Selected quad for the lemma: word_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
word_n church_n scripture_n unwritten_a 2,749 5 12.4307 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A64622 A body of divinitie, or, The summe and substance of Christian religion catechistically propounded, and explained, by way of question and answer : methodically and familiarly handled / composed long since by James Vsher B. of Armagh, and at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now printed and published ; whereunto is adjoyned a tract, intituled Immanvel, or, The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God heretofore writen [sic] and published by the same authour.; Body of divinity Ussher, James, 1581-1656.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1645 (1645) Wing U151; ESTC R19025 516,207 504

There are 25 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

except hee shew himself unto us not that hee is hidden in the darknesse for hee dwelleth in the light but that the dulnesse of sight and blindnesse of our hearts cannot reach unto that light except hee declare himself unto us like as the Sunne is not seen but by his own light so God is not known but by such means as hee hath manifested himself By what means hath God revealed himselfe By his Divine works and by his holy Word as the Prophet David plentifully and distinctly expressed in the nineteenth Psalm The Heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament shewth his handy work and so continuing unto the seventh verse touching his Works and from thence to the end of the Psalm touching his Word The law of the Lord is perfect converting the Soule the testimony of the Lord is sure making wise the simple What gather you of this That all curious searching to know more of God then hee hath shewed of himself is both vain and hurtfull to the searchers especially seeing by his Works and Word hee hath declared as much as is profitable for men to know for his glory and their eternall felicity Therefore Moses saith Deut. 29. 29. The secret things belong unto the Lord our God but those things which are revealed belong unto us and to our children for ever What bee the Divine works whereby God hath shewed himself The Creation and preservation of the world and all things therein so the Apostle to the Romans saith That all men are inexcusable seeing that which may bee known of God is made manifest within them for God hath made it manifest unto them For the invisible things of God while they are understood in his works by the Creation of the world are seen even his eternall power and Godhead Rom. 1. 19 20. Also preaching amongst the grosse Idolatrous Lystrians Act. 14. 17. hee saith that God hath not left himself without Testimony bestowing his benefits giving rain and fruitfull seasons from heaven filling our hearts with food and gladnesse And preaching among the learned and yet no lesse superstitious Athenians hee citeth and canonizeth the Testimony of the Poets to shew that God is not farre from every one of us for in him wee live move and have our beeing Act. 17. 27 28. For whosoever amongst the Heathen Poets and Philosophers which professed wisdome hath not been wilfully blinde have learned by contemplation of the Creatures of the world that God is the Maker and preserver of the same What use is there of the knowledge obtained by the Works of God There is a double use the one to make all men void of excuse as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 1. 20. and so it is sufficient unto condemnation The other is to further unto salvation and that by preparing and inciting men to seek God If happily by groping they may finde him as the Apostle sheweth Act. 17. 27. whereby they are made more apt to acknowledge him when he is perfectly revealed in his Word or after they have known God out of his Word by contemplation of his infinite power wisdome and goodnesse most gloriously shining in his Works to stirre them up continually to reverence his Majesty to honour and obey him to repose their trust and confidence in him and so the Children of God doe use this knowledge of God gathered out of his Divine Works as appeareth in many places of the Scriptures and especially of the Psalmes which are appointed for the exercise of the whole Church Psal. 8. Psal. 19. Psal. 95. Psal. 104. 136. c. Are not the Works of God sufficient to give knowledge of the onely true God and the way unto everlasting happinesse They may leave us to bee without excuse and so are sufficient unto condemnation but are not able to make us wise unto Salvation because of things which are necessary unto Salvation some they teach but imperfectly others not at all as the distinction of the Persons in the Godhead the fall of man from God and the way to repaire the same Where then is the saving knowledge of God to bee had perfectly In his holy Word for God according to the riches of his Grace hath been abundant towards us in all wisdome and understanding and hath opened unto us the Mystery of his will according to his good pleasure which hee hath purposed in himself as the Apostle teacheth Ephes. 1. 7 8 9. What course did God hold in the delivery of his Word unto men In the beginning of the world hee delivered his Word by Revelation and continued the knowledge thereof by Tradition while the number of his true worshippers were small but after hee chose a great and populous Nation in which hee would bee honoured and served hee caused the same to bee committed to writing for all ages to the end of the world for about the space of two thousand five hundred yeeres from the Creation the people of God had no writen Word to direct them Thence for the space of three thousand one hundred yeers unto this present time the Word of God was committed unto them in writing yet so that in half that time Gods will was also revealed without writing extraordinarily and the holy books indited one after another according to the necessity of the times but in this last half the whole Canon of the Scriptures being fully finished wee and all men unto the worlds end are left to have our full instruction from the same without expecting extraordinary revelations as in times past Were these Revelations in times past delivered all in the same manner No for as the Apostle noteth Heb. 1. 1. at sundry times and in divers manners God spake in times past unto the Fathers by the Prophets The diverse kindes are set down in Numb 12. 6. and 1 Sam. 8. 6. and may bee reduced to these two generall heads Oracles and Visions What call you Oracles Those Revelations that God as it were by his own mouth delivered to his servants and that ordinarily by Vrim and Thummim or by Prophets extraordinarily called What doe you understand by Visions Those Revelations whereby God signified his will by certain images and representations of things offered unto men as may bee seen in the Visions of Daniel Ezekiel Jeremie c. How were these Visions presented unto men Sometime to men waking sometime to men sleeping sometime to the mind sometime by the eyes to the imagination of men sleeping were offered divine dreams in expounding whereof we read that Joseph and Daniel excelled but now they together with all other extraordinary Revelations are ceased Where then is the Word of God now certainely to be learned Onely out of the Book of God contained in the holy Scriptures which are the onely certain testimonies unto the Church of the Word of God 1 John 5. 9. 2 Tim. 3. 15. Why may not men want the Scriptures now as
they did at the first from the Creation untill the time of Moses for the space of 2513. years First because then God immediately by his voice and Prophets sent from him taught the Church his truth which now are ceased Heb. 1. 1. Secondly traditions might then be of sufficient certainty by reason of the long life of Gods faithfull witnesses for Methusalem lived with Adam the first man 243. years and continued unto the Flood Shem lived at once with Methusalem 98. years and flourished above 500. yeares after the Flood Isaac lived 50. years with Shem and died about 10. years before the descent of Israel into Aegypt So that from Adams death unto that time three men might by tradition preserve the purity of Religion but after the comming of Israel out of Aegypt mans age was so shortened that in the dayes of Moses the first Penman of the Scriptures it was brought to 70. or 80. years as appeareth by the Psal. 90. 10. Thirdly God saw his true religion greatly forgotten in Aegypt Israel then falling unto Idolatry Ezekiel 20. 8. and having brought Israel then his people from thence did not onely restore but also encreased the same adding thereunto many more particulars concerning his service which were needfull for mens memories to be written Fourthly God having gathered his Church to a more solemn company then before it was his pleasure then to begin the writings of his will and therefore first with his own finger he wrote the ten Commandements in two Tables of stone and then commanded Moses to write the other words which he had heard from him in the Mount Exod. 34. 27 28. Fiftly thus God provided that the Churches of all ages and times might have a certain rule to know whether they embraced sound Doctrine or no and that none should be so bold as to coin any new Religion to serve him with but that which he had delivered in writing What is Scripture then The Word of God written by men inspired by the holy Ghost for the perfect building and salvation of the Church or holy Books written by the inspiration of God to make us wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. 2 Pet. 1. 21. 1 Pet. 20. 21. Joh. 20. 31. If that the Scriptures be written by men which are subject unto infirmities how can it be accounted the Word of God Because it proceeds not from the wit or mind of men but holy men set apart by God for the work of God spake and writ as they were moved by the holy Ghost therfore God alone is to be counted the Author therof who inspired the hearts of those holy men whom he chose to be his Secretaries who are to be held only the Instrumentall cause thereof When Jeremy brought the Word of God to the Jews they said it was not the Word of the Lord but he spake as Baruc the son of Neriah provoked him Jer. 43. 2. and so some perhaps in these days are so ungodly as to take the Jews part against Jeremy and all his fellowes How may it appeare therefore that this Book which you call the Book of God and the holy Scriptures is the Word of God indeed and not mens policy By the consonant testimony of men in all ages from them that first knew these Penmen of the holy Ghost with their writings untill our time and reasons taken out of the Word themselves agreeable to the quality of the writers both which kind of arguments the holy Scriptures have as much and far more then any other writings wherefore as it were extream impudency to deny the works of Homer of Plato Virgil Tully Livy Galen c. when as consent of al ages have reached delivered them unto us which also by the tongue phrase matter and all other circumstances agreeable are confirmed to be the works of the same Authors whose they are testified to be so it were more then brutish madnesse to doubt of the certain truth and authority of the holy Scriptures which no lesse but much more then any other writings for their Authors are testified and confirmed to be the sacred Word of the ever-living God not onely testified I say by the uniform witnesses of men in all ages but also confirmed by such reasons taken out of the writings themselves as doe sufficiently argue the Spirit of God to be the Author of them for we may learn out of the testimonies themselves as David did Psa. 119. 125. That God hath established them for ever Let me hear some of those reasons which prove that God is the Author of the holy Scriptures First the true godlinesse and holinesse wherewith the writers of the Scriptures shined as Lamps in their times and far surpassed all men of other religions which sheweth the work of Gods Spirit in them and how unlikely it is that such men should obtrude into the Church their own inventions in stead of Gods Word Secondly the simplicity integrity and sincerity of these Writers in matters that concern themselves those that belong unto them doing nothing by partiality 1 Tim. 5. 21. neither sparing their friends nor themselves so Moses for example in his writing spared not to report the reproach of his own Tribe Gen. 34. 30. 49. 5. 7. nor the incest of his parents of which he himself was conceived Exod. 6. 20. nor the Idolatry of his brother Aaron Exod. 32. nor the wicked murmuring of his sister Miriam Numb 12. nor his own declining of his vocation by God to deliver the Children of Israel out of Egypt Exo. 4. 13 14. nor his own murmuring against God in his impatiency Num. 11. 11 12 13 14. nor his want of faith after so many wonderfull confirmations Num. 20. 12. 27. 14. Deut. 32. 51. And though he were in highest authority and having a promise of the people to beleeve whatsoever he said Exod. 19. 8. 20. 19. 24. 3. he assigneth no place for his own sons to aspire either to the Kingdome or to the high Priesthood but leaveth them in the mean degree of common Levites all which things declare most manifestly that he was void of all earthly and carnall affections in his writings as was meet for the Penman and Scribe of God hereunto also may be added that he writeth of himself Numb 12. 3. that he was the meekest of all the men that were upon the face of the whole earth which no wise man would in such sort report of himself if he were left to his own discretion Thirdly the quality and condition of the Penmen of these holy writings some of whom were never trained up in the school of man and yet in their writings shew that depth of wisdome that the most learned Philosopers could not attain unto Some also were before professed enemies to the truth whereof afterwards they were Writers Amos was no Prophet but an Heard-man and a gatherer of wilde figges Amos 7. 14. Matthew a Publicane
an eye-witnesse of many wonders by which the Ministery of Moses was confirmed testifieth his writings to bee the undoubted Word of God the same doe the Prophets which continued the History of the Church in the time of the Judges both of Moses Joshua Likewise all the Prophets which successively recorded the holy Story and Prophesies by divine Revelation from Samuel unto the Captivity and from the Captivity to the building again of the Temple and of the City and sometimes after receiving the same book of heavenly Doctrine from the former age delivered them to their posterity And Malachi the last of the Prophets closeth up the Old Testament with a charge and an Exhortation from the Lord to remember the Law of Moses delivered in Horeb and to use the same as a Schoole-master to direct them unto Christ untill hee came in person himself Mal. 4. 4. Finally from that time the Church of the Jews untill the comming of Christ in the flesh imbraced all the former writings of the Prophets as the book of God Christ himself appealeth unto them as a sufficient testimony of him Joh. 5. 39. The Apostles and the Evangelists prove the writings of the New Testament by them and the Catholike Church of Christ from the Apostles time untill this day hath acknowledged all the same writings both of the Old and New Testament to bee the undoubted Word of God Thus have wee the testimony both of the Old Church of the Jews Gods peculiar people and first-born to whom the Oracles of God were committed Act. 7. 38. Hos. 8. 12. Rom. 3. 2. 9. 4. and the view of Christians together with the generall account which all the godly have made at all times of the Scriptures when they have crossed their natures and courses as accounting it in their soules to bee of God and the speciall testimony of Martyrs who have sealed the certainty of the same by shedding their blood for them Thereunto also may bee added the testimony of those which are out of the Church Heathens out of whom many ancient testimonies are cited to this purpose by Josephus contra Appion Turks and Jews who to this day acknowledge all the books of the Old Testament and Hereticks who labour to shroud themselves under them c. Are there not some divine testimonies which may likewise bee added to this Yes first the known Miracles which the devill was never able to doe that did so often follow the writers and teachers of the Scriptures Secondly the manifold punishments and destruction of those that have reviled and persecuted the same Are these motives of themselves sufficient to work saving faith and perswade us fully to rest on Gods Word No besides all this it is required that wee have the Spirit of God as well to open our eyes to see the light as to seale up fully into our hearts that truth which wee see with our eyes for the same holy Spirit that inspired the Scripture 1 Cor. 2. 10. 14. 37. Ephes. 1. 13. inclineth the hearts of Gods children to beleeve what is revealed in them and inwardly assureth them above all reasons and arguments that these are the Scriptures of God therefore the Lord by the Prophet Isaiah promiseth to joyn his Spirit with his Word and that it shall remain with his children for ever Esa. 59. 21. The same promiseth our Saviour Christ unto his Disciples concerning the Comforter which hee would send to leade them into all truth and teach them all things and to put them in minde of all things which hee had said unto them Joh. 14. 26. 15. 26. The Lord by the Prophet Jeremiah also promiseth to give his Law into their mindes and to write them in the hearts of his children Jer. 31. 33. And S. John saith to the faithfull that by the anointing of the holy Spirit which is on them they know all things 1 Joh. 2. 20. This testimony of Gods Spirit in the hearts of his faithfull as it is proper to the Word of God so it is greater then any humane perswasions grounded upon reason or witnesses of men unto which it is unmeet that the Word of God should bee subject as Papists hold when they teach that the Scriptures receive their authority from the Church for by thus hanging the credit and authority of the Scriptures on the Churches sentence they make the Churches work of greater credit then the Word of God whereas the Scriptures of God cannot bee judged or sentenced by any and God onely is a worthy witnesse himself in his Word and by his Spirit which give mutuall testimony one of the other and work that assurance of Faith in the Elect that no humane demonstrations can make nor any perswasions or inforcements of the world can remove Shew some further reasons that the authority of the Scriptures doth not depend upon the Church First because wee beleeve the Scriptures is a work of Faith but the Church cannot infuse Faith Secondly any authority that the Church hath it must prove it by the Scriptures therefore the Scripture dependeth not upon the Church Thirdly if an Infidell should ask the Church how they are sure that Christ dyed for them if they should answer because themselves say so it would be ridiculous when they should say because the Scripture teacheth so c. What books are the holy Scriptures and by whom were they writen First The books of the Old Testament in number nine and thirty which the Jews according to the number of their letters brought to two and twenty writen by Moses and the Prophets Rom. 3. 2. who delivered the same unto the Church of the Jews Secondly the books of the New Testament in number seven and twenty writen by the Apostles and Evangelists Rom. 1. 16. Rev. 1. 11. who delivered them to the Church of the Gentiles What language were the books of the Old Testament writen in In Hebrew which was the first tongue of the world and the most orderly speech in comparison of which all other languages may bee condemned of barbarous confusion but chosen especially because it was the language of that time best known unto the Church teaching that all men should understand the Scriptures onely some few portions by the later Prophets were left writen in the Chaldean tongue understood by Gods people after their carrying away into Babylon namely the 11 verse of the 10 chap. of Jer. six chapters in Daniel from the 4 ver of the 2 chap. to the end of the 7 chapter and three in Ezra the fourth fifth sixth Had the Hebrew Text vowels or points from the beginning as now it hath Our Saviour saith Matth. 5. 18. that not one jot or prick of the Law shall perish whereby it should appeare that the Law and the Prophets for of both hee speaketh immediately before had vowels and pricks God also by Moses commanded the Law to bee writen upon two great stones at the entrance
so full of Parables and Allegories as they are The whole Doctrine of salvation is to be found so plain that it needeth no Commentary and Commentaries are for other places that be dark and also to make more large use of Scripture then a new beginner can make of himself which we see necessary in all humane Arts and Sciences Further though speech of Scripture seem hard at first yet by custome it becommeth easie as reading doth to children Obj. 4. The godly Eunuch could not understand the Scripture without an Interpreter Acts 8. 31. Though he understood not some harder places yet that hindered him not from reading plainer places Obj. 5. The multitude of learned men that fall into heresies which they labour to confirm by Scripture proveth that the Scripture is dark It is their naughty hearts that come not with an humble and godly affection that maketh them doe so Obj. 6. But now we see by experience that there are many that daily reade the Scriptures and yet understand not the thousandth part of them They reade them not with care and conscience with prayer and study but like the women who are always learning but never come to the knowledge of the truth 2 Tim. 3. 7. Obj. 7. If the Scriptures then be so plain and perspicuous what need is there of an Interpreter First to unfold obscure places Acts 8. 31. Secondly to inculcate and apply plain Texts 2 Pet. 1. 10. 1 Cor. 14. 3. Why did God leave some places obscure in the Scriptures First that we might know that the understanding of Gods Word is the gift of God and therefore might beg it of him by continuall prayer Secondly lest we should flatter our wits too much if all things could presently be understood by us Thirdly that the Word for the high and heavenly mysteries contained therein might be accompted of which for the plainnesse might be lesse esteemed Fourthly that prophane dogs might be driven away from these holy mysteries which are pearls prized highly by the Elect alone Matth. 13. 45. but would be trodden down by swine Mat. 7. 6. Fiftly that wee might be stirred up to a more diligent search of the same Sixtly that we might esteem more of the Ministery which God hath placed in the Church that by the means thereof we might profit in the knowledge of these mysteries What assurance may be had of the right understanding of the Scriptures For the words it is to be had out of the originall Text or Translations of the same for the sense or meaning onely out of the Scriptures themselves Nehem. 8. 8. which by places plain and evident doe expresse whatsoever is obscure and hard touching matters necessary to eternall salvation Why must the interpretation of words be had out of the originall Languages Because in them onely the Scriptures are for the letter to be held authenticall and as the water is most pure in the Fountain by the springing thereof so the right understanding of the words of the holy Scriptures is most certain in the originall tongues of Hebrew and Greek in which they were first written and delivered to the Church out of the which Languages they must be truly translated for the understanding of them that have not the knowledge of those tongues What gather you from hence That all Translations are to be judged examined and reformed according to the Text of the ancient Hebrew and originall Chaldee in which the old Testament was printed and the Greek Text in which the new Testament was written and consequently that the vulgar Latin Translation approved by the Tridentine Councell for the onely authenticall Text is no further to be received of true Christians then it agreeth with the originall of the Hebrew and Greek Text. But what say you of the Greeke Translation of the old Testament commonly called the Septuagint approved by the Apostles themselves The same as we say of other Translations for although the Apostles used that Translation which was commonly received and read among the Gentiles and Jews that dwelt amongst them where it differed not in sense from the true Hebrew yet where it differed from it they left it as by many examples may be confirmed vide Hieron Prolog in Matth. How can the certain understanding of the Scriptures be taken out of the originall tongues considering the difference of reading in divers Copies both of Hebrew and Greek as also the difficulty of some words and phrases upon which the best Translators cannot agree Although in the Hebrew Copy there hath been observed by the Nazarites some very few differences of words by similitude of letters and points and by the Learned in the Greek tongue there are like diversities of reading noted in the Greek Text of the new Testament which came by fault of writers yet in most by circumstance of the place and conference of other places the true reading may be discerned and albeit in all it cannot nor the Translator in all places determine the true interpretation yet this diversity or difficulty can make no difference or uncertainty in the sum and substance of Christian religion because the Ten Commandements and the principall Texts of Scripture on which the Articles of our faith are grounded the Sacraments instituted the form of prayer taught which contain the sum or substance of Christian religion are without all such diversity of reading or difficulty of translating so plainly set down and so precisely translated by consent of all men learned in the tongues that no man can make any doubt of them or pick any quarrell against them Why must the true sense or meaning of the Scriptures be learned out of the Scriptures themselves Because the Spirit of God alone is the certain interpreter of his Word written by his Spirit for no man knoweth the things pertaining to God but the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2. 11. and no prophesie of Scripture is of any mans own interpretation for prophesie was not brought by the will of man but the holy men of God spake as they were led by the holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. 20 21. The interpretation therefore must be by the same Spirit by which the Scripture was written of which Spirit we have no certainty upon any mans credit but onely so far forth as his saying may be confirmed by the holy Scriptures What gather you from hence That no interpretation of holy Fathers Popes Councels Customs or practise of the Church either contrary to the manifest words of the Scriptures or containing matters which cannot necessarily bee proved out of the Scriptures are to bee received as an undoubted Truth How then is Scripture to bee interpreted by Scripture According to the Analogie of Faith Rom. 12. 6. and the scope and circumstance of the present place and conference of other plain and evident places by which all such as are obscure and hard to bee understood ought to bee interpreted for there is no matter necessary to eternall
the unity of the Godhead But doe you not beleeve the Godhead is to be divided whilst you beleeve that in one God are three persons No not divided into divers essences but distinguished unto divers persons for God cannot be divided into severall natures nor into severall parts and therefore must the persons which subsist in that one essence be onely distinct and not separate one from another as in the example of the Sun the beames and the heat What be those resemblances that are commonly brought to shadow out unto us the mystery of the Trinity First the Sun begetteth his own beams and from thence proceeds light and heat and yet is none of them before another otherwise then in consideration of order and relation that is to say that the beams are begotten of the body of the Sun and the light and heat proceed from both Secondly from one flame of fire proceed both light and heat and yet but one fire Thirdly in waters there is the well-head and the spring boyling out of it and the stream flowing from them both and all these are but one water and so there are there persons in one Godhead yet but one God Fourthly in man the understanding cometh from the soul and the will from both May it be collected by naturall reason that there is a Trinity of Persons in the Vnity of the God-head No for it is the highest mystery of Divinity and the knowledge thereof is most proper to Christians for the Turkes and Jewes doe confesse one God-head but no distinction of persons in the same How come we then by the knowledge of this mystery God hath revealed it in the holy Scriptures unto the faithfull What have we to learn of this That those are deceived who think this mystery is not sufficiently delivered in the Scripture but dependeth upon the tradition of the Church That sith this is a wonderfull mystery which the Angels doe adore we should not dare to speak any thing in it farther then we have warrant out of the word of God yea we must tye our selves almost to the very words of the Scripture lest in searching we exceed and goe too farre and so be overwhelmed with the glory How doth it appear in the holy Scripture that the three Persons are of that divine nature By the divine names that it giveth to them as Jehovah c. By ascribing divine attributes unto them as Eternity Almightinesse c. By attributing divine works unto them as creation sustentation and governing of all things By appointing divine worship to be given unto them What speciall proofes of the Trinity have you out of the old Testament First the Father is said by his word to have made the world the Holy Ghost working and maintaining them as it were sitting upon them as the hen doth on the egges she hatcheth Gen. 1. 2 3. Gen. 1. 26. The Trinity speaketh in the plurall number Let us make man in our Image after our likenesse Gen. 19. 24. Jehovah is said to rain upon Sodom from Jehovah out of heaven that is the Sonne from the Father or the Holy Ghost from both 2 Sam. 23. 2. The Spirit of Jehovah or the Lord spake by me and his Word by my tongue there is Jehovah the Father with his Word or Sonne and Spirit Prov. 30. 4. What is his name and what is his Sonnes name if thou canst tell Isa. 6. 3. The Angels in respect of the three Persons doe cry three times Holy Holy Holy Isa. 42. 1. Behold my servant whom I uphold mine elect in whom my soule delighteth I have put my Spirit up on him Hag. 2. 5. The Father with the Word and his Spirit make a Covenant What are the proofes out of the new Testament As all other doctrines so this is there more cleare as Matth. 3. 16. 17. at the Baptisme of Christ the Father from heaven witnesseth of the Sonne the Holy Ghost appearing in the likenesse of a Dove John Baptist saw the Sonne in his assumed nature going out of the water there is one Person he saw the Holy Ghost descending like a Dove upon him there is another Person and he heard a voyce from heaven saying This is my beloved Son there is a third Person Matth. 17. 5. At the transfiguration the Father in like manner speaketh of his Son Matth. 28. 19. We are baptized into the name of the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost John 14. 16. 26. 15. 26. 16. 13 14 15. The Father and Son promise to send the Holy Ghost Luke 1. 35. The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and the power of the Highest shall over-shadow thee therefore that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God Acts 2. 33. Therefore being by the right hand of God exalted and having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost he hath shed forth this which you now see and heare 2 Cor. 13 14. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the Holy Ghost be with you all Gal. 4. 6. God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts Tit. 3. 4 5 6. God saved us by the washing of the new birth and renewing of the Holy Ghost which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour What clear proof have you that these three are but one God and so that there is a Trinity in Vnity 1 Joh. 5. 7. It is expresly said there are three that bear Record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one What learn you of that the Apostle saith they are three Wee learne that the word Trinity although it bee not expresly set down in the word yet it hath certaine ground from thence What learn you of that that they are said to be three witnesses The singular fruit that is in the Trinity of persons in one unity of the Godhead whereby great assurance is brought unto us of all things that God speaketh in promise or threat seeing it is all confirmed by three witnesses against whom no exception lyeth What are they said here to witnesse That God hath given eternall life unto us and that this life is in that his Sonne 1 John 5. 11. How are these being three said to be but one They are one in substance beeing or essence but three persons distinct in subsistence Acts 20. 28. 1 Cor. 12. 4 5. Deut. 6. 4. Mark 12. 32. 1 Cor. 8. 4 5 6. Joh. 14. 16. 15. 26. 17. 1. If three persons among men be propounded whereof every one is a man can it be said that these three are but one man No but we must not measure Gods matters by the measure of reason much lesse this which of all others is a mystery of mysteries For the better understanding of this mystery declare unto me what a person is in generall and then what a person in the Trinity is
powers of our soules thereby to fasten our mindes and so to hold them during the exercise that no idle or vaine thoughts withdraw us from the same 2. Zeale in the Action with such Affections as are answerable to the matter in hand as in Prayer we must have a sure confidence in God that we shall obtaine the things we aske agreeable to his will In thanksgiving we must have a sweet feeling of the benefits that God hath given us in the Word and Sacraments we must come with affection to them What is required of us after the Action That we feele the fruit of it that is some increase either of knowledge of true feare or comfort for the strengthning of us in the duties we performe So also every one must examine themselves herein and all those that belong unto them else they are like unto them that having eaten a good meale by warme water doe give it up again What be the outward things that doe accompany Gods Worship 1. Ecclesiasticall Ceremonies making for Order and Decency 1 Cor. 14. 40. which are left to the appointment of the Church being of that nature that they are varied by Times Places Persons and other Circumstances 2. All comely and reverend gestures of the body as kneeling lifting up the hands and eyes to Heaven silence in the service of God and such like For the gestures of religious Adorations being here forbidden to be given unto Images are therein commanded to be given unto the God of Heaven Is there any use of our bodily behaviour sith he is a Spirit and looketh to the Heart Yes verily For 1. The whole Man and consequently the Body it selfe oweth duty unto God 2. It is a Glasse wherein the affections of the Mind are beheld 3. The Mind is the better holden in the thing affected and the better holpen and furthered in the inward Worship when both Body and Mind are joyned together notwithstanding the Mind must alwayes proceed in Affection else it is shamefull hypocrisie What gestures are most convenient for the Body Divers according to the divers Exercises of Religion as at the reading of the Word standing at prayer kneeling and therein to witnesse our humility by casting downe our eyes our confidence by lifting them up or with the Publicane to knock our breasts except our infirmities or the like Le ts hinder us herein So much of the right use of Gods Ordinances Wherein standeth the abuse of them 1. In rash negligent and carelesse dealing in any particular point of the worship of God 2. In using any thing that God hath commanded for his worship otherwise then he himselfe hath appointed 1 Chron. 15. 13. For the brasen Serpent abused was worthily broken in pieces 2 Kings 18. 4. and the Israelites for carting the Arke were worthily punished 2 Sam. 6. 3 7 8. What speciall abuses of the Word are here condemned To hang pieces of Saint Johns Gospell about Mens necks or to use any other Gospell to heale the diseases as for any man to charge a Devill to goe out of one as the Apostles did VVhat may be lawfully done in this cause We must and may pray onely unto God that he would command the Devill to depart for he is the Master that authorised him to goe thither VVhat speciall abuses of the Sacraments are condemned The receiving of them unworthily making them to bee Sacrifices 1 Cor 11. 27. 29. as is done in Popery VVhat of the Ministerie The turning of that which is given to edifie in Christ to other ends then those for which it was ordained and when Ministers exercise Tyrannicall Lordship over their flock or their fellow servants as the Bishops of the Church of Rome use to doe Luke 22. 25. 1 Pet. 5. 2 3. Or when in the execution of their function they seek themselves and not the edification of Gods people What of the Discipline and Censures When they are used in another manner and for other causes then God hath ordained Esa. 66. 5. VVhat of Prayer To aske evill things or to pray for such things as God hath made no promise of or for such persons as he hath made no promise unto as when men pray for soules departed or for those that sinne to death 1 Ioh. 5. 14 15 16. To pray in a strange tongue which we doe not understand to pray on Beads and use much babling as also to ayme more in our requests at the relieving of our necessity then at the advancement of Gods glory VVhat of thanksgiving To thanke God for things unlawfully gotten or come unto us VVhat of Fasting To make it a matter of merrit or to use superstitious choyce of meats as is done in Popery VVhat of Vowes To undertake rash Vowes to break or else to delay and deferre the paying of our lawfull Vowes as also to performe Vowes that are unlawfull Psal. 66. 13. 76. 11. Eccles. 5. 1. 5. Gen. 35. 1. VVhat defects are condemned that concerne the inward things required in the performance of all these parts of Gods worship 1. Want of understanding when we doe good duties ignorantly or thinke that we can please God by meaning well when that which wee doe is evill 2. Want of Zeale and Affection in performing God service 3. Hypocrisie when men make a greater shew of the service of God outwardly then they have a desire to serve him inwardly 4. Hearing Reading Meditating Conferring singing of Psalmes and receiving the Sacraments without Preparation Attention Reverence Delight and Profit 5. Praying without Faith Feeling Reverence Fervency not waiting for answer VVhat defects concerne the outward worship 1. All unreverent and unbeseeming Gestures 2. All Ecclesiasticall Ceremonies and Rites of Religion which are pugnant to Gods Word or not warrantable by the generall grounds thereof such as are not for Order and Comelinesse and Edification So much of the parts of Gods Worship prescribed together with the right use and abuse thereof What say you of such formes of Worship as are not prescribed by God in his Word We are commanded to serve God not according to the Traditions of men but according to his Will revealed in the Scripture Col. 2. 18. Mat. 15. 9. What followeth hereupon That no Power must be admitted in the Church to prescribe other formes of Worship not appointed by God himselfe in his Word What is then to be observed herein We must observe the Apostles rule and practise 1 Cor. 11. 28. where he saith That which I have received I have delivered unto you For if he might adde nothing to Gods Ordinances much lesse may we What is here forbidden In generall all VVill-worship whereby we make any thing a part of Gods service which he hath not commanded For how great a shew soever it have yet in that it leaneth to mans wisdome it is unlawfull Col. 2. 23. In particular to ordaine any other VVord or Sacraments then those which God hath appointed to devise any
true God and entertaining him in all the powers of the soule Com. 1. Honoring him with that worship which is to be given from men to him Every day as occasion requireth either in Solemne worship prescribed in the 2. Com. Glorifying his name in the common course of our life in the 3. Com. One day certain in the week prescribed in the 4. Com. Man respecting Such acts as are joyned with advised consent in duties which we owe unto Speciall persons in regard of some particular relation which we beare unto them prescribed in the 5. Com. All men in generall for the preservation of their Safety in the 6. Com. Chastity in the 7. Com. Goods in the 8. Com. Good name in the 9. Com. The first thoughts and motions of evill towards our neighbour that doe arise from the corruption of our nature in the 10. Com. Exercise thereof Repentance Fruits thereof in Resistance of sinne by Christian warfare where of the spirituall Armour Conflict with the World Flesh Devill in prosperity adversity here of bearing the crosse Abounding in good workes especially towards God in Praier the rule whereof is contained in the Lords Prayer wherein are to be considered the 1 Preamble 2 Petitions 3 concerning Gods glory 3 touching our necessities 3 The Conclusion and there of thanksgiving Fasting Our brethrens Edification in respect of their soules Almsgiving for the good of their bodies 3 Meanes whereby they are called The outward ministery of the Gospell wherein consider 1 Minister 2 Parts of the ministery Word Seales annexed thereunto viz. Sacraments for confirming the promises to the obedient which are either of Initiation or Admission into the Church Continuall nourishment Censures for ratifying of threatnings towards the disobedient in Word by admonition Deed by Suspension Excommunication 3 The kinds thereof namely the Old ministery before Christ called The old Testament where of the 1 Word of the Gospell more sparingly and darkly delivered 2 Types and Ceremonies 3 Sacraments Initiation Circumcision Nourishment Paschall Lambe New from the comming of Christ unto the end of the world called The new Testament wherein is to be considered the cleernes and efficacy of the Word Sacraments Initiation Baptisme Nourishment The Lords Supper 4 Divers states of the Church The world to come by the sentence of a twofold Iudgement Particular upon every soule as soon as it departs from the body Generall upon all men at once both in soule and body therein is to be considered 1 Iudge Christ comming with the glory of his Father 2 Parties to be judged Quick of whom there shall be a change Dead of whom there shall be a resurrection 3 Sentence and execution thereof where of the The torments of the Damned The joyes of the Blessed THE HEADS OF THE BODY OF DIVINITY DIVIDED INTO Two and fifty Heads 1. OF Christian Religion and the grounds thereof Gods Word contained in the Scriptures 2. Of God and his Attributes Perfection Wisdome and Omnipotency 3. Of Gods Goodnesse and Justice and the Persons of the Trinity 4. Of Gods Kingdome and the Creation of all things 5. Of the Creation of man in particular and the Image of God according to which he was made 6. Of Gods Providence and continuall government of his creatures 7. Of the good Angels that stood and the evill Angels that forsooke their first integrity 8. Of the Law of nature or the Covenant of works made with man at his Creation and the event thereof in the fall of our first Parents 9. Of Originall and Actuall sinne whereunto all mankind by the fall is become subject 10. Of Gods curse and all the penalties due unto sinne whereunto man is become subject as long as he continueth in his naturall estate 11. Of the Covenant of Grace and the Mediator thereof Jesus Christ our Lord his two distinct natures in one Person together with his Conception and Nativity 12. Of the state of Humiliation and Exaltation of our Saviour his office of Mediation and calling thereunto 13. Of his Priestly office and the two parts thereof Satisfaction and Intercession 14. Of his Propheticall and Kingly office 15. Of the calling of men to partake of the grace of Christ both outward and inward and of the Catholick Church thus called out of the world with the members and properties thereof 16. Of the mutuall donation whereby the Father giveth Christ to us and us unto Christ and the mysteriall union whereby we are knit together by the band of Gods quickning spirit with the Communion of Saints arising from thence whereby God for his Sons sake is pleased of enemies to make us friends 17. Of Justification and therein of justifying faith and forgivenesse of sinnes 18. Of Adoption whereby in Christ we are not only advanced into the state of friends but also of sons and heires and therein of the spirit of Adoption and Hope 19. Of Sanctification whereby the power of sin is mortified in us and the image of God renued and therein of love 20. Of the direction given unto us for our sanctification contained in the Ten Commandements with the rules of expounding the same and of distinction of the Tables thereof 21. The first Commandement of the choice of the true God and the entertaining him in all our thoughts 22. The second Commandement of the solemn worship that is to be performed unto God and therein of Images and Ceremonies 23. The third of the glorifying of God aright in the actions of our common life and therein of swearing and blaspheming 24. The fourth of the certain time set apart for Gods service and therein of the Sabbath and Lords day 25. The fift of the duties we owe one unto another in regard of our particular relation unto such as are our Superiours Inferiours and equals 26. The sixt of the preservation of the safety of mens persons and therein of peace and meeknesse 27. The seventh of the preservation of chastity and therein of temperance and mariage 28. The eight of the preservation of our own and our neighbours goods and therein of the maintaining of justice in our dealing one with another 29 The ninth of the preservation of our own and our neighbours good name and the maintaining of truth in our testimony and truth 30 The tenth of contentednesse the first motions of concupiscence which doe any way crosse that love we owe to our neighbour whereto for conclusion may be added the use of the Law 31 Of Repentance 32 Of the spirituall warfare and Christian armour 33 Of resistance of the temptations of the Devill 34 Of resisting the temptations of the world both in prosperity and adversity and here of patient bearing of the Crosse. 35. Of resisting the temptations of the flesh 36. Of new obedience and good works and necessity thereof 37. Of Prayer in generall and
a debt is a debt though a man knoweth it not and it is by so much the more dangerous as not knowing it he will never be carefull to discharge it till the Lords arrest be upon his back when his knowledge will doe him no good VVe may see many which heap sinne upon sinne and know also that they sinne and yet for all that cease not to make good cheer and make their hearts merry The countenance doth not alwayes speake truth so that sometimes under a countenance in shew merry there are stings and pricks in the Conscience Rom. 2. 15. which yet is oftentimes benummed and sometimes through hypocrisie it is seared as it were with a hot iron 1 Tim. 4. 2. but the Lord will find a time to awaken and revive it by laying all his sinnes before his face Psal. 50. 21. VVhen it is known what is the remedy of it It were wisdome not to suffer our guilt to run long on the score but reckon with our selves every night ere we lie down to sleep and look back to the doings of the day that in those things which are well done we may be thankefull and comfort our own hearts and in that which passeth otherwise from us we may call for mercy and have the sweeter sleep for if Solomon willeth us in that case of debt by suretyship to humble our selves to our Creditor and not to take rest untill we have freed our selves Prov. 6. 1 2 3 4 5 6. much more ought we to haste the humbling our selves unto God sith the bloud of Christ is the onely sacrifice for sinne Is the guilt of sin in all men alike No for as the sin encreaseth so doth the guilt both in regard of the greatnesse and of the number of our sins as appears out of Ezra 9. 6. where as sin is said to be gone above their heads so the guilt to reach up to the heavens VVhen the sin is gone and past is not the guilt also gone and past Christ taketh away both the guilt and the sin of the godly except originall sin which continueth during life but in the wicked when the act of sin is gone the guilt remaineth always as the strong savour of garlick when the garlick is eaten or as the scarre of a wound or the mark of a burning when the wound or burning is past VVhat is contrary to the guilt of sin The testimony of a good Conscience which is a perpetuall joy and comfort yea and a heaven to him that hath walked carefully in Gods obedience as the other is a torment of hell So much of the guilt what is the punishment It is the wages of sin sent for the guilt Rom. 6. 23. namely the wrath and curse of God by whose just sentence man for his sinne is delivered into the power both of bodily and spirituall death begun here and to be accomplished in the life to come Gen. 2. 17. John 3. 18 19. 5. 24. 28. 29. Lamen 3. 36. Esa. 64. 5 6. Rom. 6. 12. Gal. 3. 10. VVhat do you understand by bodily and spirituall death By the one I understand the separation of the soule from the body with all personall miseries and evils that attend thereon or make way thereto by the other the finall separation of both from God together with present spirituall bondage and all forerunners of damnation Are all the particular punishments expressed in the word which shall come for sin They cannot wholly be laid down they be so manifold and so divers and therefore it is said they shall come written and unwritten Deut. 29. 20. 28. 61. Against whom are these punishments addressed Against the whole estate of him that sinneth For whereas executions upon obligations unto men are so directed as they can charge either the person alone or his goods and lands alone so as if the Creditor fall upon the one he freeth the other as if he fall upon the person he cannot proceed further then unto his body the execution which goeth out from God for the obligation of sin is extended to the whole estate of the sinner both to the things belonging unto him and likewise to his own person VVhat be the punishments that extend to the things belonging to him Calamities upon his family wife children servants friends goods and good name the losse and curse of all these and unhappy and miserable posterity Matth. 15. 22. Psalme 109. 12. hinderances in goods Deuter. 28. in name ignominy and reproach Matth. 7. 12. Job 18. 17. Prov. 10. 7. losse of friends acquaintance c. What are the judgements executed upon his person They are executed either in this life or in the life to come What punishments are inflicted in this life They be partly outward partly inward What be the outward punishments 1. His want of dominion over the creatures and the enmity of the creatures against him calamities by fire water beasts or other means disorder in the world in summer winter heaven earth and all creatures 2. Shame for the nakednesse of body 3. All hunger in extremity thirst nakednesse penury poverty of estate and want of bodily necessaries 4. Wearinesse in following his calling with sweat of his browes with trouble and irksomnesse Gen. 3. 19. 5. Outward shame and infamy 6. Servitude 7. Losse of limbs or of the use of his senses deformities in body 8. Weaknesse of beeing want of sleep pains of body aches soars sicknesses and diseases of all sorts Deut. 28. Mat. 9. 2. even to the itch which few make accompt of therby to feel the anger of God and punishment of sin hither is to be referred pain in Child-bearing Gen. 3. 16. What be the inward punishments in this life 1. Sorrow and anguish of soul for these plagues and the like 2. Madnesse frenzy and foolishnesse 3. Blindnesse and distemper of the soul when God striketh it with an ignorant spirit with want of judgement to discern between good and bad with forgetfulnesse of holy things or hardnesse of heart Eph. 4. 17 18 19. which although for the time they be least felt yet are they more fearfull and dangerous then those whereof the sense is presently sharp 4. Terrour and vexation of spirit driving into hell guiltinesse and horrour of Conscience the fury of a despairing soul beginning even in this life to feel hell torments Deut. 28. 28. Heb. 10. 27. Esa. 33. 14. 5. Strangenesse and alienation from God 6. Spirituall bondage whereby sinfull man is become subject to the lust of the flesh the curse of the Law the rule of Satan and the custome of the world yea even blessings are cursed Malac. 2. 2. and prosperity causeth ruine Psal. 69. 22. In what sort is man in bondage unto Satan Both soul and body is under the power of the Prince of darknesse whereby man becommeth the slave of the Devil and hath him to reign in his heart as his God till Christ deliver him Col. 1. 13. Ephes. 2. 2. 2 Tim. 2. 26.
to the clearing of the understanding How then doth our Saviour perform his Propheticall office Two wayes outwardly and inwardly How inwardly By the teaching and operation of his holy Spirit Ioh. 6. 45. Act. 16. 14. How outwardly By opening the whole will of his Father and confirming the same with so many signes and wonders How did he this Both in his own person when he was upon the earth Heb. 2. 2 3. as a Minister of the circumcision Rom. 15. 18. but with the authority of the Law-giver Mat. 7. 29. and by his servants the Ministers Mat. 10. 40. Luk. 10. 16. from the beginning of the world to the end thereof before his incarnation by the Prophets Priests and Scribes of the old Testament Heb. 1. 1. 1 Pet. 1. 11 12. 3. 18 19. 2 Pet. 1. 19. 20 21. Hos. 4. 6. Mat. 2. 5. 6. 17. 23. 37. And since to the worlds end by his Apostles and Ministers called and fitted by him for that purpose 2 Cor. 4. 6. 5. 19 20. Eph. 4. 8. 11 12 13. How doth it appeare that he hath opened the whole will of his Father unto us Both by his own testimony Joh. 15. 15. I call you no more servants because the servant knoweth not what his Master doth but I call you friends because all which I have heard of my Father I have made knowne unto you and by the Apostles comparison Heb. 3. preferring him before Moses though faithfull in Gods house In what respect is our Saviour preferred before Moses 1. As the builder to the house or one stone of the house 2. Moses was only a servant in the house our Saviour Master over the house 3. Moses was a witnesse only and writer of things to be revealed but our Saviour was the end and finisher of those things What learn you from hence 1. That it is a foul errour in them that think of our Saviour Christ so faithfull hath not delivered all things pertaining to the necessary instruction and government of the Church but left them to the traditions and inventions of men 2. That sith our Saviour was so faithfull in his office that he hath concealed nothing that was committed to him to be declared the Ministers of the word should not suppresse in silence for feare or flattery the things that are necessarily to be delivered and that are in their times to be revealed 3. That we should rest abundantly contented with that Christ hath taught rejecting whatsoever else the boldnes of men would put upon on us Did he first begin to be the Prophet Doctor or Apostle of his Church when he came into the world No but when he opened first his Fathers will unto us by the ministery of his servants the Prophets 1 Pet. 1. 10 11. 3. 19. Heb. 3. 7. Is his Propheticall office the same now in the time of the Gospell that it was before and under the Law It is in substance one and the same but it differeth in the manner and measure of revelation for the same doctrine was revealed by the ministery of the Prophets before the Law by word alone after by word written and in the time of the Gospell more plainly and fully by the Apostles and Evangelists What have we to gather hence that Christ taught and teacheth by the Prophets Evangelists and Apostles 1. In what estimation we ought to have the books of the old Testament sith the same Spirit spake then that speaketh now and the same Christ. 2. We must carry our selves in the hearing of the word of God not to harden our hearts Heb. 3. 8. 15. For as much as the carelesse and fruitlesse hearing thereof hardeneth men to further Judgement for it is a two-edged sword to strike to life or to strike to death it is either the favour of life to life or the savour of death to death 2 Cor. 2. 16. How doth the Apostle presse this Heb. 3. verse 8 9 10. c. First he aggravateth the refusall of this office of our Saviour against the Israelites by the time forty yeares by the place the wildernesse and by the multitude of his benefits then he maketh an application thereof verse 12 13. consisting of two parts 1. A removing from evill 2. A moving to good What comfort have we by the Propheticall office of our Saviour 1. Hereby we are sure that he will lead us into all truth revealed in his word needfull for Gods glory and our salvation 2. We are in some sort partakers of the office of his prophecie by the knowledge of his will for he maketh all his to prophecie in their measure enabling them to teach themselves and their brethren by comforting counselling and exhorting one another privately to good things and withdrawing one another from evill as occasion serveth Acts 2. 17 18. So much of the Propheticall office of our Saviour Christ what is his Kingly office It is the exercise of that power given him by God over all Ps. 110. 1. Ezek. 34. 24. and the possession of all Mat. 28. 18. Psalm 2. 8 c. for the spirituall government and salvation of his elect Esa. 9. 7. Luk. 1. 32 33. and for the destruction of his and their enemies Psalm 45. 5. For what reasons must Christ be a King 1. That he might gather together all his Subjects into one body of the Church out of the world 2. That he might bountifully bestow upon them and convey unto them all the aforesaid meanes of salvation guiding them unto everlasting life by his Word and Spirit 3. That he might appoint Lawes and Statutes which should direct his people and bind their consciences to the obedience of the same 4. That he might rule and governe them and keep them in obedience to his Lawes 5. That he might appoint officers and a setled government in his Church whereby it might be ordered 6. That he might defend them from the violence and outrage of all their enemies both corporall and spirituall 7. That he might bestow many notable priviledges and rewards upon them 8. That he might execute his judgements upon the enemies of his subjects How doth he shew himselfe to be a King By all that power which he did manifest as well in vanquishing death and hell as in gathering the people unto himselfe which he had formerly ransomed and in ruling them being gathered as also in defending of them and applying of those blessings unto them which he hath purchased for them How did he manifest that power First in that being dead and buried he rose from the grave quickned his dead body ascended into heaven and now sitteth at the right hand of his Father with full power and glory in heaven Act. 10. 30. Eph. 4. 8. Secondly in governing of his Church in this world 1 Cor. 15. 25 26 27 28. continually inspiring and directing his servants by the divine power of his holy Spirit according to his holy word Esa. 9. 7. 30. 21. Thirdly by his
all nations ages and conditions of men Eph. 5. 23. Ioh. 10. 16. Gal. 3. 28. Rev. 7. 9. 17. and that my self am one of that company and a sheep of that fold Why say you that you beleeve that there is a Catholick Church Because that the Church of God cannot be alwayes seen with the eyes of man Why is this Church called holy Because she hath washed her robes in the blood of the Lamb and being sanctified and cleansed with the washing of water by the word is presented and accepted as holy before God Rev. 7. 14. Eph. 5. 26 27. Col. 1. 21 22. for though the Church on earth be in it selfe sinfull yet in Christ the head it is holy and in the life to come shall be brought to perfection of holinesse What learn you hence That if ever we will have the Church for our Mother or God for our Father we must labour to be holy as he is holy What is meant here by catholick Church The whole universall company of the elect that ever were are or ever shall be gathered together in one body knit together in one Faith under one Head Christ Jesus Eph. 4. 4 5 6. 12. 13. Col. 2. 19. Eph. 1. 22 23. For God in all places and of all sorts of men had from the beginning hath now and ever will have an holy Church that is Gods whole or universall Assembly because it comprehendeth the whole multitude of all those that have doe or ever shall believe unto the worlds end Doe all those make one body The whole number of believers and Saints by calling make one body the Head whereof is Christ Jesus Eph. 1. 10. 22 23. Col. 1. 18. 24. Having under him no other Vicar and so the Pope is not the Head of the Church for neither property nor office of the head can agree unto him What is the property of the Head To be highest and therefore there can be but one even Christ. What is the office of the Head First to prescribe lawes to his Church which should bind mens consciences to the obedience of the same and of such law-givers there is but one James 4. 12. Secondly to convey the powers of life and motion into all the members by bestowing spirituall life and grace upon them For the naturall members take spirit and sense from the head so the Church hath all her spirituall life and feeling from Christ who is only able and no creature beside to quicken and give life Thirdly to be the Saviour of the body Eph. 5. 23. But Christ Jesus only is the Saviour of the Church whom by this title of the head of the Church Paul lifteth up above all Angels Archangels Principalities and Powers And therefore if the Pope were the successour of Peter and Paul yet should he not therfore be the head of the Church which agreeth to no simple creature in heaven or under heaven So much of the Head where be the members of this holy Catholick Church Part are already in heaven triumphant part as yet militant here upon earth VVhat call you the Church triumphant The blessed company of those that have entred into their Masters joy Heb. 12. 23. Rev. 7. 14. 16. waiting for the fulfilling of the number of their fellow-members and their own consummation in perfect blisse Rev. 6. 7. VVhy is it called Triumphant Because the Saints deceased have made an end of their pilgrimage and labours here on earth and triumph over their enemies the world death and damnation Are the Angels of the Church triumphant No First because they were never of the Church militant Secondly because they were not redeemed nor received benefit by the death of Christ and therefore it is said that He took not on him the nature of Angels but the seed of Abraham Heb. 2. 16. VVhat is the speciall duty which the Church triumphant in heaven doth perform Praise and thanksgiving to God VVhat is the Church militant It is the society of those that being scattered through all the corners of the world are by one faith in Christ conjoyned to him and fight under his banner against their Enemies the World the Flesh and the devill continuing in the service and warfare of their Lord and expecting in due time also to be crowned with victory and triumph in glory with him Rev. 1. 9. 12. 11. 2 Tim. 4. 7 8. Who are the true members of the Church militant on earth Those alone who as living members of the mysticall body Eph. 1. 22 23. Col. 1. 18. are by the Spirit and Faith secretly and inseparably conjoyned unto Christ their head Col. 3. 3. Psalm 83. 3. In which respect the true militant Church is both visible Mat. 16. 18. and invisible Rom. 2. 29. 1 Pet. 3. 4. the elect being not to be discerned from the reprobates till the last day But are none to be accompted members of this Church but such as are so inseparably united unto Christ doubtlesse many live in the Church who are not thus united unto him and shall never come to salvation by him Truly and properly none are of the Church saving only they which truly beleeve and yeeld obedience 1 John 2. 19. all which are also saved howbeit God useth outward meanes with the inward for the gathering of his Saints and calleth them as well to outward profession among themselves as to inward fellowship with his Sonne Act. 2. 42. Cant. 1. 7. whereby the Church becommeth visible Hence it commeth that so many as partaking the outward means doe joyn with these in league of visible profession Act. 8. 13. are therefore in humane judgment accompted members of the true Church and Saints by calling 1 Cor. 1. 2. untill the Lord who only knoweth who are his doe make known the contrary as we are taught in the Parable of the tares the draw-net c. Mat. 13. 24. 47. Thus many live in the Church as it is visible and outward which are partakers onely outwardly of grace and such are not fully of the Church that have entred in but one step Cant. 4. 7. Eph. 5. 27. 1 John 2. 19. That a man may be fully of the Church it is not sufficient that he professe Christ with his mouth but it is further required that he believe in him in heart These doe the one but not the other or if they believe in heart they believe not fully For they may generally believe indeed that Christ is the Saviour of mankind but they know not whether themselves have part in him yea by their works they disclaim any interest in him VVhat say you then of such They are partakers of all good of the outward or imperfect Church and therefore their children also are baptized and admitted as members of Christs Church These are like evill citizens as indeed the Church is Gods city who are in truth but citizens in profession and name only For they as yet want the chiefest point which onely maketh a
have no other Gods before him that is in the secret of our heart whereof he alone taketh notice So in the second by the words Make Bow Worship he forbiddeth any outward service of Religion to any other Wherefore must God be worshipped both by our bodies and our soules Because he is the Lord and Maker of them both 1. Cor. 6. 20. What gather you from hence That such as dare to present their bodies to a Masse or to any other grosse Idolatry and say that they keep their hearts to God are here convicted of falsehood and hypocrisie So much of the second Commandement in generall what are the particular branches of it There is here first required that all solemne religious Worship should be given to the true God and secondly that it be given to him alone and not communicated to anything which is not God So that the summe of the first part is Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Matth. 4. 10. How are we to worship the Lord our God By those meanes onely which himselfe approveth in his Word according to the saying of Moses Doe that which I command thee and doe no more Deut. 4. 2. 12. 32. What is here required First that we give unto God that Worship which hee himselfe hath prescribed in his Word Secondly that we give him that alone without addition or alteration What is forbidden First the neglect of Gods Worship or any of his Ordinances when we contemne or despise or leave undone that service which hee hath commanded us to performe unto him Secondly the adding any thing unto or taking any thing from the pure Worship when we serve him by any other meanes then that which he himselfe hath commanded What are we to consider in the pure worship of God which he hath prescribed in his Word 1. The parts of it 2. The right manner of using of it What be the parts of it They are partly such as we give unto God and partly such as God giveth unto us What is required of us touching these kinds 1. That we use these things that God hath given us to that end that God hath given them for 2. That neither in giving to God nor taking from him we devise any thing of our owne to serve him withall What are the things God giveth us to serve him by His Creatures in the first place and his Word Sacraments Ministery Discipline and Censures of the Church which we must use according as they are instituted of God What duties are here required Our presence at the exercise of Religion the preaching hearing and reading of the Word of God together with meditation conference and all other means of increasing our knowledge therein the administring and receiving of the Sacraments c. Acts 2. 42. How doe you worship God in these In the Creatures by beholding his glory in them in his VVord by diligent hearing of it and carefull beleeving and practising of it in his Sacraments by receiving them duely in the Ministery and Censures by submitting our selves to them VVhat are the things that we give unto God They are either more or lesse ordinary VVhat are the more ordinary 1. To pray to God both publickly and privately 2. To praise God both alone and with others Are these duties required of all Christians Yea every true Christian must offer this Sacrifice to the Lord every day For in all ages and at all times it hath been the practise of Gods Saints to offer unto God the Sacrifice of Prayer and Praise as we may see by the practise of Daniel and Peter who went up at noone to pray Acts 10. 9. and Isaac who went out at Eventide to pray in the Fields Gen. 24. 63. What are the parts of Prayer Three 1. Confession which is the Sacrifice of a broken Heart and wounded Soule 2. Petition for such things as we lack 3. Thanksgiving for such things as we have received What are the things lesse ordinary 1. Fasts publicke or private Joel 2. 12 15. 2. Solemne Thanksgiving for speciall Blessings Psal. 50. 14. whereunto Feasting also is joyned when speciall occasion of joy is given us 3. Making and performing holy Vowes unto God What is Fasting And abstinence for a time from all the commodities and pleasures of this life so farre as comelinesse and necessity will suffer to make us more apt to Prayer and more able to serve God What is a Vow A solemne promise made unto God of some things that are in our power to performe which we do to declare out thankfulnesse to strengthen our faith and to further us in doing of good duties wherein we are backward our abstaining from some evill whereunto we finde our selves especially inclined So much of the parts of Gods solemne Worship What is required to the right manner of using of the same Our carefull sincere and diligent behaviour in all his Service that every thing may be done as he hath appointed and no otherwise What are the things required hereunto They are partly inward partly outward the former whereof concerne the Substance the latter the Circumstance of Gods worship What are the inward As all the powers of the soule are charged to joyne together by the first and great Commandement in the entertaining and loving so by this in performing all acts of solemne worship to the true God therefore herein there must bee a concurrence as well of the understanding that we have knowledge of the particular service which wee doe Romans 14. 5. 1 Cor. 14. 14 15. as of the will and affection that we may worship God in Spirit and in Truth Joh. 4. 22. What things are requisite to the performance of this Three 1. A diligent Preparation and advisednesse before we come to any holy exercise 2. A right disposition of the minde in the action of it selfe 3. A comfortable departure upon the sensible feeling of the fruit thereof What is required in the Preparation before the Action That wee bethinke our selves before-hand about what things wee come and dispatch our selves of all the things that hinder us in the service of God which sith we must doe in things otherwise lawfull much more in things unlawfull What is further to be observed herein That every Preparation be answerable to the exercise whereunto wee are called as in the parts of Prayer for example 1. In Confession we must have a true feeling of our former sinnes 2. In Petition we must have the like sense of our wants and bethink our selves what need we have of the things we aske and strive against our staggering and doubting of Gods promises 3. In Thanksgiving we must call to minde at least Gods benefits bestowed upon us and consider the greatnesse of them And so in all other Services of God VVhat Disposition of the minde is required in the Action 1. A reverent diligent and earnest attentivenesse to the thing withall the
blessing of God upon the week going before What are the private duties that are to be performed out of the Church Such as we performe either in secret by our selves alone or in common with our families at home or others abroad both before the publick exercises in the Church the better to performe them and after the more to profit by them What be they in particular First Private Prayer Secondly Reading of the Word Thirdly holy Conference touching the Word of God and familiar talke of things belonging to the Kingdome of heaven Luke 14. 7. 16. Fourthly Examination of our selves and those that belong to us what we have profited by the hearing of the Word and other exercises of Religion Fiftly Catechising of our families Sixtly Meditation upon Gods Word Properties and Workes as well of Creation as of Providence especially that which he exerciseth in the government of the Church Psal. 80. 88. 92. Seventhly reconciling such as are at variance and visiting the sick relieving the poore c. 1 Cor. 16. 2. Neh. 8. 12. For these also are works of the Sabbath VVhat proofe have you of this continuall exercise and imployment 1. In the Law every evening and every morning were Sacrifices which on the Sabbath were multiplyed Numb 28. 9. 2. The 92. Psalme entituled A Psalme for the Sabbath to bee sung that day declareth that it is a good thing to begin the praises of God early in the morning and to continue the same untill night That wee may know then how to spend a Sabbath well declare more particularly how we may bestow the whole time in exercises of holines and first begin with the evening preparation Our care must be over night that having laid aside all our earthly affaires we begin to fit our selves for the Lords service that so we may fall asleep as it were in the Lords bosome and awake with him in the morning VVhat must be done in the morning when we awake We are to put away all earthly thoughts and to take up such Meditations as may most stirre up our hearts with reverence and cheerfulnesse to serve the Lord the whole day after wherein first we are to consider the great benefit of the Lords Sabbath and so cheere up our hearts in the expectation to enjoy the same Secondly to covenant with the Lord more religiously to sanctifie the whole day after In making of our selves ready what are we to doe Rising as early for the Lords service as we doe for our owne businesses and bestow no more time nor care about our apparell and such like then needs must we may then occupy our minde about such matters as bee most fit for that time which ordinarily may be these two 1. To thinke upon Gods goodnesse in giving us such apparell and other necessaries which many others want so that wee may judge all things we have rather too good for us then bee discontented with any thing we enjoy 2. Considering how well our bodies be apparelled and provided for to seek more to have our soules better apparelled with Christ Iesus Being up and ready what are we to set our selves to Wee must set our selves to our morning sacrifice either alone or with others if it may be some short Prayer for our preparation being used VVhat Meditations must we here enter into Two especially the one for that which is past the other for that which is to come VVhat for that which is past To cast our weeks account at least how God hath dealt with us in benefits and chastisements and how wee have dealt with him in keeping or breaking his Commandements that by both we may finde matter to comfort and humble us to move us to thankfulnesse for mercies received and to earnest suit and labour for pardon of our trespasses and supply of all our necessities VVhat for that which followeth To prepare our selves for the publick Ministerie and as it were to apparell our selves and make our selves fit to go to the Court of the Lord of Hosts with his children and before his Angels What things are necessary hereunto 1. A due regard whither we goe before whom what to doe and what ends wherewith to honour God and to receive grace from him 2. An earnest hunger so to use the meanes to Gods honour and our good 3. True faith that we shall enjoy our desire 4. Ioy and Thankfulnesse in the hope of such Blessings 5. Humility in regard of our unworthinesse 6. Vnfained purpose of amendment of life What must be added unto these To the Meditations fervent Prayer must be joyned and Reading for our furtherance in Gods service and such as conveniently can are to joyne together in a Christian Family to read pray and confer and Governours to instruct their Families in such matters as are then befitting Having thus spent the time privately what is to be done in publick We are to goe to Church in all comely sort before the publick Ministry is begun and then with all diligence to attend and to give consent thereunto and so to take to heart whatsoever shall be brought unto us that by all the holy exercises we may be edified in all needfull graces The publick Ministry ended what are we to doe We are to occupy our minds on that we have heard and when we come to place and time convenient to set our selves more especially to make use of it to our selves and others pertaining to us and to water it with our prayers that it may grow and bring forth fruit What say you to our diet and refreshing of our nature on this day Care would be had that it be such as every way may make us fitter for holy duties And to this end we are to season it with Meditation and speeches of holy things How is the afternoone to be spent 1. The time before the Evening Sacrifice we are to bestow either alone or with others in such Exercises as may best quicken in us Gods Spirit 2. For the Evening Sacrifices in all respects to behave our selves as in the Morning and to continue to the end 3. This publick Ministry fully ended to keep our minds in like sort as before on that we have heard and so being come home either alone or with others to enter into an examination of our selves for the whole day How are we to end the day 1. With thanks for Gods blessings on our labours 2. Humble suit for pardon of all our faults escaped 3. Earnest desire of grace to profit by all that we may persevere unto the end and be saved Doe you make any difference betwixt the Sabbath nights and other nights Yes we should lay our selves downe to rest in greater quietnesse that night upon the sense and feeling of the former Exercises so that our sleep should be the more quiet by how much the former Exercises of that day have been more holy otherwise we should declare that we have not kept the whole day so
1 Tim. 5. 4. Gen. 45. 11. 47. 12. What be the contrary sinnes of Children in respect of their Parents 1. Disobedience 2. Murmuring at their Parents chastisements 3. Contemning them for any default of body or minde 4. Vnthankfulnesse in not relieving them not standing for their deserved credit c. What is the speciall duty of Children to their Parents in case of marriage That they ought not so much as attempt to bestow themselves in marriage without their Parents direction and consent especially daughters Gen. 24. 21. 21. 27. 46. 28. 9. Iudges 14. 2. 1 Cor. 7. 36 37 38. What reason have you to perswade children to this duty That seeing their Parents have taken such great paines and travell in bringing them up they should reap some fruits of their labours in bestowing of them Besides they should give them this honour to esteeme them better able and more wise to provide for their comfortable marriage then themselves are Is this duty required onely of Children to their naturall Parents that begat them No It is also in some degree required of children to their Vncles and Ants or to any other under whom they are and that bee in stead of Parents unto them when their Parents are dead Esther 2. 10. 20. Ruth 2. 18. 23. What is the duty of Masters towards their servants 1. To deale honestly and justly with them leaving off threatning remembring they have a Master in heaven Col. 4. 1. Eph. 6. 9. 2. To have a care to instruct and catechise them and to teach them the feare of the Lord. 3. To teach them their Trades and Occupations that they may bee bettered for being in their family 4. To allow them fit wages for which they have covenanted with them that they may live honestly for the labourer must have his hire 5. To reward them plentifully and to recompence their service when they part from them according as the Lord hath blessed them by their labour Deut. 15. 13 14. 24. 14 15. VVhat are the sinnes of Masters 1. Vnadvised entertainment of sinfull servants 2. Negligence in not instructing them in the feare of God and in some lawfull calling and not using religious exercises with them 3. Not admonishing or correcting them or doing it in an ill manner grieving more when they faile in their businesse then when they are slack in Gods service 4. Giving them ill example and using light behaviour before them 5. Detaining their wages from them and not recompencing their labours by giving them a due reward when they are with them and when they part from them 6. Neglect of them in sicknesse unjust stopping of their wages for that time 7. Not relieving them if they be able in their age who have spent their youth in their service VVhat is the duty of Servants to their Masters 1. To reverence and obey them in all things agreeable to the word 2. To pray for them that God would guide their hearts 3. To learne all good things from them 4. To be faithfull and not prodigall in spending their goods 5. With care and faithfulnesse as in the presence of God to bestow themselves wholly at the times appointed in their Masters businesse doing their worke not onely faithfully and with a single eye but also diligently Gen. 24. 10 11 c Eph. 6. 5 6 7. VVhat are the sinnes of Servants in respect of their Governours 1. Contempt and Disobedience 2. Murmuring at their corrections though unjust 3. Idlenesse in their Calling 4. Vnthriftinesse and unfaithfulnesse in dealing with their Masters goods and affaires 5. Stealing and privy defrauding of them 6. Eye-service Eph. 6. 6. VVho are Superiours and Inferiours in the Schooles Tutors and Schoole-Masters are the Superiours Pupills and Scholars the Inferiours whose duties are to bee gathered by proportion out of those of Fathers and Children Masters and Servants in the Family Hitherto of Superiours and Inferiours which are more private who are the publick Such as governe and are governed in the Church and Common-wealth VVhat is the duty of such Superiours To procure the common good of those of whom they have received the charge forgetting to that end themselves and their owne private good so oft as need shall require Exod. 18. 13. 2 Sam. 24. 17. Matth. 11. 2. 1 Thes. 2. 7 8 11. VVhat is the duty of Inferiours to their publick Superiours To minister charges and other things necessary for the execution of their offices and to their power to defend them in the same Rom. 13. 6 7. Gal. 6. 6. 1 Tim. 5. 17 18. 1 Cor. 9. 4 5 6 7 9 11 13. How many sorts be there of publick Superiours Two Ecclesiasticall and Civill the former whereof are as it were Divine the other are called Humane Creatures 2 Kings 2. 3. 1 Tim. 2. 2. 1 Pet. 2. 13 14. VVhy doe you call the Ministers of the Church Divine Creatures Because they are precisely in their kindes number and orders set down in the word of God VVhy call you the other Humane Creatures Because notwithstanding they are appionted of God and such as without them neither Church nor Common-wealth can stand yet are not their kindes and number and Order so appointed of God but that men may make more or fewer of greater authority or lesse according as the occasion of places times or the disposition of peoples doe require Who are the Superiors in the Church All Ecclesiasticall Governours and the Ministers of the Word especially 1 Tim. 5. 17. Who are under the Government All Christians and Professors of Religion What is the Ministers duty to the people 1 To be faithfull and painefull in dispensing to them the will of God and not their owne fancies or the inventions of men instructing them sincerely in the way of salvation and breaking unto them the daily bread of life 2 Tim. 4. 1 2. Acts 20. 26. 2 To comfort and strengthen the weake 3 To be an example unto all in life and conversation What be the sins of Ministers 1 Slacknesse in Preaching 2 Vnprofitable or hurtfull teaching 3 Giving ill example What is the duty of the people to their Ministers 1 To heare them willingly Mat. 10. 14. 2 To submit themselves to all that they shall plainely and directly teach them out of the Word of God Heb. 13. 7. 17. 3 Frankely and freely to make provision for them that there bee no want Gal. 6. 6. 1 Tim. 5. 17 18. 1 Cor. 9. 4 5. c. What be the sins of the people in regard of their Ministers 1 Disobeying and opposing against their Doctrine 2 Denying them competent maintenance 3 Not standing for them when they are wronged Who are Superiors in the Commonwealth All Civill Magistrates whether they be Supreame as Emperors and Kings or inferior Governours under them 1 Pet. 2. 13 15. whereunto are to be referred the Generall in the Field and Captaines in Warre as also in Courts Advocates are Fathers
Or thus It is the holy request of an humble and sanctified heart together with thanksgiving Phil. 4. 6. offered by the power of the spirit of Prayer Rom. 8. 26. as a speciall service unto God Psal. 50. 15. in the name of Christ John 14. 14. in behalfe of our selves and others Ephes. 6. 18. with assurance to be heard in what wee pray for according to the will of God 1 Iohn 5. 14. Iames 1. 6. Why doe we call it a request with thanksgiving Because in all our Prayers there must both petition of the good things we need and thankfull acknowledgment of those things we have obtained 1 Thess. 5. 17 18. As for those formes which containe neither supplication nor giving of thanks as the Articles of the Beleefe the Decalogue c. they may and ought for other good purposes be committed to memory and rehearsed Deut. 6. 7. but to use them as Prayers savoureth of deep ignorance if not of superstition Matth. 6. 7. Why doe you call it the request of the heart Not to exclude the use of bodily gesture much lesse of the voice and tongue in the action of Invocation therefore called the Calves of the Lips Hosea 14. 2. but to shew first that the heart is on our part the principall mover and speaker in prayer from whence both voice and gesture have their force and grace 1 Cor. 14. 15. Psal. 45. 1. 108. 1. Secondly that Prayer on sudden occasions may be secretly and powerfully offered and is of God heard and accepted when neither any voice is uttered nor any bodily gesture employed Exod. 14. 15. Nehem 2. 4. Why doe you adde Of an humble and sanctified heart Because as in generall none can pray or doe any thing acceptable Psal. 109. 7. but such as are truely regenerate and sanctified unto this and every good work Psal. 51. 15. so in speciall and for the present action of prayer it is required as the summe of all sacrifices that the heart be humble and contrite Psal. 51. 17. acknowledging it owne unworthinesse by reason of sinne Dan. 9. 8 9. feeling the want of Gods grace and mercy Psal. 143. 6. and submitting it selfe unto him willing to be beholding for the least degree of favour Luke 15. 18 19. What then is required of us that our prayers may be holy 1. That we pray with faith and assurance that God for Christ sake wil heare us 2. That we pray with feare and reverence of God 3. That we pray with humility and a lively sense of our owne unworthinesse to obtaine any thing at Gods hands 4. That we pray with a true feeling of our owne wants and an earnest desire to obtaine those things for which we pray 5. That our affections be agreeable to the matter for which we pray 6. That we purpose to use all good meanes for the obtaining of those things for which we pray In brief these be the speciall properties of true prayer It must be 1. In faith without wavering Iames 1. 6. 2. In truth without faining Psal. 145. 18. 3. In humility without swelling Luke 18. 13. 4. In zeale without cooling Iames 5. 16. 5. In constancy without fainting Luke 18. 1. What learne you hence That even they which are most frequent and fervent in this duty had need to pray God to forgive their prayers in conscience of their owne frailties and infirmities Esa. 38. 14 15. Psal. 77. 9 10. 32. 3 5. What is the spirit of Prayer An especiall grace and operation of the holy Ghost Iude 20. called therefore the spirit of grace and supplication Zachary 12. 10. enabling us to powre out our soules unto the Lord Psalme 62. 8. with sighes that cannot be expressed Romanes 8. 26. For the holy Ghost must bee our helper in prayer to teach us both what to pray and how to pray Rom. 8. 26. To whom must we pray To God alone and to none other For 1. He alone is the searcher of the hearts heareth the voice and knoweth the meaning of the spirit of prayer Psal. 65. 2. Rom. 8 27. 2. He is able to grant whatsoever we demand Eph. 3. 20. 3. He challengeth our faith and confidence without which we cannot pray Rom. 10. 14. Wherefore seeing he alone heares all prayers heales all sins knowes all suiters Jer. 31. 18. 2 Chron. 7. 14. 6. 30. 1 Chro. 28. 9. Psal. 44. 21. He alone hath love enough to pitty all and power enough to relieve all our wants and necessities to him alone we are to pray and to none other What learne you hence That seeing the Scripture forbiddeth us to communicate Gods honour to any other Isa. 42. 8. 48. 12. such as pray either to Saints or Angels Col. 2. 18. have forgotten the name of their God Psal. 44. 20. which condemneth those of the Church of Rome who would have us to pray to Angels and Saints departed Whether must we direct our prayers to the Father or the Sonne or to the Holy-Ghost We must pray to the Trinity of Persons in the Vnity of the Godhead that is to say to our God in Trinity In whose name or for whose sake must we pray to God In the only name and for the only sake of his Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ Dan. 9. 17. Iohn 16. 23 24. the alone Mediator between God and man 1 Tim. 2. 5. As of propitiation so or intercession 1 John 2. 1 2. Rom. 8. 34. who through the vaile of his flesh and merit of his bloud hath prepared for us a new and living way whereby we may be bold to enter into the holy place Heb. 10. 19. in whom alone we are made the children of God and have liberty to call him Father Gal. 4. 5. Finally in with and for whom God giveth all things that be good to his Elect Rom. 8. 32. Who are condemned by this Doctrine They of the Church of Rome who teach us to pray in the name of Saints and make them to be our Mediators between God and us For whom are we to pray For our selves and others us and ours in a word for all men 1 Tim. 2. 1. even our enemies Mat. 5. 44. because they beare the common Image of God Jam. 3. 9. and bloud of mankinde whereof we are all made Act. 17. 26. unlesse it be apparent that any one hath committed the unpardonable sin 1 John 5. 16. But principally for such as are our brethren in Christ and of the houshold of faith Eph. 6. 18. Gal. 6. 10. Secondly for all sorts and degrees of men especially publick persons as Rulers and such as are in authority 1 Tim. 2. 2. Ministers that watch over our soules Eph. 6. 19. Col. 4. 3 c. What assurance have we that we shall be heard in what we pray for 1. Because we pray to that God that heareth prayers Psal. 65. 2. 2. And is the rewarder of all that come unto him Heb. 11. 6. and in his name to whom
all his works even in his ordaining of some to eternall life and other some to everlasting destruction That his infinite justice and infinite mercy over all his creatures but especially over his Church may be reverenced and adored by all men but especially by my selfe That the name of God may be reverently and holily used of all men but especially of my selfe That when the glory of God commeth in question between my selfe and any thing that belongeth unto me I may preferre that unto this Finally that God would vouchsafe to plant and encrease in me and others such graces whereby his name may be glorified What are those graces for which we pray here in particular 1. Knowledge of God Psalme 100. 3. 67. 2. That God would give us the knowledge of himselfe his Word and Works for we cannot glorifie his name unlesse we know it 2. Beliefe of his Word that wee and others may sanctifie God in believing his Word how unlike soever Iohn 3. 33. Wherefore Moses and Aaron are said not to have sanctified the name of God because they beleeved not Numb 20. 12. Contrariwise Abraham glorified God in beleeving Rom. 4. 20. 3. Fearing the Lord alone and not men That the Lord be our feare Esa. 8. 12 13. 1 Pet. 3. 14 18. 4. Humility for our selves and others without which wee cannot glorifie God as it is meet Psalme 115. 1. 2 Sam 7. 18. Psal. 8. 4 5. 144. 3. Luke 1. 48. 5. Patience arising from thence whereby wee doe willingly submit our selves unto the correcting hand of God as Eli 1 Sam. 3. 18. Hezekiah Esa. 39. 8. 6. Thankfulnesse that we may praise him for his benefits more particularly where we are to hallow Gods name as well by praising it for the benefits we have received as for his wonderfull works in the Creation and government of the world the Church especially 7. Lips opened and tongues tuned to speak of him with reverence Psal. 51. 15. 44. 1. 45. 1. 8. A life so ordered that men may say he is a holy God who by his grace maketh us an holy people Matth. 5. 16. 1 Pet. 2. 9. Tit. 2. 10. That according as we know the vertues of our good God so the fruits of them may appeare in ours and all good peoples lives that so his name may be honoured and praised and he may get glory by the godly conversation of us and others VVhat doe we pray against in this Petition We pray against all ignorance of holy things we should know Hos. 8. 12. and against infidelity and want of good works whereby God wants of his glory we pray against all lofty and high things that hinder that God onely cannot be exalted Esa. 2. 11 12 13 14 15 16. especially the pride of our hearts which we are to confesse and lament Prov. 8. 13. Against all false religion and prophanenesse impatience unthankfulnesse Rom. 1. 21 c. those tongue-wormes of swearing blasphemy and unreverent speaking of God Exod. 20. 7. Esa. 2. 11 12 13 14 15. Prov. 8. 13. together with all wickednesse and ungodlinesse whereby Gods Name is dishonoured In a word we pray that God would remove and root out of our hearts tongues and lives all such vices by and for which his name is dishonoured especially an evill and scandalous life for which the name of God and his religion is evill spoken of in the world Rom. 2. 23 24. What doth this teach us Our dulnesse is hereby condemned who by nature are so ill-disposed to glorifie God and to use his name holily and reverently What is to be considered in the second Petition Let thy Kingdome come Matth. 6. 10. Luke 11. 2. One of the meanes how to have the name of God sanctified which is a dependance of the former Petition What is the summe of this Petition That God may reigne in our hearts and not sinne and that the Kingdome of our Lord Iesus Christ both by the inward working of his Spirit and also by the outward meanes may be enlarged dayly untill it bee perfected at the comming of Christ to judgement that the Kingdome of sinne and Satan being more and more abolished Acts 26. 18. Col. 1. 13. Christ may now reigne in our hearts by grace Col. 3. 15 16. and we with him for ever in glory 2 Tim. 2. 12. What is meant here by Kingdome That government which our Saviour Christ exerciseth first in the world then in the last day both in the whole Church and in every member thereof For by the Kingdome of God wee must understand here not so much that univerall soveraignty which as Creator he exerciseth over all creatures disposing them all to their proper ends for his glory Esa. 5. 6. Psal. 95. 3 c. as the spirituall regiment Psalme 110. 2. 1 Cor. 15. 25. of the Church and of all things for the good of the Church wherein God hath appointed Christ to be the King Psalme 2. 6. Hos. 3. 5. the Saints his Subjects Rev. 15. 3. the Word his Law Job 22. 22. the Angels and all creatures his servants Heb. 1. 6 the Ministers his Heralds and Ambassadors 2 Cor. 5. 20. Finally the Devills kingdome Matth. 12. 26. that is wicked Angels and men enemies to the Kingdome of Christ Luke 19. 27. his foot-stoole Psalme 110. 1. How is this Kingdome said to come 1. In regard of the meanes where the word of the Kingdome is published Matth. 12. 28. 13. 19. Marke 4. 15. 2. In regard of efficacy where from the heart obedience is yeelded Rom. 6. 17. 3. In regard of perfection it hath these degrees 1. Increase of grace in the time of this life Matth. 13. 18. 2. The translation of blessed soules into heaven in the moment of death Luke 23. 42 43. 3. Finally the full redemption of glorification of the Saints in soule and body in the life to come Matth. 25. 34. VVhat doe we then desire concerning the kingdome of God in this Petition We pray either for that he exerciseth in this world or for that hee exerciseth in the world to come called the kingdome of glory How many sorts are there in that kingdome he exerciseth in this world Two First that he exerciseth over all men and other creatures called kingdome of power Secondly that he exerciseth over all the Church called the kingdome of grace What desire we of God concerning the government he exerciseth over all Creatures That he would governe all the creatures both in the naturall course of things and in the civill and domesticall government of men yea in the rule of Devils themselves in such sort as they may serve for the good of his Church Psal. 97. 1. Mat. 6. 13. John 17. 2. What desire we concerning his government in the Church That it may be here in this world inlarged and that it may be accomplished in the last day Psalme 112. 6. Isa. 62. 7. What doe we desire for the
inlargement of it in this world That by Christ the head of the Church God would governe his people to the perfect salvation of the elect and to the utter destruction of the reprobate whether open Rebels or faigned hollow-hearted Subjects What great need is there that we should pray for the kingdome of God For that being taught that we should pray that the kingdome of God may come hereby we are put in mind of another kingdome of Satan and darknesse which opposeth strongly against his kingdome Mat. 12. 24 25. 2 Cor. 6. 14 15 16. Why doe all men naturally abhorre Satan even to the very name of him They doe in words and shew but when they doe his will live under his lawes delight in his works of darknesse subject themselves to the Pope and other his instruments they are found indeed to love him as their father and honour him as their Prince whom in words they would seeme to abhorre For as the same men are affirmed by our Saviour Christ to approach unto God with their lips and to have their hearts farre from him Mat. 15. 8. so are they in their lips farre from Satan but neare him in their hearts What other oppositions are there against Gods Kingdome The flesh and the world Gal. 5. 10 17. What be the meanes we ought to pray for that our Saviour Christ may governe his Church in this world thereby Inward and outward What inward things doe we pray for That God would give his holy Spirit as the chiefe and principall meanes whereby our Saviour Christ gathereth and ruleth his Church conveighing his spirit of knowledge and good motions into his people And consequently we pray against the motions and temptations of Satan and of our owne flesh What are the outward things we pray for The meanes whereby the Spirit is conveighed namely the Word and the dependances thereof the Sacraments and Censures What pray we for concerning the Word That it being the scepter of Christs kingdome Mar. 1. 13. the rod standard of his power Psal. 110. 2. Isa. 11. 4 10. Isa. 44. 4 10. called the Word of the kingdome Mar. 1. 13. the kingdome of heaven Mat. 13. may have free passage every where 2 Thes. 3. 1. and may be gloriously lifted up and advanced and it only having place all not agreeable thereunto and all traditions and inventions of men may be rejected What pray we for concerning the Sacraments That as they are the Seales of Gods promises and the whole Covenant of grace so they may be both ministred and received in that purenesse and sincerity which is according to his Word and all false Sacraments and sacrifices put under foot What pray we for concerning the Censures That not only private persons but the whole Church may be ruled by the line of Gods Word that so well doers may be advanced and evill doers censured and corrected according to the degree of their fault and therefore that all impunity or tyrannous tortures of conscience may be taken away What further doe we pray for That God would furnish his Church with all such Officers as he approveth that being indued with speciall gifts may be both able and willing to execute their charge diligently and faithfully What further desire you in this Petition That where these things are only begun they may be perfected And that every Church may be polished and garnished that Sion may appeare in her perfect beauty and so the Iewes may be called and so many of the Gentiles as belong unto Christ and the contrary enemies may be either converted or confounded What doe we pray for in respect of every member of the Church Even as poore captives are alwayes creeping to the prison doore and labouring to get off their boults so we out of a sorrowfull feeling of the spirituall bondage we are in to Satan and sin pray that the kingdome of Christ may come and be advanced in every one of our hearts in justice righteousnesse peace and joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. that as Kings unto God we may subdue within us all those either opinions or affections that rise up and rebell against God What then are the particulars concerning the kingdome of grace that we doe crave of God in this Petition 1. That Satans kingdome may be abolished Acts 26. 18. the bands of spirituall captivity loosed 2 Tim. 2. 26. Col. 1. 13. the power of corruption that maketh us like well of our bondage abated Gal. 5. 24. the instruments of Satans tyranny as the Turke and Pope and all such out-lawes from Christ defeated 2 Thes. 2. 8. 2. That it would please God to gather out of every part of the world those that belong to his election 3. That God for the gathering of them would raise up faithfull and painfull Ministers in every part of the world where there are any which belong to his election That all loyterers and tongue-tyed Ministers being removed Isa. 56. 10 11. faithfull and able watchmen may be set over the flocke of Christ Mat. 9. 38. with sufficient encouragement of maintenance countenance protection c. and the word of God may be freely preached every where 2 Thes. 3. 1. 4. That it would please God with the blessing of his spirit to accompany the word so that it may be of power to convert those that belong unto him 5. That it would please God every day more and more to increase the holy gifts and graces of his holy Spirit in the hearts of those whom he hath already called effectually 6. That the Lord by his word and spirit would rule in the hearts and lives of his Saints Col. 3. 15 16. making them also Kings in part by overcomming the corruption which is in the world through lust 7. That God would raise up godly and religious Magistrates which should further and countenance his worship as much as in them lyeth 8. That the eyes of all men especially Princes may be opened to see the filthinesse of the whore of Babylon Rev. 17. 16. and the true beauty of pure Religion and of the Spouse of Christ Isa. 60. 3. 9. That God would banish and root out of his Church all those things which may hinder the proceeding of his kingdome in the hearts of those that belong unto him 10. Finally that he would finish the kingdome of grace calling his elect uncalled Rom. 9. 27. confirming such as stand 2 Thes. 2. 17. raising the fallen Jam. 5. 15 16. comforting the afflicted Isa. 61. 3. and hasten the kingdome of glory What doe we desire of God in this Petition concerning the Kingdome of glory and our good in the world to come 1. That God would be pleased to take us out of this sinfull and conflicting life into peace with Christ and translate us unto the kingdome of heaven Phil. 1. 23. 2. That the number of the elect being accomplished the finall dissolution of all things may come That God would hasten the second
meanes which God hath appointed to call us by They are partly inward and partly outward 1 Thes. 5. 19 20. Act. 10. 44. What are the inward The Spirit of God which is given by the outward things Gal. 3. 2 3. 1 Tim. 1. 14. What meane you by the Spirit of God in this place That power of God which worketh in the hearts of men things which the naturall discourse of reason is not able to attaine unto Being incomprehensible how may we come to some understanding and sense of it By the things whereunto it is compared 1. To winde Acts 2. to shew the marvellous power of it in operation 2. To oyle Heb. 1. 9. that is of a hot nature that pierceth and suppleth 3. To water John 4. that cooleth scowreth and cleanseth 4. To fire Mat. 3. Acts 2. that severeth drosse and good metall How is the operation of it Diverse as softening and hardening enlightening and darkening which it worketh after a diverse manner by the word in the hearts of the elect and reprobate according to the good pleasure of Gods secret will only and after that according to the good pleasure of his revealed will so that the lawfull use thereof is rewarded with a gracious increase of blessing and the abuse punished with further hardnesse to condemnation What then doth the Spirit worke in the wicked Finding them hard it hardeneth them more to their further condemnation What doth the same Spirit worke in the godly Faith whereby they take hold on Christ with all his benefits Eph. 2. 8. What are the outward things which God hath given to call us by They are either common to the whole world or proper to the Church What are the things common to the whole world Gods works not unprofitably given although not sufficient to salvation Is not the knowledge of the wisedome power and goodnesse of God in the Creation and government of the Heaven and Earth with the things that are in them sufficient to make us wise to salvation No First it serves rather for further condemnation without the Word Rom. 1. 19 20 21. Secondly as by and with the Word the due meditation and consideration of Gods works is a good help to further us in Religion and in the graces of Gods Spirit 1 Cor. 1. 21 22. Sith then God doth not reveale the Covenant of grace nor afford sufficient meanes to salvation to the whole world but onely to the Church explaine here what you meane by the Church Wee speake not here of that part of Gods Church which is triumphant in glory who being in perfect fruition have no need of these outward meanes of communion with him Rev. 21. 22 23. But the Subject here is the Church militant and that we consider also as visible in the parts of it consisting of divers assemblies and companies of beleevers making profession of the same common faith Howbeit many times by persecution forced to hide themselves from the eye of the world and happily by the rage of the enemy so scattered that as in the dayes of Elias 1 Kings 19. 10. they can hardly be knowne or have entercourse between themselves and so the exercise of the publick ordinances may for a time be suspended among them But are none to be accounted members of this Church but such as are true beleevers and so inseparably united unto Christ their head Truely and properly none other 1 John 2. 19. Howbeit because God doth use outward meanes with the inward for the gathering of his Saints and calleth them as well to outward profession among themselves Acts 2. 42. Cant. 1. 7. as to inward fellowship with his Son whereby the Church becomes visible hence it is that so many as partake of the outward meanes and joyne with the Church in league of visible profession are therefore in humane judgement accounted members of the true Church and Saints by calling 1 Cor. 1. 1. untill the Lord who only knoweth who are his doe make knowne the contrary as we are taught in the Parables of the Tares Matth. 13. 24. Matth. 13. 47 c. And of the draw-net and the threshing floore where lyeth both good corne and chaffe Matth. 3. Hath Christ then his Church visible upon earth Yea throughout the world as we have shewne in the particular congregations of Christians Rom. 3. 3. called to the profession of the true faith and obedience of the Gospell In which visible assemblies and not else where the true members of the true Church invisible on earth are to be sought Romans 11. 5. and unto which therefore all that seek for salvation must gladly joyne themselves Esa. 60. 4. Doth the visible Church consist of good and bad or of good onely It consisteth of good and bad as at the beginning we may see it did in Cain and Abel whereupon our Saviour compareth the Church to a net in which are fishes good and bad and to a field which in it hath wheat and cockle Matth. 13. 24. 47 c. What are the markes and infallible notes whereby to discerne a true visible Church with which we may safely joyne First and principally the truth of Doctrine which is professed and the sincere preaching of the Word together with the due administration of the Sacraments according to the commandements of Christ our Saviour Mat. 28. 19 20. Secondarily the right order which is kept with sincere and conscionable obedience yeelded to the Word of God Why doe you make the first to be the principall marke of visible profession Because they are the onely outward meanes appointed of God for the calling and gathering of his Saints and which prove the Church to bee a pillar of truth 1 Tim. 3. 15. Can the Church want this and yet be a Church Yea it may want these in the time of warre or persecution and in such a time we may safely joyn our selves to a company which allowes of the publick Ministery of the Word of God and administration of the Sacraments howsoever the exercise of the same by reason of these Garboiles are wanting for a time Are we to joyne with all Churches that have these markes Yea neither must we separate from them any farther then they separate from Christ Phil. 1. 18. Cant. 1. 5. as shall be shewed What say you to the other notes that are commonly given of the Church Either they are accidentall and in great part separable or utterly impertinent and forged for the upholding of the Romish Synagogue But is not Antiquity a certaine note of the Church No for errors are very ancient and the Church when it began was a Church yet had no antiquity Is not multitude a note No for Christs flock is a little flock Luk. 12. 32. and Antichrist very great Apoc. 13. 3 4 8. 18. 3. Are not miracles a marke of the Church No for beside that wicked people may worke them Mat. 7. 22 23. the Church of Christ hath been without
miracles and the comming of Antichrist is foretold to be with all power and signes and lying wonders 2 Thes. 2. 9. Apoc. 13. 13 14. Such as those are whereof the Papists brag and boast of which are indeed no true miracles May the Church erre and be corrupted or fall and become no Church First we must distinguish of errors some are fundamentall such as raze the foundation of the Church as the denying that Christ came in the flesh or the denying of the resurrection and in these the Church cannot erre others are of lesse moment and in these it may erre Secondly the Catholick Church considered in her true members can never utterly fall Matth. 16. 18. Psalme 1. 6. 1 Thes. 5. 24. Howsoever no Congregation be so pure that it may bee said at any time to bee free from all corruption Cant. 1. 4. or so constant but that at times it may be shaken in the very foundation of truth as it may appeare by the Church of Corinth Galatia c. 1 Cor. 15. 12. 13. Gal. 3. 1. Thirdly the Church being considered with respect of the place God doth not alwayes continue a succession of true beleevers within the same limits and borders and hence we say that divers Churches are falne as those of Asia c. Neither is any place so priviledged but that for sinne the Candlestick may in time be thence removed Rev. 2. 5. How may we judge of a Church corrupt or ceasing to be a Church Where God utterly taking away the meanes of his Word and Worship Acts 13. 46. hath apparently given the bill of divorce Esa. 50. 1. there are we not to acknowledge any Church at all as at this day in Jerusalem once the holy City But where these meanes are yet continued we are to acknowledge a Church of Christ Rev. 2. 12 13. howsoever more or lesse corrupt according to the greater or lesse abuse of Gods Word and Worship Since Churches may be so diversly corrupted from which and how farre are we to separate From Churches mortally sick of heresie Tit. 3. 10 11. or Idolatry as it were a contagious plague or leprosie wee are to separate Rev. 18. 4. Howbeit whiles there is yet any life rather from the scab or sore then from the body that is from the prevailing faction maintaining fundamentall errours and forcing to idolatrous worship Such is our separation from the present Church of Rome not from such therein who either meaning well in generall are ignorant of the depth of Satan Rev. 2. 24. or secretly dissent from the damnable corruptions 1 Kings 19. 18. with whom as a body yet retaining life we desire to joine Phil. 1. 18. so farre as we may with safety from the foresaid contagion Are we to continue fellowship with all other Churches not so deadly and dangerously corrupt From Churches holding the foundation in substance of faith and worship though otherwise not free from blemish we are not to separate 1 Kings 15. 14. 22. 43. farther then in dislike and refusall of that wherein they do apparently separate from Christ in respect either of manners doctrine or forme of publike worship What are the Enemies of the Church Besides these spirituall wickednesses which fight against our soules there are outward enemies also that visibly oppose the Church of Christ. How doth Christ defend his Church against those enemies This is partly to be done by the Civill Magistrate to whom it belongeth by Civill meanes to maintaine the Church in that truth and liberty which Christ hath given unto it and partly by the breath of Christs own mouth in the preaching of the Gospel yet not perfectly but by the brightnesse of his comming in the latter day What is the estate of the Church when these enemies prevaile The Church is often oppressed and darkned so by them that it doth partly degenerate and is partly hid but never wholly destroyed nor altogether invisible Is not the Church alwayes visible in her parts The persons are alwaies visible for Christ hath and ever had from the beginning his Church visible upon earth Rom. 11. 1 2 3 4. that is some companies of Beleevers making profession of the same common faith yet the persecution may be such that the visible Church may not appeare throughly for a time the professors being forced thereby to hide themselves from the eye of the world Rev. 12. 14. and happily by the rage of the enemy so scattered that as in the dayes of Elias 1 Kings 10. 14 18. they can hardly be knowne or have entercourse between themselves and hence it is that the Church is compared to the Moon sometimes in the full sometimes in the wane What distinction is thereof the members of the visible Church Generally they are all of the family of Christ Ephes. 3. 15. which as sheep of his flock are to heare his voice and to follow him Joh. 10. 2 3 4. But more especially out of these Christ the chiefe Priest and Shepheard hath instituted some to be above some to be under ordaining some to have preheminence and government others to be governed and guided by them Heb. 13. 17. Whom hath Christ appointed to be Governors and guiders over the rest 1. Church-officers and Ministers appointed to teach and governe the flock of Christ and to feed it with the wholsome food of the Word and Sacrament 1 Cor. 12. 28. 1 Tim. 5. 17. Luk. 12. 2. Joh. 21. 15. 1 Pet. 5. 2. 2. Princes and Civill Magistrates whom Christ hath charged to see to the wayes of his houshold and so to rule and order it outwardly that all both Ministers and People doe their office and duty even in things concerning God Psal. 78. 71 72. 2 Chro. 35. 3. 34. 32. Having now spoken of the Church and the members of it what are those things which are proper to the visible Church The Word Rom. 10. 17. John 5. 25. 6 68. and the dependents thereof viz. Sacraments 1 Cor. 10. 1 2 3 4. and Censures Matth. 18. 15. 1 Cor. 5. of which in their proper places What is the Word That part of the outward Ministery which consisteth in the delivery of Doctrine and this is the ordinary instrument which God useth in begetting of faith What order is there used in the delivery of the Word for the begetting of faith 1. The Covenant of the Law is urged to make sin and the punishment thereof knowne whereupon the sting of conscience pricketh the heart with a sense of Gods wrath and maketh a man utterly to despaire of any ability in himselfe to obtaine everlasting life After this preparation the promises of the Gospel are propounded whereupon the sinner conceiving hope of pardon sueth to God for mercy and particularly applieth to his own soul those comfortable promises which in the Word is propounded What is the inward meanes for the begetting of faith The holy Spirit of God Is it not lawfull to separate the
inward meanes from the outward In no case for those things which God hath joyned together no man may separate Matth. 19. How doth it appeare that God hath joyned both these meanes together Because hee saith by the Prophet Esay chap. 59. 21. that this is the Covenant that hee will make with his people to put his Spirit and Word in them and in all the posterity of the Church The Apostle in like manner 1 Thess. 5. 19. 20. joyneth these two together Quench not the Spirit and despise not prophesying It would seem by these words of the Apostle that the Spirit of Adoption and Sanctification proper to the faithfull may be lost whilst he exhorteth that we should not quench the Spirit By no means but as God doth assure the faithful of their continuance in him so he doth declare by these exhortations that the only means wherby we should nourish this holy fire in us is to take heed to the preaching of the Word Is by the word prophecying only meant the preaching of the Word No but by a figurative speech all those outward meanes whereby God useth to give his holy Spirit as are the Sacraments and the discipline of the Church over and above the preaching of the Word which being principall of all is here set downe for the rest Why doth the Apostle set the Spirit before the preaching of the Word meant by Prophecy considering that by and after preaching of the VVord the Lord giveth his Spirit 1. Because the Spirit is the chiefe of the two the Word being but the instrument whereby the Spirit of God worketh 2. For that the worke of the Spirit is more generall and reacheth to some to whom the preaching of the Word cannot reach 3. For that the Word is never profitable without the Spirit but the Spirit may be profitable without the Word as after will appeare What doe you learne of this that the meanes of Gods Spirit and Word are usually conjoyned together That no man is to content himselfe with this phantasie to thinke that he hath the Spirit and so to neglect the Word because they goe together Who are by this condemned The Anabaptists Papists Libertines which ascribe to the Spirit that which they like although wickedly seeing the Spirit doth not ordinarily suggest any thing to us but that which it teacheth us out of the word Ioh. 14. 26. What other sort of men are here condemned The Stancharists who esteem the Word to be fit to chatechise and to innitiate or enter us in the rudiments of Religion But too base to exercise our selves continually in it wheras the Prophets and Apostles most excellent men did notwithstanding exercise themselves in the Scriptures Mar. 4. 1 2 c. compared with Isa. 2. 1 2 c. 2 Pet. 3. 15 16. Are none saved without hearing of the Word Yes For first children which are within the Covenant have the Spirit of God without the ordinary meanes of the Word and Sacraments Mat. 2. Rom. 8. 9 14. Secondly some also of age in places where these meanes are not to be had Thirdly some also which living in places where such means are yet have no capacity to understand them as some naturall fooles mad men or deafe borne to shew that God is not tied to meanes What must we here take heed of That we presume not upon this sith that notwithstanding this secret working of God yet it is as impossible to come to heaven if having the means and capacity of receiving them we contemne the means as it is impossible to have a harvest where no seed time hath gone before Mat. 13. or to have children without the Parents seed 1 Pet. 1. 23. seeing amongst such the Spirit of God works faith only by the preaching of the word Indeed where the Lord placeth not the preaching of the VVord there he can and doth work faith without it but where he hath placed it he will not doe it without it In times and places where Popery hath prevailed many were and may be so at this day in Spaine and Rome converted by the very bare reading of the Word yea without the reading of the VVord but not so among them who have or may have it either by going from home to it or fetching it home to them How is the diverse working of Gods Spirit by the Ministry of the Word set out unto us By the parable of the seed three parts whereof fell into barren and unprofitable ground one into good and fruitfull Mat. 13. 3. 9. 18 19 24. Are not three parts of the foure in the Church likely to be condemned by this Parable No in no case For it is both curious and uncomfortable Doctrine it being a far different thing to have three sorts of wicked men in foure sorts and to have thrice as many of one sort What is the first thing you observe here common to the godly with the wicked To understand something of the word of grace and to give consent unto the same If they understand it how is it that the first sort of unfruitfull hearers are said not to understand Mat. 13. 19. They have some understanding but it is said to be none because it is no cleare knowledge whereof they can give a reason out of the Word nor effectuall which ariseth from hence for that they come without affection and goe away without care What are we here to learne 1. To take heed not to deceive our selves in a bare profession or light knowledge of the Word and that we come to heare it with zeale and depart with care to profit 2. To beware also of the great subtilty of Satan who as a swift bird snatcheth the Word out of the unprepared hearts even as also doth a thiefe which taketh away whatsoever he findeth loose What observe you in the second sort common to the godly with the wicked To have some kind of delight in the Word and a glimpse of the life to come Mat. 13. 20. Heb. 4. 5. What difference is there between a godly joy and this 1. This is like the blaze of the fire and is never full and sufficient whereas the godly joy is above that of gold and silver 2. The wickeds delight is for another purpose then is the godlies For it is only to satisfie a humour desiring to know something more then others whereas the godlies joy is to know further to the end they may practise Why is it said they have no root Mat. 13. 21. Because though they understand the things yet are they not grounded upon the reasons and testimonies of the Word nor transformed into the obedience of the Gospell and therfore when persecution commeth they wither away Proceed to the third sort They are they which keep it it may be with some suffering of persecution yet the thornes of covetousnesse or of worldly delights overgrow the good seed and make it unfruitfull So much of the three sorts of unfruitfull soyle and
wee see that wee need no more but to bee born and then to have this life preserved The Sacrament of Baptisme sheweth us the first the Sacrament of the Lords Supper the second Therefore those five other Sacraments of Confirmation Penance Matrimony Orders and extreame Unction joyned by the Papists are superfluous because some of them have no warrant at all out of the Word of God and God hath not promised a blessing upon the using of them others of them though they bee agreeable to the Word yet are without the nature and number of the Sacraments What is Baptisme It is the first Sacrament of the New Testament by the washing of water Ephes. 5. 26. representing the powerfull washing of the blood and spirit of Christ 1 Cor. 6. 11. Heb. 10. 22. and so sealing our regeneration or new birth our entrance into the Covenant of Grace and our ingraffing into Christ and into the body of Christ which is his Church Joh. 3. 5. Tit. 3. 5. Act. 8. 27. The word Baptisme in generall signifieth any kinde of washing but here it is specially taken for that sacramentall washing which sealeth unto those which are within Gods Covenant their birth in Christ and enterance into Christianity How was this Sacrament ordained and brought into the Church in the place of Circumcision At the Commandement of God Joh. 1. 33. by the Ministery of John therefore called the Baptist Matth. 3. 1. after sanctified and confirmed by our Saviour Christ himself being baptized by John Mat. 3. 13. and giving commission to his Apostles and Ministers to continue the same in his Church unto the end Mat. 28. 18. Why call you it the first Sacrament Because Christ gave order to his Apostles that after they have taught and men beleeve they should baptize them that so they might bee enrolled amongst those of the houshold of God and entered into the number of the Citizens Burgesses of the heavenly Jerusalem What abuse doth this take away That which sometimes the ancient Church was infected withall namely that they baptized men at their death and let them receive the Lords Supper twice or thrice a yeer whereas this is the first Sacrament of the Covenant What are the essentiall parts of this Sacrament of Baptisme As of all other Sacraments two the outward signes and the inward things signified where also is to bee considered the proportion and union which is between those two parts which is as it were the very form and inward excellency of a Sacrament What are the outward signes in Baptisme They are the outward element of water and the outward sacramentall actions performed about it What are those Sacramentall actions First the Ministers blessing and consecrating the water And secondly the right applying it so consecrated to the party to bee baptized May none but a lawfull Minister baptize No for baptism is a part of the publique Ministery of the Church and Christ hath given warrant and authority to none to baptize but those whom hee hath called to preach the Gospel Goe Preach and Baptize Matth. 28. 29. those onely may stand in the roome of God himself and Ministerially set to the seale of the Covenant And it is monstrous presumption for Women or any other private persons who are not called to meddle with such high Mysteries nor can there bee any case of necessity to urge as will appeare afterwards Touching the first action of the Minister how is hee to blesse and consecrate the water First by opening to them that are present the Doctrine of Baptisme and the right institution and use of it what inward mysteries are signified and sealed up by those outward signes So did John when hee baptized hee preached the Doctrine of Repentance and taught the people the inward baptisme of the Spirit signified by his baptizing with vvater Matth. 3. 11. Secondly by acknowledging in the name of the congregation mans naturall pollution that vve stand in need of spirituall vvashing by giving thanks to God the Father for giving his Sonne for a propitiation for our sins and appointing his blood to bee a fountain to the house of Israel to wash in and for ordaining of this service to bee a Sacrament and seale of so great a mystery Thirdly by making profession of Faith in Gods promises in that behalf and praying that they may bee made good unto the party that is to receive the seale thereof for as every thing is sanctified by the Word of God and prayer so in especiall manner the Sacramentall water in baptisme is blessed and consecrated by the Word of institution and prayer to God for a blessing upon his own Ordinance What is the second Sacramentall action The action of washing that is of applying the Sacramentall water unto the party to be baptized diving or dipping him into it or sprinkling him with it In the name of the Father the Son and of the holy Ghost Is the action of diving or dipping materiall and essentiall to the Sacrament or is there absolute ground and warrant for sprinkling which is most commonly practised with us in these cold Countries Some there are that stand strictly for the particular action of diving or dipping the baptized under water as the onely action which the institution of this Sacrament will bear and our Church allows no other except in case of the childes weaknesse and there is exprest in our Saviours baptisme both his descending into the water and rising up so that some think our common sprinkling to bee through ease and tendernesse a stretching the liberty of the Church further then either the Church would or the symbolicalnesse of the outward sign with the thing signified can safely admit it typifying our spirituall buriall and resurrection Rom. 6. 8. Others conceive the action of sprinkling of water upon the face of the baptized very warrantable especially in young children to whom further wetting may bee dangerous and the grounds are these First it seems that neither dipping is essentiall to the Sacrament of Baptisme nor sprinkling but onely washing and applying water to the body as a cleanser of the filth thereof Secondly then as in the other Sacrament a spoonfull of wine is as significant as a whole gallon so here a handfull of water is as significant as a whole river Thirdly the action of sprinkling beares fit resemblance with the inward grace as well as dipping and hath authority in the Scriptures read 1 Pet. 1. 2. and Heb. 12. 14. there is speech of the sprinkling of the blood of Christ and the blood of sprinkling speaks better things then the blood of Abel Fourthly it is not unlikely that the Apostles baptized as well by sprinkling or powring upon as by diving and dipping into sith wee read of divers baptized in houses as well as others in rivers However the washing the body by water is essentiall Ephes. 5. 26. though whether way it bee done seem not to bee essentiall so water bee applyed to the body
he gave him the Tree of life to be a pledge of his promise It was not the Tree of life that gave Adam life but the promise Adam might have lived by the promise without the Tree but the Tree could doe him no good without the promise Thus God promiseth Christ and his benefits to the faithfull and to their seed and then he gives us Baptisme to seale these promises it is not Baptisme that saves us but the promises it is not water that purgeth our sins but the bloud of the Covenant why then was the Sacrament added for our weaknesse to be a strengthening to our faith not to give any strength or efficacy to the Covenant made in the bloud of Christ Gods Word is as sure as his bond his promise is as effectuall as his seal and shall as surely be accomplished the Sacraments onely give strength to our faith in apprehending it What infer you from this That where God is pleased to dispense his seals and Sacraments they are great comforts and pledges of his love and to despise or sleight them were a horrible sleighting even of the Covenant it selfe But where he denieth means and opportunity of enjoying the signes the things signified are never the farther off or lesse effectuall It is said Gen. 17. 14. that the uncircumcised should be cut off from Gods people because he had broke the Covenant but it is meant onely of voluntary and wilfull refusing of Circumcision for the people of God in the wildernesse were forty years without the outward sign of Circumcision they were not without the inward grace Davids child died the seventh day a day before the time appointed for Circumcision and yet both his words and his cariage expresse that he doubted not of the salvation of it so the theef upon the Crosse beleeving in Christ was received with Christ into Paradise though he were never baptized hee had the inward grace of Baptisme the washing of the bloud of Christ though not the outward signe when God affordeth means wee must wait upon him for a blessing in them and by them when he doth not afford means we must not tie the working of his grace to them God who sanctifieth some in the womb knows how to sanctifie all his elect infants and by his Spirit apply the merits of Christ unto them without the outward water Some have the outward signe and not the inward grace some have the outward sign and the inward grace some have the inward grace and not the outward sign we must not commit Idolatry by deifying the outward element the rule will hold It is not the want of the Sacraments but the contempt or wilfull neglect of them that is dangerous What other errors of opinion and practise doe you observe about Baptisme As some through ignorance and superstition have too high a conceipt of the outward signs so others through ignorance and prophanenesse have too mean and base an opinion of them some there are who esteem of Baptisme as of a meer Ecclesiasticall ceremony and Church complement as if there were no serious vertue or efficacy in it or profit to be expected by it or had no other use but to give the childe a name and there is an end they look no further How doth it appear that some have so sleight an opinion of this Ordinance By their answerable practises such as these and the like 1. Often Baptism is deferred and that upon every trifling occasion as if it were a businesse of no great weight and moment but might attend every ones leisure and many times through delay the child dieth without it which though it doth nothing prejudice the childes salvation yet it will lie heavy upon the parents conscience for neglecting Gods Ordinance when he afforded opportunity 2. Often the Minister is sent for home to perform that service with few in a private chamber when no eminent necessity urgeth to the dishonour of so sacred a businesse which ought to bee a most solemne and publike action of the whole Congregation 3. Though the child be brought to Church yet often some by-day is chosen and not the Lords Sabbath and it is then done as if it were only womens worke to be present at Baptisme who have most leisure to spend time about matters of smaller consequence 4. If it be on the Sabbath then the maine care and preparation is about matters of outward pomp and state every thing is fitted and prepared for the purpose but onely that which should chiefely be viz. the hearts and mindes of those that goe about a businesse of that nature 5. While the Sacrament is in performing the demeanor of many shew that they have a slight opinion of that service some turning their backs upon it going out of the Church so soon as sermon is done as if the word was worth the minding but not the Sacrament others prating and talking all the while as if there were nothing for them to learne by but no duty for them to performe in that action 6. Lastly infants are brought to the Sacrament of Baptisme in their infancy but are never by their parents taught the doctrine of Baptisme when they come to years of understanding Baptisme is not made use of as it ought in the whole course of mens lives these things shew that men commonly have a meane conceit of this Ordinance What is the best way to reforme these irreligious practises A serious pondering considering of the high dignity of this divine ordinance that wil cause a devout reverent demeanor in that holy busines 1. Every one should consider that it is no customary formallity but an honourable ordinance instituted by the lawful authority of God himselfe who never imposed any service upon his Church in vain It was honoured by our Saviour Christ himself who sanctified it unto us by submitting unto it in his owne sacred person confirmed by his practise by his precept c. 2. Every one should consider that there are infinite mercies sealed up by it to the faithful and to their seed It is a visible admittance of thy child if thou beest a Parent into the Congregation of Christs flock signifying its interest in the heavenly Ierusalem which is above Is this a busines to be mumbled over in a corner Christ came from Galile to Jordan to be baptized is the receiving of thy child into the bosome of the Church in a full Congregation no comfort unto thee is it not mercy to see the bloud of Christ ministerially sealed up unto thy Infant to purge it from that pollution which it hath brought into the world with it which also thou makest confession of by presenting it to this mysteriall washing Is it not joy to thy heart to heare the whole Congregation of Gods Saints pray for thy childe and that God hath honoured thee so much as to count thy very childe holy and within his Covenant thinke on these things 3. Every one that
hath both made and sanctified were not as fit as the skin of a Beast which the Artificer hath tanned and sewed 3. They must moreover according to the Commandement of Christ eat and drink the Bread and Wine not laying or hanging it up or worshipping it as the papists doe 4. Lastly they must use thanksgiving offering up themselves both souls and bodies as a sacrifice of thanks Rom. 12. 1. in which regard this Sacrament is called the Eucharist What is to be done after the action 1. We must by and by use joyfull thanksgiving with prayer and meditation being so comforted in heart in the favour of God towards us that we be ready with a feeling joy to sing a Psalme unto the Lord Matth. 26. 30. 2. We must continually endeavour to finde an increase of our faith in Christ love to God and all his Saints power to subdue sin and practice obedience with all other sanctifying and saving graces 1 Cor. 10. 16 17. 11 21. Col. 2 6 7. 2 Pet. 3. 18. For a true believer shall feele in himself after the receiving of the Sacrament an encrease of faith and sanctification a further deading of the old man and so a greater measure of dying unto sin a further strength of the new man and so a greater care to live in newnesse of life and to walk the more strongly and steadily in the wayes of God all the dayes of his life this being a Sacrament not of our incorporation as Baptisme but of our growth which albeit one cannot alwayes discerne immediately after the action yet between that and the next Communion it may be easily espied in our service towards God and men What if a man after the receiving of the Sacrament never find any such thing in himself He may well suspect himself whether he did ever repent or not and therefore is to use means to come to sound faith repentance For the Lord is not usually wanting to his ordinances if men prepare their hearts to meet him in them If we receive no good no refreshment at this spirituall feast if God send us away empty either it is because we have no right unto his mercies being not in Christ and so not accepted or because some secret unmortified lust remaineth in us like Achans wedge of gold so some beloved sin either not seen or not sufficiently sorrowed for and resolved against lyeth glowing in the heart which causeth God to frown upon our services like a dead flye causeth the ointment to stink therfore in this case a man should descend into himself make a more strict search into his conscience that he may againe come before the Lord with more humilty and better preparednesse and God will reveale himself in due time to every one who unfainedly seeketh after him in his ordinances So much of the Sacraments What are the Censures They are the judgements of the Church for ratification of the threates of the Gospell against the abusers of the Word and Sacraments What doe these Censures profit the Church of God Very much for by them the godly having strayed from the course of sincerity are through obedience brought home againe But the wicked are hardened by them through disobedience whereof it is that the wicked are properly said to be punished the godly only chastened and corrected But it seemeth that corrections rather belong to Magistrates then to Ministers The Magistrates by the Lawes of the Common-wealth punish some by death others by other torments and some by purse which belongeth not to the Minister who hath to doe only with the soule And these spiritual censures are of as necessary use in the Church both to help the godly and to restrain and root out the wicked out of the Church as those penall Lawes of the Magistrate in the Common-wealth They therefore who upon this pretence that God forceth no man to come unto him suppose the censures to be unprofitable are like unto children that will have no rod in the house Whereby doth the necessity of Censures appeare Easily for sith in the Church of God there be of all sorts as in a net cast into the sea which catcheth good and bad It is impossible without correction to keep good order in the Church especially to restraine the wicked hypocrites from offending and thereby slandering their profession If then there were no hypocrites there were no use of Censures Not so but the serve most of all for them that make no conscience of their calling For the best man that is having some sparkes of his naturall corruption remaining unregenerate may fall and offend and therefore must be chastened by the Church But this is the difference the godly falling by infirmity by correction doe amend but the wicked offending purposely by punishment are hardened What is to be gathered of this That sith censures are as needfull in the Church as the rod in the house or the Magistrates sword in the Common-wealth for offendors yea and of so much more use as these are for the body and this life and the other for the soule and life to come they that set themselves against them care not what disorder there be in the Church but seek to exempt themselves from punishment that they might doe what they list and make the Gospel a covert for all their wickednesse who are like to them in the second Psalme that would not beare the yoake of Government So much for the use and necessity of Censures What is the doctrine of them especially delivered In the 18 chapter of Saint Matthew from the 15 verse to the 20. where both their institution and ratification is laid downe For first our Saviour declareth the degrees of the censures ordained for such as are called brethren which are generally corrections according to the greatnesse of the offences and then treateth of their power and authority What is to be observed in the degrees of the censures That the censures be according to the offences as if the offence be private the censure thereof must be private wherein the censurer is to deale circumspectly 1. That he know the offence 2. That he admonish the offender secretly 3. That he do it in love convincing his offence so to be by the Word of God What further duty is required of us in this case 1. That we runne not to others to slander the offenders which Moses forbiddeth Levit. 19. 16. 2. Not to keep the injury in minde of purpose afterwards to revenge it 3. Not to deale roughly with one under pretence of seeking the glory of God 4. Not to despise the offender but by all means to seek his amendment Who are to be admonished openly in the Church Those that sin openly What if they will not amend by admonition● Then they are by suspension to be barred for a time from some exercises of Religion and if by that they will not amend then they are by excommunication to be cut
off from the Church and delivered unto Satan as shall be declared How are the Censures ratified and the authority of the Church confirmed by our Saviour Christ That appeareth by his words unto his Disciples Matth. 18. 18. Whatsoever you bind on earth meaning according to the rule shall be bound in heaven and whatsoever you loose in earth shall be loosed in heaven which is as much as if a Prince giving authority to one of small reputation should bid him execute justice he would beare him out How is this further proved It is further confirmed in the verse following by a reason of comparison If two or three shall agree upon any thing and shall aske it in my name it shall be granted If Christ will ratifie the deed of two or three done in his name how much more then that which the whole Church shall doe accordingly Why is it said And shall aske it in my name To declare that by prayer unto God in the name of our Saviour Christ all the Censures of the Church but especially Excommunication should be undertaken as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 5. 4. When you are gathered together in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ that is calling upon his name deliver such an one unto Satan What need is there of this ratifying of the Churches authority in exercising the Censures Because some doe contemne the Censures of the Church as proceeding from men onely as if thereby they were no whit debarred from the favour of God whereas neverthelesse whom the Church separateth from the outward seales them also Christ depriveth of the inward graces banishing them from his kingdome whom the Church hath given over to Satan What gather you of this That men should not slightly shake off but with reverence esteeme the censures of the Church as the voice of God himselfe and although they be never so high and stout yet are they to subject themselves to the judgement of God in the Church unlesse they will set themselves against the Lord himself We have heard of the generall doctrine of censures What are the kinds of them They are either of soveraigne medicine Matth. 18. 15 16. 1 Cor. 4. 5. or of fearfull revenge 1 Cor. 16. 22. Iam. 1. 14. 2 Tim. 4. 14. the former properly are corrections the latter punishments What are the medicinall censures They are such as serve to bring men to repentance the principall end of the next the glory of God being the salvation of his soul that is censured What things are required of them that doe execute these censures against any man Six 1. Wisdome 2. Freedome from the sin reproved 3. Love 4. Sorrow 5. Patience and 6. prayer for the party Of what sorts are the medicinall Censures They are either in word or in deed What are they in word The chidings rebukes of the Church for sin which we call Admonitions How many sorts of admonitions are there Two the first is private betwixt Brother and Brother Levit. 19. 17. Mat. 18. 15 16. the other publick by the Minister assisted by the congregation when the private will not prevaile Mat. 18. 17. 1 Tim. 5. 20. What are we to observe in the private admonitions That we should watch one another diligently witnessing thereby our mutuall love which God requires of us as if any man seeing another whose journey he knoweth wander out of the way if he should not admonish him he might justly be accounted unnaturall much more we knowing all men think to journey towards heaven if we see any go the wrong waies as by Robberies Adulteries Vsury Swearing or Drunkennesse and do not admonish them are even guilty of their wandring especially sith the other belongeth to the body but this both to body soul. But is it not sufficient for men to watch themselves seeing every man standeth or falleth to God Such was the wicked answer of Cain and they that use it are like unto him but if God commanded in the law to help our enemies Oxe or Asse having need of help we are more bound by the law of charity to helpe himself and unlesse we reprove him we are partakers of his sin as hath bin said which we ought not to be because we have enough of our own What are the degrees of private admonitions They be two the former is most private done by one the other is private also but more publick then the first and it is done by two or three at the most whereof he that first admonisheth must be one Mat. 18. 15 16. Why hath our Saviour Christ limited us with these degrees By all means to win the offender if it be possible if not that his condemnation may appeare to be most just after so many warnings How is the first degree of private admonition expressed If thy brother offend against thee or in thy knowledge onely tell him between thee and him Matth. 18. 15. Are we bound to reprove all men of what profession soever No but him that is of the same profession of Christianity that we be of whom the Scripture termeth a brother thereby shutting forth Iewes Turks Hereticks and Atheists except we have some particular bond as of a master to his servant or father to his child or magistrate to his subject What learn you thereby 1. That we observe this in our admonitions that he be a brother whom we admonish and not such a one as is a scorner 2. That we are not to make light of or contemn the admonitions of others but to accept of them and account of them as a pretious balme How must we reprove our brothers fault First we must be sure that it is a fault we reprove him for and then we must be able to convince him thereof out of the Word of God so that he shall not be able to gainsay us unlesse he doe it contemptuously it being better for us not to reprove him then not to be able to convince him by the Word of that we have reproved him in Lastly we ought to doe it with all love and mildnesse regarding the circumstances of persons time and place not inconsiderately nor of hatred or to reproach him or as one that is glad of somewhat to hurt his good name What is meant by Tell him between thee and him Matth. 18. 15. That the good name and report of another man should be so regarded by us that if his fault be private we are not to spread it abroad as some that think they be burthened unlesse they tell it to others which is not the rule of Charity Why is this added If he heare thee thou hast gained thy brother As a notable meanes to encourage us in this duty For if the bestowing of a Cup of cold water shall not be unrewarded how much more the gaining of a soule from Satan What if our brother heare us not and so we doe not gain him Notwithstanding we lose not our labour but our reward
be exercised 332 Of the spirituall warfare 333 Of our spirituall armour 334 Of our first enemy Satan 335 2. Enemy the world 3. Enemy our flesh 336 New obedience 337 Of good works in generall and of the properties of them 338 That there is no merit in good works Wherein our good works faile 339 Why God rewardeth our works 340 The ends of good works Of speciall good works required 341 Of prayer what it is 342 The necessity of prayer A more full description of prayer What is required that prayer may be holy 343 That we must pray to God alone 344 That we must pray onely in the mediation of Christ. For whom we must pray The parts of Prayer 346 Of Petition The meanes of obtaining the gift of prayer 348 Motives to Prayer Hinderances of prayer 349 The subject of our requests Prayer for others 350 Of thanksgiving In what thanksgiving consisteth 351 Why thanksgiving is required The properties of praise The meanes of thanksgiving Motives to thanksgiving Signes of thankfulnesse 352 Of the Lords prayer Of the preface 353 Our Father 354 Which art in heaven 355 The parts of the Lords prayer 356 Sixe petitions in the Lords prayer The first Petition 357 What is meant by Name What is meant by hallowed 358 What we aske in the first Petition What graces we here pray for 359 What things we here pray against The second Petition 360 What is meant by Kingdome What is meant by Comming The particulars here prayed for 1. respecting the kingdome of grace 362 2. Respecting the kingdome of glory 363 The third Petition The summe of this Petition What meant by the word Thy. What will is here to be understood 364 VVhat we aske in this Petition concerning Gods revealed will What meant by this word Doing 365 VVhat meant by Earth and Heaven The order of the three last Petitions The three last Petitions 366 The fourth Petition 367 What meant by Bread What meant by Give Give us This day 368 Our daily VVhat we begge in this Petition The fifth Petition 370 VVhat is meant by Debts What we aske in this Petition 372 The reason of this Petition The sixt Petition 374 The summe of the sixt Petition Of the temptations and the causes why we must pray against them 375 How God may be said to tempt us 376 What is meant by Deliver us from evill 377 VVhat is meant by Evill VVhat things we pray for in this petition 378 Conclusion of the Lords Prayer VVhat is meant by Kingdome 379 VVhat is meant by Power VVhat is meant by Glory VVhat meant by Thine 380 VVhat by For ever VVhat is meant by Amen VVhether it be lawfull to use any other forme of Prayer 381 VVhat pulike Prayer is VVhat private Prayer is VVhat ordinary prayer is 382 What extraordinary Prayer is Circumstances of Prayer Gesture in Prayer Of the place of Prayer Of the time of Prayer 383 Of Fasting What an holy Fast is Of the time of Fasting 384 Of the kinds of Fasting 385 Of a publick Fast. Of a private Fast. Who are to fast 386 Of the parts of a Christian Fast. Of a holy Feast 388 Of the time of Feasting 389 In what an holy Feast consisteth Of Vowes 390 Who are to vow What is to be vowed 391 The duty of those that have vowed Of Almes 392 Who are to give Almes Whereof we must give Almes How much must be given 393 To whom Almes must be given What order must be observed in giving With what affection Almes must be given The fruits of Almes-deeds 394 Of Vocation Externall Internall Meanes of Vocation 395 Inward Outward Inward the Spirit of God Of the Church visible 396 The infallible markes of a true visible Church VVhether the Church may erre 397 In what cases we may separate from a corrupt Church 398 Of the enemies of the Church Of the Governours of the Church 399 Things proper to the visible Church The Word Sacraments Censures Of the Word What things are common between godly and wicked hearers 401 Things proper to godly hearers How justifying Faith differeth from the faith of worldlings 402 Of the Sacraments 403 The Sacraments of great use VVhat a Sacrament is The use of Sacraments 406 The ends why Sacraments are instituted The persons that are actors in the Sacraments and their actions 407 Of preparation to the Sacraments 408 Duties in the action of receiving Duties after receiving Of the old Testament and the Sacraments of it 409 The new administration of the Gospel 410 The Sacraments of the new Testament Of Baptisme what it is 411 Whether diving or dipping be essentiall to Baptisme 413 Sprinkling in Baptisme warrantable The inward part or thing signified in Baptisme The similitude betweene the signe and thing signified The benefit of Baptisme to a common Christian. 415 To whom Baptisme is effectuall How infants may be capable of the grace of the Sacrament 416 What benefit elect infants have by Baptisme for the present 417 The lawfulnesse of infants Baptism 418 Baptisme not of absolute necessity to salvation 419 Baptism to be highly accounted of 420 That many have a slight esteem of this ordinance What the meanes are to reforme this slight esteem 421 Of the Lords Supper 422 What it is The differences between Baptisme and the Lords Supper 423 Why it is called the Lords Supper Of the matter of the Lords Supper 424 That the bread and wine are not changed into the body and blood of Christ Of the forme of this Sacrament of the Lords Supper 426 The sacramentall actions of the Minister Of the consecration of the bread and wine The sacramentall actions of the receivers 427 The ends and uses of the Lords Supper 428 Who are to receive the Lords Supper Preparation to the Lords Table Duties in the action of receiving to be performed by the Communicant Duties to be performed after the action 430 Of the censures of the Church 431 Of the degrees of Censures 432 Of the kindes of Censures 433 Of private admonition The degrees of private admonition 1. Most private How we must reprove 434 2. The second degree of private admonition Of publick admonition 435 Of Suspension Of Excommunication Anathema Maranatha Of the enemies of the Church 437 Of the generall apostasie Of Antichrist and who he is 438 What difference between Christs miracles and the Popes 442 The seat of Antichrist 443 Of the last judgement 445 Why the righteous dye Of particular judgment at the houre of death 446 Of the generall judgement Of the preparation to the last judgement The signes of the last judgement The second thing in the preparation 447 The third thing The fourth thing 448 The fift thing The act of judgment how performed The execution of the last judgement 449 The state of the Reprobate in hell The state of the Elect in heaven The use of this Doctrine concerning the last judgment 450 FINIS ERRATA PAge 21. line 9. for saith read truth p. 31. l. 33. for distinction
Contracts between Magistrates and people Of Contracts between Ministers people Of Workmasters and hirelings and their duties to one another Of things deposited and committed to trust The duty of Executors Of persons committed to trust Of just possession of goods and what is required unto it Of Restitution and what is to be considered in it Of the right use and fruition of goods Of parsimony and frugality Of tenacity miserlinesse Profusion and Prodigality Of Liberality Of lending Of Free-giving The ninth Commandement The scope or end The occasion of this Commandement The chiefe sin here forbidden The Negative part The Affirmative part The summe of the duties here required Of Truth Truth must be professed and how Opposites to truth 1. Lying Reasons to disswade from lying Three sorts of Lyes Vices opposite to freedom of speech Opposites to simplicity of speaking truth Means of preserving truth Profitable speech Curtesie and affability Seasonable silence Opposites to profitable speech 1. Vnprofitable 2. Hurtfull speech 3. Rotten speech Fame and good name Publick Testimonies Rash Iudgment Perverse Iudgment The duties of the Plaintiffe and the vices opposite hereunto The vices of the Defendant The duties of Lawyers and the opposite vices The duty of witnesses False testimony in the publick Ministery of the word Flattery Evill speaking Whispering Obtrectation Conserving of our own good name The meanes of getting a good name A true testimony of our selves The opposites to the profession of truth concerning our selves Arrogancy and boasting Confession of sinne The 10. commandement The end of this Commandement The occasion of this Commandement Two sorts of concupiscence Lawfull concupiscence Vnlawful concupiscence and the kindes thereof The growth of sinne The parts of this Commandement and 1. the negative Originall concupiscence That originall concupiscence is sinne Actuall Concupiscence Evill thoughts Evill thoughts injected by Satan Evill thoughts arising from naturall corruption The speciall kinde of conpiscence here forbidden What is meant by our neighbours house Neighbours wife Our neighbors servant His Oxe and Asse The affirmative part The meanes enabling us to obey this commandement The impossibility of keeping this Commandement Repentance new obedience Repentance what it is When repentance is to be exercised Of the spirituall warfare Of the spirituall Armour Of our first enemy Satan 2. Enemy the World Third enemy our flesh New obedience Of good works in generall and of the Properties of them That there is no merit in good works Wherein our good works faile Why God rewardeth our works The ends of good works Of speciall good works required Of prayer what it is The necessity of prayer A more full description of prayer What is required that prayer may be holy That we must pray to God alone That we must pray only in the mediation of Christ. For whom we must pray The parts of Prayer Of Petition The meanes of obtaining the gift of prayer Motives to prayer Hinderances of Prayer The subject of our requests Prayer for others Of thanksgiving In what thanksgiving consisteth Why thanksgiving is required The properties of praise The meanes of thanks-giving Motives to thanksgiving Signes of thankfulnesse Of the Lords Prayer Of the p●e●ace Our Father Which art in heaven The parts of the Lords Prayer 6. Petitions in the Lords Prayer 1. Petition What is meant by Name What is meant by hallowed What we ask in this petition What graces we here pray for What things we here pray against The second Petition What is meant by Kingdome What is meant by comming The particulars here prayed for respecting the kingdome of grace 2. Respecting the kingdome of glory The third Petition The three last Petitions The fourth Petition What meant by Bread What meant by Give Give us This day Out Daily What we beg in this Petition The fifth Petition What is meant by debts What we aske of God in this fifth petition The reason of the petition The sixt Petition The summe of the sixt Petition Of the temptations and the cau●es why we must pray against them How God tempteth us Deliver us from evill What is meant by it What is meant by evill What things we paray for in the sixt Petition Conclusion of the Lords Prayer What is meant by Kingdome What is meant by Power What is meant by Glory What meant by Thine What meant by for ever What is meant by Amen Whether lawfull to use any other forme of Prayer What publick Prayer is What private Prayer is What ordinary prayer is What extraordinary prayer is Circumstances of prayer 1. Gesture Of the place of prayer Of the time of prayer Of Fasting What an holy Fast is Of the time of Fasting Of the kindes of Fasting Of publick Fast. Of private Fast. Who are to fast Of the parts of a Christian fast Of a holy feast Of the time of feasting In what an holy feast consisteth Of Vowes Gen. 28 20. Iudg. 11. 30. 31. 1 Sam. 1. 11. Who are to vow What is to be vowed The duty of those that have vowed Of Almes a 2 Cor. 9 7. Who are to give Almes a 1 Iohn 3. 17. b Luke 21. 2 3. c 1. Tim. 6. 17. d Eph. 4. 28. e 2 Cor. 8. 2. 14. a ● Sam. 25. 3. b Mat. 12. 7. a Neh 8. 10. b Luke 19. 8. How much must be given c 2 Cor. 9. 6. Gal. 6. 7. Prov. 11. 25. d Luke 3. 11. 1 Cor. 16. 2. e 2 Cor. 8. 13. f Acts 20. 25. g 2 Cor. 8. 1 2. 9 Luke 12. 35. h Act. 4. 34 35 with Acts 5. 4. i 1 Tim. 5. 8. k 2 Cor. 9. 12. Iob 31. 17 18 c. Iam. 2. 15 16. To whom alms must be given l Matth. 5. 41. Rom. 12. 20. m Luke 10. 33 with Ioh. 4. 9. n Psal. 41. 1. o Deut. 15 7. 11 Lev. 25. 35. p Luke 7. 5. q 2 King 6. 1. c. 2 Chro 34. 22. r Ioh. 5. 2 3. 9 s 2 Thes. 3. 10 11 12. 1 Tim. 5. 8. Mat. 15. 5 6. t Deut. 15. 7. What order must be observed in giving u Gal 6. 10. x 1 Kings 17. 13. y 1 Cor. 16. 2. z Luke 21. 1. Iob 31. 16. Prov. 3. 28. With what affections almes must be given a Deut. 15. 8. Mat. 5. 42. b Luke 6. 36. Psal. 37. 26. c Exod. 22. 25. d Neh. 5. 11. e Luke 6 35. f Prov. 1. 26. g Nehem. 5. 18. The fruits of Almes-deeds 2 Chro. 2● 14. Of Vocation Externall Internall Meanes of Vocation Inward Outward Inward The Spirit of God Of the Church visible Rev. 12. 14. The infallible marks of a true visible Church Whether the Curch may erre In what cases we may separate from a corrupt Church Of the enemies of the Church Of the Governours of the Church Things proper to the visible Church The Word Sacraments Censures Of the Word 1 Chro. 17. 7. Acts 2. 40 41. 11. 20. 1 Cor. 4. 13. Iohn 17. 10. Ephes. 1. 23. Rom 3. 19. 7. 9 10.