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A17258 A guide vnto godlinesse: or, A plaine and familiar explanation of the ten commandements, by questions and answeres fittest for the instruction of the simple and ignorant people. By Francis Bunny, one of the prebendaries of the Cathedrall Church of Durham.; Guide unto godlinesse. Bunny, Francis, 1543-1617. 1617 (1617) STC 4100; ESTC S119539 83,481 241

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know themselues and holdeth that for a dishonouring of his name whereof they make no reckoning will both charge them and punish them too vnlesse speedily they repent for their grieuous transgressiō Q. You told vs in the beginning that the fourth Commandement if it bee well obserued is a very good meane to instruct vs how wee may performe these duties vnto God and to furder vs in doing the same A. It it most true for it commandeth the sanctifying of the Sabbath that is vpon that day the occupying of our selues about such holy exercises as might rauish our hearts with a consideration of Gods goodnesse towards vs and his wisedome in all his works Q. This Commandement as it is repeated by Moses in the fift of Deuteronomy is this Keep the Sabbath day to sanctifie it as the Lord thy God commanded thee and so forth from the beginning of the 12. verse to the end of the 15. wherein I obserue some things that seem not to belong vnto the first table of the Commandements wherof as yet we speake A. That is truely obserued And for your better vnderstanding of this commaundement you must remember that first the commandement it selfe is giuen in these words Keepe the Sabbath day Then is the chiefe and principall end why it should bee kept mentioned Afterwards the commandement it selfe is explained namely what God requireth of vs or what hee meaneth by these words Keepe the Sabbath In it thou shalt do no maner of worke thou thy son c. And by this occasion is shewed a second end of giuing this Commandement That thy man seruant and thy mayd seruant may rest as well as thou Fourthly diuers reasons are scattered here there in these words some inducing to obedience in respect of the principall end which is the sanctifying of the Sabbath others in regard of the second end of this day of rest for the Sabboth day in the true signification of the word and the day of rest is al one namely that seruants might haue a day of rest as well as their masters Q. That I may particularly bee instructed in this Commandement I pray you first to teach mee the precept it selfe what is thereby meant Thou shalt keepe the day of rest Are all workes forbidden in these words A. The Prophet Moses is informed from God himselfe concerning this point Leuit. 23 8 The seuenth day is a holy conuocation in it thou shalt doe no seruile worke Q. But what are those seruile workes A. The works of euery mans seuerall vocation wherein he is to bestow his labour either for the good of the common-wealth wherein hee liueth or the maintenance of his owne estate and of his family Which workes because they are especially wrought in respect of this present life that here wee liue in comparison of those that aime at the euerlasting life are worthily called seruise because that curse of God belongeth to these our bodily labours In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eate bread Gen. 3.19 vntill thou returne to earth And seruile also they may be called because for the most part they are not wrought with such sincerity respect to Gods glory as they ought but sauor somewhat of our corruption and are too much inthralled to either our gréedy desire to inrich our selues by painful trauel or ambitiously seeking prayse of men or are otherwise sowred with some such leauen and so serue in some part at the least our polluted and naughty affections Q. But being commanded to keep the day of rest we are not forbidden all kind of workes A. No. For there are workes of Religion such as were circumcising the children which if the eight day wherein by Gods Law they were to be circumcised fel vpon the Sabbath was to bee performed without transgression of this Law Ioh. 7.22 as our Sauiour Christ affirmeth And the killing of the Sacrifices vpon the Sabbath day must be done Mat. 12.5 So the paines or labor in comming to Church vpon the Sabbath day is a labour not only lawful but commanded and necessarily required of all Christians as a duety that they must performe Some other are workes of necessity as if an Oxe be fallen into a pit vpon the Sabbath day it is no breach of this Commandement to pull it forth Luke 14.5 But here we must deale wisely and sincerely For if any businesse may without great danger bee put off vntill another time then this is not a work néedfull to be done that day so that euery occasion cannot make a worke of necessitie but only danger of great hurt or losse There are also works of charitie whereof Christ giueth this example Luk. 13.15 Doth not euery one of you loose an Asse or Oxe from the stall and lead him to the water on the Sabbath day Such workes are the visiting of the sicke comforting of them that are in heauinesse and such like works Q. Among the workes of charity many reckon this that they make drinkings gather great companies together vpon the Sabbath day to benefit som poore man as their pretence is may not this be truly accounted among the works of charitie that this day may be performed A. No. For when a worke that seemeth to proceed from a charitable affection toward man is crossed by some commandement of the first table all which belong to the immediate honor of God thou must rather shew thy loue to God then to man And indeed they who will not choose other daies wherein they may performe duties of loue towards their neighbour then that which God appointeth for to honour him in doe plainly shew they loue their owne profit better then either God or their neighbor because they take such time only to do good to their neighbour as God challengeth to be honoured in being loth to leese the work of a day appointed for labour Q. Is there then great necessity in consecrating the Sabbath day to a day of rest A. Very great as may appeare by the charge that is giuen For the word Kéep the Sabbath the word I say vsed in the Hebrew requireth oft a great and diligent care in kéeping that which is there commanded as Deutero 8.11 24.8 1. Kings 2.3 2. Kings 11.5 In all which places and many such like the selfe same word is vsed that here Moses hath to shewe the watchfull care wee should haue to kéepe this day of rest Yea God himselfe in giuing this commandement Exod. 20 giueth it with a memento Remember that thou keepe holy the Sabbath day Remember not onely when it commeth to keepe this day of rest from bodily labour but thinke of it before hand As a wise builder wil prouide his stuffe néedful for his building that when the work is in hand nothing bee wanting Or a discreet Captaine purposing to fight with his enemy will muster his Souldiers appoint his Captaines and Officers furnish them with armour weapons and victuall and all
things needfull that when hee goeth to encounter his aduersary there be no want euen so God would haue vs to consider all the weeke before what we haue to doe on the Sabbath day that wee might so dispose of our sixe dayes of work that the seuenth might bee wholly bestowed without any let vpon Gods seruice Q. This Commandement requireth not onely the rest of the masters or chiefe of families but of seruants too that they should not be appointed to any labour that day And therefore they who send their seruants vpon errands vpon such daies which is a sin wherein too many offend transgresse this Commandement They likewise who appoint thē that are vnder them so they worke not their wonted worke to doe other businesse either at home or abroad and thinke they breake not the Sabbath are much deceiued A. It is so Yea God hath such care that seruants shuld also rest that day that hee would the cattell should rest lest by any meanes the seruants if the cattel rested not should be constrained to work And that this commandement might more religiously be obserued euē the stranger though hee were not tyed to such lawes as Gods people were yet being then among Gods people might not worke that day lest his example might bee hurtfull or offensiue to other Q. I see then that there must bee rest from our ordinary labour vpon the Sabbath day But is it enough that wee rest from worke is that a sufficient sanctifying that day A. No for the end why we should rest from bodily worke is that wee might be wholy occupied in Sanctifying it and apply our selues to heauenly meditations Q. Then to bee idle is not the rest that is heere commanded much lesse to bestow that day or any part of the Sabbath in excessiue drinking feasting or gaming A. You say truely for the rest from bodily labour is to this end onely that the mind of men being occupied in spirituall and heauenly meditations they might more assuredly inioy that sweet rest and quietnesse of conscience which is that Peace that the world cannot giue Ioh. 14.27 as our blessed Sauiour telleth vs in such sort as he giueth it Q. I pray you then teach vs how wee may sanctifie this day of rest in such sort as that wee may find this heauenly rest A. Wée must vnderstand that this Commandement as it was giuen vnto all that God brought out of the house of bondage euen to Moses and Aaron aswell as to the people so is it generall now and belongeth vnto all states of life to all callings to Men and Women and euery body in his place must seeke to further this worke The Magistrate and the Minister the Pastor and the People the Master and the Seruant must indeauour to helpe forward as the Prophet Zephanie speaketh Chap. 3.9 with one shoulder this sanctifying the day of rest Q. Hath the ciuill Magistrate any thing required at his hands in this sanctifying of the Sabbath but that for his owne selfe and his household hee be carefull to resort to the holy exercises of that day A. Yes he is also bound euen by this Commandement in respect that the talent of gouernment is committed to him from God first to haue a care that good lawes be made against the prophanation of the Sabbath secondly to take order that such Laws be duely executed and punishment inflicted against offenders as Law commandeth Heereof wee haue in Nehemiah a godly patterne for Magistrates who séeing the Sabbath day when the people of the Iewes were returned from the captiuitie of Babylon wickedly prophaned by treading Wine-presses selling Grapes and such like labours earnestly reproued them for it yea and the Magistrates too with these words Nehe. 13.15.17 What euil thing is this that ye do and breake the Sabbath day And the night before the Sabbath he caused the gates of Ierusalem to be shut and set his seruants to watch the gates that none should open the same but they should be kept shut vntill after the Sabbath day so that he kept the Marchants which by their bearing of burthens prophaned the Sabbath day without the walles all night once or twice But seeing them somewhat obstinate and loth to be restrained he also threatned them that if they came any more in such sort to offer such prophanation on the Sabbath day hee would force them by violence to depart By which Story that is left vnto vs as a commendable fact for all Magistrates to imitate wee see how carefull and how earnest Magistrates should bee to shew themselues as the LORD hath appointed them Conseruatours of his Sabbath Q. As for Ministers of the word we know that their vocation is holy and should especially bee directed to the true sanctifying the day of rest A. It is most true that wee haue a holy calling which that wee also should walke in holily it were to bee wished But as this Commandement was giuen to Aaron as well as to Moses or the people so no doubt wee must haue great regard to the sanctifying the Sabbath day and go before other therein our selues I meane and our housholds that by our example other may the rather be moued to this holy rest And besides those duties that God requireth of vs in regard of our generall calling to Christianity wee haue a speciall calling vnto the Ministerie whereby we must striue to the vttermost of our power to call our people to the sanctifying the Sabbath day to teach them how the day is to bee sanctifyed to exhort such as are slack to reproue such as obstinately offend therein and by all extremity that we can to compell men to the sanctifying thereof And wee must do this as God hath inabled vs sincerely and seeking only the glory of GOD not our owne praise or moued by any other corrupt affection if we will truly and effectually teach our people to sanctifie the Lords Sabbath For how much the more zealously and from a sanctified heart the word is deliuered the more powerfully no doubt will it worke a godly reformation Q. Magistrates and Ministers I see must vse their talents of authority and gifts to sanctifie the Sabbath and themselues by their example also must moue other thereto haue not any other charge to helpe forward herein A. All Parents and heads of housholds must further this duty likewise to haue a great care that their children and seruants prophane not the day that God commandeth to bee kept holy Yea one neighbour ought to stir vp another as Gods people did Come Esay 2.3 let vs go vp to the mountaine of the Lord to the house of the God of Iaacob and hee will teach vs his waies and wee will walke in his paths Come let vs go to the Church let vs reuerently heare his word let vs not spend the day in drinking wantonnesse or idlenesse that God bids vs bestow in holinesse yea and seruants and children should frame themselues willingly
to perform this duty Q. Wee haue heard what persons should be furtherers to this worke of sanctifying the Sabbath Now let vs heare what duties are required of vs to the sanctifying thereof A. If wee will holily as wee ought apply our selues to this holy seruice wee must beginne with our selues for vnlesse wee be first sanctified Mat. 7.18 our seruice cannot be holy An euill tree cannot bring forth good fruit saith He that cannot lye The Priests in the Leuiticall Law when they went about that holy seruice that belonged to their office must first themselues bee sanctified Exod. 28.41 And therefore Iosiah that good King minding to haue the feast of the Passeouer kept 2. Chro. 35.6 commanded the Priests to sanctifie themselues for that seruice And God commanded the people of Israel to be sanctified Exod. 19.10 when he appointed to declare to them his Law Good Ezechia therfore intreated God to be mercifull to some that came out of some Tribes of Israel to the feast of the Passeouer that prepared their whole heart to seeke the LORD 2. Chro. 30.19 although they wanted the Legal sanctification This good foundation of sanctifying our selues beeing thus layd all that wee doe will bee better accepted with God Then must wée carefully follow all the holy exercises of that day such as are these hearing of the Word attentiuely and as men greedy to learne Praying to GOD feruently for the assistance of his holy Spirit in all our godly indeuours yeelding to him most hearty thankes for his graces bestowed vpon vs godly conference when wee are out of the Church one with another of the lessons that we haue heard by the Ministery of the Word company with such as can and will instruct vs either by reading to vs good Bookes or by godly talk either of Gods goodnes to our selues or his mercy shewed to others or his fearefull iudgments against the wicked for contempt of Him and his truth or generally of his wonderfull works in creating all things in such order as they are and all for our vse Q. I perceiue they that are sanctified and with sanctified hearts doe keepe the Sabbath day may find much comfort in such holy exercises but how may wee sanctifie our selues A. It is a harder worke then wee are able to performe yet if we heartily call vpon God for his grace intreating Him to worke that in vs which wee of our selues are no way able to doe and then keepe a carefull watch at the dore of our lips that we speake not vnaduisedly and haue a watchfull eye vnto our waies that we walke warily if I say in sincerity of heart wee thus seeke to prepare our selues to sanctifie our selues to this holy rest no doubt God wil giue a blessing to these our good indeuors Q. Alasse then how lamentable is the case of many in our dayes who spend scarcely one hower of the day in the Church and thinke that time also how short soeuer long and tedious But in the Ale-howses or the vngodly feasts and meetings which too many resort vnto they willingly tarry very long yea the whole day seemeth too short when it is bestowed so rebelliously against Gods expresse Cōmandement A. In truth the carelesnesse and supine security of men in these our dayes is much to be pittied wherein many who haue the name of Christians would scorne to be deemed not to be so haue onely heard of GOD and are acquainted with the name of Christ and so by continuall company among Christians haue some generall knowledge of good words but yet are so carelesse to attaine to any true knowledge by the light of Gods word so godlesse and irreligious in prophanation of the Sabbath day so wholy deuoted to such vnchristian méetings and so loose lewd in behauiour when they are there that if any Turkes or Infidels should behold their conuersation at such times they would then detest the very name of Christianity such staines are they to the very profession Q. But God forbid all that resort to such meetings were so vnruly some are more moderate and come but at the intreaty of their friend or for company of their neighbours or fellowes not delighting much in drinking A. True some are more moderate but he that is most moderate if he trust too much in himselfe that he can in such dangerous meetings carry himselfe soberly may soone bee deceiued and therefore may seeme by his ouerboldnesse to tempt God as presuming of his own naturall disposition And let all men assure themselues heereof that God in his iust iudgement forsakes them and leaues them to themselues who contemptuously do breake his Law And therfore if their friend intreat them to disobey Gods Commandement in resorting vpon the Sabbath day to such feasts it is the part of a good Christian rather to moue his friend to detest his wicked prophanation of the Lords Sabbath but in any wise let not the seruant of God consent to his wicked perswasion Exod. 23.2 Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do euill much lesse one seducing friend And since they say they go with their friend and thinke that should serue to make their fault lesse I would all Christians should remember 1. Thes 5.11 their duty is to exhort one another to good and to edifie one another in the things that belong to godlinesse but to suffer thy selfe to be drawne away to wickednesse is a token of great weakenesse and to consent to such perswasion procureth Gods wrath to bee short séeing the godly must abstaine from all shew of euill 1. The. 5.22 and must in all their doings as the third Commandement teacheth glorifie God it is most certaine that the resort to such vngodly méetings vpon the Sabbath day how moderately soeuer they carry themselues is a breach of Gods Commandement and therefore God in his iustice may and will in his good time punish such offenders vnlesse they repent and take a new course Q. What are the reasons whereby the Israelites are mooued to obey this Commandement A. The first reason is the Commandement of God which Moses heere in repeating the Law setteth forth and strengtheneth partly in respect of the authority of the Commander in calling him Lord partly hee allureth them to performe vnto this Commandement willing obedience because he hath many waies declared himselfe to bee their good and gracious God whom they cannot disobey without great note of vnthankfulnes Secondly in giuing them 6. daies to supply all wants of their body and for dispatch of their worldly affaires hee reserueth onely one to be wholy imploied in his honor and seruice the bestowing of which day in such sort as wee ought to doe is also most to our owne good because it is the gaining our soules to God I say by this his large allowance of so many daies for bodily labours they iustly are to be charged with a staine of ingratitude if they willingly giue not
this one day to holy and spirituall exercises Q. Are we so tied in the sixe daies to labour in our calling that we may not in them resort to places where Gods word is preached and taught A. No For the knowledge and seruice of God must chiefly be sought for of vs Mar. 6.33 First seeke the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse saith our Sauiour Christ Wée sée GOD himselfe who gaue this charge to the Israelites commanded also his holy seruice to be performed of them somtime on the sixe daies as namely it may appeare Leuit. 23. and Numb 2. but most plainely in the story of Ester the fourteenth and fifteenth daies of the Moneth Adar with feasting and ioy were kept by Mordecai his commandement no doubt Ester 9.22 their ioy and reioicing was seasoned with thanksgiuing to God for their deliuerance from so imminent danger and is left vnto vs as a patterne to follow in like case and is also obserued of vs on the 5. of Nouember in giuing thankes to our most gracious God who saued vs from the most vnnaturall Gunpowder-Treason And they who in sincerity of heart seeke after the knowledge seruice of God at such times will also the more diligently early or late follow the works of their calling to supply their wants and such faithfull care of seruing GOD shall not want a blessing from God Q. But may a pretence of following such holy exercises be any excuse to such as will perchance bestow a little time that way and then the rest of the day they imploy in idlenesse A. It seemeth there were some such whereof the Apostle admonisheth Timothy 1. Tim. 5.13 and they were young widdowes but Saint Paul liked not of their doings and would not in any wise that such should be tolerated among Christians Q. But what thinke you of these words Sixe dayes shalt thou labour They seeme to be a Commandement and to require the labour of sixe daies euery man in his calling A. They are vnto the godly a toleration or permission to follow their vocation and to worke for the maintenance of themselues and their families But they haue also the force of a commandement to the condemnation of the vngodly that spend their life in loitering and idlenesse and may worke in them a sting of conscience when they shall remember that God saith Sixe dayes shalt thou labour and their own heart telleth them they haue not wrought but loitered For séeing God hath after mans fall set this downe as a Decrée that may not be altered vnlesse we spend our time in some religious exercise as before I sayd In the sweat of thy face thou shalt eat thy bread Gen. 3.19 good and godly is the exhortation that the Apostle maketh to the Thessalonians to worke with their hands as hee also before had commanded them 1. Thes 4.11 that nothing bee lacking to them Verse 12. And iust cause hee hath to giue that heauy charge which hee afterwards giueth vnto them 2. The. 3.10 If there were any that would not worke that he should not eat So hateful is the idle life to God and good men and so vnséemely for any Christian Q The Commandement of God if there were no other thing to moue GODS people to obedience in this thing ought to be sufficient but much the rather seeing God hath dealt with them so fauourably as to haue consideration of their wants that they might haue time to supply them A. There is yet a third reason to moue them then and vs also now to sanctifie the Sabbath in these words But the seuenth day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God For God challengeth this day as his due and not to be spent but as he appointeth that is in holinesse and sanctification Q. But the seuenth day which is here commanded is not that which now we call the Sabbath day so that it seemeth wee transgresse this Commandement howsoeuer we keepe our Sabbath A. Indéede the day here commanded as that also wherein God rested was the seuenth day of the wéeke and the day that we keepe and indeuour to sanctifie is the first day of the wéek For that seuenth day being ceremoniall and so by the comming of Christ abolished for he was the end and fulfilling of all the ceremoniall Lawe needefull it was that the chiefe and most substanciall end of that ceremonie should bee still retained that is that one day should bee wholly consecrated to Gods seruice And this day which we now solemnize being the first day of the wéeke was vpon good ground thought to be fittest because as God rested the seuenth day from his worke of creation and therefore that day was then thought most conuenient to bee vnto his people a day of rest So Christ rising againe from his worke of redemption vpon the first day of the wéeke the Apostles being directed by the Spirit of God vpon this first day of the wéeke had their holy assemblies as is most plaine Ioh. 20.19.26 Acts 23.7 and in other places and of the worke that Christ wrought in rising againe it is called The Lords day Reu. 1.10 And by this is there as it was fit a difference put betwéene the Sabbath of the Iewes and that which we kéepe Q. Almost in the very beginning of handling this fourth Commandement you sayd that there was a principall end why wee should keepe this day of rest which I think is this that you haue spokē of already the sanctifying it Declare then if there be any other end of keeping the Sabbath though not of such importance as this is A. Moses a true expositor of Gods meaning expresseth it in these words That thy man-seruant and thy mayd may rest as thou dost Deu. 5.14 Not giuing therein liberty to any seruants to rest from bodily labour and spend their time in idlenesse but their rest must be such as their masters rest ought to be a rest from seruile work that they may the more carefully and seriously bend themselues wholly to the sanctifying of that day I am not therefore of that minde that this part of this commandement belongeth to the second table as some thinke but rather that Moses expounding those former words Thou shalt do no work therein c. giueth them to vnderstand that the rest which in these words God commandeth them to giue their seruants must be to that very end that themselues also must rest that is to sanctifie that day And to the end they might more willingly giue this time of holy rest vnto their seruants hee putteth them in minde of their seruitude in Egypt Deut. 5.15 wherein they liued in such thraldome that they could not haue liberty to serue the Lord from which if they acknowledged truly as they ought confessed Gods great goodnesse in that he deliuered them then must they also thinke that their seruants must not alway bee tyed to their worke but that they as
daies so little regard the Ministerie of the Word as themselues might see if they had grace to marke how often and how fearefully Gods Iudgements are threatned against them that will not hears throughout the Scriptures Q. Let vs now heare what honour seruants owe their masters A. Saint Paul teacheth it plainely Eph. 6.5.6.7 Seruants be obedient vnto your Masters according to the flesh with feare and trembling in singlenesse of your hearts as vnto Christ not with seruice to the eye as men pleasers but as the seruants of Christ doing the will of God from the heart with good will seruing the Lord and not men Which commandement of the Apostle requireth such seruice as is not now commonly done to Masters for it must bee hearty and sincere being more carefull to do the duty of a seruant then to require reward yea striuing rather to deserue well then to aske recompence The Apostle saith it must bee with feare and trembling Saint Peter likewise Seruants 1. Pet. 2.18 bee subiect to your Masters with all feare not that their meaning is that seruants should alwaies be afraid of anger or punishment but their feare should be such as the Wife-man speaketh of Pro. 28.14 Blessed is the man that feareth alwaies that is that alwaies mistrusteth his owne doings that neuer thinketh that he hath serued God sincerely enough but suspecteth his owne waies not wholy to be guyded by Gods Spirit euen so seruants should feare lest they be short in performance of their duty or doing their seruice to be short they should rather feare the Lords Eye then their masters wrath And where this hearty seruice is and so seasoned with feare of Gods All-séeing-Eyes and a true view of our owne vnability to serue so perfectly as wee should there doubtlesse will be a faithfull indeuour to serue truely And such seruants for a good supply of their own wants will carefully intreat the Lord both better to inable them to doe their duty and to giue such blessing to their desire to serue truely as may be to their Masters good Q. But many times Masters are froward and too too rigorous insomuch as such seruice may seeme a very grieuous bondage are such masters to be honoured also A. Saint Peter answereth this question commanding seruants to be subiect to their Masters not onely to the good and courteous but to the froward also For this is thank-worthy 1. Pet. 2.18 if a man for conscience toward God indure griefe suffering wrongfully So that a true Christian seruant must doe his duty towards his Master remembring that so doing he serueth the Lord as Saint Paul in the place alleaged teacheth who howsoeuer their master cannot be pleased yet will take in good part and plentifully reward their faithfull seruice Therfore must seruants striue to bridle herein the corruption of their nature and to serue as S. Paul would haue vs to do al things Phil. 2.14 without murmurings and reasonings for as before I said concerning honouring of Parents so here also and in all duties that wee owe to our superiours an honourable and reuerent affection printed in our hearts towards them must bee the roote from whence true seruice must grow that it may bee willing Q. Besides these superiours that now you haue spoken of there are others also as olde folke husbands Schoolemasters which are accounted superiours to whom also honour belongeth A. Most true concerning aged folke God hath giuen this Commandement Leuit. 19.32 Thou shalt rise vp before the hoare head and honour the person of the old man especially if godlinesse be ioyned with many yéeres then age is a Crowne of glory Pro. 16 3. when it is found in the way of righteousnesse As for Wiues Saint Paul teacheth them obedience Ephe. 5.22 Wiues sub your selues vnto your husbands as vnto the Lord. And that more willingly they might performe this duty he yeeldeth this reason for the Husband is the Wiues head verse 23. Now it were a monstrous thing for the body not to be vnder the head Againe Wiues submit your selues to your Husbands as it is comely in the Lord teaching that it is a foule and vncomely thing if the wife bee not in subiection to the husband And for the comfort of all inferiours wée must note that they must be subiect vnto the Lord and for the Lords sake as is to bee séene in the subiection of children subiects and seruants that their mind beeing still fastened vpon their heauenly rather then vpon their earthly Master or Husband they may with lesse griefe beare the yoke of obedience Yea Schollers if they knew what good they get by their Schoolemasters who traine them vp in knowledge and lay in them the very ground-worke of Learning whereby they are made fit to serue most profitably in the Church or Common-wealth willingly also would confesse that they should defraud them of their due if they doe not honour and reuerence them Q. We haue now heard of the honour that inferiors owe to their superiors whether by nature as Parents or by publike place in the Common-wealth as gouernors or in the Church as Pastors and Ministers or by age as Elders or by voluntary subiection and that either in priuate households as to Husbands or masters of families or to Schoolemasters as profitable to the youths of many places but do not these superiors also owe to their inferiors some duties A. Yes and first to begin with Parents as they of their children must bee honoured so must they also giue cause of honour Parents owe to their children diuers duties wherof some are to be done in the childhood of their children some when they are come to riper age and some at all times must be performed Q. What are Parents bound to do to children in their childhood A. First in their infancy they must haue care that they may haue things necessary for the sustenance of their life when they are not able to helpe themselues and this the fathers and mothers may learne of the beasts of the field and birds of the ayre who leaue not their young ones vntil they be fit to shift for themselues 1. Sam. 1.23 as Anna gaue her childe sucke vntill shee would weine him Secondly when they are come to any vnderstanding they must not prolong the time to instruct them first in the very principles and grounds of Religion For if Thou teach thy childe in the trade of his life Pro. 22.6 when hee is old he will not depart from it And therefore the Apostle admonisheth thus Fathers Ephes 6.4 bring vp your children in instruction and information of the Lord. In the booke of Deuteronomy it is a charge very often giuen vnto Parents to teach their children Gods Law Yea it is worth marking how in all their extraordinary ceremonies or actions the children were instructed what was meant thereby As if the children should inquire when they saw their fathers to eate in
I say vnto you Mat. 5.22 whosoeuer is angry with his brother vnaduisedly that is without cause or immoderately vpon small cause shall bee culpable of iudgement And Saint Iohn saith 1. Ioh. 3.15 Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a murtherer Enuy is another bad affection of the heart that wisheth often sometime also practiseth the death of them whose good successe they grieue at as wee see in Cain who killed Habel his brother Gen. 4.5 because God better accepted of Habels sacrifice then of his This enuious heart is a murdering heart and was in the brethren of Ioseph so cruell that they had a purpose to kill him Gen. 37. had not Ruben first and after Iudah perswaded them otherwise And out of these or some one of them groweth a third kind of murdering hearts namely a purpose to execute their malice and mischiefe such as was in those aboue fortie men that had conspired to kill Paul which they could not effect Acts 23. yet murtherers they were because they in heart intended murder And in this sort no doubt many of our Romish-Catholicks who knew in generall that mischiefe was intended on the 5. of Nouember when that most inhumane and sauage purpose that euer was thought vpon should haue been executed and wished in their hearts it might take effect are cruell monstrous murderers And so are many other who since haue been as bloudy-minded nay when are not Papists in these our daies plotting some or other bloudy designes against this State As for murthering with the tongue Mat. 5.22 Christ telleth vs Whosoeuer shal say Foole is worthy to be punished with hell fire teaching thereby that if with vnséemely words we execute the anger that in heart wee haue conceiued we are guilty of breaking this Law Thou shalt not kill Q. But concerning the goods of our neighbour you say this prohibition may be broken A. It is true yet not because hee that robbeth or taketh from a man his riches taketh away his life also but because bringing him to want things necessarie hee maketh his life bitter and vnpleasant in which respect the sonne of Sirach saith Eccle. 34.23 Hee that taketh away his neighbours liuing slayeth him Théeues therefore robbing and stealing are breakers of this Commandement Vsurers that by their biting gaine vndoo them for the most part with whom they deale Other by tedious suites and continual trouble weary poore men out of their liuings and all oppressours Who beat the people to pieces and grind the faces of the poore as Esay speaketh chap. 3.15 that oppresse the poore and destroy the needy as Amos 4.1 chargeth them all such are guilty of breach of this precept Thou shalt not kill Another sort of transgressours of this Law may wéepe and houle as Saint Iames saith and why Iam. 5.4 Behold saith hee the hire of the labourers which haue reaped your fields which is of you kept backe by fraud crieth and the cries of them which haue reaped are entred into the eares of the Lord of hostes God gaue vnto his people a straight charge Leuit. 19.12 The labourers hire shall not remaine with thee all night Deut. 24.14 15. Thou shalt not oppresse thy hired seruant which is poore and needy thou shalt giue him his hire for the day neither shall the Sunne go downe vpon it for he is poore and therwith hee sustaineth his life lest hee crie against thee to the Lord and it bee sin vnto thee The transgression of this Law in this respect is too common Poore men when they haue wrought wasted their strength in working cannot get many times their hire at the wéekes end for their sustenance Yea poore men many times are forced to take it vp in farre worse penniworths then they might haue in the market for ready money A sin euery whit as crying a sin as not paying the reapers hire in due time and a plaine breach of this commandement Take heede then you that haue the labours of many poore men not onely of that woe denounced by Ieremie Iere. 22.13 Woe to him that vseth his neighbour without wages and giueth him nothing for his worke but also of not giuing them their hire in due time to supply their needfull wants take héed I say that not any vnder you keepe backe any thing from them by fraud which S. Iames chargeth them of his time with To be short all kind of cruell dealing is here vtterly forbidden Q. You told vs of three sorts of murder with the hand with the heart and with the tongue Of this last kind of killing I pray you speak somewhat A. First vile and reprochfull spéeches either to a mans face or behind his backe And therefore our Sauiour Christ saith Mat. 5.22 Whosoeuer saith to his brother Racha shall be worthy to be punished by a Councell and whosoeuer shall say Foole shall be worthy to be punished with hel fire by which words his meaning is to teach vs that this commandement Thou shalt not kill is broken by the least signification of our anger vttered by word of mouth but that conuicious and reproachfull termes are a grieuous transgression of this Commandement Q. Are there any other kind of words by which we may be thought to kill A. Yes as by reproachfull so also by slanderous words Pro. 22.1 for if a good name is to be chosen aboue great riches as Salomon telleth vs and is better then a good oyntment Eccle. 7.3 as elsewhere he teacheth vs then must the slaundering tongue be a murthering tongue in that it taketh away a mans reputation which is as it were the life of a mans name as well as the hand that taketh away a mans goods should be iudged a murdering hand which is before proued Q. But without danger of breach of Gods law a man may reproue sin and lewd life in another A. Yes and so did Eliah very plainely when hee said to Achab a wicked King of Israel who charged him with troubling Israel 1. King 18.18 I haue not troubled Israel but thou and thy fathers house in that you haue forsaken the commandements of the Lord and thou hast followed Baalim And the Prophet Esay calleth the Princes of Iudah Princes of Sodome Esay 1.10 and that people who iudged themselues a very holy and religious people the people of Gomorrah Yea it is the duty of Pastors and Ministers now as in times past it was of the Prophets to tell Gods people of their sins Leuit. 19.17 Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart but thou shalt plainely rebuke thy neighbour and suffer him not to sinne as also S. Paul willeth Gal. 6.1 But there is great difference betweene slaundering or reproaching which is heere condemned and this Christian reprehension much commended to vs by Christ and his Apostles First in the roote for that springeth from the bad affection of a cankred heart Secondly in the
manner of reprehending for it is done sharply and with bitternesse Thirdly in the end which is the discredit and disgrace of them whom wee reproue or slander But that godly and Christian reprehension riseth from a charitable and louing affection and concerning the manner is done in the spirit of méekenes and the end is the reforming of our brother Q. But this sinne of slandering I would iudge rather to bee against the ninth Commandement A. This sinne of slandering is a transgression against two Commandements at the least howsoeuer it bée true or false that a man reporteth to the hurt of his neighbors good name because hee doth it of an vncharitable mind hee is a transgressour of this sixt Commandement But if the reports be vntrue whether deuised by them which do so report them or that they haue heard them of others and without consideration haue rashly published that to the discredit of another therein they sinne against the ninth commandement And because they in so dooing steale away their neighbors credit which is much déerer to a well minded man then much wealth and the losse thereof he estéemeth greater then of worldly goods such men are also guilty of breach of the eight Commaundement Thou shalt not steale Q. You haue told vs of many waies whereby this precept may be broken by doing either against the person of anyman or against his goods or name but how by omission of duties do men transgresse A. There are certaine particular duties belonging to particular callings certaine duties generall belonging to all And these particular duties are diuers also some beeing helpes vnto eternall life some for the maintenance of this our present temporall being here And first to speake of that which should especially bee cared for If the Ministers of the Word doe not in some measure their duty in admonishing the people of ther danger they are in by reason of their sin they breake this Commandement Thou shalt dye the death saith God to Ezechiel if thou doe not speake and admonish Ezec. 33.8 the wicked of his way that wicked man shall dye for his iniquity but his blud wil I require at thy hand S. Paul therfore as he was careful to performe this duty himselfe Act. 20.31 I haue not ceased saith hee day and night with teares for the space of 3. yeeres to admonish you So hee chargeth Timothy to preach the word to bee instant in season and out of season 2. Tim. 4.2 to reproue to rebuke to exhort with all long suffering and doctrine And himselfe feared woe Cor. 9.16 if hee preached not the Gospell Then also Parents masters or dames of families if they omit this dutie in vsing all good means to bring their children and seruants to the knowledge and feare of God and doe not seeke to whet the word of God vnto them by carefull and often putting them in mind thereof as Moses chargeth the Israelites to doe Deu. 6.7 by omission of this duty they are found transgressors of this Lawe Magistrates should by due punishments represse bloudshed and all disorders in the Common-wealth for to that end were punishments commanded So thou shalt take away euill from among you saith Moses that all Israel may heare it and feare Deut. 21.21 speaking of disobedient children commaunding that they should bee stoned to death So that as Pastors and Masters of families in neglecting the duties aboue mentioned put the soules of such as are vnder them in danger of beeing hunger-starued for want of good food so Magistrates omitting their dutie in punishing especially bloudy and cruell offences doe incourage offenders nay strengthen their hands to further mischiefe and by omission of this dutie may make themselues accessaries and partakers of other mens faults Moreouer if a man hath an Oxe that hath vsed to gore and the owner is acquainted therewith and knoweth that he is a dangerous beast and doth not prouide for the safety of other if that beast kill man or woman the owner of that Oxe shall bee put to death as guilty of the murther because hee had not due care of his neighbours life If a man digge a pit or Well and a beast fall into it and dye hee that digged the pit must pay for the beast that is dead by that meanes If an Oxe that vsed to push kill another Oxe his owner if hee knew he vsed to push or gore must make restitution Exod. 21 These lawes being set downe teach vs that we must not omit a care of our neighbours life or good whereby mans life must in some good sort be maintained Lastly the omission of those duties which our Sauior Christ speaketh of I was hungry and you gaue me no meate Mat. 25 I thirsted you gaue mee no drinke I was a stranger and ye lodged me not c. is a breach also of this Commandement Q. Are all then that seeke to haue their wants in such things supplyed to be releeued for meat drinke or other such like A. I thinke not For the vagrant and wandering persons which with most importunitie seeke for reliefe first leade an idle and therefore an vngodly life for abundance of idlenesse Eze. 16.49 was one of the crying sins of Sodom Secondly they are commonly reported to liue most filthily without feare and shame Thirdly as they are not any members of the common-wealth wherein they liue so they are not belonging to any particular congregation or Church and the most of them scarcely come at any Now for such people so hatefull to God and good men in respect of their lewdnesse to bee fed and clothed wheresoeuer they come is nothing els but to cherish and maintaine them in their wicked course against most Christian and godly lawes Not to relieue their necessity may be thought a want of charity Two things are therefore for reformation of these vnchristian disorders to be wished rather I feare then hoped for The one is the restraint of this rogueing life with all sharpnesse the other diligent and carefull endeuour to set to work such as are able or els let not him eat that will not labour 2. Thes 3.10 and prouision for maintenance of the impotent And how vnwilling soeuer these vagrants are to be tyed to one place and thereby doe much hinder the execution of our godly lawes yet were it the part of them to whom authority is committed to combine themselues together to put in practice such Christian lawes tending so much to abandon lewdnesse and idlenesse of life and to doe it with resolution not to be daunted or discouraged for any paines And thus much of the omission of dueties whereby we may bee made transgressors of this now Q. Hitherto you haue spoken of the prohibition it now remaineth that you speake of the Commandement A. Christ who is the best Interpreter of this law and of all the commandements of the second Table saith loue is commanded in them all Thou shalt loue
their consciences burned with a hot iron therfore such are to bee accounted deceiuers and false teachers Q. What learne wee in the eight Commandement Thou shalt not steale A. I first obserue therein the order for after God hath commanded holinesse of life and as the Apostle speaketh 1. Thessa 4.4 to keepe our vessell in sanctification then hee prouideth for goods teaching vs thereby First to seeke the kingdome of heauen and the things that belong vnto eternall life and to let these worldly things bee of lesse account with vs. Then for the words themselues they are as most of the other are a forbidding of that which is euill Q. What is then forbidden here A. Al waies wherby others may receiue hurt that we may gaine some get by violence and oppression others by more secret meanes By oppression also some more violently some more craftily The first sort are they which rob and spoile and take away mens goods by plaine force such are all robbers Oppressours also who by wealth or other greatnesse whether by Law or other meanes get from other that which they haue no right to Vsurers also a kind of people not allowed to follow their trade among Gods people are transgressors of this Law for God by his seruant Moses gaue this Commandement Thou shalt not giue to Vsurie to thy brother Vsurie of money Vsurie of meat or of any thing that is put to Vsurie Deut. 23.19 Againe Exod. 22 25. If thou lend money to my people to the poore that are among you thou shalt not be as a Vsurer to him thou shalt not oppres him with Vsury Yea there are other yet greater théeues then these who content not themselues with mens goods but whole Kingdomes countries must be vnto them a prey And howsoeuer God in his iustice punisheth wicked men by great and grieuous sinners as Tyrus and Aegypt were giuen into the hand of Nabuchodonosor a great wronger of all his neighbours yet was Nabuchodonosor who subdued them a plaine transgressor of this Law Q. But it may seeme otherwise for God commendeth his seruice that hee did against Tyre and seemeth as if hee held himselfe indebted to him for it but withall promiseth that hee would giue to him and his souldiers Aegypt for a reward of that seruice Ezekiel 29. A. True for that which hee did was decréed of God though hee neither knew Gods wil therein neither cared for it so that the déed was good which God also inabled him to doe for he could not haue done any thing but as the executioner of GODS wrath against those wicked people but hee did it with a cruell and ambitious mind and therefore it was not well done God therefore commendeth the worke that hee wrought against Tyre but in his manner of working it hee is a transgressour of this Law Q. By this which wee haue heard wee may in some sort iudge of other meanes whereby men oppresse one another And this you set downe as most certain that whosoeuer oppresse others are transgressours against this Commandement and may be called cruell theeues Against such God denounceth heauie iudgements Esay 33.1 Woe to thee that spoylest and was not spoyled and dost wickedly and they did not wickedly against thee Esay 30.12 13. Because you haue cast off this word whereby I haue admonished you by my Prophet and trust in violence and wrong and stay thereupon therfore this iniquitie shall bee vnto you as a breach that falleth or a swelling in an hie wall whose breaking commeth suddenly in a moment For God will not suffer vnpunished the contempt of this his Commandement Thou shalt not do thy neighbour wrong neither rob him But all theeues are not violent some by more secret meanes deceiue Therfore Saint Paul in few words forbiddeth both sorts 1. Thes 4.6 That no man oppresse or defraud his brother in any matter for the Lord is auenger of all such things Of oppressours wee haue heard now let vs heare somewhat of these other who steale by craft A. Some of them we call théeues but many of them though theeues they are and make it their trade yet will not they bee called theeues Of these wee reade as an exposition or Commentarie vpon this Commandement Ye shall not steale nor deale falsly nor lie one to another Vnder these three stealing false dealing lying may all this sort of stealing bee vnderstood Stealing is a secret taking away of our neighbours goods whether by night or day Of this sort are not onely they whom wee call théeues but all such as get into their hands some one commodity or moe which other may not meddle with but as from them These Monopolies haue alwaies been euill thought of among wise gouernours condemned by the Roman Lawes and are by experience found to bee very hurtfull to Common-wealths for by inhauncing the prices of such things as they haue ingrossed they steale away the wealth of the comminaltie It séemeth there were such among Gods people in Salomons daies and how men iudged of them it doth appeare by his words Pro. 11.26 Hee that withdraweth the corne the people will curse him But Amos the Prophet is very bitter against them who when they had stored themselues with full garners of corne thought their solemne feast daies appointed for Gods seruice to be a hinderance to them For euery minute they iudged an hower Amos 8.4 5 6. they longed so much and so greedily after their vnlawfull gaine But in these our daies such kind of men are so much the worse because they wil not sticke sometime to prophane the Sabbath day to deliuer their commodity make their gaine which these men though bad enough would not doe neither was it lawfull for them for we may sée by Nehemiah Nehe. 10.31 13.15 16 17 18 19 20 21. that buying and selling vpon the Sabbath was vtterly vnlawfull Q. What do you think of selling to a day as it is most commonly vsed now for Corne Cattell or any other commoditie euen for a short time to haue too much increase and for a longer time much more Is not this a secret kind of stealing A. Yes and that a very vnchristian stealing of our neighbours goods So selling by false waights and measures Leuit. 19.35.36 Thou shalt not do vniustly in line in waight in measure You shal haue iust ballances true waights true Epha true Hin that is both thy great measure of the Epha and the little measure of the Hin shall bee iust and true Some steale Land by remouing the bounders contrary to the aduice of Salomon Pro. 22.28 Deut. 19.14 Thou shalt not remoue the anciēt bounds which thy fathers haue made For Deut. 37 17. Cursed be he that remooueth his neighbours marke and al the people shall say So be it Yea Numa Pompilius though he knew not these Lawes of God yet hee so hated this kind of stealing the he decreed it should be no offence
words of the Apostle are herein so plaine and pregnant yea it is a duty generally to be performed for all not onely our superiours but also for inferiors Q. Samuel told the people when they would needes haue a king 1. Sam. 8.11.22 in a manner whether God would or not that their king would take their sons and appoint them to his Chariots and to be his horsemen and some to runne before his Chariots and to bee Captains meaning that they would make them to venture their liues in the warres as also many examples in the Scriptures doe teach For Dauid Asa Iehosaphat and other good Kings when they needed chose Souldiers from among the people for the defence of them and their Realme This I take is one point of obedience that we must performe to kings A. It is so and was very willingly yeelded vnto by the people of God Iosh 1.11 And Captaine Ioshua commanded the people to prepare victuals for after three dayes they should go and take possession of the Land of Canaan which they could not get but by battell Also hee put the Rubenites Gadites and the halfe Tribe of Manasseh of the charge that Moses gaue them not to rest when they came to their possession but to helpe their brethren to conquer the Land and they willingly obeyed verse 13.16 because they knew it was a duty which they ought to Ioshua who was then in stead of their king to them and so they went and came not to their own possessions vntil Ioshua sent them away chap. 22. Q. Is there an honour also due to the Ministers of Gods word A. Yes vnto them as to Parents and gouernours obedience must bee giuen Heb. 13.17 Obey them that haue the ouersight of you and submit your selues For they watch for your soules as they that must giue accounts that they may do it with ioy Q. Wherein consisteth this obedience to the Ministers of the word Parents command or aduise their children and as hath been sayd they must therein be obeyed Gouernors likewise haue their commandements and their lawes which wee may not transgresse But what commandements hath the Minister of the Word to charge vs with A. Such as are I will not say as needfull but indeed more necessarie then any other For if that which he commandeth be obeyed neither Parents nor Gouernours shall want their due but shall most reuerently bee honoured Hee is a messenger from GOD the Commandements which hee bringeth if he be faithfull in his Ministerie are from that great Commander whose Lawes are directions to Parents and Children Kings and Subiects Masters and Seruants yea to all sorts sexes and states that are they belong not onely to this present life but teach vs how to attaine to the life that lasteth alwaies To be short this office is to beate downe by threatnings out of Gods Law the proud and haughtie hearts to comfort with the sweet promises of the Gospell the consciences burthened with sinne to breake the Bread of Life to the hungry and as faithfull stewards to giue to euery one their portion in due season the Apostle therefore not without great cause admonisheth that we haue them in singular loue 1. Thes 5.13 for their workes sake Q. I see then gouernours and Parents and all superiours are in regard of their superiority Gods Images and therefore as his deputies must bee honoured and those sparks of Gods Maiesty that shine in them as Gouernours must bee reuerenced but the chiefe honour that can bee done to the Minister is the obedience to his Word and hee is to bee accounted of as Gods messenger who is sent to teach Gods will therefore his office is highly to be esteemed of and hee in doing his office is to bee heard his words to bee receiued with reuerence that they being printed in our heart may also by Gods good grace work in vs newnesse of life and a godly reformation But is there no other duty to bee performed to our Ministers 1. Tim. 5.18 A. Yes as in other callings so in this too The workeman is worthy of his wages as the Apostle Saint Paul taught vs who also learned that lesson of our Sauiour Christ Mat. 10.10 Gal. 6.6 therefore the same Apostle thus exhorteth Let him who is taught in the word make him who hath taught him partaker of all his goods 1. Cor. 9.11 If wee haue sowne vnto you spirituall things is it a great thing if we reape your carnall things Nay he plainely affirmeth that if the Gentiles be made partakers of the spirituall things of Gods people their duty is to minister to them in carnall things Q. This is a lesson very needfull to bee taught in many places of this Realme where very small pensions are appointed to the Minister of the Word and that causeth small teaching of the people in such places though for the most part the number of the people where is least maintenance is very great Yea and where there is by law reasonable maintenance established for the Minister of the Word yet the hearts of many of the people are not open enough to part from that which they ought to giue both by Gods Law and mans For howsoeuer tythes are due whether by Gods Law or not to the Minister yet that beeing appointed for his maintenance then Gods Law commandeth that euery man should haue his due But many of vs may iustly take vp the complaint of the Prophet or rather accuse the wrongfull dealing of the people as hee did in his dayes when hee charged thē to say for their deeds proclaimed it The Table of the Lord is not to be regarded Mal. 1.7 And then sheweth that they offered the lame the blind the sick in sacrifice So there are too many that think this is to much or too good for the Parson therefore they lesson or change to worse their tithes according to their greedy humor not caring in the meane time how much they diminish their pastours maintenance nor how like theeues as they are they robbe him of his due Well honour obedience and maintenance are the ministers due But what if the people bee not obedient to his doctrine what danger may follow therevpon A. Very great Luk. 10.16 for hee that heareth you saith Christ heareth mee and hee that despiseth you despiseth mee and hee that despiseth mee despiseth him that sent mee Is it not a dangerous thing to despise God as the despisers of the preaching of the Word are here said to doe Yea the very dust of the Apostles feet which they shake off when their word is not receiued Mat. 10.14 shall bee a witnesse against the contemners and the wrath of God is so heauy against despisers of the Word that it shall be easier for Sodome and Gomorrah at the day of Iudgement then for them verse 15 most miserable therefore is the estate of all such how great soeuer they bee who in these our