find not these words in Luke nor in many Greek Copies nor in the Arabick and therefore it may be a question whether our Saviour added them to this form of Prayer or no but suppose them to be the words of our Saviour it 's doubted whether that be a form of Doxology or contain certain reasons for to move God to hear our petitions or both The words are found in Scripture 1 Chron. 29. 11. and there used in form of a Doxology and praising of God which is a part of divine Worship and sometimes joyned with petition and oftentimes concludes the same and in this sense it may be a part of prayer and fit to be used when we depart out of his presence and take our leave with our heavenly Father Amen is made the conclusion and by it we signifie our desire that God would hear us and put his hand and seal to our petitions and also our joynt consent in our desires with him who is the mouth of the people praying together which implies that we understand the Prayers made have attended to them and approve them and by this word make them Our Prayers It 's oftentimes a word of confirmation and then it signifies so it is sometimes a word of petition and then it signifies so be it Sect. 5. The matter of all these petitions may be reduced into the form of a Prayer in this manner 1. O Almighty Lord and in Christ Jesus our most gracious Father we thine unworthy Servants do here present our selves before the throne of Grace and desire in the first place and above all things that thy name be hallowed and thine eternal excellency and supreme dominion being manifested more and more both by thy blessed word and glorious works we and all others may know thee to be God alone who dost
new guilt therefore we humbly beseech thee Lead us not into temptation Satan is cruel subtle raging temptations many times very violent we live in a wicked world weich is full of snares there is no time or place of absalute safety O therefore strengthen our faith arm us with thy compleat armour from heaven support us assist us watch over us continually that we mast stand firm against all assaults of the enemy keep the faith and being watchful and humbly depending upon thee our God may obtain a final victory by the power of our blessed Saviour who hath overcome the world and triumphed over the powers and principalities of hell Desert us not at any time especially not in the day of fiery persecutions bloody conflicts and the hour of greatest trial Order all occurrences and events by thy wise providence in such a manner as that in greatest straits we may find a way to escape and tho' we cannot avoid always the evil of afflictions yet we may be delivered from the evil of sin Sanctifie all conditions both of prosperity and adversity unto us so that Satan by them may not gain any advantage against us Tread him shortly under our feet and put an end to all our troubles and hasten to give us eternal peace and safety Lord hearken unto these our prayers which we offer unto thee in the name of Jesus Christ to whom with thee and thy Spirit all praise glory honour and thanks be given now and for evermore Amen This Prayer may be contracted into four words yet retaining the principal matter or more enlarged in the several heads according to which if we consider the mercies pray'd for once received we may compose a form of thanksgiving and the same may be reduced to order so as to render thanks for blessings and deliverances which may be considered as publick of Church or State or private as of Congregations Families persons the blessings are either spiritual or temporal the deliverances are so too for they are from sin or guilt or from temptation or from the miseries of this life And here it is to be observed 1. That all the Prayers in Scriptuer may be reduced to the several heads of this form which tho' it contracts the matter of Prayer unto a few heads disposed in an excellent order yet leaves it indifferent whether we will begin our more general Prayers with Thanksgiving or Petition and in presenting our petitions whether we shall begin with supplication for blessings or with deprecations for deliverance from evil The principal thing is to pray to God alone with an upright heart in the name of Christ for such things as God hath promised that we may be accepted and heard CHAP. IX Of Christs promise to the Apostles Sect. 1. YOu heard before that there were two parts of the Commission granted by Christ unto his Apostles the first was a mandate to go to all Nations to disciple them to baptize them discipled to teach them baptized to observe all his Commandments the second a promise of which I will now speak in a few words and so conclude And we must observe 1. The reasons why Christ made this promise 2. The words of the promise partly exprssed here partly Mark 16. 17 18. There were several reasons which moved Christ to add this promise For 1. as the death of Christ did trouble them much so did his departure he must go and leave them behind him he was their dearest Lord whom they loved he was their joy their solace their guide and their protector and to part with him went near their hearts All this Christ understood and therefore to comfort and revive their sinking spirit that so though he withdraw his bodily presence yet they may be encouraged to go on with the work he adds this promise because he would be present with them in another and more effectual way 2. The work was very difficult and seemed to be far above their power and they should be encountred with many fearful enemies from whom they should suffer very much the devil and the world would oppose them with all their strength lest therefore they should be terrified dejected and depsair he lets them know he will be with them not only to strengthen and assist them but to preserve them in the midst of greatest danger and deliver them out of all their troubles 3. They might doubt of the success of their labours and fear lest their doctrine seeming to be new and contrary to the received opinions both of Jew and Gentile would not be received he therefore promiseth so to be with them as that he would confirm it outwardly by glorious miracles and make it effectual by the Holy Ghost to the end Sect. 2. In the words which are Loe I am with you always unto the end of the world we may consider 1. The person to whom this promise is made 2. The person promising 3. The thing promised 1. The persons to whom this promise is made are first the Apostles for to whom the commission is granted to them the promise is made and these are easily known to be all such as Christ intended to trust with the dispensation of Word and Sacraments These were of two sorts 1. Extraordinary 2. Ordinary The extraordinary are the Apostles to whom the promise was made immediately and principally for their place was high and extraordinary their power great and of large extent their work very difficult their sufferings greivous their enemies many potent cruel these must lay the foundation and plant the Christian Church in all Nations confirm the doctrine of the Gospel preached by them with many signs wonders and gifts of the Holy Ghost they must be infallible in word and writing and leave their doctrine upon record to be a rule of doctrine faith and life unto the worlds end yet these must die and when they had finished rhe great work leave the world and the Church which they had planted must continue and must have her pastours and teachers who must dispence both Word and Sacraments in the generations following till time shall be no more Therefore the promise must be understood as made to all their lawful successors in the Ministry till the number of Gods Saints be made up for what can those do except Christ in their successive generations be with them how should they go through with the great work without him His presence thefore was necessary unto them also without this promise both made and performed unto them their Ministry cannot be successful and effectual for the conversion edification and salvation of the Church yet here we must observe that though Christ promise his extraordinary presence to the Apostles yet his ordinary presence will be sufficient for their successours Sect. 3. The person who made this promise was Christ otherwise the promise of Man or Angel had been to no purpose he that had all power in heaven and earth and had given the four fold mandate