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

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Did we not even strip the very dead of their shrowds in stead of covering the naked In a word Did we not at our Fasts invite the Devil to a Feast Is it such a Fast that I have chosen saith the Lord Isa 58.5 Did ye at all Fast unto me even to me Zech. 7.5 This is a lamentation and must be for a lamentation Wherefore Fast of thy Fasts O Nation Repent of thy Repentance lest the Lord forbid his Prophets to pray for thee Reject thy Cry when thou Fast and consume thee by the Sword the Famine and the Pestilence Jer. 14.11 12. Next follows a word of Holy Feasting seasonable onely at the receiving of Benefits or removal of Evils wherein we are to have a special eye and regard to those Four Graces viz. Thanksgiving Fear Temperance and Charity without which it may be feared lest the Lord deal with us as he threatned Israel and turn our Feasts into mourning Amos 8.10 yea spread the dung even the dung of our Feasts on our Faces Mal. 2.3 For when we Feast do we not eat to our selves and drink to our selves Are there not spots in our Love-Feasts Do we not Feast with the Leaven of Malice and Wickedness Is it with the unleavened Bread of Sincerity and Truth Wherefore though at such times a more free and liberal use of the Creature is not unseasonable yet ever remember that it is better to go to the house of Mourning then to the house of Feasting But if thou wilt make a Feast obey our Saviors command and call the poor the lame the maimed and the blinde Luk. 14.13 Lastly Ecclesiastical Discipline that keeps the Key of Life and Doctrine offers it self to our consideration Without which every man is at liberty to write act and speak according to the pleasure of his prophane and blasphemous Heart without which we may expect the fall of the Walls of the holy Vineyard and a breach open for the Wilde Bore of the East and the little Foxes of the West to devour the Grapes without which the Magistrate wears a Sword without point or edge without which Vice lords it and Vertue 's enslaved without which the Children starve whilest holy things are given to Dogs without which the desperate Wills of prophanest men establish Iniquity as a Law to be obeyed on pain of Martyrdom Submit thy self therefore to this and every Ordinance of God who hath sealed a Commission to his Church with an Amen to it That whatsoever they shall binde on Earth shall be bound in Heaven and whatsoever they shall loose on Earth shall be loosed in Heaven Matth. 18.18 Thus Reader having shewed thee the way to this Holy Arbor the Door is open onely let me whisper this word in thy Heart at parting That thou take heed how thou Readest not knowing but the Trump may Sound ere thou arrive at the other end of this Arbor The Lord grant This may not then Rise in Judgement against either of our Errata's J. G. THE HOLY ARBOR CHAP. I. §. 1. The Trinity ONe of the deepest Mysteries of our Religion is That God is the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost and again That the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost are one and the same God So it is one of the most mysterious points of our Faith To believe in one God who is distinct in three Subsistances or Persons called The Father the Son and the Holy Ghost who are three in person and again they three are one not in person but in nature By Nature is meant a thing subsisting by it self that is common to many By Person is meant a thing or essence subsisting by it self not common to many but incommunicable In this Mystery of the Trinity the Divine Nature is the Godhead it self simply and absolutely considered and a Person is that which subsisteth in this Godhead as the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost If any man would conceive in minde rightly the Divine Nature he must conceive God or the Godhead absolutely if any of the Persons then he must conceive the same Godhead relatively with Personal properties Thus the Godhead considered with the propriety of Fatherhood or Begetting is the Father and conceiving the same Godhead with the propriety of Generation passively taken we conceive the Son and the same Godhead with the propriety of Proceeding we conceive the Holy Ghost Neither may it seem strange to any that the names of Nature and Person are used to set forth this Mystery by for they have been taken up by common consent in the Primitive Church and are contained in the Scriptures Heb. 1.3 Gal. 4.8 This Mystery may well be conceived by a Comparison borrowed from Light The light of the Sun the light of the Moon and the light of the Air for nature and substance are all one and the same light and yet they are three distinct lights The light of the Sun being of it self and from none the light of the Moon from the Sun and the light of the Air from them both So the Divine Nature is one and the Persons are three subsisting after a diverse maner in one and the same Nature The three Persons are one not simply but one in Nature that is Coessential or Consubstantial having all one Godhead because there is one God and no more in Nature considering that the thing which is Infinite is but one and is not subject to multiplication And as these three Persons are one in Nature so whatsoever agrees to God simply considered agrees to them all three They are all Coequal and Coeternal All most Wise Just Merciful Omnipotent by one and the same Wisdom Justice Mercy Power And because they have all one Godhead therefore they are not onely one with another but also each in other the Father in the Son the Son in the Father and the Holy Ghost in them both And we must not imagine that these three are one God in this sense as though the Father had one part of the Godhead the Son another part and the Holy Ghost a third for that is most false because the Infinite and most simple Godhead is not subject to Composition or Division but admits a Distinction without any Separation And whereas it is said That the Son and the Holy Ghost have their beginning from the Father we must know that it is not a beginning of their Nature or of their Godhead from the Father but of their Person onely for the Godhead of all three Persons is uncreate and unbegotten and proceeding from none So also whereas it is said That the Son and the Holy Ghost have received all their Attributes as Wisdom Knowledge Power c. from the Father we must know That that which the Son receiveth of the Father he receiveth it by Nature and not by Grace and he receiveth not a part but all that the Father hath saving the personal propriety So the Holy Ghost receiveth from the Father and the Son by Nature and
viz. 1. The Father Createth but immediately by the Son and the Holy Ghost the Son from the Father and the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son 2. The Father and the Holy Ghost Redeem us but mediately by the Son but the Son immediately from the Father by the Holy Ghost 3. The Father and the Son Sanctifie us but mediately by the Holy Ghost but the Holy Ghost immediately from the Father and the Son In this deep Mystery of our Religion we must be guided wholly by Faith and endeavor to believe this Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity though we are not able to reason the truth thereof by Natural demonstrations Behold the sacred Riddle of Divinity One Godhead in a holy Trinity Of Persons or three Persons all in one Most undivided Deity alone Distinct in Persons not in Essence no The Godhead's not divided think not so For it 's not subject to division Nor admits of any Composition But distinction without seperation As is most evident by Mans Creation Gen. 1.26 §. 2. Gods Word THe Word of God is the Wisdom of God James 3.17 concerning the truth which is according to godliness being given by inspiration of God 2 Tim. 3.16 the original being from heaven not earth Joh. 3.27 and the Author thereof being God not man 1 Cor. 2.10 by which Word God alone doth onely binde the Conscience by causing it in every action to excuse for well-doing and accuse for sin Now this Word of God is the holy Scripture in which name are to be understood all and onely those Canonical Books of the Old and New Testament of whose Authority was never any doubt in the Church which we receive as Canonical not so much because that the Church doth so receive and allow them as for that the holy Spirit in our hearts doth testifie that they are from God Touching which this is a Truth must be held of us That no part of the Canonical Scripture inspired of God such as was committed as the Lords Treasure to the Church for the perpetual instruction thereof in Faith and Obedience is lost and perished nor can be lost or perish so that no one Oracle or Sentence of God can fall away Indeed these sacred Books may be despitefully abused by men many ways but they can never be finally lost and wholly extinguished for the works of God remain for ever and ever And as for any sandy Supposition contrary to this Truth let the vain Supposer answer What Error more can be convinced what Comfort more can be received what Vice more can be corrected what Truth more can be published what Grace more can be commended to the Church out of those Books which he so fondly supposeth to be lost Beware therefore of doubting of Gods Providence herein shaking thereby the Faith of the Church Whosoever thus goes about to strike at the foundation thereof the least dust that falls from the Building will crush the presumptuous Underminer into bottomless destruction The Scripture is a Doctrine inspired by God to make us wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 16. Rom. 1.16 and containeth all things necessary to be known and believed for the salvation of man Joh. 20.31 2 Tim. 3.16 17. the whole being as it were compendiously comprised in the Decalogue the sum of the Law and in the Creed the sum of the Gospel As for all the fundamental Points of Christian Religion necessary to salvation they notwithstanding the darkness of some Mysteries herein contained are clearly and plainly set down so as the humble and obedient heart may distinctly without wavering and gainsaying conceive and believe them Thus not unfitly is the Scripture compared in regard of the perspicuity thereof to a Foord over which a Lamb may wade and in regard of the difficulty thereof to a Sea wherein an Elephant may swim Now though all things necessary to be known are herein contained yet are not all literally expressed as the Baptism of Infants and Original Sin which notwithstanding are distinctly and demonstratively inferred thence and so are all things that belong to Faith and Obedience whatsoever we are to believe or to practice So that the letter of the Scripture may be alledged and yet the word of God missed as by all Hereticks and a man may swerve from the letter yet alledge the true word of God therefore it is nothing less then necessary that we be diligently familiar and well acquainted with this word of God Josephus tells us The Jews knew the Scriptures as well as their own names many of us may tell the Jews We scarce know the names of the Scriptures Most inexcuseable Ignorance sad and lamentable for we are bound to know the Scriptures themselves that by them we may come to knowledge by knowledge to faith by faith to obedience and by obedience to salvation Touching the Apocryphal Books to which the Imps of Rome as to their own Traditions give power equal to the Canonical Scriptures they were not penned by the Prophets the Lords Secretaries as the Scriptures were nor ever committed of trust to the Israelites They contain certain things disagreeing from the true Scriptures of God and no proof that they were penned by the Spirit of God therefore there is no warrant for the equalling them in Credit or Authority with the Scriptures Besides one main property of the Books of the Old Testament is That every one of them was written either by Moses or some other of the Prophets in the Hebrew tongue the native language of the Jews but the Apocryphal Books were penned by some other in the Greek tongue which was not the language of the old Prophets so that they are no part of the Law or of the Prophets And yet as the presumptuous Papists make the Apocryphal Books of equal Authority with the Canonical so others have more blasphemously long since obtruded for Canonical the fatherless brood of other Books unto these as The third and fourth of Esdras An Appendix of Job A Preface to the Lamentation The third and fourth of the Maccabees a Book called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Book of Enoch The Gospel of Thomas and of Matthias The Acts of Peter and in the year 1120 a certain new Gospel called Evangelium Aeternum was found out being full of Blasphemies All which and the like are damnable presumptions plainly forbidden by the Lord Deut. 4.2 and most fearfully threatned Rev. 22.18 19. So then to withstand the Devils suggestion against the Divine Authority of the true sacred Seriptures it is very necessary to have our judgements well informed therein to pray for the Spirit of Revelation or Inspiration which may inwardly testifie to our Spirits That God is the Author of the Scriptures which Principle we must hold undeniable and give no place to doubting about these uncontradictable Truths The Scripture is said to be the Word of God in regard of 1. The Author who is God himself 2 Tim. 3.16 2. The Matter which is Gods
impossible it is our own fault for God commanded them when they were possible neither hath he lost the right of requiring that now which we lost the power of performing of then at our Parents first birth yea after our second birth in Christ being still in this life but in a state of imperfection it is impossible though God commands us to crave and desire of him in this life the perfect fulfilling of the Law So that God chargeth no more upon us then he had enabled us to do and had given us strength to perform and if there be any impossibility to do it the fault resteth in our selves and not in God for man by his first Creation was able to keep the whole Law without sinning for he was made after Gods own Image God saith Solomon made man righteous Eccl. 7. his heart was full of divine understanding his will was altogether right his affections holy his power absolute to persist and continue such always but as his nature now is he cannot keep the Law of God neither the whole nor any parcel thereof but is altogether corrupt his understanding darkned his will crooked his affections impure and his best strength weakness towards the running of the race of Gods Commandments yea though assisted by Gods grace and regenerate yet does not perfectly fulfil the Law but faileth still in many things for though a man be now Spiritual and guided by Gods Spirit not to sin as men natural 1 John 3.9 yet the flesh the old man corrupt Nature is not altogether expelled but remaining for their humiliation and the exercise of Grace in their Spiritual combat hindreth them from doing perfectly the thing they would and swayeth them oftentimes to the thing they would not Thus though the Law exacteth such perfect obedience as no man in this life is able to yield as appeareth Acts 13.38 Rom. 8.3 3.20 Gal. 2.21 yet we must know that it is impossible onely to Nature but not to Grace which is thus to be explained It is possible to Grace because Grace covereth our failings not that a man in Grace can perfectly fulfil all things Christians are not bound at all to the observation of the Judaical Ceremonies nor are the Judicial Laws of the Jews necessarily to be received or established in any Commonwealth yet no Christian man whatsoever is freed from the obedience of the Moral Law for that remains for ever a Rule of obedience to every childe of God though he be not bound to bring the same obedience for his Justification before God for he is accursed saith the Law that faileth in any Commandment except saith the Gospel he be reconciled again in Christ and in him have the pardon of his transgressions Whence this is one main difference betwixt the Law and the Gospel That the Law leaveth no place to repentance nor affordeth any means to resume that which is lost or recover that which is decayed Hear the thunder of the Law Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the Book of the Law to do them Gal. 3.10 Listen to the still voyce of the Gospel Repent Mat. 3.2 4.17 Sin no more Joh. 5.14 8.11 Turn you turn you from your wicked ways for why will ye dye Ezek. 33.11 In this respect the Law may be resembled to Abishai the Gospel to David both of them found their enemy Abishai would presently have smote him dead but David wakes him tells him the danger he was in and adviseth him to look better to himself 1 Sam. 26.8 c. Thus the Law sets forth the rigor of Gods Justice the Gospel the riches of his Mercy Now indeed a man cannot see his sins to purpose without the spirit of Bondage for that must make the Law effectual as well as the Spirit of Adoption doth the Gospel that is except God himself press the Law in our hearts the Ministers discover our sins to no purpose they may as soon shake the earth it self as the heart of a sinner without the work of God therefore the first work of the Holy Ghost is to awaken a sinner to set upon him his sins that he may be fit to receive Christ The Law in general is that part of Gods Word which commands things just honest and godly and being thus conceived it is three-fold● or the parts thereof are three 1. The Ceremonial Law concerning Ceremonies binding the Jews until the coming of the Messias that they should be Signs Symboles Types or Shadows of Spiritual things to be fulfilled in the Gospel of Christ this Law prescribed to the Jews Ceremonies Rites and Orders to be performed in the Worship of God and is laid down in the Books of Moses especially in Leviticus it concerned the Jews onely and is now wholly abrogated 2. The Judicial Law which is that part of Gods Word which prescribed Ordinances for the Government of the Jews Commonwealth and the Civil punishment of offenders Indeed their whole Civil Order or Government that is of the Offices of Magistrates Judgements Punishments Contracts and of the distinguishing and bounding of Dominions binding all Abrahams posterity until the coming of the Messias that they should be Types of that Order which should be in Christs Kingdom that is of the Spiritual Regiment of the Messias This did indeed principally concern the Jews but yet so far forth as it tendeth to the establishing of the Moral Law having in it common Equity it concerneth all people in all times and places 3. The Moral Law which teacheth us what to do and what not to do binding all reasonable creatures to perfect obedience both internal and external so that it may fully be described in these three points 1. That part of Gods word concerning righteousness and godliness which was written in Adams minde by the gift of Creation and the remnants of it be in every man by the light of Nature in regard whereof it bindes all men 2. It commandeth perfect obedience both inward in thought and affection and outward in speech and action 3. It bindeth to the curse and punishment every one that faileth in the least duty thereof though but once and that in thought onely Gal. 3.10 The sum of the Moral Law is propounded in the Decalogue or Ten Commandments which many can repeat but few do understand The Ceremonial Law must be considered in a double respect 1. In regard of the observation of it in Gods worship and so it is wholly abrogated 2. In the scope and substance of it which is Christ crucified with his benefits whom it shadowed out thus it remaineth still and is now more plain then ever it was The Ceremonial Law ceased at the coming of Christ for these Reasons 1. There is no more use of a candle when the Sun is risen nor of the picture when the person is present Thus was it between the Mosaical Ceremonies and Christ 2. The renting of the vail of the Temple at Christs suffering
not actually and to be born in the Church of believing Parents is unto Infants in stead of profession of Faith and Repentance Hence may it appear how far from this Sacrament of Baptism the Anabaptists derogate by making it but an idle Ceremony acknowledging indeed some of the ends and uses thereof but restraining the efficacy thereof and so take away the chiefest comfort and truest benefit the Church reaps thereby Many indeed are Baptized which receive not the Graces propounded and offered therein but the fault is not in that no Grace accompanieth that Sacrament but in that they receive it not but afterwards when they come to years of discretion they reject the Grace which appertaineth thereto What if some believe not shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect God forbid Rom. 3.3 and Baptism is no natural means of working Grace as if the Grace which is sealed up thereby were inherent in the water or in the Ministers act of sprinkling it but it is onely a voluntary instrument which Christ useth as it pleaseth him to work what Grace or measure of Grace seemeth best to him so as Grace is onely assistant to it not included in it yet in the right use thereof Christ by his Spirit worketh that Grace which is received by it in respect whereof the Minister is said to Baptize with water but Christ with the Holy Ghost Mat. 3.11 So that unto true Baptism must concur a death unto sin in him that is Baptized and a new birth unto righteousness otherwise his Baptism is vain for it is not the washing away of the filth of the flesh but the stipulation of a good Conscience 1 Pet. 3.21 The use of this Sacrament without faith doth not save therefore with faith it doth save the want of this Sacrament doth not condemn yet so as that want be without contempt so some may be saved which are not Baptized but none can be saved which do not believe For the bare water in Baptism is not sufficient unto Salvation neither is it changed into the very Blood of Christ neither is the Blood of Christ present in the water or in the same place with the water neither are their bodies who are Baptized washed therewith visibly neither is the Holy Ghost by his vertue more in this water then elswhere but in the right use of Baptism he worketh in the hearts of them who are Baptized and Spiritually sprinkled and washeth them with the Blood of Christ and useth this external Symbole or Sign as an instrument and as a visible word or promise to stay and stir up the faith of them who are Baptized Now all they and they alone receive Baptism to the right use who are renewed or renewing and are Baptized to those ends whereto Baptism was by Christ instituted And as the Covenant once made with God is also afterwards after sins committed perpetually firm and of force to the Repentant So also Baptism being once received confirmeth and assureth the Repentant all their life time of remission of sins and therefore it ought not to be reiterated nor deferred neither yet are all those who are Baptized with water whether they be of understanding or Infants partakers of the Grace of Christ for the everlasting Election of God and his Calling into the Kingdom of Christ is free And as for the wickedness of the Minister Baptizing it makes not the Baptism void or of no effect and force unto them so Baptized so that it be administred into the Promise and Faith of Christ and therefore also the true Church doth not Baptize them who have been Baptized of Hereticks but onely must inform and instruct them with true Doctrine concerning Christ and Baptism Lastly touching the use of Godfathers and Godmothers it is not at all necessary nor by God required to the Sacrament of Baptism for Christ hath not in any of his Institutions so much as intimated the use of such Sureties and the whole Congregation are witnesses of the childes admission into the Church the Parents being bound to perform what is required for the childes education The words used in Baptism signifie 1. That Baptism was instituted by the Commandment and Authority of the three Persons in the Godhead 2. That these three Persons confirm unto us by their own testification that they receive us into favor and perform that unto us which is signified by Baptism which is Salvation if we believe and be Baptized 3. That he which is Baptized is bound to the knowledge faith worship trust honor and invocation of this true God who is the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost Baptism comprehendeth 1. The Sign which is water 2. The Ceremony as the sprinkling of water 3. The things themselves which are 1. The sprinkling of the Blood of Christ and the imputation of his Righteousness 2. The mortification of the old man and putting on of the new 3. The quickning of the new man into a certain hope of the Resurrection to come by Christ 4. The Sign which not onely signifieth but also confirmeth 5. The Sign which hath that authority and power of confirming from the Commandment of God That Baptism testifies and confirms the will of God touching his bestowing Salvation on us may appear thus 1. Because we are Baptized in the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost that is we are assigned deputed and claimed to be his own 2. Because God hath promised Salvation to him who shall believe and shall be Baptized 3. By several Testimonies of Scripture as Acts 22.16 Mark 16.16 Rom. 6.3 Tit. 3.5 1 Pet. 3.21 The use of Baptism is twofold 1. It serves to be a Pledge or Token of Gods favor towards us 2. It serves to be a notable means of our death unto sin Baptism is a Pledge of Gods favor to us principally three ways 1. It sealeth to us the free pardon and forgiveness of our sins Acts 2.38 2. It is a Pledge of the vertue of Christs death Rom. 6.3 4. 3. It is a Pledge unto us of the life of Christ and of our fellowship with him Baptism is also a means of our death unto sin three ways 1. By putting us in minde of mortifying the flesh and crucifying our own corruptions 2. It causeth us to dedicate our selves wholly unto God in Christ 3. It causeth us to labor to keep and maintain peace and unity with all men but especially with Gods people To be Baptized into the death of Christ is 1. To be partakers of Christs death no otherwise then if our selves were dead 2. To dye also our selves which is to mortifie the lusts of our flesh This mortification God promiseth us in Baptism and bindeth us unto it Baptism is a means of our sanctifying and cleansing in these respects viz. 1. In that it doth most lively represent and set forth even to the outward senses the inward cleansing of our soul by the Blood of Christ and sanctifying us by the
and upbraideth not 6. To be a God true of his Promises therefore we crave the accomplishing of them 4. The necessity of prayer for it is the means which God hath appointed to obtain every good thing Mat. 7.7 Jam. 4.7 5. The utility or profit we receive by this duty of Prayer which is exceeding much and very beneficial to us many ways as 1. To obtain every good thing Christ hath passed his most certain and general Promise for it Joh. 16.23 2. To prevent Judgements threatned Jer. 26.19 and remove them being inflicted Jam. 5.18 3. To preserve nourish and strengthen in us all Spiritual graces Col. 1.9 c. 4. To obtain pardon and remission of sins Acts 8.22 5. To subdue in us the power of sin Psal 19.13 experience can well witness this to those that use prayer 6. To sanctifie all Gods creatures to our use and whatever we do 1 Tim. 4.5 usurpers are they that use them otherwise 6. The efficacy thereof for it prevaileth over all Creatures reasonable or unreasonable and of reasonable both visible as Man and invisible as Angels whether evil or good yea it prevaileth with God himself Examples of all which may be these Daniel by prayer stopped the mouthes of the Lyons Dan. 6.22 Davids prayer turned Achitophels counsel into foolishness 2 Sam. 15.31 Thereby the Devil even when he is surest possessed is cast out Mat. 17.21 At Elisha's prayer a mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about him 2 Kings 6.17 By prayer Jacob had power over the Angel which was called The Angel of the Covenant Christ Jesus true God Hos 12.4 who therefore was called Israel because he prevailed with God Gen. 32.28 7. The great honor thereof whereby the Saints have a free access to the glorious Throne of Grace The Romish Church doth neither know nor teach nor practice the duty of prayer aright and that for these Reasons 1. They pray not in knowledge but in a strange tongue and allow of Ignorance as the Mother of Devotion 2. They commend doubting and speak against Assurance and so pray not in faith nor obedience 3. They pray not in humility for mercy for their sins for they think to merit by their prayers 4. They direct not their prayers to God onely in the name of Christ but to God and his Saints making the Virgin Mary their Mediatress In the close of all take this seasonable direction with thee touching praying for or against our Enemies We may lawfully pray against the evil cause that an evil man maintaineth but not against the person of that evil man Now if any extraordinary man hath truly and indeed the Spirit of discerning to judge whether Gods and his enemies be incurable and hath a pure zeal to Gods honor therein he may lawfully pray against such their very persons as David did in the 109 Psalm Prayer the Souls Incense sent by faith to God Attracts his Blessings and diverts his Rod It does acquaint us with the Lord and makes A trembling Terror cease th' Infernal Snakes It makes the weak victorious yea the Sun Stand still Go back It stays a Plague begun When th' Earth had in a Burning-Feaver layen Full three years space it caus'd a gracious Rain It wings the Soul for that Celestial good Which eye ear heart ne're saw heard understood §. 2. The Lords Prayer VVE must imitate and follow the matter and form of the Lords Prayer in all our prayers but are not so tyed to the very words of this Prayer but that we may freely use them or other words at our pleasure for our Savior himself oft-times prayed in other words and so did the Apostles neither is there such vertue as that by the bare repetition of them we can binde God to grant our requests or that we should never pray in other words But as the Ten Commandments contain all things to be done of us the Creed all things to be believed by us so the Lords Prayer doth comprehend all things to be asked by us of Almighty God Some think it is to be used onely as a Direction by which we may learn how and what to pray and that the words themselves are not to be used others think it the onely Prayer to be used at all times and upon all occasions The former opinion grounds it self on Mat. 6.9 the latter on Luke 11.2 The truth is the use of this Prayer is not onely to direct for matter or for words but for both but in praying the very words take heed lest the tongue run without the heart as it must needs do in those that ceremoniously rehearse them making haste to have done before they ever truly began Wherefore to pray these words rightly he that prayeth must in some convenient measure understand them and have his minde taken up with them in the uttering the heart still conveying it self into the meaning of every petition and if thus this Prayer be said it is well used alone or added to other prayer Now we must know That other prayers though differing from this in order yet if consonant thereto in matter may also be used by us for otherwise Paul in his Epistles would not have used such variety of order and maner in thanksgivings requests and deprecations for his Spiritual children for himself and for the whole Church So that though this order be generally to be followed yet neither is it always necessary nor yet is it a swerving from this Direction though some of these petitions onely be asked in some of our prayers and others be omitted But the error is when we go beyond the Rules here given us doting too much upon worldly things or having proud unfaithful or malicious hearts we make our prayers the labor of polluted lips In the Lords prayer are contained 1. A preface and therein a compellation Our Father wherein seven things are to be considered 1. Who is to be called upon that is God whom we are to call by the Name of Father wherein we must observe That Father here is not the Name of one Person onely but of the whole Essence 2. That God will hear such as call upon him because he is their Father 3. That he is able to grant and answer their requests for he is in heaven 4. Who ought and also are able to pray aright and they are the Sons of God 5. That Faith is here required for by Faith we become the Sons of God 6. Through whom we must pray that is in the Name of the onely begotten Son of God 7. The difference betwixt the prayers of Christians and of Turks or Jews for ours are made by faith in Christ 2. Six requests viz. 1. Hallowed be c. which is then done when the true knowledge and glory of God is celebrated by men 2. Thy Kingdom c. that is let thy Church be extended multiplied preserved enlarged and guided by thy Spirit 3. Thy will be c. which is then done when
part 5. To beware of distrustful care for that which Christ bids us ask God undoubtedly will give because it is according to his will if we ask in faith and make a sober use of the means that be lawful and look if temporal blessings fail for a good supply in Spiritual Graces 6. To learn to receive our bread from God or any other temporal blessing we enjoy as a fruit of Christs Passion which is the Foundation of every good gift and blessing of God 7. That every one should have a lawful Calling and therein so imploy himself that he may eat his own bread 2 Thess 3.12 8. That all fraud injustice and cruelty in the getting of temporal things is condemned for we pray for our own bread gotten by honest labor that we eat not the bread of violence Prov. 14.17 20.17 9. That we must labor to be in Christ 2 Cor. 13.5 endeavor to maintain our estate Gen. 30.30 and impart our goods to the poor Prov. 19.17 10. That community of goods is an Anabaptistical fancy Josh 13.7 and not commanded in the word for what need of a Law against Theft if all things were common In the Supplication of this Petition we pray for all things needful for us in this present life not being measured by our own will but by the will of the Lord These things are 1. General concerning us all as 1. Peace and tranquility through which small things become great whereas by discord great things decay and come to nothing 1 Tim. 2.2 2. Seasonable weather that the heavens may answer the earth the earth may answer the Corn the Corn may answer us as is promised of God to such as he favoreth 3. Worthy and vertuous Governors of the Common-wealth by whose care Peace may be maintained 4. Healthfulness strength and ability of the people and the encrease of them to our mutual comfort and the dismaying of our enemies Psal 144.12 5. Victory over our enemies that rise up against us 2. Special viz. 1. An honest disposition to labor in our particular Callings to get and preserve such things as are for our maintenance he must not eat that will not work 2 Thess 3.10 no man is priviledged to be idle 2. Good success through Gods blessing on our labor 3. A charitble disposition in us to relieve the impotent poor for we pray for our not my daily bread 4. The Sanctification of the Creatures which is when we are sanctified that receive them for without this there cannot be a comfortable use of them 5. The blessing of God to make the Creatures nourishable unto us for neither they in themselves nor we in our selves have wherewithal to convert them to nourishment 6. Contentation and resting upon Gods Providence in our greatest wants and dangers 7. Humility and lowliness of minde because we are all beggars it is of Alms that we have any thing we have nothing of our own and without the Lords liberality we cannot be sustained In the Deprecation of this Petition we pray with submission to the will of God 1. Against unseasonable weather pestilent influences and vapours plague and all contagious diseases unhealthful constitutions and extreme poverty 2. Against idleness improvident Magistrates Invasion of Enemies and Civil War 3. Against discontent murmuring trust in the Arm of Flesh covetousness and worldly cares hard-heartedness prodigality unjust and unrighteous dealing and against all things that defile man and make the creatures unclean and accursed unto him as pride in abundance discontent in want negligence in mens callings unfaithfulness in dealing improvidence in getting Parsimony in hoording ingratitude in prodigally spending unmercifulness in not giving to the poor unthankfulness for Gods Creatures all abuse of the gifts of God and the like The Thanksgiving of this Petition is For all and every the benefits of this life both general and special even for all such things as before we prayed for and for freeing us from any evils wherewith we have been bodily oppressed yea we thank God that he hath hitherto so bountifully provided for us and others that we have a sufficiency for our present estate and do see his blessing in the getting having and using of all his Creatures for had we the Royalty of the whole world yet without the blessing of Almighty God miserable were our condition so that had we the fowls of the Air at command all the fish in the Sea in a net all the beasts of the Field at our shambles all Creatures in the world at our command and service yet had we need in all humility to address our selves to the Throne of Grace and say Give us this day our daily bread What have we that we have not Lord from thee Save our own Natural impurity Which poysons all the sustenance we take Vnless thou bless it for our Saviors sake Vouchsafe us Lord this day our daily bread Without which Staff of life Mankinde is dead One Crum for Jesus sake the Crums are all We crave the Crums that from thy Table fall Such Alms are precious when thou dost dispence Thy Blessing with those gifts of Providence §. 9. And forgive us our Trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us IN this Petition we pray That God would freely forgive us all our sins and trespasses against his Laws as we do from the heart forgive the offences by men committed against us The word Trespasses in this Petition is by Matthew called Debts and by Luke Sins for sins are debts because we owe obedience of which we fail by sin and because as by debt a man is in danger of imprisonment so by sin of being cast into the prison of Hell whence Christ hath ransomed all Believers by paying the debt Thus the word Debt is a figurative kinde of speech taken from bargaining wherein God is resembled to the Creditor man is the Debtor the Law is the Bond or Obligation and Sin is that Debt of ours for which we stand bound to God by the Law which appears by this That in the Evangelists the words Sin and Debt are used promiscuously as Luke 11.4 compared with Mat. 6.12 Now sin makes us debtors unto God not that we owe it him for we are bound by the Law to the contrary obedience but because upon default of obedience unto God whereto we are bound by the Law we are bound for our sins unto punishment which is as it were a second debt Thus Christ calleth all our sins Debts Matth. 6. both Original and Actual both of Fact and of Omission because they make us debtors to God either of obedience or punishment which we are to pay Forgive us that is Seeing we are not able to pay the debts occasioned by our sins accept of the satisfaction made by the All-sufficient Lord Jesus and for his sake Let not our debts be required at our hands or any of them for the least of which we are never able to answer So that this Forgiveness here asked
our discharge in this life that we be not tormented in the life to come The Reasons why sin is called a Debt to man 1. Because we owe love which is thereby broken Rom. 13.8 2. Because we owe punishment for doing wrong Judg. 1.8 3. Because we owe satisfaction for the wrong done Lev. 6.4 These words As we forgive our debtors are added for these Reasons 1. That we may rightly desire remission of sins that is with faith and repentance a sign and token whereof is the love of our Neighbor 2. That when we finde in our selves true faith and repentance we may so have a certain argument and comfort in us that we are of the number of them to whom remission of sins is promised and that therefore we shall doubtless obtain the same All offences that are done to us of others may be reduced to these three Heads 1. Such as do onely displease us but bring no loss or hurt to us 2. Small injuries such as do not onely displease us but withal bring some little hurt to us either in our life goods or good-name 3. Greater injuries such as are not onely offensive to our persons but withal do prejudice our life and bring a ruine upon our estates both in goods and good-name The forgiveness between man and man is fourfold viz. 1. Of Revenge that is when we requite not evil for evil either by thought word or deed This belongeth to all men 2. Of private Punishments when men return not punishments for injuries done by way of requital though we cannot forgive wholly and perfectly yet we may truly and sincerely 3. Of Judgement when we judge not an injury done to be an injury 4. Of Satisfaction when it is due for some hurt done Now man is said to forgive man when he doth pardon either the wrong done Gen. 50.21 or the punishment appointed for the wrong 2 Sam. 19.23 or the satisfaction which the offender is bound to make Luke 7.4 or all of them as occasion is offered Mat. 18.32 The conditional words of this Petition are useful to us many ways viz. 1. To inform us that asking of pardon and testimony of Repentance go together he that receives the one must express the other for where God gives pardon there also he gives grace to repent and mercy is not granted but on condition of repentance Acts 2.37 38. 2. To teach us to forgive our brethren every day to renew our repentance and to humble our selves and to let us know That we are bound to forgive all persons Gol. 3.12 all sins Prov. 10. and at all times Mat. 17.22 when men offend us and that fully 3. To afford us a notable sign of pardon of sin namely our forgiving of and mercy to our brethren 4. To admonish us to beware of the common sin of this Age which is desire of revenge spite and grudging for if we forgive not we pray in effect that God would not forgive us yea we curse our selves 5. To discover unto us the gross hypocrisie of our Nature for so oft as we make this Petition we make profession of reformation of life in new obedience for this one branch of brotherly Reconciliation here professed doth presuppose our Conversion from all sin since true Repentance for one sin cannot stand with a purpose to live in any other 6. To stir us up to hunger after love mercy gentleness meekness and to endeavor to practice the same continually living in peace 2 Cor. 13.11 laboring to make peace Mat. 5.9 and shewing all tokens of love to our adversaries that they may assure themselves we have wholly forgiven them 7. To shew us the way how to keep true peace of conscience for ever for when we are at one with God and man we have a blessed peace and this is by calling upon God for the pardon of our sins every day and by following after peace with men in the practice of forgiveness and reconciliation which is never sincere without repentance 8. To acquaint us That no man living in malice can say the Lords Prayer as he ought to do Mat. 5.24 and that is a sign of grace to forgive Mat. 17.32 9. To exclude from pardon all such as persecute the Saints of God till they repent and practice as they pray in this Petition By this Petition we are taught 1. To bewail our carnal security going on from day to day in sin without thought of the debt thereby 2. To relye and settle our hearts in all estates in affliction temptation and death it self on the meer mercy of God in Christ by faith in his Blood for the pardon of our sins 3. Not to lie down in the sins we daily commit but renew our estate by true humiliation and repentance which consists in daily examination confession contrition supplication and conversion 4. To use this Petition as a remedy against despair which must not embolden any to sin presumptuously for the Lord hath said he will not be merciful to that man Deut. 29.19 5. That no man possibly can fulfil the Law for the Apostles themselves were commanded to ask pardon for sin every day whereby it is plain they could not fulfil the Law much less can we 6. In all godly maner to endeavor after what we pray for for it is gross also hypocrisie daily to ask the pardon of sin and still to continue in the daily practice thereof 7. Not onely to pray for the pardon of our own sins but of our brethrens also whereby we are taught that the good estate of their souls should be dear and precious to us In the Supplication of this Petition we pray for what soever tendeth to the forgiveness of our sins as 1. The knowledge of our sins without which the tongue may pray for pardon but the heart cannot Thus many poor and miserable souls ignorantly deceive themselves 2. Grace to acknowledge our sins for he that hides them shall not prosper Prov. 28.13 and all that know them do not confess them or else some way justifie themselves 3. Grace to be truly humbled for sin and that in the sense of Gods curse due for it else we are still in our sins and cannot pray to speed 4. Justification through the death and blood-shedding of Christ Rom. 4.25 That Christs righteousness may be made ours and our sins laid upon him for his mercies sake 5. Love and charity towards our brethren that God would give us a heart to be reconciled to them pardoning their offences against us The Deprecation of this Petition is against all things that may shut up Gods mercy and goodness from us as 1. Blindeness of minde and ignorance of our inward estate which is through ignorance of the Law 2. Hardness of heart which keepeth from repentance 3. Despair of Gods mercy and goodness which driveth from God to the Devil 4. Presumption which is the promising of happiness to ones self on false ground 5. Continuance in sin and the least opinion of
aright The duties following upon our faith in the Holy Ghost 1. To keep our bodies holy and pure as the Temples of the Holy Ghost and not to defile them by uncleanness 2. To believe without doubting whatsoever is contained in the holy Scripture because that all were given by inspiration of the Holy Ghost and were set forth by holy men not of any private motion but as they were moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Tim. 3.16 2 Pet. 1.21 3. To use all our gifts to the honor of God for it is the holy Spirit of God from whom we receive them all 4. To submit our selves in all things to the government of Gods Spirit and not follow the sway of our own Natures for he is our guide and will lead us into the way of all Truth Eternal Breath O let thy blessed ayr Imbreathe us with new life or else repair The ruines of our Souls Blow and refresh Our dim-burning Zeal but blow out the Flesh New-mould us fit for Mercy and make good The Charter Christ hath seal'd us with his Blood Vnscale our Vnderstandings make us see The Crown of Hope ' yond hope Faith's Mystery Inflame our Souls with holy fire and then Our Souls thy fire shall flame thee back agen §. 9. The Holy Catholique Church Concerning the holy and Catholique Church of Christ we believe That the Son of God doth from the beginning of the world Joh. 10.11 Gen. 26.4 to the end thereof Rom. 8.29 gather defend and preserve unto himself by his Spirit Isa 59.21 and Word Acts 2.46 out of whole Mankinde Mat. 16.18 Joh. 10.28 a company chosen to everlasting life 1 Joh. 3.21 and agreeing in true faith And that we are lively Members of that Company 1 Joh. 2.19 and so shall remain for ever 1 Cor. 18.9 To believe in which holy Catholique Church is to believe the Doctrine thereof wherein she followeth Christ the Prophets and Apostles the onely sure ground and pillar of Truth and that in this visible Company and Society are some true Repentants and truly converted and my self to be a lively Member of the invisible and visible Church So that to believe and confess the Doctrine of Salvation taught and delivered by the Prophets and Apostles is an infallible and inseperable note of a true Church of God for Gods Church is nothing else but a company of Gods people called by the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles unto the state of Salvation so that out of the Church there is no Salvation ordinarily In which regard Noahs Ark was a true Type of the Church none being saved from drowning that were out of it And none but such who are of Christs body shall partake of the benefits of his Office for himself saith He prays not for the world Joh. 17.9 In which respect also out of the Church no Salvation for the body being the true Catholique Invisible Church he that is not a member of this body is out of the Church and so hath not Christ to be his Head and Savior Yea the Church is also Christs Spouse the many espousal Titles which in Scripture are given to Christ and the Church in mutual relation of one to another evidently declareth as much He is stiled a Bridegroom she a Bride Joh. 3.29 He Well-beloved she Love Cant. 1.13 15. He an Husband she a Wise 2 Cor. 11.2 He an Head she the Body both one flesh Eph. 5.23 31. Thus the Church being the Communion of Saints sanctified in Christ Jesus confessing him the Son of the living God in every place knit in one Church as the Body and every Member unto Christ as unto one Head it is most evident that no man can be saved out of the Church for whomsoever God hath chosen and elected to the end which is eternal life them he hath chosen to the means which is the inward and outward calling But here note That Infants born in the Church are in charity to be reputed of the Church till at their mature Age their life notoriously express the contrary The Church is called Catholique or Vniversal because it is not now tyed to any certain place or people as it was under the Law before the coming of Christ Now the Doctrine of the true Church consisteth in the Sentences and Decrees which we are bound by the Commandment of God to believe and obey and no Doctrine is to be proposed to the Church that is repugnant to the holy Scripture or not contained therein And the Church hath Authority to judge and determine in Controversies of Faith according to Scripture to interpret and expound the Word of God with respect to the Analogy of faith Rom. 12.6 And though she be the Witness and Keeper of Gods written Word yet may not inforce any thing to be believed as necessary to Salvation that is either contrary or beside the Word of God The visible Church is a company among men imbracing and professing the true and uncorrupt Doctrine of the Law and the Gospel and using the Sacraments aright according to Christs Institution and professing Obedience unto the Doctrine in which company are many ungenerate or hypocrites consenting notwithstanding to the Doctrine The invisible Church is a company of those which are Elected to eternal life in whom a new life is begun here by the Holy Ghost and is perfected in the world to come They which are in this invisible Church never perish neither are any hypocrites therein And it is called Invisible not that the men are invisible but because their Faith is so that we cannot certainly discern the godly from the hypocrites And although this Universal invisible Church is that Militant Church which remaineth as yet in the field and is fighting on Earth yet it is and lieth hid in the visible Church so that in this respect there is as it were no more difference between them then between a whole and a part Now those visible Churches which refuse to be governed by Christs Word but are by Humane Traditions playing the Adulteresses by committing Idolatry are not of this Catholique Church which is subject to Christ neither are Infidels that defie Christ Hereticks that deny him Ignorant persons that know not his Will Prophane persons that despise Worldlings that lightly esteem him nor any that persecute or scorn him in his Members Thus many have a Name of being of the Church who indeed are not And as for the Church of Rome they are departed from the Truth they have denyed the Faith they have defiled themselves with Idols they will not have Christs Righteousness imputed to them they set up their own Works and seek Justification by them they will not receive Christ to be their onely King and Priest they will merit Salvation for themselves and therefore they are not a true but a false Church The word Church signifieth an Assembly called together which calling is twofold viz. 1. Outward which is common to all that make profession of the Gospel in this respect
not things unlawful unpossible and unwarranted by the Word of God not things whereof we are uncertain whether they please God or not but such things as the Scripture warranteth being the true Rule of all right ways the Record of Gods Revealed Will. 5. That being thus made it is carefully to be kept and religiously to be performed having an eye to that party with whom we have to deal For as Vows are to be made with reverence so are they to be performed with care and diligence otherwise we grosly abuse the Majesty of God and take his Name in vain So that Vows are not in themselves unlawful or to be condemned so as they be restrained and bounded in the compass of the Law of God Consider farther in Vows these Particulars viz. 1. If they be made of any thing flat against the Word of God they cannot binde or tye us to the performance thereof for all the force and power of binding us is to be borrowed and derived from the Word of God otherwise they have no strength or efficacy to constrain or command 2. They must not be made of such persons as want sufficient Reason Judgement Discretion and Understanding as Children Fools or Furious persons 3. They must be so made as they may stand with Christian Liberty for we may not in any sort make that absolutely Necessary which God hath left free unto us ensnaring the Conscience and abridging the Liberty which Christ hath purchased contrary to the Commandment of the Apostle Gal. 5.1 4. That a Vow made of a thing unpossible is no Vow at all but an intolerable presumption and a wilful tempting of God 5. They must not be against a mans general or particular Calling that is neither against his calling as he is a Christian neither against that special calling wherein he liveth 6. They must not be rash heady sudden idle or unadvised but made with Advice Meditation and Deliberation for rash Vows are not lawful though the things vowed may be done lawfully 7. They ought all to be of great moment and importance not idle and trifling toys like the Popish Vows whereof one voweth a Pilgrimage to the Saints another to fast or eat no Flesh at such a Feasts Even whereof the one is superstitious and the other devilish 1 Tim. 4.1 3. 8. They must not be made for false and wrong ends as conceit of Merit and opinion of deserving the favor of God and Everlasting Life For the ends which we respect must be good as to exercise and stir up the gifts of Faith Prayer Obedience Repentance and other graces of the Spirit and to testifie our Thankfulness to God for Blessings received at his hand They must not be to binde God unto us but us the closer unto him in a more strict course of life 9. They must come from a free heart performed willingly and chearfully unto God 10. We must pay our Vows without delay we must not put off the time Gen. 33.1 Exod. 5.3 lest the Lord hold us guilty of taking his Name in vain The blister'd Tongues of men scarce ought can vent Without the Breach of this Commandement We cannot sigh reprove admire nor fit Expressions to the fancy of our Wit Without the Breach thereof Courtiers sick For want of words make it their Rhetorick And Poets swear they are undone unless They may have license for some Prophaneness But let all such as Take Gods Name in vain Take heed they Take not Hell too for their pain The Fourth Commandment Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath day Six days thou shalt labor and do all that thou hast to do c. THe Sum of this Commandment setteth out a certain Day wherein God will have men to sever themselves from their ordinary labors and to apply themselves wholly to his Service As God rested the Seventh day after the Creation So Christ having ended the Work of the New Creation rested on this day from the Work of Redemption And as Christ did substitute the last Supper in room of the Passover So he substituted the First day of the Week in room of the Jews Sabbath to be a day set apart to his own Worship From Adam to our Savior Christ the Sabbath was the Seventh day of the Week but from Christ and his Apostles it is the First of the Week that is the Lords day which was instituted for the Seventh day or Sabbath day in respect of Christs Resurrection Now Christ in changing the Sabbath day from the Seventh day to the Eighth did not change the Moral Law for that change was no change of the Substance but of the Circumstance of Time for the Substance of that Law is the enjoyning of a Seventh days Rest unto the Lord now though a Seventh day from the Creation be not kept yet a Seventh day is kept still Hence then doth the Sectarist vainly hold That all days are now alike and none more a Sabbath then another For whereas they alledge We are free from the Law Rom. 7. it is meant of the Ceremonial Law the heavy yoke whereof Christ took from our shoulders and if in any place freedom from the Law be spoken of it is either meant of the Ceremonial and Judicial or of the Rigor of the Moral Law enacting perfect Obedience in every point or else threatning condemnation Neither is that true which is alledged Every day is a Sabbath to a Christian for it is Gods express Command Six days shalt thou labor yet not excluding our daily Service to God This continual Sabbath will not be till we come to Heaven Isa 66.23 Neither may it be in the liberty of the Church to change the Sabbath day again for as it was not at the first changed without Christs Authority so it can receive no further change without him And if the Church had this power then might it be said to be Lord of the Sabbath yet without adjoyning any opinion of such necessity of this unalterableness in the Church as to think it the least part of any ceremonial Worship it being now the Lords day no Jewish Sabbath And this is an unchangeable Rule That one day in Seven neither more nor less is Moral and Perpetual And although the Jews that believed changed the day which was ceremonial yet altered they not the Morality of one in Seven For in the first change they kept two Sabbaths together the Jewish the Seventh day of the week past in memorial of the Work of Creation which was past the Christian the First day which was immediately next the other and the First of the week to come in Remembrance of the Work of Redemption being our Sabbath at the Resurrection of Christ for the time following which is impossible ever to be changed again That which is shadowed forth in the Legal Sabbath is begun in the Spiritual and is perfected and consummated in the Heavenly Sabbath The Breach of this Sabbath is the main sin of the world nay Humane Inventions
and Traditions are ordinarily better observed and more regarded then this Commandment of God The people indeed would rather go to Church then to work but to carnal Delights and Recreations rather then either forgetting the Memento wherewith the Lord more specially commands as well due preparation before as unsophisticate performance in the actual celebration of this holiest of days Such as make no conscience to take the Lords day from him are Spiritual Thieves and meddle with that which is not their own never considering the wrong and injury that they offer unto the Almighty God rested on the Seventh day that is he ceased to create any New parts of the World as being now perfect and such as he would have it to be Good Reason therefore had the Lord of this day on pain of Eternal death of Body and Soul in Hell the place of the Damned strictly to charge and command that every Soul keep this whole day holy to his glory How dares then any creature-Man think his own thoughts speak his own words or do his own works on this glorious day Isa 58.13 the Lords own holy day He that walks away this day in vain Discourse idle Pastimes and sinful Recreations steps every step he thus prophanely steps one step forward to Eternal Death He that gathered but Sticks thereon was stoned to death because he had not kept that Statute which God had enacted as by solemn Proclamation That all sorts that profess themselves his Servants should wait upon him on the Sabbath It was Christs own custom to preach the Gospel in the Synagogues on this day so also the Disciples Acts 20.17 17.1 2. 1 Cor. 16.11 The Doors of the Temple were shut the six days but opened from morning until the evening upon the Seventh day Ezek. 46.1 2. And this sanctifying of the Lords day is a Moral Duty and bindes perpetually otherwise we should have but Nine Commandments whereas they are often called the Ten Words Exod. 34.28 Deut. 14.13 10.4 And Christ came not to destroy but to fulfil and keep the Law Mat. 5.17 Know then we may not make this day a day of vain pleasures and carnal delights a day of Sports and Recreations thinking it sufficient if we follow not the works of our Calling neither may we on this day go or ride about our worldly matters to buy bargain sell and talk with others robbing God of his day to spare one of our own neither is it sufficient to observe onely so much of this day as is enjoyned by Laws and Injunctions of men and prophane the rest of it thereby dividing the Lords day between God and our selves And every sin is so much the greater by how much less the thing is for which men sin I say the less the thing is for which a man will sin and transgress the Law of God the greater always is his sin because the greater is his contempt of God Thus was it with him that gathered Sticks on the Sabbath day and was stoned to death for his pains And thus it is with such as recreate away the Sabbath by walking the Fields who offend God more therein then he that worketh thereon in his Calling for his Necessity Yet here by the way we are to beware of a Jewish Superstition which Christ often refutes in the Gospel that is to think it unlawful to perform on the Sabbath day whatsoever works belonging to the necessity either of his own life or of others for by the end of the Commandment it appears That such works onely are forbidden as hinder the Exercise of the Ministery of Gods Word The parts of this Commandment are two viz. 1. The Commandment That the Sabbath be sanctified that is that it self viz. the Seventh day be allotted for Gods Service Gen. 2.3 Exod. 20.11 16.26 20.10 2. The Reason of the Commandment drawn from Gods Rest on the Seventh day after the Creation and his hallowing thereof Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day that is with great care and Religion and that for these Reasons 1. Because the breach and violating of the Sabbath is the breach and violating of the whole Worship of God for the neglect of the Ministery soon corrupts the whole Doctrine and Worship of God 2. Because by the exacting of this Typical Sabbath God would signifie the greatness and necessity of the Spiritual Sabbath 3. Because God will have the external Sabbath to serve for the beginning and perfecting of the Spiritual Sabbath in us In this Commandment we are commanded to keep holy the Sabbath day which is done 1. By preparing our selves by Prayer and emptying our hearts of sin 2. By assembling together to Pray unto God to Praise him to hear his holy Word and to Receive the blessed Sacraments 3. By meditating upon Gods Works and the Word which we have heard suffering it so to work in us as that we may be furthered in all holiness of life 4. By collecting and distributing to the Poor by visting the sick and reconciling dissentions among Neighbors In this Commandment is forbidden all Prophaning of the Sabbath which is 1. By doing worldly works which are not of present necessity by journeying about worldly Affairs idle resting or absenting our selves from the publike Duties of Gods Word and Worship 2. By forgetfulness of the Sabbath upon the six days by which we often bring upon our selves a necessity of prophaning the same 3. When being Parents or Governors we leave such as are under our charge to their liberty upon that day The Reasons of this Commandment are 1. Partly expressed therein and are taken 1. From the Lords Example who rested the Seventh day from all his works of Creation 2. From his Blessing inseparably linked unto the hallowing of this day 2. Partly enfolded therein are these 1. The Law of the Sabbath is Ancient and was of force in Paradice before Mans Fall 2. Because it is most Equal the Lord allowing us six days to labor in 3. Because the Seventh is the Lords peculiar day so that without Sacriledge we cannot any way prophane it God will have all our children and family to cease from their labors on this day for two causes 1. That these also may be brought up by their Parents and Masters in the service of God and may be admitted unto the Ministery of the Church 2. Because he will have especially on the Sabbath day Love and Bountifulness towards our Neighbors to be shewed and seen in the Church Strangers also are commanded to intermit their labors and that if they were converted to true Religion because they were of the houshold of the Church if they were Infidels it is commanded them not in respect of themselves but in respect of the Israelites and that especially for these two Reasons 1. Lest by their ill Example they should give offence unto the Church 2. Lest their liberty might be an occasion to the Jews to accomplish by them those labors which it was
commending their Errors and Vices or not advising them according to their place with due Reverence of enormous and pernicious faults committed by them The Duties of Magistrates may be reduced to these Heads viz. 1. To see that God be honored and that the good things taught and established be done as God hath appointed 2. To give Judgement faithfully and speedily in matters belonging to their Judgement 3. To command the observing and keeping of the Decalogue 4. To execute the Decalogue or the Commandments of the Decalogue that is to observe and maintain the obedience thereof by punishing them that transgress against Discipline either in Goods Name Body or Life 5. To Enact some positive Laws for maintenance of Civil Order which otherwise would not stand serving also for the keeping and obedience of the Decalogue The Vices contrary to the Duty of Magistrates viz. 1. Slackness or slothfulness viz. 1. Not to Require of the people the Discipline of the whole Decalogue 2. Not to Ordain those things which are required to the preservation and order of Civil Society 3. Not to defend the Innocent against Injury 4. Not to restain or to punish too lightly such as offend against the Discipline of the Decalogue or against the positive Laws 2. Tyranny which is 1. To Command things which are unjust 2. To Punish that which is no sin 3. To Punish more grievously then the degree of the fault doth deserve The Reasons wherefore Superiors ought in performance of their duty to go before others viz. 1. By vertue of their Authority they bear Gods Image therefore in doing their duty they honor that Image 2. By reason of their pluce they ought to go before such as are under them 3. A saithful performance of their duty is a special means to keep their Inferiors in compass of theirs 4. Their Failing in duty is exemplary it causeth others under them to fail in theirs and so it is a double sin 5. Their Reckoning at the great Day of Account shall be the greater for of them who have received more more shall be required The general duty of the Husband to the Wife viz. 1. To provide for her what is meet not onely as she is his Wife but as she may be his Widow 2. To give honor to her as to the weaker vessel that is to bear with her infirmities and weakness 3. To protect and defend her to be a covering unto her head The general duty of the Wife to her Husband viz. 1. To Recompence his care over her in providing things necessary for the houshold and to do good for her Husband all the days of her life 2. To Reverence her Husband that he may be a vail and a covering before her eyes The duty of the housholder viz. 1. To provide for his Houshold the things that belong unto their Soul by a familiar Catechizing and Examination and to be the mouth of his Family in constant Prayer 2. To provide for the things belonging unto this life that is to give to every one that is meet in his place and Calling and they of the house are to submit themselves to the order of the house so it be good 3. To command such things as are just and possible to prescribe just and lawful labors not unlawful not unpossible not too burthensom and unnecessary to give them honestly their wages for their labors and to govern them by upright domestical Discipline Masters of families may transgress 1. By permitting of idle slothfulness and licentionsness 2. By unjust Commands and Exactions 3. By defrauding their Servants of their Wages 4. Through too much rigor and severity The duties of married persons 1. Spousal Faith and Troth for mutual love each to other onely continually constantly 2. Community of goods and a sympathy or fellow feeling in evils and calamities 3. The bringing forth and bringing up of children 4. A mutual bearing with infirmities with a desire to cure them Again the common mutual duties concerning Man and Wife are twofold 1. Absolutely necessary for the being and abiding of Marriage whereof there are two kindes 1. Matrimonial Amity 1 Cor. 7.10 11. 2. Matrimonial Chastity 1 Thess 4.4 2. Needful and requisite for the well-being and well-abiding of marriage which may also be reduced to these two Heads 1. Such as they are mutually to perform to each other as 1. A loving Affection of each other 2. A provident care of one for another respecting The Soul of each other The Body of each other Goodname of each other The goods of each other 2. Such as both of them are joyntly to perform to others which Duties respect either 1. Such as are in or of the family 2. Such as are out of the family Directions for preservation of Concord betwixt Man and Wife viz. 1. All Offences must be avoided as much as possible may be by both parties 2. When an Offence is given by the one party it must not be taken by the other but meekly passed by 3. If both be incensed together both must strive which shall first offer Reconciliation 4. Children Servants or any other must not be bolstered up by the one against the other 5. They must avoid making of Comparisons in any kinde whatsoever prejudicial to either 6. They must take heed of and never entertain the least rash and unjust Jealousie 7. In all things that may stand with a good Conscience they must endeavor to please each other 8. They must joyntly persevere in fervency of Prayer to God for his Blessings to be continued on them in the estate wherein they are united by his Providence For the yet better understanding of this Commandment we must know That Subjection is twofold 1. Of Reverence whereby one testifieth an eminency and superiority in them whom he reverenceth This is proper to Inferiors 2. Of Service whereby one in his place is ready to do what good he can to another This is common to all Christians Again Subjection is twofold 1. Necessary which is the Subjection of Order or that degree of Inferiority wherein God hath placed all Inferiors and whereby he hath subjected them to their Superiors that is set them in a lower degree 2. Voluntary which is the Subjection of Duty or that dutiful respect which Inferiors carry towards those whom God hath set over them whereby they manifest a willingness to yield to that order which God hath established which ought to be added to the Necessary Subjection Likewise League or Society betwixt Man and Man People and People is twofold viz. 1. The League of Concord when men binde themselves in peace one with another And this may be had with all men Believers and Unbelievers good or bad Have peace with all men Rom. 12.18 2. The League of Amity when men binde themselves one to another in special Love beside their outward Concord And this kinde of peace ought onely to be had with true Believers In a word the Duty 1. Of Magistrates is to procure
By Consent or Assistance so Saul in keeping the garments of them that stoned Stephen 4. By Provocation this Paul forbids Eph. 6.4 5. By Negligence or Silence of this too many Ministers are guilty 6. By Flattery when men sooth up others in Sin 7. By Connivance or slight Reproof so Eli in rebuking his Son 8. By Participation so such as are Receivers of Thieves are guilty of Theft 9. By Defending another in his Sin Why the Infirmities of the Saints are recorded in Scripture viz. 1. Not to disgrace them but to keep us from a vain opinion of our selves that we presume not on our own strength 2. To make us the more careful to look to our steps that we slip not as they did for fear we cannot rise as they did it is easie to fall but hard to rise 3. Having faln as they did we should by their Example learn to rise as they did having like Sins we should have like Repentance that we may have like Forgiveness Now the Sin against the Holy Ghost whereof he is the object not in regard of his Essence or Person but in regard of his Office or Operation consisteth of these Degrees viz. 1. A rejecting of the Gospel Heb. 8.29 2. A spightful rejecting thereof under which are comprised Malice and Hatred of Heart Blasphemy of the Tongue and Persecution 3. A spightful rejecting of the Gospel against Knowledge Heb. 10.26 4. A spightful rejecting thereof after Knowledge against Conscience 5. A wilful Gainsaying and Opposition against the inward Operation and supernatural Revelation of the holy Ghost 6. A despighting of the Spirit in such things as he revealeth to them for their own good This unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost is distinguished differeth from many other sins which come very near unto it viz. 1. From many things against Knowledge yea and against Conscience also for they may be without malice of heart which this cannot be the Elect may fall into them but not into this David and Peter sinned against Knowledge and also against Conscience 2 Sam. 11. Matth. 26.70 2. From many sins committed on Malice against Christ and his Gospel which may be done out of Ignorance 1 Tim. 1.13 As Paul did before his Conversion 3. From Blasphemy and Persecution which may be done also in Ignorance or in Passion 2 Cor. 16.10 4. From Denial of Christ which may be done out of Fear like Peter or other like Temptations 5. From Apostacy from the Faith and Profession of Religion which also may be done not out of Malice but through the Violence of some Temptation like Solomon 1 Kings 11.4 5 6. And the Levites in Captivity who though barred from the Holy Things yet were admitted to do other Services in the Temple Ezek. 44.10 c. whereby it is manifest they fell not into this unpardonable Sin 6. From Presumption and Sinning with an high hand as Manasseh did 2 Chro. 33.13 7. From Hardness of Heart from Impudency and committing Sin with Greediness for so did the Gentiles which had not the Gospel Supernaturally revealed to them 8. From Infidelity and Impenitency yea from final Infidelity and Impenitency whereinto all the Reprobate fall which is not perfectly committed till Death but the Sin against the Holy Ghost is sooner otherwise in vain had Saint Johns Caveat been concerning the not praying for them 1 John 5.16 This Sin against the Holy Ghost is unpardonable not simply in regard of the Greatness and Hainousness of it as if it were greater then the Mercy of God and Sacrifice of Christ but rather in regard of that Order which God hath set down and that fixed Decree and Doom which he hath both established and revealed And though God is not bound to render man a Reason of his Orders and Decrees yet it hath pleased him to make known some reasons thereof in his Word for the better satisfaction of mens mindes and justification of his own proceedings 1. Because it is impossible that they who sin against the Holy Ghost should be renued again unto Repentance Heb. 6.4 5. 2. Because they utterly renounce and quite reject the onely Means of Pardon which is Christ Jesus offered in the Gospel Heb. 10.29 3. Because they have wittingly so wholly cast themselves into Satans power and utterly renounced to have to do with God having as it were subscribed to be Satans and ever to be with him and on his side being certified in their hearts that they are wholly forsaken of God and shall be damned And thereupon they like the damned in Hell blaspheme God whom they have renounced and with spight oppugn the Gospel through an inward hatred of God the Author of Christ the Matter and of the Holy Ghost the Revealer thereof Seeing this Sin against the Holy Ghost is not committed without malice of the Will we must know that of this malice of the Will there be two Degrees viz. 1. Particular when a man wittingly and willingly sinneth against some particular Commandment as Acts 7.51 The Jews were stiff-necked and always resisted the Holy Ghost that is the Ministery of the Prophets in some things not in all 2. General Malice when a man is carried wittingly and willingly to oppugn all the Law of God yea Christ himself true Religion and Salvation by Christ and so reverseth all the Commandments This is the sin against the Holy Ghost And this being a general and universal Apostacy of this degree the Apostle saith If we sin willingly after we have received the Knowledge of the Truth there remaineth no more Sacrifice for Sins Heb. 10.26 The chief Points considerable in this Sin against the holy Ghost viz. 1. The Name it is called a Sin against the Holy Ghost not because it is done against the Person or Deity of the Holy Ghost for so he that sinneth sinneth also against both the Father and the Son but it is so called because it is done contrary to the immediate Action namely The Illumination of the Holy Ghost 2. The Efficient Cause of it which is a purposed and obstinate Malice against God and against his Christ 3. The Object namely God himself and the Mediator Christ Jesus for the Malice of this Sin is directed against the very Majesty of God himself and against Christ Heb. 10.29 4. The Subject in which it is This Sin is found in none at all but such as have been enlightned by the Holy Ghost and have tasted of the Gift of God Heb. 6.5 6. 5. The Elect cannot commit this Sin and therefore they who feel in themselves a sure Testimony of their Election need never to despair 6. This Sin cannot be forgiven not because it is greater then Christs Merit but because after the Commission thereof it is impossible for a man to repent 7. It is very hard to know when this Sin is committed because the Root thereof lurketh inwardly in the Heart That we may ever abhor the very thought of sin consider feriously these two most cursed
all to do it meritoriously 2. A Work that it may be meritorious must not be a Debt or Duty for then the doer deserves nothing but man when he hath done his best hath done no more then what by duty he was bound to do and having done all is but an unprofitable Servant 3. To make the work meritorious there must be a proportion betwixt the Work and Life Eternal the reward of the Work but man cannot do a work proportionable to Eternal glory for he takes all of God and can give nothing to him besides man is a Creature and therefore whatsoever he hath or can do is no more then what he oweth to God Again the End of good works is threefold especially viz. 1. In respect of God that his Commandment may be obeyed 1 John 3.22 That his will may be done 1 Thes 4.3 That we may shew our selves to be obedient children to God our Father 1 Pet. 1.14 That we may shew our selves thankful for our Redemption by Christ Tit. 2.14 That we may not grieve the Spirit of God Eph. 4.30 But walk according to the same Gal. 5.22 That God by our good works may be glorified Matth. 5.16 That we may be good followers of God Eph. 5.1 2. In regard of our Neighbor that he may be helped in worldly things Luke 6.38 That he may be won by our example to Godliness 1 Pet. 3.14 That we may stop our adversaries mouths 3. In respect of our selves that we may shew our selves new Creatures 2 Cor. 5.17 That we may walk as the children of Light Eph. 5.8 That we may have some assurance of our Faith and of our Salvation 2 Pet. 1.8 10. That the punishments of sin may be prevented Psal 89.32 And the promised reward obtained Gal. 6.9 Again more particularly thus we are bound to do good works in respect of God for these Reasons 1. Because of the Commandment of God who requires them at our hands 2. For the glory of God which is hereby in others also exalted 3. Because of that thankfulness which the regenerate owe to God as well for his Mercies temporal as his Blessings spiritual We are bound to do good works in respect of our selves for these Reasons viz. 1. That by our good works we may be assured of our Faith Matth. 7.17 2. That we may be assured that we have obtained remission of sins through Christ and are for Christs sake justified before God 3. That we may be assured of our Election and Salvation 2 Pet. 1.10 4. That thereby our Faith may be exercised cherished strengthned and advanced 5. That thereby we may shew forth an honest Life and Calling Ephes 4.1 6. That we may escape Temporal and Eternal punishments Matth. 7.19 7. That we may obtain Corporal and Spiritual rewards 1 Tim 4.8 We are bound to do good Works in respect of our Neighbor for these Reasons viz. 1. That we may be profitable unto them by our good Example and so edifie them 2. That Offences may be avoided Mat. 18.7 3. That we may win Unbelievers and by our words and deeds and example convert them unto Christ Luke 22.32 A more large explication of the Proofs of this Assertion That Good Works cannot Merit viz. 1. Our best works are imperfect Gal. 5.17 Works indeed good neither are nor can be performed of us without our renewing by the Holy Ghost neither proceed they from our selves but are the Gifts and Effects of God in us and we his Instruments unto whom he communicateth his Blessings in us as in the Subject by us as the Instruments The purity of which actions are supposed to be no farther pure then the purity and light of their Mindes may be supposed to be Thus on the light of Nature may follow actions morally good upon Spiritual light follow actions also Spiritually good or Good Works upon imperfect illightning imperfect Obedience on perfect illightning perfect Obedience also followeth which though in this life is not but deferred till the life to come 1 Cor. 13. yet are the godly in whose hearts the life of Faith is kindled pure in the sight of God when he beholdeth them in Christ though their good Works cannot be perfect so long as themselves who work joyntly with the Spirit are not perfect yet shall not their Imperfections nor the Imperfections of their works be imputed to them but the Perfection of their Saviors Satisfaction 2. The Good Works whatsoever we are able to do are all due Luke 17.10 therefore no man ought to be beguiled to slacken his strictness in avoiding any sin or his Conscionableness in performing any bounden Duty by a Suggestion of Satans that he may be over-just Eccl. 7.18 For in true Righteousness a man cannot be over-just but for a man to make a Righteousness unto himself which is not grounded on Gods VVord and therein to be strict is to be over-just and to perform more then is due unto God To count such things to be sin which by Gods Law are not made sin is to be over-just and to be censorious without just ground is to be over-just but we regulating our selves by Gods VVord when we shall have done all those things which are commanded us must say We are unprofitable servants and have done but that which is our duty to do and therefore far from meriting 3. Our VVorks are impure and vicious however they seem most good Isa 64.6 for if any works proceed good from us they are not ours but Gods good works in us as the Subject and by us as the Instruments neither are they good works which are imagined by us as seeming by us to be right and good or which are commanded by men but such onely which are done by a true Faith according to Gods Law and are referred onely to his Glory yet though the Righteousness of the holiest Saints considered in it self and compared with the perfect Rule of the Law be exceeding defective or opposed to the Righteousness of Christ be as nothing yet as it is a work of Gods holy Spirit in us proceeding from an heart purified by Faith all the imperfections thereof being covered with the perfect Righteousness of Christ it is acceptable to God and such a thing as we may receive much comfort by but not glory in or think to merit ought thereby 4. If we do any good VVorks they are not ours but are belonging to God onely who worketh in us both to will and to do of his own good pleasure Phil. 2.13 and therefore good VVorks in us can merit nought unless it be a Curse for those imperfections and defilements which are inseparably in them by reason of that staining quality which remains in our depraved Nature 5. No Creature whatever he do can merit of God by order of Justice even because the Creature can never do sufficient to merit the work and benefit of his Creation at the hands of his Creator 6. There can be no proportion betwixt our Works and the
which are 1. In respect of God his own glory 2. In respect of Men to confirm some truth or decide some controversie so that the particular Ends of all lawful oaths may be these four viz. 1. Allegiance and Obedience to Princes so the Elders of Gilead swore to Jephthah Judg. 10.11 So Jehoida the Priest made the guard of King Joash to swear 2 King 2.11 4. 2. To confirm a lawful League and establish a Covenant between men Thus did Abraham with Abimelech and he with Isaac Gen. 21.23 24. 26.28 29 31. Thus did Jacob and Laban Gen. 31.53 so did David and Jonathan 1 Sam. 18.3 20.8 23.18 3. For the deciding of Controversies between party and party which otherwise cannot be determined 4. To justifie our Religion and to binde our selves thereby to the true Worship of God Thus was it in the days of Asa 2 Chron. 15.12 13 14. 34.31 32. 6. The Properties of an Oath for as every Oath is not unlawful so every Oath is not lawful as when contrary to Gods Word Now it is the property of a lawful Oath to be undertaken of such things as are true certainly known possible godly necessary profitable weighty worthy so great a Confirmation and no way disagreeing with Gods Word no way prejudicial to his Honor or the Love we owe unto our Neighbor Again before at the taking of every Oath there must be consideration had of these particulars viz. 1. Of the thing in question that is to be confirmed 2. Of the nature of the Oath that is taken 3. Of the minde and true meaning of him that sweareth 4. Of the particular circumstances of time place and persons before whom we swear as if before the Magistrate remember these three Caveats viz. 1. That the Oath be administred lawfully not against Piety or Charity 2. That the Oath must be taken in the Magistrates meaning not in our own private sense 3. Not ambiguously but our words must be agreeable to what we conceive in heart 5. Of the just occasions of an oath which are chiefly these four viz. 1. When it may further Gods glory and Worship 2. When it may tend to the Preservation of our Neighbors life goods and good-name or to the furtherance of Brotherly love 3. When it lawfully serveth to relieve a mans own private necessity 4. When the Magistrate doth exact it by order of Justice 6. Of the event and issue of the Oath 7. Whether the party we are to deal with doubteth of the thing we are to speak of or not 8. If we doubt whether then it may not be passed with Truly and Verily or by doubling our Asseveration as Christ did 9. Whether there be not any other fit means to try out the matter before that we come to an Oath 10. When the matter is of importance and there is no other Tryal but by an Oath we must consider before whom we swear as the Judge or Magistrate Jer. 4.2 And by whom or what as by the Lord Lev. 19.12 In every lawful oath there is a double Bond 1. It bindes one man to another for the performing of the thing he sweareth to do 2. It bindes a man unto God for he that sweareth invocates God as a witness and a Judge of the Truth of his Assertion and he stands bound unto God till the thing sworn unto be performed if it be lawful and possible That a Christian may take a right and lawful oath is confirm'd by these Reasons drawn 1. From the end of an Oath for an Oath is a confirmation of Faith and Truth a deciding of Debates a Bond of Civil order and giveth and ascribeth the praise and maintenance of the Truth to God 2. From the nature of an Oath which is a Testification of the Truth and an invocation of God whereby we desire of him such things as are agreeable unto his Nature and Will manifested in his Word even that he will bear Record of the Truth 3. From Gods own Commandment Deut. 6.13 10.20 Isa 65.16 4. From the Examples and Practice of the Saints whose Oathes are in Scripture approved and such places of Scripture as forbid Oathes forbid onely rash Oathes and such as have not the lawful causes and conditions of an Oath There are two Times and cases wherein a man may lawfully Swear viz. 1. When the Magistrate ministreth an Oath unto a man upon a just occasion for he hath power in this case and therefore when he justly requires it of a man then may he lawfully swear Let no man therefore vainly imagine from the words of our Savior Swear not at all Matth. 5.34 that it is not lawful to take an Oath being thereto lawfully called by a Magistrate for Swearing is commanded as a part of Gods Worship Deut. 10.20 And Christs meaning in that place was not to forbid all Swearing simply but all Swearing after the Jewish maner and custom that is in common talk and communication as is plain in ver 37. For this is a Rule to be observed in the Interpretation of Scripture Things generally spoken must be particularly understood according to the circumstances of the present matter in hand as when Paul saith He became all things to all men 1 Cor. 9.22 if this should be taken generally we might say That with Blasphemers he became a Blasphemer c. But as that speech of Pauls must be restrained to things indifferent so this here of our Saviors is restrained to the Jewish Custom 2. When a man 's own Calling general or particular necessarily requireth an Oath And this is in four cases viz. 1. When the taking of an Oath serveth to maintain procure or win unto God any part of his glory or to preserve the same from disgrace In this regard Paul moved with a godly zeal useth an Oath in sundry of his Epistles 2. When his Oath serveth to maintain or further his own or others Salvation or preservation in Soul or Body 2 Cor. 1.23 Psal 119.106 3. When the Oath serves to confirm and stablish Peace and Society between party and party Kingdom and Kingdom Thus Abraham and Abimelech Jacob and Laban Gen. 21. 31. 4. When a man by Oath and not otherwise may free himself from temporal losses in which regard a man may lawfully by Oath purge himself from infamy and slander An Oath is to be used onely in case of necessity and that for these Reasons 1. Because God will not hold him guiltless that taketh his Name in vain which is done one way by using it negligently and unnecessarily 2. Because the end of practising an Oath is to decide Strifes and determine Controversies which disturb Peace and hinder Christian Charity Heb. 6.16 3. The Name of God is most fearful in Praises glorious in Holiness great in Might and doing Wonders therefore it ought not commonly to run in our mouthes without weighty and necessary cause An Oath doth not binde in these six cases 1. When it is against
the Word of God and tendeth to the maintenance of sin 2. If it be made against the wholesom Laws of the Commonwealth 3. If it be taken by such persons as want Reason as Children Ideots Mad-men c. 4. If it be made by those who are under tuition of others and have no power to binde themselves 5. When it is made of things impossible for then it is a vain Oath 6. If at the first it were lawful and afterward it become unlawful and impossible We must Swear by God onely and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because God hath commanded us to Swear by him onely as alone to be feared and worshipped 2. God will have Invocation to be used to himself onely and an Oath is an invocating of God 3. An Oath gives and ascribes unto him by whom we Swear the inspection and viewing of mens hearts the hearing of them and infinite Wisdom and Knowledge but God onely views the heart Joh. 2.25 4. By whom we Swear unto him we give and ascribe the executing of punishment and Omnipotency as whereby he must maintain the Truth and punish him that lyeth but God alone is Omnipotent and the executer of punishment Mat. 10.28 Reasons against Swearing by the creatures 1. An Oath is a part of Gods Worship Deut. 10.20 every part whereof must be referred to God directly but in indirect swearing by the Creatures the Oath is directly referred to the Creature and indirectly unto God namely in the Creature which is not lawful 2. A man must Swear by him that is greater then himself Heb. 6.16 and therefore God swar by himself because there was none greater to swear by ver 13. 3. Thou shalt Swear by my Name Deut. 6.13 Then God seems to prescribe such a form of Swearing wherein his Name is plainly expressed but in indirect Oathes by the Creatures it is otherwise 4. He that sweareth by the Temple sweareth by God Mat. 13.16 whence may be gathered That an indirect Oath is superfluous because it is sufficient that a man Swear by God onely and not by the Creature also Unto right and lawful Swearing is opposed 1. The refusing of a lawful Oath when one avoideth to take an Oath that tendeth to Gods glory and to the safety of his Neighbor 2. Perjury or Forswearing when wittingly and willingly a man deceiveth in an Oath either in bearing Witness or in Promise made to God 3. An Idolatrous Oath which is taken by another besides the true God 4. An Oath made to an unlawful thing as was Herods to perform whatsoever Herodias Daughter should ask 5. A Rash Oath made of lightness without any necessity or for no great cause Perjury is threefold or there are three kindes of Perjury viz. 1. When a man Swears that which he knows to be false when a man confirmeth by Oath that which he knows or thinks to be otherwise 2. When he Swears that which he means not to do this is deceitful Swearing when a man either about things past or to come Sweareth contrary to the true knowledge or purpose of his minde reserving a meaning to himself contrary to the meaning of the Magistrates demand according to which every Oath is given and so must be taken for if a man might lawfully frame a meaning to himself in Swearing he might easily delude all Truth and so should not an Oath for confirmation be the end of Strife but the breeder thereof through surmise of false meaning in him that Sweareth 3. When Swearing to do a thing which he also means to do yet afterward doth it not The breaking of a binding Oath as when a man upon his Oath promiseth to do a thing that is lawful and doth it not unless God after the Oath taken make the thing promised impossible to be done for then it is no longer binding In Perjury there must be these two things viz. 1. A man must affirm or avouch some thing against his own minde his own meaning purpose intention or perswasion his speech must not be answerable to that which is in his minde if he knoweth a thing to be false and swears it is false this is no Perjury 2. In Perjury there must be an Oath it is not Perjury to affirm a thing that is false unless he also swears to the thing he affirms falsly against his minde yet every Oath maketh not a direct Perjury unless it be a binding Oath for a man may swear unto a thing that is unlawful and afterward alter his minde and not perform his Oath without Perjury Now he sinned in so swearing and thereby obliged to Repentance yet he is not Perjured because the Oath was not a binding Oath The grievousness of this sin of Perjury appears by these three sins which are contained in it viz. 1. The uttering and maintaining of a lye 2. The calling on God to be a witness to a Lye wherein men do as much as in them lieth set the Devil himself the Father of Lyes in the room of God the God of Truth and so grosly rob him of his Honor and Majesty 3. In Perjury a man prays for a curse upon himself wishing God to be a witness of his Speech and a Judge to Revenge if he swear falsly so as herein a man is his own Enemy and as much as in him lieth doth cast his own both Body and Soul into Hell Now as touching Vows know That these four Conditions are Required in every lawful Vow viz. 1. Concerning the person of him that voweth that he be a fit person 2. Concerning the matter of a Vow that it be lawful possible and acceptable to God it may not therefore be sin not trisles or light matters nor things meerly necessary as to dye which cannot be avoided nor things impossible 3. Concerning the form of a Vow it must be voluntary and free Now that it may be so these three things are necessary 1. That it be made in judgement that is in Reason and Deliberation 2. That it be done with consent of Will 3. With Liberty of Conscience 4. Concerning the End of a Vow which is not to be a part of Gods Worship but onely a stay or help to further us in the same Now there are three special and particular Ends of a lawful Vow viz. 1. To shew our selves thankful to God for blessings received 2. To prevent sin to come by keeping sobriety and moderation 3. To preserve and encrease our Faith Prayer Repentance and Obedience Again in a vow consider 1. What it is is even a free and solemn Promise to God touching such things as please him tending to the glory of his Name the profit of our Brethren or the Repentance and Salvation of our own Souls 2. Who may Vow and they are onely and all such as are free and at liberty 3. To whom Vows are to be made not to Saints or Angels but to God onely and to him alone they are to be performed Psal 76.11 4. What we may Vow to God