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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

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part thereof unto idle and curious questions 2 Pet. 3. 16. 3. By abusing it to prophane mirth by framing jests out of it or against it Psal. 22. 13. Also by making Playes and Enterludes thereof 4. By maintaining Errour sinne and prophanenesse by it Mat. 4. 6. Isa. 66. 5. 5. By applying it to Superstition and unlawfull Arts to Magicall spels Sorceries and Charmes for the healing of diseases finding out of theft c. Deut. 18. 11. Acts 19. 13. How is Gods Name taken in vaine in regard of the Sacraments and other holy Mysteries and Ordinances of God When they are unworthily received and prophanely used Mal. 1. 11 12. 1 Cor. 11. 27. 29. Jer. 7. 4 10. So much of the chiefe particulars forbidden in this Commandement What are the helps or hinderances of the obedience thereof 1. That we both inure our hearts to feare and reverence the great and dreadfull Name of the Lord our God Deut. 28. 58. Eccles. 9. 2. and keep a carefull watch over our lips and lives lest by any meanes we dishonour him Psal. 39. 1. 2. That we avoid both the company of prophane persons who set their mouth against Heaven Psal. 73. 9. and all unnecessary dangers wherby divers have been occasioned to deny the Lord Mat. 26. 69 c. What is contained in the Reason annexed to the Commandement A dreadfull penalty That the Lord will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his Name in vaine What is the summe of this threat That God will not leave this sin unpunished 1 King 2. 9. but will grievously punish the breach of this Commandement whereby he threatneth extreme miseries and judgements to the Transgressors For it being our happinesse to have our sins covered and not imputed Psal. 32. 2. it must needs be extreame unhappinesse to have it reckoned and imputed unto us What is implyed herein A fit opposition That howsoever mans Lawes take not hold of offending in this kind yet God will not acquit them Psal. 1. 5. nor suffer them to escape his righteous and fearefull Iudgements Zach. 5. 3. Jer. 5. 12. Neither shall the Transgressor scape unpunished although the Magistrate and the Minister also would pronounce him innocent and although the Malefactor flatter himselfe as if all dangers were past nay the more free that usually he escapes the Iudgements and punishments of men the more heavy plagues and vengeance will surely light upon him from God except he repent Hitherto of the Commandements concerning that service which is to be performed to God at all times as occasion shall require which is that which concerneth the speciall time wholly to be bestowed in his Worship The fourth and last Commandement of the first Table which setteth forth a certain day especially appointed by the Lord himselfe to the practise of the Worship prescribed in the three former Commandements for therein consisteth the chiefe point of the sanctifying of that day What are the Words of this Commandement Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath day c. Exod. 20. 8 9 10 11. What are we to observe in these words First the Commandement and then the Reasons annexed thereunto What is the meaning of the Commandement It challengeth at the hand of every man one day of seven in every week to be set apart unto a holy rest and requireth all persons to separate themselves from their ordinary labour and all other exercises to his service on the same that so they being severed from their worldly businesses and all the works of their labour and callings concerning this life they may wholly attend to the worship of God alone Neh. 13. 15 16. Esa. 58. 13 14. Why doe you adde these words apart and separate To make a difference between the Sabbath dayes wherein wee must wholy and only serve God and the exercises of the other six days wherein every man must serve him in his lawfull calling What need is there of one whole day in every week to serve God seeing we may serve him every day That is not enough For 1. To the end that we should not plunge our selves so deeply into the affairs of the world as that we should not recover our selves the wisdome of God hath thought it fit that one day in seven there should be an intermission from them that we might wholly separate our selves to the service of God and with more freedome of spirit performe the same 2. A whole day is needfull for the performance of all the parts of Gods service and worship as hearing of publike Prayer and the Word preached Chatechising Administration of the Sacraments exercise of holy Discipline and consideration of the glory of God in the creatures 3. If Adam in his perfection had need of this holy day much more have we who are so grievously corrupted 4. If the Lord in love and wisedome considering our necessities both of soule and body hath set out a weeks time for both of provision that as every day we set apart some time for food and spend the rest in labour so we set one day in the week aside for our spirituall food and bestow the other dayes on our earthly affaires so as this day may in comparison be accounted the soules day wherein yet wee must have some care of our bodies as on the six dayes we must have some care of our soules What is forbidden in this Commandement The unhallowing or prophaning of the Sabbath either by doing the works of our calling and of the flesh or by leaving undone the works of the Spirit But is not this Commandement Ceremoniall and so taken away by the death of Christ No but is constantly and perpetually to be observed and never to cease till it bee perfectly consummated in the heavenly Sabbath Hebr. 4. 9 10. How prove you that 1. Because it is placed in the number of the perpetuall Commandements otherwise the Morall Law should consist but of nine words or Commandements which is contrary to Gods Word Deut. 4. 13. 2. Because this Commandement amongst the rest was written by the finger of God Exod. 31. 18. whereas no part of the Ceremoniall Law was 3. For that it was written in Tables of stone as well as the other Deut. 5. 22. As to signifie the hardnesse of our hearts so to signifie the continuance and perpetuity of this Commandement as well as the rest 4. Because it was before any Shadow or Ceremony of the Law yea before Christ was promised whom all Ceremonies of the Law have respect unto for the Sabbath was first instituted in Paradise before there was any use of Sacrifices and Ceremonies Gen. 2. 1 2 3. 5. The Ceremonies were as a Partition wall betwixt the Iews and the Gentiles but God doth here extend his Commandement not onely to the Iewes themselves but also to strangers Exod. 20. 10. Nehem. 13. 15 16 c. 6. Our Saviour Christ willing his followers which should live about forty yeares after his Ascension
That the breaches of all the Commandements concurred in Adam and Eves sinne 134 The effects of the fall 136 Sin guiltinesse punishment Of our first Parents nakednesse 137 Of their hiding themselves Of sinne Why all Adams posterity are partakers of his sinne and misery 142 What sinne is 143 Imputed sinne 144 Inherent sinne Originall sinne The propagation of originall sinne 145 The minde corrupted The corruption of the memory The corruption of the will 147 The corruption of affections The corruption of the conscience Of the corruption of the body Actuall sinne Of the sin against the Holy Ghost 151 The divers differences of actuall sinne 152 Guilt of sinne 153 Punishment of sinne Of Gods covenants of man 157 Of the covenant of grace 158 The differences between the covenant of works and the covenant of grace 159 Wherein they agree Of Jesus the Mediator of this covenant 160 The foundation of it Of the person of Christ. Of the natures of Christ Divine Humane Of the divine nature of Christ Why it was necessary that Christ should be God 161 Of the humane nature of Christ. 162 Why it was necessary that Christ should be man 164 Of the union of the two natures of Christ. 165 Of Christs Office Mediatorship 166 That here is but one Mediator Of his names Iesus Christ. 167 Of Christs Priest-hood 168 The Popish Priest-hood overthrowne 169 Of Christs satisfaction 170 Of Christs sufferings 171 Of Christs sufferings in his soule 172 Of Christs sufferings in his body Uses of Christs passion 174 Of Christs buriall His descending into hell Christs righteousnesse in fulfilling the Law Christs originall righteousnesse 175 Christs actuall holinesse Of the intercession of Christ. 176 Of the Propheticall office of Christ. 177 Of the Kingly office of Christ. 179 Of Christs humiliation 183 Of Christs exaltation Of the Resurrection of Christ. Of Christs ascension 184 Of the third degree of Christs exaltation his sitting at the right hand of God 185 The state of the godly in Christ. 186 Of the Church of Christ. 187 The Catholick Church The property and office of the head of the Church The Church triumphant 188 Of the Church militant Prerogatives of the members of the Catholike Church 190 What Sanctification is What Redemption is Of our union and communion with Christ. 192 Communion of Saints The benefit of our Communion with Christ. 193 Justification Glorification Of Justification What Justification is Vses arising from the Doctrine of Justification 195. Of Faith 196 The various acception of Faith The divers kindes of Faith 197 Historicall faith Temporary faith Miraculous faith Justifying faith The Popish implicite faith 198 That the whole soule is the seat of faith What reconciliation is 200 What adoption is 201 The benefits of adoption Sanctification 202 The differences between justification and sanctification The differences between the Law and the Gospell 203 The Morall Law the rule of sanctification Ceremoniall Law 204 Judiciall Law The Morall Law The end and use of the Law 205 1. Knowledge of the Law required Rules to be observed for the Interpretation of the Law 1. Rule the Law is spirituall 2. Rule the Law is perfect 206 3. Rule in every commandement there is a Metaphor or Synecdoche 1. Branch of the third rule 2. Branch 3. Branch Why the Commandements are propounded in the second person 207 Good company required Why the Commandements are propounded negatively 208 The division of the Decalogue The summe of the 1. table The summe of the 2. table 209 The division of the 1. table 211 The Preface of the Commandements 212 How the reason of the 1. Commandement belongeth to us 213 The fift Commandement The scope and meaning of this Commandement 214 What is forbidden and required in this first Commandement The severall branches of the first Commandement What it is to have a God 125 Of the knowledge of God Opposites to the knowledge of God Ignorance of God Affiance in God 216 Patience Hope Love of God Thankfulnesse 217 Feare of God Reverence 218 Humility Pride Sorrow Joy Vnity in Religion 219 What it is to have other Gods Sinfull confidence 220 Inordinate love Sinfull feare Sinfull joy and sorrow The third branch of this Commandement True Religion How we must come to the true Religion Helpes inabling us to obey this Commandement 221 Meanes of the knowledge of God Hindrances Meanes of ignorance here forbidden What is enjoyned in the three following Commandements The second Commandement 222 The scope and meaning of the second Commandement What is here forbidden What is meant by making of Images The speciall branches of the second Commandement 223 Of Prayer 224 Of Fasts Of Vowes 225 The manner of Gods worship Of Preparation Of the disposition in the action What is required after the action 226 Ecclesiasticall Ceremonies Of bodily gestures Of the abuse of Gods Ordinances Defects respecting the inward Worship 227 Defects in outward Worship 228 Helps in performing Gods pure worship The second maine branch of the second Commandement 229 What is forbidden concerning Images 230 That it is unlawfull to make the Image of God 231 That it is unlawfull to make the Image of Christ. What is meant by worshipping Images 232 Of countenancing Idolatrie 233 Reasons to back this Commandement taken from Gods Titles Jealous God Reasons drawne from the works of God 234 The first reason The second reason 235 The third Commandement 236 The summe of the third Commandement What is meant by the Name of God What is meant by the word In vaine 237 What is forbidden in the third Commandement What is required in the third Commandement The particular duties required in the third Commandement The duties repugnant 238 The right use of Oathes What persons may lawfully take an Oath 239 The speciall abuses of an oath How Gods Name is taken in vaine in regard of his properties How in respect of his Works 240 How in respect of his Word Of the helpes and hindrances 241 The reason annexed to the third Commandement The fourth Commandement The meaning of the fourth Commandement 242 What need there is of one day in seven to serve God That the Sabbath day is not ceremoniall Of the change of the seventh day to the first and the reason thereof 243 The time of the Sabbath and when it beginneth 244 What is meant by the word Remember 245 Of the preparation of the Sabbath The parts of the fourth Commandement 246 What workes ought to be declined What rest required in the fourth Commandement 247 The speciall breaches opposite to an holy rest To whom this Commandement is chiefly directed 289 The second part of this Commandement which is the sanctifying of the rest The exercises and duties required on the Sabbath Prayer with the Congregation 250 Hearing the Word Receiving the Sacraments Private duties of the Sabbath Of the evening preparation 251 The first duties of the morning Of the publick duties of the Sabbath 252 What is to bee done after the publick Ministery Sins to be
to have other Gods Sinfull Confidence Inordinate Love Sinfull Feare Sinfull Ioy and Sorrow The third branch of the first Commandement True Religion How we must come to the true Religion Helps inabling us to obey this Commandement Means of the knowledge of God Hindrances Means of ignorance here forbidden What is enjoyned in the 3. following Commandements The second Commandedement The scope and meaning of the second Commandement What is here forbidden What is meant by making Images The speciall branches of the second Commandement Of Prayer Of Fasts Of Vowes The manner of Gods worship Of Preparation Of disposition in the action What required after the Action Ecclesiasticall Ceremonies Of bodily Gestures Of the abuse of Gods Ordinances Defects respecting the inward worship Defects in outward Worship Helps in performing Gods pure Worship The 2d main branch of the second Commandement What forbidden concerning Images That it is unlawfull to make the Image of God That it is unlawfull to make the Image of Christ. What is meant by worshiping Images Of countenancing idolatry Reasons to back this commandement taken from his titles Iealous God Reasons drawn from the works of God The 1. Reason The second Reason The third Commandement The summe of the third Commandement What is meant by the Name of God Exod. 3. 14. 6. 3. Psal. 68. 4. What is meant by the word in vaine What is forbidden in the third Cōmandement What is required in the third Commandement The particuler duties required in the third Commandement The vices repugnant The right use of Oathes What persons may lawfully take an Oath The speciall abuses of an Oath How Gods Name is taken in vaine in regard of his Properties How in respect of his Works How in respect of his Word Of the helpes hindrances The reason annexed to the third Commandement The fourth Commandement The meaning of the fourth Commandement What need there is of one day in seven to serve God That the Sabbath day is not etremoniall Of the change of the seventh day to the first and the reasons of it The time of the Sabbath and when it beginneth What is meant by the word Remember Of the Preparation of the Sabbath The parts of the fourth Commandement What Workes ought to be declined What rest required in the fourth Commandement The speciall breaches opposite to an holy rest To whom this Commandement is chiefly directed The second part of this Commandement which is the sanctifying of the Rest. The Exercises and Duties required on the Sabbath Prayer with the Congregation Hearing the Word Receiving the Sacrament Private duties of the Sabbath Of the evening preparation The first duties of the morning Of the publick duties of the Sabbath What is to be done after the publick Ministery Sins to be condemned in respect of the second part of this Commandement Helps and hinderances to the keeping of this Commandement Of the Reasons inforcing obedience to this Commandement 1. Reason 2. Reason 3. Reason Fourth reason The second Table The summe of the second Table The generalls to be observed in this Table Division of the second Table The fift Commandement The meaning and scope of the fift Commandement The duty of Equalls What are Superiours Who are Inferiours What it is to honour Duties of Superiours The divers sorts of Superiors The duties of aged persons Duties of the younger unto them Superiors in knowledge Superiors in Authority Duties of Inferiors to those that are in Authority Duties of Superiours in authority Kinds of Superiors in Authority Superiors in the Family and their duties Inferiors in the Family and their duties Duties of Husbands wives Duties of the Husband The duties of the wife Duties of Parents Sins of Parents Duties of children towards their Parents Duties of Masters towards their Servants Duties of servants towards their Masters Publick Superiours and their duties The sorts of publick Superiours Superiours in the Church their duties The peoples duty to their Ministers Superiours in the Common-wealth The Magistrates duty in civill affaires The duties of Subjects towards their Magistrates Of the helps and meanes inabling us to keep this fift Commandement Hindrances to these duties here commanded Of the reason annexed to the fift Commandement Of the promise of long life how performed The sixth Commandement The summe meaning of the sixth Commandement The Negative part The Affirmative part The duties respecting our persons Duties respecting our souls The contrary vices forbidden Duties respecting our bodies The contrary vices forbidden Duties respecting the time of our departure Duties respecting our Neighbour while he liveth Inward duties respecting our affections Duties respecting the preservation of peace Evill passions opposite to these duties Outward duties respecting the soules of our neighbours The contrary vices to the former duties Duties respecting the whole person of our Neighbours Gestures Duties required in words The opposite vices The use Duties required in our deeds The contrary vices to the former duties How wee doe indirectly endanger our neigbours life How wee doe directly take away our neighbours life Chance-medly and how proved to be a sinne Of Man-slaughter Of Duels Reasons perswading to the detestation of this sin Duties to be performed to our Neighbor after his death Duties respecting beasts Of punishments due to the breakers of this Commandement Means furthering us in the obedience of this Commandement Hindrances of our obedience to this Commandement The seventh Commandement The meaning and scope of the seventh Commandement Of inward impurity and the branches of it Abuse of Apparell Of the abuse of meat drink Wanton Gestures Chastity in the eyes c. Wanton Speeches Chastity in the tongue eares Stage-Playes Breach of the seventh Commandement in respect of action Of Stewes and the unlawfulnesse of them Of Rape Incest Fornication Adultery Polygamy What is required in the entrance into Marriage The contrary abuses What is required in the holy use of Marriage Vnlawfull Separation The punishments of the breach of this Commandement Helps means of keeping this Commandement Hindrances of obedience The eighth Commandement The end of the eighth Commandement The occnsion of this Commandement Of Theft The parts of this eighth Commandement Generall duties commanded Opposite vices Speciall duties here required Arguments disswading from the love of money and earthly things Selfe-contentednesse Motives perswading to selfe-contentednesse Lawfull measuring of our appetite Affected poverty Covetousnesse Ambition Carking care Carelesnesse Solicitous and distracting cares What required to just getting Lawfull Calling labour in it Extraordinary getting What is opposite to a lawfull Calling Vnjust getting out of contract Theft Domesticall theft Theft committed out of the family Sacriledge Theft of persons Rapine Oppression Accessaries to theft Acquisition by lawfull Contract Acquisition by liberall alienation Acquisition by illiberall alienation Merchandise Of Selling. Vices and corruptions in selling Of buying and what is required unto it Of pawning and what is required unto it Of Location and letting Of conduction and hiring Of Vsury Of
to pray that their flight might not bee on the Sabbath day to the end that they might not bee hindred in the service of God doth thereby sufficiently declare that hee held not this Commandement in the account of a Ceremony Matth. 24. 20. But it sometimes shadoweth our sanctification and our eternall rest Col. 2. 16 17. Exod. 31. 13. and is therefore Ceremoniall That followeth not For 1. There is no Commandement which hath not some Ceremonies tyed unto it as in the Commandement touching Murther to abstain from strangled things and bloud And the whole Law had the Ceremony of the Parchment Law So that by that reason the whole Law should be Ceremoniall which is absurd 2. The Ceremoniall representation of our eternall rest came after the Commandement of the rest and therefore is accessary and accidentall for which cause the time of correction and abolishment of Ceremonies being come Dan. 9. 7. Matth. 11. 13. Acts 15. 6. Col. 2. 13 14. Heb. 10. 14. Gal. 5. 2. that use may well fall away and yet the Commandement remaine it being out of the substance of the Commandement What is the speciall day of the week which God hath set apart for his solemne Worship The first day of the week called the Lords day 1 Cor. 16. 2. Rev. 1. 10. Acts 20. 7. Was this day set apart thereunto from the beginning No For from the first Creation till the Resurrection of Christ the last day of the week commonly called Saturday was the day that was appointed thereunto and that which the people of God constantly observed And why so Because upon that God ceased from the worke of Creation Gen. 2. 2 Exod. 31. 17. How came this day to be changed By divine Authority How doth that appeare 1. By the practise of our Saviour Christ and his Apostles Iohn 20. 19 26. Acts 2. 1. 20. 7. which should be a sufficient rule unto us especially the Apostles having added a Commandement thereunto 1 Cor. 16. 12. 2. There is no reason why it should be called the Lords day Rev. 1. 10. but in regard of the speciall dedication thereof to the Lords service for otherwise all the dayes in the weeke are the Lords dayes and he is to be served and worshipped in them What was the cause that the day was changed Because it might serve for a thankfull memorial of Christs Resurrection For as God rested from his labour on the last day of the weeke so Christ ceased from his labour and afflictions on this day Mat. 28. 1. Gen. 2. 1 2. As the one therefore was specially sanctified in regard of the Creation of the World so was the other in respect of the restauration and redemption of the world which is a greater worke then the Creation Can this day then be altered No power of any Creature in Heaven or Earth can alter it or place another seventh day in the place and stead thereof But doth this Commandement directly require the seventh day from the Creation No but the seventh day in generall Doth not the reason annexed where the Lord in six dayes is said to make Heaven and Earth and to rest the seventh day and therefore to hallow it confirme so much No not necessarily For it doth not hence follow that we should rest the same day the Lord rested but that we should rest from our worke the seventh day as he rested from his which seventh day under the Law he appointed to be Saturday so nothing hindreth but by his speciall appointment under the Gospell it may be Sunday and yet the substance of the Commandement nothing altered Why doth not the New Testament mention this change Because there was no question moved about the same in the Apostles time When then doth this our Sabbath begin and how long doth it continue This day as all the six is the space of twenty foure houres and beginneth at the dawning though we ought in the Evening before to prepare for the day following Why doth our Sabbath begin at the dawning of the day Because Christ rose in the dawning and to put a difference between the Iewish and a true Christian Sabbath For as the Iewes begun their Sabbath in that part of the day in which the Creation of the World was ended and consequently in the Evening so the celebration of the memory of Christs Resurrection and therein of his rest from his speciall labours and the renewing of the World being the ground of the change of that day it is also by the same proportion of reason to begin when the Resurrection began which was in the Morning Can you shew this Example Yea Paul being at Troas after he had preached a whole day untill midnight celebrated the supper of the Lord the same night which was a Sabbath dayes exercise and therefore that night following the day was a part of the Sabbath For in the Morning he departed having staid there seven dayes by which it is evident that that which was done was done upon the Lords day Acts 20. 7 10. Is the Lords day only to be separated to Gods service No For of this manner are holy Fasts observed for the avoiding of some great evill present or imminent Lev. 23. 27. Ioel 2. 12. holy Feasts for the thankfull remembrance of some speciall memorable mercies obtained Zach. 8. 19. Ester 9. 17 18 19. To what Commandement doe you refer the Churches meeting on the working dayes That is also by a manner of speech of one part for the whole contained in this Commandement yea it reacheth to the times which the Family appointeth or that every one for his private good proposeth although the Bond to that time is not so strict as is the Bond to observe the dayes of Rest. So much of this Commandement in generall What doe you note therein in particular 1. The entrance in the word Remember 2. The parts of the Commandement What is to be observed in the word Remember That although all the Commandements are needfull diligently to be remembred yet this more specially Why so 1. Because this Commandement hath least light of nature to direct us to the observation of it 2. For that we are naturally most negligent in it suffering our selves to be withdrawne by our worldly businesse from the Lords service upon the Lords day and therefore such a speciall warning is needfull to be added What things are we thence to remember 1. To looke backe unto the first institution of the Sabbath day in Paradise Gen. 2. 2 3. before all Sacrifices and Ceremonies 2. So to beare it in mind as to live in continuall practise of the duties we learned the Sabbath day last past 3. To bethink our selves before of the works of the Sabbath and so to prepare our selves and our affaires Luke 23. 54. that we may freely and duely attend on the Lord in the Sabbath approaching What should be done in this preparation of the Sabbath 1. We should so compasse all
3. 4. but then most abominable Ezek. 23. 37 38. 4. The keeping a peece of the day not the whole or giving liberty to our selves in the night before the whole Sabbath be ended 5. The forbearing our selves but imploying others in worldly businesses for preventing of which sinne God is so large in naming of the persons which in this Commandement are forbidden to worke Why is there a particular rehearsall of these persons in this Commandement To take away all excuses from all persons in this Commandement for the Lord did see that such was the corruption of men that if they themselves did rest upon this day from labours they would thinke it sufficient not caring how they toyled out and wearied their servants at home with continuall labour as many doe so that it were better to be such mens Oxen then their servants so small care they have of their soules What is the speciall use of this rehearsall To teach us that all sorts and degrees of persons are bound to yeeld this duty unto God and that the Sabbath is to be kept both by our selves and those that doe belong unto us Was it not ordained also for the rest and refreshing of men and beasts especially Servants which could not otherwise continue without it That also was partly intended as may appeare by Deut. 5. 14. but not principally for the things here contained doe concerne the worship of God but that wearing and toyling out of servants and beasts is against the sixt Commandement and working is here forbidden that men might be the more free for the worship of God and therefore though servants had never so much rest and recreation upon other dayes yet they ought to rest upon this day in that regard Why is there mention made of allowing rest to the beasts First that we may shew mercy even to the beasts Prov. 12. 10. Secondly to represent after a sort the everlasting Sabbath wherein all Creatures shall bee delivered from the bondage of corruption Rom. 8. 20 21. Thirdly because of the whole imployment of men in the Lords service for beasts cannot be travelled or used in any worke upon that day unlesse man be withdrawne from Gods service yea though the beast could labour without mans attendance yet his minde would some time or other be carryed away and distracted thereby that it would not be so fit as it ought to be for Gods service To whom especially is the charge of this Commandement directed To Housholders and Magistrates who stand charged in the behalfe both of themselves and of all that are under their roofe and Government Jos. 24. 15. Neh. 13. 15. Heb. 13. 15. What is the charge of the Housholder That not only himselfe keep the Lords day but also his Wife Children and Servants as much as may be For as they serve him in the weeke dayes so he must see that they serve God on the Lords day What gather you of this That a Housholder should be as carefull of the Lords businesse as of his owne And if he will not keep such a servant as is not carefull in his ordinary worke much lesse should he keep any that will not be carefull in the Lords worke how skilfull soever he be in his owne What is the Magistrates part To see that all within his gates keep the Lords day Jo. 24. 15. even strangers though Turks and Infidels Neh 13. 15. causing them to cease from labour and restraining them from all open and publick Idolatry or false Worship of God much more all his owne Subjects whom he ought to force to heare the Word 2 Chron. 34. 33. So much of the first part of this Commandement touching our rest from all worldly businesses What followeth in the next place The second and greater part of this Commandement which is the sanctifying of this Rest and keeping it holy unto the Lord by exercising of our selves wholly in the service of God and performing the duties of that day Are we as strictly bound to these duties as the Jewes Yes verily and more then they because of the greater measures of Gods graces upon us above that which was upon them What is required of us herein To make the Sabbath our delight to consecrate it as glorious to the Lord Isa. 58. 13. and that with joy and without wearinesse Amos 8. 5. with Mal. 1. 13. and that also with care and desire of profit we bestow the whole day as nature will beare in holy Exercises What are these Exercises They are partly duties of Piety Acts 13. 13. 15. 20. 7. Psal. 92. 1. as hearing and reading the Word Prayer singing of Psalmes and feeding our selves with the Contemplations of the heavenly Sabbath partly of mercy 1 Cor. 16. 2. Neh. 8. 12. as visiting and relieving the sicke and needy comforting the sad and such like How are these duties to be performed Hartly publick in the Church where the solemne worshipping of God is the speciall worke and proper use of the Sabbath Partly private out of the Church and that either secretly by our selves alone or joyntly with others What if we cannot be suffered to use the publicke meanes Such as are necessarily debarred from the publick duties must humble themselves before God mourning and sorrowing for this restraint Mat. 24. 20. Psal. 42. 6. 84. 1 2 3. and with so much more care and earnestnesse use the private meanes Psal. 53. 1 2. What is the first duty we are to performe in the publick Assembly To joyne in Prayer with the Congregation which is an excellent duty for if as Christ saith When two or three are gathered together in his Name he will grant their requests how much more will he heare his servants when two or three hundred are gathered in his Name What is the second To heare the Word read Luke 4. 16. Acts 3. 16. 15. 20. for blessed is he that readeth and they that heare the Word Rev. 1. 3. What is the third To heare the Word preached Luke 4. 16. 22. Acts 13. 14 15. 15. 21. 20. 7. What is the fourth To communicate in the Sacraments by being present when the Sacrament of Baptisme is administred unto others and by receiving the Sacrament of the Lords Supper our selves after a decent order in the appointed time Acts 20. 7. 1 Cor. 11. 20. Why should a man be present at Baptisme First that hee may give thanks to God for adding a Member to his Church Secondly that he might be put in minde of his own Vow made to God in Baptisme by seeing the childe baptized What is the fift duty to be performed in the Congregation Singing of Psalmes What is the sixt Exercise of the Discipline of the Church against offenders 1 Cor. 5. 4. What is the seventh Collection for the poore and Contribution for relieving the necessities of the Saints of God 1 Cor. 16. 1 2. where we are to give according to our wealths and the
A BODY OF DIVINITIE OR THE SVMME AND SVBSTANCE 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 VVhereunto is adjoyned a Tract intituled IMMANVEL OR THE MYSTERY OF THE Incarnation of the SON OF GOD Heretofore writen and published by the same Author JOHN 17. 3. This is life eternall that they might know thee the onely true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent LONDON Printed by M. F. for THO DOVVNES and GEO BADGER and are to be sold in S. Dunstans Church-yard in Fleetstreet MDCXLV To the Christian Reader CHristian Reader I doe here present and commend unto thee a booke of great worth and singular use which was written and finished about twenty years since the Author whereof is well knowne to bee so universally eminent in all Learning and of that deepe knowledge and judgement in sacred Divinity that he transcendeth all elogies and praises which I can give him I commend it unto the Christian Reader under a two-fold notion the first respecteth the subject matter of this whole Work which is of greatest excellency ad being The summe and substance of Christian Religion upon which as a most sure foundation we build our faith ground all our hopes and from which we reap and retain all our joy and comfort in the assurance of our salvation which as at all times it is most profitable to be read studied and known so now if ever most necessary in these our days wherein men never more neglected these fundamentall principles as being but common and ordinary truths and spend their whole time study and discourse about Discipline Ceremonies and circumstantiall points and herein also not contenting themselves with those common rules and that clear light which shineth in the Word they are onely led by their own phantasies daily creating unto themselves diversity of new opinions and so falling into sects and schismes they break the bond of love and fall off from the communion of Saints as though it were no Article of their Creed and being in love with their own new Tenets as being the conception and birth of their own brains they contend for them more then for any fundamentall truths and not onely so but also hate maligne and most bitterly and uncharitably censure all those that differ from them in their opinions though never so conscientious and religious as though they professed not the same faith yea served not the same God nor beleeved in the same Christ but remain still Aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel and in comparison of themselves no better then Papists or at the best but carnall Gospellers The second notion under which I commend it respecteth the Work it self or the manner of the Authors handling it which is done so soundly and solidly so judiciously and exactly so methodically and orderly and with that familiar plainnesse perspicuity and clearnesse that it giveth place to no other in this kind either ancient or modern either in our own or any other Language which ever yet came to my view in which regard I may say of it as it is said of the vertuous woman Many have done excellently but this our Author exceedeth them all I will adde no more in the deserved praises of this Worke but leave it Christian Reader to thy self to peruse and judge of it commending thee to the Word of Gods grace and the good guidance of his holy Spirit who is able to build thee up in fruitfull knowledge to lead thee into all truth to direct and support thee in the wayes of godliness and to give thee an everlasting inheritance amongst the blessed Thine in the Lord Jesus Christ JOHN DOWNAME The Connexion of these Points together and Dependence of them one upon another IN Christian Religion wee are to consider the Ground thereof contained in the Scripture Parts which treat of Gods Nature in his Essence considered absolutely in it selfe where the doctrine of divine Attributes which respect either His perfection in his Simplenesse whereby he is exempted from Composition and division Infinitenesse wherby he is exempted from all measure of Time by his eternity Place by his immensity Life whence he is called The living God Considered in his All-sufficiency Al-seeing wisdom Foreknowledge Counsell Almighty power Holy will wherein is seen his Goodnesse and therein his love unto his creatures mercy or grace shewed them in their misery Iustice in his word called his Truth deeds disposing of all things rightly rendring to the creatures according to their works Persons subsisting in one and the same undivided Essence Kingdome in his Eternall decree which men must not curiously prie into but content themselves with what is made manifest Execution thereof in the workes of Creation of things Invisible The highest Heavens Angels Visible Unreasonable Reasonable man consisting of Body Soule Providence Common unto all creatures Proper respecting the everlasting condition of principall Creatures Angels Good Bad. Men who are ordered in This life by the tenor of a two-fold Covenant Nature or Workes where we are to consider the Conditions and Events Shame Primary the fall of our first parents Secondary the corruption of Nature originall Actions actual of omission commission Death comprehending all the curses of the Law whereunto the nature of man standeth subject Grace wherein we are to consider the state of Christ the Mediator in his Person and there in his Natures and their Union where of his Conception Nativity Distinction Two fold state of Humiliation Exaltation Office with his Calling thereunto Execution thereof concerning God the party offended wherein his priestly office is exercised the parts whereof are Satisfaction giving contentment to Gods Iustice by his Obedience to the Law Suffering for our sinne Intercession soliciting Gods mercy for those he hath redeemed Man the party offending to whom he communicates the grace by him purchased by his Propheticall office Kingly office The rest of mankind who are called by participation of his grace where we are to consider 1. The company thus called out of the world The Catholike Church of Christ where such as obey this calling in Outward profession alone hold onely externall communion with it Inward affection also internall with the Head Christ Iesus there being a Mutuall donation whereby the Father gives Christ to them them to Christ. Mysticall union whereby they are knit together by Gods quickning Spirit The rest of mankind whence ariseth the Communion of Saints 2. Grace whereunto they are called Reconciliation Iustification where of Iustifying Faith Adoption and therein of Hope Sanctification and therein of Love here consider the Rule of Holines the morall law contained in the ten Commandements wherein are to be considered Generall rules to be observed in the exposition of them Distinction of them into two tables containing the duties we owe unto God namely Having the
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
his mouth and works of his hands are all stained with sin Be not outward sins more grievous then inward Some be and some be not for if they be against the same Commandement and the same branch thereof they are much more wicked and evill because first God is more dishonoured outwardly Secondly other men are offended if godly or inticed by their example if wicked Thirdly a man doth more ingrosse himselfe in sin outward then in a bare thought that he restraineth from outward action But how may some thoughts be more evill then actions If they be of more wicked matters as the denying of God in heart is worse then an idle word What use are we to make thereof It serveth first to condemn the common sort that say and hold that thoughts are free which are oft so sinfull Secondly to assure us that many though they lead an outward civill life in actions yet if their hearts be not cleansed by faith may be more odious in Gods sight that knoweth their thoughts then a godly person that may be left to some outward weaknesses in his life What be the degrees by which men doe proceed in the committing of actuall sin Out of James 1. 14 15. these foure degrees may be observed First temptation to sin James 1. 14. 2 Sam. 11. 12. which then only is sin to us when it either ariseth from our own corruption or from outward occasions to which we have offered our selves carelesly For if every temptation to sin offered unto us should be sin simply then our Saviour that was tempted should have sinned Therefore the outward or inward temptations that Satan may offer be not sins to us till they get some hold in us which is when we are the occasion of them our selves by inward corruption or outward carelesnesse in venturing upon temptations Secondly concupiscence bringing sinne to conception James 1. 15. which is done by these degrees First entertaining the sinne whereunto we are tempted and suffering it to have abode in the mind or thought Secondly withdrawing the heart from God whom we ought to feare with all our hearts and his Commandements Jam. 1. 14. Thirdly consulting whether that sinne which we ought to hate may be done or no. 3. Consent of the mind to commit sinne whereupon ensueth the birth of sin Jam. 1. 15. by which it is brought forth into act against God or man 4. Often repetition of sin by custom and continuance wherein the heart finally is hardened Heb. 3. 13. and sinne is come to a perfection or ripenesse Jam. 1. 15. which is the strength that sin getteth over man whom it ruleth as a Master doth a slave in which estate who so continueth must look for eternall death Jam. 1. 15. for sin then reigneth which it never doth in the godly Are these actuall transgressions all of one sort No for they are diversly considered in respect of the Commandement broken the object offended the disposition followed and the degrees attained How for the Commandement The breach of a Commandement that biddeth is a sin of omission but of one that forbiddeth is a sin of conversion the one is an omission of duty required the other a Commission of evill forbidden by the one we offend in omitting those things which we should doe by the other in committing those things which we should not doe Which be the inward sins of omission The not thinking so often or religiously of heavenly things respecting the first table or of good duties to man as we should but suffering our minds to be a through-fare for vaine or wicked thoughts to passe through more then good which sinne if it were thought of well would make men more humble before God and to make more conscience of their houres dayes and nights to mark how their mind is occupied What be inward sins of Commission All actuall sins of the mind and thoughts whether we be awake dealing with God or man or asleep dreaming Examples of the first against God are to think there is no God Psal. 10. 45. or to have vile and base conceipts of him or his government Psal. 10. 41. 1 Cor. 2. 14. And towards man every inward breach of the second table But doth man commit sin in the night when he dreameth Yes surely the soule is never idle but when it thinketh not of good it thinketh of evill and the godly may mark that after they have had any dreams of things unlawfull their heart is in a measure wounded till they obtaine peace and pardon from God What use are we to make thereof To pray earnestly that God would sanctifie our corrupt hearts that it may be a fountaine of holy and not sinfull thoughts and in the night 1. To commit our selves specially to God that because we having our Senses and Judgement bound and silent are lesse able to resist and judge our sinfull thoughts God would preserve us from them by his grace And 2. That we avoid all occasions thereof in the day What be the outward sins of Commission Such as to the committing of them beside the thought of our mind any part of our body doth concurre as our tongue to words and other parts to deeds How are sinnes distinguished in regard of the object offended Some sins are more directly against God some against men either publique or private and others against a mans self How in regard of the disposition followed Either as we partake with others sins Esa. 6. 5. or as we commit the sin in our own person What be the differences of partaking with others sins First when we conceal and winke at other mens sins which we ought to reveal and rebuke as Magistrates and Ministers oft doe 1 Sam. 3 13. Secondly when we further it by our consent presence or counsell Act. 7. 58. 8. 1. 22. 20. 23. 14 15. Rom. 1. 32. Thirdly when we provoke others to sin Mark 6. 25. VVhat difference of disposition is there in those sins which a man doth commit in his own person Some sins are committed of Ignorance 1 Tim. 1. 13. Ps. 19. 12. or of an erring conscience 1 Cor. 8. 7. which a man doth either not know or not mark others are done of knowledge Doth not Ignorance excuse Affected Ignorance doth rather increase then diminish a fault VVhat be the differences of sins of knowledge 1. Some are of infirmity and temptation for feare of evill or hope of good Rom. 7. 19. Mat. 26. 69 70. 2. Some of presumption obstinacy and stubbornesse in sinning against which David earnestly prayed Ps. 19. 13. 50. 21. Eccles. 8. 11. and this may proceed if men have not the grace of God to obstinate and wilfull malice against God and his truth and to the unpardonable sinne against the holy Ghost Heb. 6. 4 5 6. 10. 29. Mark 3 29 30. What is the sin against the holy Ghost the highest of all sins It is a wilfull and malicious falling from and resisting of the Gospell
our businesses in the six working dayes that our worldly affaires enter not or incroach into the possession of the Lords day Not only willingly but not so much as by any forgetfulnesse As when through want of foresight or forecasting the payment of mony due by obligation or any such businesses that might be prevented shall fall out on that day 2. We should sanctifie our selves and those that are under us to keep that day What is contrary to this The neglect of Preparation for the Sabbath before it come and of fitting our hearts for holy service when it is come What are the parts of this Commandement They are two First to keep the Lords rest Secondly to sanctifie this rest For it is not sufficient that we rest from worldly businesses but it is further required that it be a holy rest The first sheweth what works we are to decline upon this day the other what duties we are to performe What are the workes that we must decline and leave undone on the Lords day Not onely the workes of sinne which we ought to leave undone every day but also the workes of our ordinary callings concerning this life and bodily exercise and labours which upon other dayes are lawfull and necessary to bee done Marke 3. 4. Ezek. 23. 37 38. Num. 15. 32 33. Exod. 31. 10 11 12 13 14. 34. 21. Nehem. 13. 15 c. Esa. 58. 13. What instances have you in Scripture of the performance hereof The Israelites ceased both from those works which were of the least importance as gathering of sticks Num. 15. 32. and from such also as were of greatest weight as working at the Tabernacle and building the Temple on the Sabbath day and consequently all other workes betwixt these extreams as buying and selling working in seed time or harvest were forbidden unto them Are we as strictly bound to rest from all our outward businesses and to forbeare all worldly labour upon this day as the Israelites Yea so farre forth as the morality of the Commandement reacheth but by the Ceremoniall Law there was enjoyned unto the Iewes a more exact observation of outward rest which to them was a part of their Ceremonial worship whereas unto us the outward rest is not properly any part of the sanctification of the day or of the service of God but only a meanes tending to the furtherance of the same even as in Fasting and Prayer Fast is of it selfe no part of Gods service but a thing adjoyned thereunto and so farre forth onely acceptable in the worship of God as it maketh a way and readier passage for the other 1 Cor. 8. 8. What did that most strict observance of outward rest signifie unto the Jewes Their continuall Sanctification in this world Exodus 31. 13. Ezek. 20. 12. and their endlesse rest in the world to come whereof this was a Type no lesse then the land of Promise Heb. 4. 4 5. 10. How was the latter of these specially typified In this world Gods Children are subject to the fiery tryall but after these troubles rest is provided for them 2 Thes. 1. 7. and no fire to be feared in that after world For a more lively representation of that there was a charge laid upon the children of Israel that no fire might be kindled throughout all their habitations upon the Sabbath day Exodus 35. 3. though it were for the very preparing of the meat which they should eate Exodus 16. 23. which was allowed unto them even in the two great solemne dayes of the Passeover Exo. 12. 16. Is it then lawfull for us to make a fire and dresse meat upon the Lords day Yea certainly because these were proper to the Pedagogy or manner of government of the Children of Israel under the Law as may appeate by this that there was no such thing commanded before the Law was given by Moses and consequently being not perpetuall must necessarily follow to bee Ceremoniall Now after the Sabbath that Christ our Lord rested in the grave the Ceremoniall Sabbath lyeth buried in that grave together with those other Rites which were shadows of things to come the body being in Christ Col. 2. 16 17. Therefore we being dead with Christ from these Ceremonies are no more to be burthened with such Traditions ibid. verse 20. Nor to bee brought under the bondage of any outward thing It is a liberty purchased unto us by Christ and we must stand fast unto it that blessed houre being come wherein the true worshippers are to worship the Father in Spirit and Truth John 4. 23. To leave then the Ceremoniall Sabbath and to come to the Morall How is the Rest required therein laid downe in the fourth Commandement By a Declaration First of the Works from which there must be a cessation Secondly of the persons that must observe this Rest. How is the former of these expressed In these words In it thou shalt not doe any Worke Exodus 20. 10. What is required of us hereby That for the space of that whole naturall day we cease in minde and body from all our worldly labours yea from the workes of our lawfull Calling and all other earthly businesses whatsoever more then needs must be done either for Gods glory or mans good What gather you of this That all exercises which serve not in some degree to make us fit to the Lords worke are unlawfull upon the Lords day Why doe you say that we must rest in minde and body Because this rest must be of the whole man in thoughts words and deeds Esa. 58. 13. Is it meerely unlawfull to doe any bodily or outward businesse on the Lords day No. First for such works are excepted as are presently necessary either for common honesty or comelinesse Secondly the actions of Piety requisite for the performance of Gods service on that day Acts 1. 12. Mat. 12. 5. Thirdly extraordinary exigents of Charity for the preservation of the Common-wealth 2 Kings 11. 9. Fourthly the preservation of our owne and others life health and goods in case of present necessity or great danger of their perishing if they were not saved on that day Mat. 12. 10 11. Marke 3. 4. Luke 13. 15 16. What be the speciall breaches of this part of the Commandement 1. The making of the Sabbath a common day through common labours in our ordinary callings Neh. 13. 15. vaine speech and talking of our worldly affaires Esa. 58. 13. thinking our owne thoughts and no other but a common use of the Creatures 2. The making it a day of carnall rest unto idlenesse feasting pastimes c. which draw our mindes further from God then our ordinary labours Exod. 32. 6. Whither are referred all recreations which distract us as also excessive eating and drinking which causeth drowsinesse and unaptnesse unto Gods Service and Worship 3. The making it a day of sinne or the Devills holy day by doing that on the Lords day which is no day lawfull Mar.
the King of Jericho might not revile the Spies but should have failed in her duty if she had betrayed them at the Kings Commandement and therefore in this case shee did well in preferring the obedience she owed to God before the duty she owed to man Josh. 2. 3. In like case also Ionathan revealing his Fathers counsell unto David and preferring the greater duty before the lesser did well 1 Sam. 19. 3. So we owing a greater duty to our Countrie then to our naturall kindred must rather refuse to reliefe them if they be Trayters then suffer any hurt to come to our Countrie But what if two have need of that which I can give but to one onely I must then preferre those that bee of the houshold of faith before others Galat. 6. 10. and my kinsemen and those that I am tyed unto by a speciall bond before strangers Iohn Chap. 1. v. 14. Acts 10. 24. What are we specially forbidden to doe by the Commandements of the second Table To doe any thing that may hinder our neighbours dignity in the fift Life in the sixth Chastity in the seventh Wealth in the eighth or good Name in the ninth though it bee but in the least secret motions and thoughts of the heart unto which we give no liking nor consent for unto that also the last Commandement doth reach How are these six Commandements of the second Table divided Into such as forbid all practise or advised consent to any hurt of our neighbours and such as forbid all thoughts and motions of evill towards our neighbour though they never come to advised consent of the Will The first five Commandements doe concerne such things as come unto consent and further the last such as come not unto consent at all How are those five Commandements of the first sort divided Into those that concerne speciall duties to speciall persons and those that concerne generall duties to all those duties which concerne speciall persons are commanded in the first those that generally concerne all men either in their life chastity goods or good name are enjoyned in the foure Commandements following What gather you hence That we are to distinguish between duties and duties between sinne and sinne done towards men and that to offend principall persons and such unto whom wee are in speciall manner obliged is greater sin because God hath singled out this one Commandement for these persons What are the words of this Commandement which is the fift in order Honour thy Father and thy Mother that thy dayes may be long upon the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee Exod. 20. 12. What is to be considered in these words 1. The Commandement 2. The Reason What is the meaning and scope of this Commandement That the equality of mens persons and places in whatsoever estate Naturall Civill or Ecclesiasticall and with whatsoever relation to us bee duely acknowledged and respected for it requireth the performance of all such duties as one man oweth unto another by some particular bond in regard of speciall callings and differences which God hath made between speciall persons What be these speciall persons Either in Equalls or Superiours and Inferiours for this Commandement enjoyneth all due carriage of Inferiours to their Superiours and by consequent also of Superiours to their Inferiours and likewise by analogy of equalls among themselves under the sweet relation betwixt Parents and Children or betwixt brethren of the same family and the generall duty of honour What are Equalls They be equall in gifts either of Nature or Industrie as brethren in a family Citizens in a Common-wealth Pastors in a Church c. What is required of Equalls That they live equally amongst themselves loving one another and affording due respect to each other Rom. 12. 10. that they live together sociably and comfortably preferring each other before themselves and striving to goe one before another in giving honour 1 Pet. 2. 17. 5. 5. Eph. 5. 21. Phil. 2. 3. that they be faithfull one to another What is here forbidden Want of Love Incivility Strife and Vaine-glory whereby they seek to advance themselves one above another and to exalt themselves above their fellowes Phil. 2. 3. Matth. 23. 6. What are Superiours They be such as by Gods ordinances have any preeminency preferment or excellencie above others and are here termed by the name of Parents 2 Kings 2. 12. 5. 13. 6. 21. 13. 14. 1 Cor. 4. 15. Col. 3. 22. to whom the first and principall duties required in this Commandement doe appertaine Eph. 6. 1 2. Why are all Superiours here called by the name of Parents 1. For that the name Parents being a most sweet and loving name men might thereby be allured the rather to the duties they owe whether they be duties that are to bee performed to them or which they should performe to their inferiors 2. For that at the first and in the beginning of the world Parents were also Magistrates Pastors Schoole-masters c. How doth this agree with the Commandement of Christ Mat. 23. 7 8 9. that we should call no man Father or Master upon earth Very well for there our Saviour meaneth onely to restraine the ambitious Titles of the Pharisees in those dayes who desired not onely so to be called but that men should rest in their authority alone for matters concerning the soule Who are Inferiours comprehended here under the name of Children Such as by the Ordinance of God are any way under Superiours who are principally and in the first place to performe the duties required in this Commandement Why is the Commandement conceived in the name of Inferiours Because their duties are hardest obeyed in all estates What is here contained under the name of Honour Not onely Cap and Knee but every particular duty according to their particular estates Mal. 1. 6. Why are these duties comprehended under the word Honour Because it adds an ornament and dignity unto them What is the Honour that Inferiours owe to all Superiours in generall 1. Reverence in heart word and behaviour Lev. 19. 3. Eph. 6. 1. 5. For the reverence of the mind is to be declared by some civill behaviour or outward submission as of rising before them and of giving them the honour of speaking first c. Lev. 19. 32. Iob 29. 8. 32. 6 7. 2. Obedience to their counsells 3. Prayer to God for them with giving thanks 1 Timothy 2. 1 2. 4. Imitation of their Vertues and Graces 2 Timothy 1. 5. 4. 9. 8. 9. What contrary sinnes are here forbidden 1. Want of Reverence inward or outward 2. Despising of Superiours Iude v. 8 9 10. Prov. 30. 11. 3. Neglect of Prayer and other duties What is the duty of all Superiours towards their Inferiours That they answerably afford unto them love blessing according to the power they receive from God Heb. 7. 7. 11. 20. Gen. 9. 25 26 27. good
to their Clients Who are under the Government of the Civill Magistrates All persons and Subjects in the Realme City or State where they are Governours Rom. 13. 1. What are the duties of Kings and inferiour Magistrates in the Common-wealth They are twofold First in respect of Gods matters Secondly in regard of civill affaires 1 Tim. 2. 12. The former whereof regardeth the good of the soules the latter of the bodies of their Subjects VVhat is the Civill Magistrate to doe in Gods matters and for the Soules of the Subjects 1 He should pray for them that God would make their hearts obedient unto him 2 He should see that God be honoured in his Dominions that abuses in Religion be reformed and the truth promoted and maintained after the example of David Solomon Hezekiah Iosias and other good Kings 2 Cro. 14. 3 4. 15. 12 15. 17. 6 9. 3. He should plant the sincere preaching of the Word among his subjects that so they may be more obedient unto him And take care that the good things already taught and established may be done as God hath appointed He is not to make new Lawes of his owne for Religion but to see those Ordinances of Religion which are grounded upon the Word of God duely established and preached that so God may be truly served and glorified and the Church within his Realmes and under his government may under him leade a quiet and peaceable life in all goodlinesse and honesty 1 Tim. 2. 2. For he who neglecteth this duty unto God shall never performe his duty to man how politick soever he seeme to be VVhat is the Magistrate especially to performe in respect of civill affairs 1. He must looke to the peace of the Common-wealth over which he is set 1 Tim. 2. 2. defending his subjects from their enemies and preserving their lives in war and peace and suppressing murderers robbers and all outragious persons 2. He must not only maintaine peace but also honesty that by him we may not only lead a peaceable life but also an honest 1 Tim. 2. 2. where specially he is to provide that all uncleannesse be removed 3. He must see that justice be duely executed Psal. 72. 2 4. and that the Ministers thereof give judgement speedily in matters belonging to their judgement 4. He must take order that every man may enjoy his owne Psal. 72. 4. 5. He must cherish the good and discountenance the bad and take order that Malefactors may be punished and well doers may be encouraged Psal. 72. 4 7. Rom. 13. 3 4. VVhat is the sin of Magistrates Carelesnesse in performing those former duties VVhat is the duty of Subjects to their Magistrates 1. To pray for them that God would rule their hearts by his holy Spirit that under them we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godlinesse and honesty 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. 2. To help them with our goods paying willingly customes taxe and tribute due to them Mat. 22. 17 21. Rom. 13. 6 7. which condemneth the popish Clergy that detract this Tribute 3. To adventure our lives for them in war and peace 2 Sam. 21. 16 17. and 23. 15 16. 4. When they doe us wrong not to rebell but endure it patiently for it is better to suffer for well doing then for evill 5. To be obedient and dutifull unto them and to obey their Lawes in the Lord. Doe their Lawes binde the Conscience As far as they are agreeable with the Lawes of God the doe but otherwise they doe not for there is but one Law-giver who is able to save and to destroy Jam 4. 12. VVhat learne you out of the former That Drunkards Theeves Murderers c. breake both this Commandement and that other under which those sins are principally contained VVhat out of the latter That the Papists are to be condemned who hold that the Popes Lawes doe binde the conscience What be the sinnes of Subjects 1. Disobedience and Rebellion Refusing and repining to pay dues Hitherto of the duties of Superiours Inferiours and Equalls Shew now what are the helpes of the obedience of this Commandement They are either common to all or proper to Inferiours and Superiours What is common to all There must be endeavour to nourish and increase a naturall Affection Rom. 12. 10. Humility Rom. 12. 16. and Wisedome to discerne what is good and fitting for our owne and others places Rom. 13. 7. What is proper to the Inferiours Hee must see God in the place and authority of his superiours Rom. 13. 1. setting before his eyes the dreadfull threatnings and example of Gods vengeance on the seditious and disobedient Eccles. 10. 8. What is proper to the Superiours He must be the same to his Inferiours that he would have Christ to be unto himselfe Eph. 6. 9. remembring the tragicall ends of Tyrants and Vsurpers What hindrances of these duties are to be avoyded 1. Selfe-love which maketh men unfit either to rule or to obey 1 Tim. 3. 2 3 4. 2. Partiall inquiry into the the duties of others towards us joyned for the most part with the neglect of our owne Eccles. 7. 23 24. 3. The furie of the Anabaptists 4. The company of seditious persons and despisers of government Prov. 24. 21 22. What is the reason annexed to this Commandement That thy dayes may be prolonged and that it may goe well with thee in the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee Deut. 5. I6 What is taught in this reason That God moveth the hearts of Superiours to promote the good estate of Inferiours for so also doe the words sound Exodus 20. 12. that they may prolong thy dayes besides the providence of God to the obedient which is farre above all experience of mens provision What is the summe of this promise The blessing of long life and prosperity to such as by keeping this Commandement shall shew that they regard the Image and Ordinance of God Eph. 6. 1 2 3. Rom. 13. 1 2. Have not the other Commandements this promise No not expressely which sheweth that a more plentifull blessing in this kind followeth from the obedience of this Commandement then of the other that follow Hence it is called by the Apostle the first Commandement with promise Eph. 6. 2 3. it being the first in order of the second Table and the only Commandment of that Table that hath an expresse promise and the only Commandement of the Ten that hath a particular promise But how is this promise truly performed seeing some wicked men live long and the godly are taken away in the midst of their time 1. The Lord performeth all temporall promises so far forth as it is good for us and therefore the godly are sure to live so long as it shall serve for Gods glory and for their owne good but the wicked live to their further condemnation Isa. 56. 20. 2. It is enough that the promises of this life be performed
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
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
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
yeers And finally that hee who was Davids Son should yet bee Davids Lord a case which plunged the greatest Rabbies among the Pharisees who had not yet learned this wisdome nor known this knowledge of the holy The untying of this knot dependeth upon the right understanding of the wonderfull conjunction of the divine and humane Nature in the unity of the Person of our Redeemer For by reason of the strictnesse of this personall union whatsoever may bee verifyed of either of those Natures the same may bee truely spoken of the whole Person from whethersoever of the Natures it bee denominated For the clearer conceiving whereof wee may call to minde that which the Apostle hath taught us touching our Saviour In him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily that is to say by such a personall and reall union as doth inseparably and everlastingly conjoyn that infinite Godhead with his finite Manhood in the unity of the self-same individuall Person Hee in whom that fulnesse dwelleth is the PERSON that fulnesse which so doth dwell in him is the NATVRE Now there dwelleth in him not onely the fulnesse of the Godhead but the fulnesse of the Manhood also For wee beleeve him to bee both perfect God begotten of the substance of his Father before all worlds and perfect Man made of the substance of his Mother in the fulnesse of time And therefore wee must hold that there are two distinct Natures in him and two so distinct that they doe not make one compounded nature but still remain uncompounded and unconfounded together But Hee in whom the fulnesse of the Manhood dwelleth is not one and hee in whom the fulnesse of the Godhead another but hee in whom the fulnesse of both those natures dwelleth is one and the same Immanuel and consequently it must bee beleeved as firmly that hee is but one Person And here wee must consider that the divine Nature did not assume an humane Person but the divine Person did assume an humane Nature and that of the three divine Persons it was neither the first nor the third that did assume this Nature but it was the middle Person who was to bee the middle one that must undertake this mediation betwixt God and us which was otherwise also most requisite as well for the better preservation of the integrity of the blessed Trinity in the Godhead as for the higher advancement of Mankinde by means of that relation which the second Person the Mediator did beare unto his Father For if the fulnesse of the Godhead should have thus dwelt in any humane person there should then a fourth Person necessarily have been added unto the Godhead and if any of the three Persons beside the second had been born of a woman there should have been two Sons in the Trinity Whereas now the Son of God and the Son of the blessed Virgin being but one Person is consequently but one Son and so no alteration at all made in the relations of the Persons of the Trinity Againe in respect of us the Apostle sheweth that for this very end God sent his own SON made of a Woman that WE might receive the adoption of SONS and thereupon maketh this inference Wherefore thou art no more a servant but a SON and if a SON then an HEIRE of God through Christ intimating thereby that what relation Christ hath unto God by Nature wee being found in him have the same by Grace By nature hee is the onely begotten Son of the Father but this is the high grace hee hath purchased for us that as many as received him to them hee gave power or priviledge to become the Sons of God even to them that beleeve on his Name For although hee reserve to himselfe the preheminence which is due unto him in a peculiar manner of being the first born among many brethren yet in him and for him the rest likewise by the grace of adoption are all of them accounted as first-bornes So God biddeth Moses to say unto Pharaoh Israel is my Son even my first born And I say unto thee Let my son goe that hee may serve mee and if thou refuse to let him goe behold I will slay thy son even thy first born And the whole Israel of God consisting of Jew and Gentile is in the same sort described by the Apostle to bee the generall assembly and Church of the first born inrolled in heaven For the same reason that maketh them to bee Sons to wit their incorporation into Christ the self-same also maketh them to be first-bornes so as however it fall out by the grounds of our Common Law by the rule of the Gospel this consequence will still hold true if children then heirs heirs of God and joynt-heires with Christ. And so much for the SON the Person assuming The Nature assumed is the seed of Abraham Heb. 2. 16. the seed of David Rom. 1. 3. the seed of the Woman Gen. 3. 15. the WORD the second person of the Trinity being made FLESH that is to say Gods own Son being made of a Woman and so becomming truely and really the fruite of her wombe Neither did hee take the substance of our nature onely but all the properties also and the qualities thereof so as it might bee said of him as it was of Elias and the Apostles that hee was a man subject to like passions as wee are Yea hee subjected himself in the dayes of his flesh to the same weaknesse which we find in our own fraile nature and was compassed with like infirmities and in a word in all things was made like unto his brethren sin onely excepted Wherein yet wee must consider that as hee took upon him not an humane Person but an humane Nature so it was not requisite hee should take upon him any Personall infirmities such as are madnesse blindenesse lamenesse and particular kindes of diseases which are incident to some onely and not to all men in generall but those alone which doe accompany the whole Nature of mankinde such as are hungring thirsting wearinesse griefe paine and mortality Wee are further here also to observe in this our Melchisedec that as he had no Mother in regard of one of his natures so he was to have no Father in regard of the other but must bee born of a pure and immaculate Virgin without the help of any man according to that which is writen The Lord hath created a new thing in the earth A woman shall compasse a man And this also was most requisite as for other respects so for the exemption of the assumed nature from the imputation and pollution of Adams sin For sin having by that one man entred into the world every Father becommeth an Adam unto his childe and conveyeth the corruption of his nature unto all those whom hee doth beget Therefore our Saviour assuming the substance of our nature but