Selected quad for the lemma: work_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
work_n faith_n impute_v justification_n 4,722 5 9.4017 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A49513 Principle[s] of faith & good conscience digested into a catecheticall form: together with an appendix: 1. Unfolding the termes of practicall divinity. 2. Shewing some markes of Gods children. 3. Some generall rules and principles of holy life. By W. Lyford, Batchelour of Divinity, and minister of Gods Word at Sherborne in Dorsetshire. Lyford, William, 1598-1653. 1655 (1655) Wing L3555; ESTC R216824 122,930 334

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

a carnall man sinne is pleasing and duty a burthen the duties of the Law being brought and pressed on the soule doe shew how hollow and rotten we are which otherwise we should never have mistrusted by our selves Ro. 7.9 9 10 13. Rom. 8.7 Q. What fourth worke of the Law bringeth a sinner to Christ A. It worketh wrath that is it laies the curse upon us it proclaims the judgement of God against us for every sin It curseth every disobedience it tels every soule of us thou art a domned creature c. Ro. 1.18 Rom. 4.15 2 Cor. 3.7 9. The Law is full of rigour 1. It accepts of no obedience but what is every way full and perfect 2. The Law admits of no excuses It accepts of none of our sorrows 3. The Law regards not what we can doe but what we should doe All that be under the Law must doe it or dye This is the case of all that be out of Christ the Law curseth them Q. How fiftly doth the Law drive us unto Christ A. When we see that we are shut up and cannot winde our selves out of Gods wrathfull hands the soul even drowned with sorrow and feare is constrained to goe to Christ upon the invitation of the Gospell The soule does hereupon consult and advise with it selfe what to doe to be saved and so at length resolves to goe to Christ this is one use of the Morall Law viz. to make us see 1. How vile we are 2. How weak we are 3. How wicked we are what enemies to God and goodnesse 4. How cursed we are 5. And so to consult within our selves and to resolve to goe to Christ as that prodigall did Luk. 15.17 18. and those Lepers 2 King 7.3 4. Thus the Law and the Gospell worke together for our salvation it is not in me to save you saith the Law therefore seeke further It is in me to save you saith the Gospell therefore rest in me Act. 2.37 Mat. 11.28 Rom. 8.15 And so the soule is converted and drawn unto Christ by the Gospell being driven from the Law by the Law it selfe CAP. XXVIII Of the second end and use of the Morall Law Q. WEE have seene the first maine use of the Morall Law What is the second A. To be a perpetuall rule of obedience and holinesse Second Use of the Morall Law and it is therefore called the Morall Law Mat. 19.17 Rom. 2.25 Rom. 7.12 Heb. 8.10 1 Tim. 1.5 8. Jam. 2.10 11. The Law shewes us what is good and what is bad Q. Our obedience is but in part here What be the properties of that obedience which God will accept of his servants True obedience what A. 1. It must be a free a loving submitting of the b inward and outward man to the c whole will of God with an intention d and desire to please and approve our selves to him in every thing we doe This is the nature of true obedience a the ground and rule of obedience is the will of God b the creature obeying is the inward and outward man c the manner is free without compulsion d the end and aime of all is to please God not men or our selves and by these properties true obedience is differenced from meer civill honesty restraining grace in hypocrites a Mat. 15.9 Esa 1.12 b Rom. 6.13 17. c Psal 40.8 119.6 80. Mat. 5.20 Jam. 2.10 d H. s 7.14 Zach. 7.5 6 Rom. 14.6 Joh. 5.30 John 7.18 Esay 10.7 Mat. 6.6 Q. Is there any worthinesse in our works to procure to us Gods favour A. None at all our best works done before we be regenerate are utterly corrupt and cannot please God The evill tree cannot bring forth good fruit Joh. 3.6 Rom. 8.8 Mat. 7.18 Phil. 3.8 Q. But what say you of the workes we performe after regeneration A. Though God in mercy for Christs sake doe accept of our endeavours to please him yet our very best workes are stained with many imperfections And therefore have need of forgivenesse c. Luk. 17.10 Rom. 7.21 Esa 64.6 Tit. 3.5 Mat. 20.10 14. When the Scripture speaks of rewarding our workes Mat. 10.42 and Mat. 6.6 It is a reward of Grace not of Debt Neh. 13.22 Remember me and spare me The rewards of God must needs be full of Grace seeing he promiseth to reward Begging and praying and a cup of cold water which is of little worth Q. It seems then that God doth receive us into his favour without any consideration of our works of his meer mercy in Christ alone imputing his righteousnesse unto us and not our frailties A. It is most true for we are saved by faith in Christ without the works of the Law Rom. 3.28 Rom. 11.6 Q. But doth justification by faith make men despisers of good duties contained in Gods Law A. By no means for faith is the very life and root of all good works And the reason why many doe not performe works of obedience is because they have not faith Heb. 11.7 8 17 25 27. Iam. 2.22 Luk. 17.3 5. Esay 7.4 12. 1 Pet. 3.5 The more faith Faith answers all objections it removeth carnall reasoning and so brings the heart to obey in all things the more obedience Gal. 5.6 Q. The Law being the rule of obedience we ought to be carefull to know it and to lead our lives by it A. Yes For both he that knows it not and he that obeyes it not shall be beaten with many stripes Luk. 12.47 48. Q. How many Commandments be there A. Ten Ten words Deut. 4.13 Q. What sorts of duties doth the Law of God containe A. Two sorts 1. Duties that immediatly concern Gods Glory and Worship in the foure first precepts 2. And duties that more immediately respect our Neighbours good in the six last Mar. 12.29 30 31 33. Mat. 22.37 40. Thus are the Ten Commandments divided Q. What motives are there to stir us up to the keeping of this Law in all the points of it A. Two 1. Because God is the Law-giver God spake every one of those words and where God hath a voyce to speake we ought to have an eare to heare and an heart to obey God sets his stamp upon them all Iam. 4.12 Heb. 2.2 Rom 7.12 The law is holy just and good Q. Why secondly must we carry an awfull regard to this Law A. Because he is Jehovah our God our maker our deliverer and therefore may justly challenge obedience at his creatures hands Love and feare ought to keep us in obedience Mal. 1.6 Es 5.4 Deut. 10.12 Jer. 2.9 13 19. Mic. 6.3 Esay 43.23 24. Deut. 7.6 11. Deut. 26.17 19. the strongest and sweetest bond of obedience is that relation between God and us CAP. XXIX Q. THe first Table of the Law of God containes foure Commandments What is the summe and substance of it A. The first Table of the Law teacheth and requireth 1. That I cleave unto God with my heart 2. That I worship him with my
Word and Spirit of God a 1 Ioh. 1 9 b Rom. 8.13 14. Eph. 2.2 Ier. 44.17.6 And if the blind lead the blind they both fall into the ditch a Blind rule is a blind guide Q. How thirdly may it be knowne A. Because they were never converted neither doe they see why or from what such as be borne and bred up in the true Religiō should be converted such people are yet in their naturall state Ioh. 8.33 34.36 Ioh 3.4 7. Luk. 15.7 Act. 3.19 Q How fourthly may people be convinced to be under sinne and without grace A. Because sin is no burthen to to them they were never pricked in their hearts not soundly humbled under their naturall condition A man may finde many faults in himselfe by cōmon grace but to feel and bewaile the rottēnesse sink of iniquity that is in our hearts the contrarieties that be in our nature against God and the workings of corruption this we cannot discover but by the sanctifying Spirit of God Rom. 7.7 9. Q. How fiftly doth it appeare that men want Grace A. Because they discerns not betweene pretious and vile as between the state of Nature the state of Grace between civill honesty saving Grace Let them tell what the differences be Num. 16.3 Eze. 22.26 Esa 5.20 Joh. 3.4 1 Cor. 2.13 14. Spirituall things must be spiritually discerned you must not heare a Sermon as you would heare a speech c. Q. How sixtly may this be proved A. Because they cannot bring you one promise out of the Scripture nor one mark of a saved one of which they can say this doth belong to me But the lesse they know of the Word of God the better they thinke of themselves and the lesse they search their owne hearts the greater is their assurance These are deluded ones Sound Christians can bring promises and evidences that they are in the state of Grace such as these Rom. 8.1 2 13. 1 Joh. 3.14 1 Joh. 5.1 2. 1 Thes 5.5 6. Q. How lastly may a carnall person be convinced to be under sin A. Because they are not in Christ this you must know that it is not enough for a man to doe his best and what he can but if he be not in Christ the Law layeth hold on him he is under the curse No body is safe by doing his best Eph. 2.12 1 Thes 1.10 the Law is a cruell Master it lookes not what we can doe it accepts not of repentings c. but unless we be in Christ Jesus it curseth all our imperfections Gal. 3.10 1 Joh. 5.11 12. Q. This is the case of man by nature and of all the sons of Adam What must we doe to escape wrath A. We must get into the Covenant of Grace made to us in Christ the promised seed Gal. 3.13 26. Rom. 10.4 Gal. 4.4 5. CAP. VI. Of the Covenant of Grace and our Redemption by Christ Third head of Christian doctrine Q WHat is the Covenant of Grace A. It is Gods free Charter and Grant wherein he bestoweth remission of sinnes and the Kingdome of Heaven in and for the death of Christ Jesus or it is a contract betweene God and man concerning reconciliation and life everlasting to be given and received by faith in Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 5.19 Gen. 17.4 7. There is Gospell in that Rom. 4.16 17. Gal. 3.8 Deu. 26.17 18. The matter covenanted is life and reconciliation the conveyance it is a gift by Christ the instrument and mean to receive it is faith all our right and title to Heaven comes this way from the love of the Father through the merit of the Son made ours by faith Eph. 15. Rom. 5.21 Rom. 3.22 24 Eph. 2.8 Q. What is the true difference between the Covenant of Workes and the Covenant of Grace A. The Law or Covenant of Workes offereth salvation to them that keepe it perfectly in their own persons that is to them that be without sinne and have a righteousnesse of their owne a personall perfect perpetuall Obedience Rom. 10.5 Luk. 10.28 Q. Explaine that farther A. The Law considers not what we can doe now neither doth it accept of sorrowes for doing amisse but it is satisfied only with a full and compleat obedience If thou say I doe my best c. that is no content to the Law the Law requires that all our works be holy without any touch of the flesh Rom. 7.14 2 Cor. 3.7 9. Gal. 3.10 It curseth every failing Q. How doth the Gospel offerus salvation A. By the righteousnesse of Christ th● Mediator so that the humbled soule resting on Christ by faith is justified and ● peace with God though we be not perfectly holy Rom. 3.25 26 27. Gal. 2.1 2 Cor. 5.19 Rom. 4.16 1 Tim. 1.15 This the priviledge of the Gospell that whe● we faile yet if we repent and turnet God God accepts our persons and th● greatest sin shall not condemne us th● Law knowes no such thing Gal. 3.12 Of justification by faith in Christ Jesus Q. 1. Then Christ doth not justify us ● giving grace and ability to keep the Law A. No for then Justification werea● works and not of Grace besides there no such b ability given to any living Grace is given whereby we subdue or corruptions The Covenant with Adam was of workes though all he had was given him and strive to please God b● not to fulfill the Law perfectly a Eph. 7 8 9 10. b 1 Joh. 1.8 9. Act. 5.31 Ac● 15.11 That which I fetch with my pen●● is not a gift but our righteousnesse is 〈◊〉 gift Rom. 5.17 Q. 2. Doth he save us by joyning 〈◊〉 merits to our workes as if we were justified partly by workes and partly by fai●● in Christ A. No we are justified by faith without the deeds of the Law and Christ will not have any to bejoyned with him in that businesse Rom. 3.21 27 28. Rom. 11.6 Esa 64.6 Jer. 23.6 Esa 63.3 Rom. 4 5 6. Heb. 7.25 Heb. 9.26 Gal. 5.4 To a sinners justification Christ is all in all or none at all Q. 3. Doth the New Covenant save as by changing the condition of workes into faith and sincere obedience as if the act of believing and obeying should be in stead of perfect obedience to the Law A. By no meanes The righteousnesse by which we are justified is 1. The righteousnesse of a God 2. Imputed to us residing in the person of Christ 3. Every way able to answer the Law See Phil. 39 2 Cor. 5.21 Ro 3.21 22 26. But our faith and sincere obedience is 1. But the righteousnesse of a man 2. Inherent no● imputed 3. No way able to answer the Law The New Covenant doth not change workes into workes workes perfect incompleat i●to workes imperfect But it changeth workes of our own performing into workes performed for us by Christ for faith doth not justifie as it is a grace wrought in us working in us but as it is an
PRINCIPLES OF FAITH GOOD CONSCIENCE DIGESTED Into a Catecheticall Form together with an Appendix 1. Vnfolding the Termes of Practicall Divinity 2. Shewing some Markes of Gods Children 3. Some generall rules and principles of holy life By W. LYFORD Batchelour of Divinity and Minister of Gods Word at Sherborne in Dorsetshire The Fourth Edition That the soule be without knowledge is not good Prov. 19.2 If thou wilt apply thine heart to understanding if thou criest after knowledge then thou shalt understand the feare of the Lord Prov. 2.3.5 Thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy Children Deut. 6.7 Printed at Oxford by Henry Hall for John Adams and Edward Forrest 1655. Advertisements touching the use and purpose of this Booke to my People 1. THere be two parts of a Ministers office that undertakes the instruction of Gods people the one to deliver sufficient matter of distinct knowledge unto Christian faith The other to lay downe and diligently to inculcate Principles of sanctification whereby a Christian may be directed in point of duty and holy life enabled to discerne between the state of Nature and the state of Grace Both these I have endeavoured the former by drawing out the generall heads of Christian doctrine into particulars the latter by laying down trials and principles of sanctification and holy practice 2. I intend this Booke for the instruction of those that are to be admitted to the Lords Supper wherein they shall be publikely exercised three years the two former years to be hearers and the last yeare to be answerers in it In which time it is hoped that the meanest capacity will be able to attain the sense understanding of the matter And whē they have been thus diligently instructed the Congregation satisfied of their competent knowledge in the doctrine of Christ then upon a day appointed for their admission to the Lords Supper the said Catechumenes upon their own motion desire to be admitted shall make professiō of their faith repentāce Ezek. 20.37 in their own names with their own mouthes undertake that Covenant of Faith obedience unto Christ which at Baptisme we all entred into and stand bound to performe 3. I have prepared a severall chapter for every week of the year and endeavoured to make the answers as weighty and perspicuous as I could both which as I conceive will be more delightfull and profitable to the learner To every answer I cause thē to read the proofes one or more as the time and matter requires within three quarters of an hour each Chapter will be dispatched if any thing be more lightly passed over one time it may be more largely insisted on the next 4. The number and length of questions will not be burthen some to thē that be long exercised therein The answers themselves are not long if you observe that they end where this marke beginneth and that all that is included within this marke is added for explication and not to lode the memory And if you expresse the sense of the answer in other words of your owne the answer will be the better accepted 5. There is some repetition of the same matter in the doctrine or justification by faith the Offices of Christ the difference betwixt the Law the Gospel which was not an oversight but of purpose the better to root those main points in weak understandings 6. This training up of our Children and Servants in a forme of wholsome words will I hope through Gods blessing be a meanes to prevent that grosse ignorance in them which now reignes in aged people The like fruit may be hoped in the free Grammer Schoole The Lord grant you to grow in grace in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ that both he that soweth and he reapeth may rejoyce together and when we shall be parted by death may have a joyfull and happy meeting in Heaven and be united to our blessed and glorious head for evermore AMEN READER THis fourth Edition addeth nothing of substance to the former the number of Questions and Answers and Pages be all the same Some notes for Explication are set in the margin Some expressions are changed and added when the former might seeme doubtfull The Contents of the severall Chapters Cap. 1. OF the certainty of holy Scripture of the state of innocency and the Covenant of Nature Cap. 2. Of the fall of man and his sinfull state of the staine and guilt and punishment of sinne Cap. 3 4. Of the difference and degrees of sin of originall sin sins of knowledge ignorance of infirmity and presumption of reigning sinne and sinne against the Holy Ghost Cap. 5. Arguments to convince carnall persons that they be under the curse no better then nature made them Cap. 6 Of the Covenant of Grace the differēce between the Old and New Testament the manner how Christ and Faith doe justify Cap. 7. Of the promises made to Christ the Mediator Cap. 8. Of Christ offered to sinners as yet unconverted and the ground of a sinners going to Christ Cap. 9. Of Gods promises to believers promises to the weake the doubting the lapsed Christian c. Cap. 10. Of the wonderfull person of the Mediatour God and Man and the benefit flowing from the personall union Cap. 11. Of Christs Priestly Office and the parts thereof viz. Satisfaction and Intercession Cap. 12. Of the Kingly and Propheticall offices of Christ Cap. 13. Who are in Covenant with God signes of true faith and repentance Cap. 14. Of mans uprightnesse the signes and benefit thereof Cap 15. Of the Nature Properties of God Cap. 16. Of creation providence whereby God guideth supporteth all things good and evill great and small Cap. 17. Of faith in Jesus Christ his Titles and Dominion Cap. 18. Of the Incarnation of the Sonne of God and manner of his conception Cap. 19. Of Christs sufferings the extent and value thereof Cap. 20. Of Christs exaltation to Gods right hand and what he doth there for us Cap. 21. Of the last judgement and of faith in the Holy Ghost Cap. 22. Of the Church of God militant triumphant of inward and outward calling signes of the true Church Cap. 23. Of the communion of Saints with Christ the Head and one with another the bonds and fruits of that communion Cap. 24. Of forgivenesse of sinnes the cause and effects thereof Cap. 25. Of the state of the dead and everlasting life for whom it is prepared Cap. 26. The first office of Faith to justify how faith is wrought by the Gospell Cap. 27. The second office of Faith to purify the heart of the first main end and use of the Morall Law scil to drive unto Christ and how that 's done Cap. 28. Of the second principall end of the Morall Law of the properties of true obedience of workes before and after regeneration and their unability to save Cap. 29. Of the first Commandment of Images of God or the
his holy Spirit draweth our hearts to embrace his gratious promises a Heb. 12.2 Eph. 2.8 b Luk. 24.25 Mar. 9.24 Num. 20.12 2 Chron. 16.7 9. Mat. 14.31 Luk. 18.9 c 1 Cor. 2.9 11. Joh. 6.44 45. Q. Why must we strive seeing it is Gods gift A. Yes because God hath appointed means whereby he will bestow all graces on us therefore if we seek him in those meanes we shall find him if we neglect those meanes it is a signe we have no grace nor can we ever hope to have any Mar. 4.24 1 Cor. 3.7 9. Rom. 10.14 15. Prov. 2.1 2 3. Mat. 13.44 Act. 16.14 1 Cor. 12.6 Q. Why secondly must we strive A. Because faith and all other graces be contrary to our corrupt nature and therefore we must give the more diligence to attaine the same at Gods hand As he that plants a graft contrary to nature must use the more care and because we cannot cure our selves we must seek and beg some one to put us into the pool when the waters be moved Phil. 2.12 13. Esay 26.12 Heb. 6.11 12. Rom. 11.24 2 Pet. 1.10 Q. By what meanes doth God usually worke faith in us A. By two Meanes 1. By the knowledge of the Law convincing us of sin Mat. 3.2 3. Ioh. 16.9 Rom. 4.15 Gal. 3.22 24. This is but preparative Hos 10.12 Q. But what is the chiefe meanes by which God doth worke faith in us A. By the preaching of the Gospell by which it is also encreased And therefore if we desire to have faith we must heare and obey the Gospell the Word of the Kingdome must be rooted in our hearts and affections 1 Pet. 1.23 2 Cor. 10.4 5. Rom. 1.16 Luk. 8.13 15 Gal. 3.2 Q. How doth the Doctrine of the Gospell bring about the heart from security and false confidences to believe on Christ for salvation A. Two waies especially To rest in any thing short of Christ is a false confidence 1. By inviting us to come unto Christ The Spirit doth convince us of sin and damnation and that we have need of the righteousnesse of another to save us Luk. 13.3 Joh. 16.9 Joh. 5.45 Joh. 8.24 Phil. 3 3 8.9 Matt. 9 13. By the law is the knowledge of sinne but to make us fly from the Law and to be dead to it and to seeke salvation by a righteousnesse without us this is the worke of the Gospell Rom. 7.4 The Gospell inviting commanding and calling us to Christs righteousnesse it doth cause us to renounce and forsake all hope of righteousnesse by works of the Law the Gospell puts a spirit into the letter of the Law The Gospell awaking us and bidding us to repent and goe to Christ for salvation doth make use of the Law to shew us our danger and our insufficiency to save our selves and consequenly a necessity of believing in Christ Q. How secondly doth the Gospell work the heart to believe A. 2. By shewing us such a fulnesse and al sufficiency in Christ that of him and in him we have all things needfull for salvation it shewes and assures the conscience that God is satisfied and well pleased with us in Christ Act. 13.32 33 34. John 1.16 17. Col. 1.13 14 19. Q. What followes thereof A. Therefore they that meddle not with the Scripture regard not the Ministry of it on the Lords day but slight it or scoffe at the preaching thereof shew plainly that they have no faith Rom. 15.4 Rom. 10.14 17. CAP. XXVII Of the second office worke of Faith viz. to purify the heart worke by love Here followes the life of a believer and the first end and use of the Morall Law Fourth heal of Christian doctrine Q. WHat is the second office of Faith A. To purify the heart working it to an obedient walking in all the Commandments and Ordinances of the Lord so that I shall not professe one thing and do another Jam 2.17 21 26. Act 15.9 it is ever purging out corruption Q. The rule of obedience in generall is the whole written word of God and more summarily the morall Law contained in the ten Commandements Tell me now Is the Law of the ten Commandements still in force A. Yes and whosoever doth or teacheth otherwise shall be least in the Kindome of Heaven that is none at all Mat 5.18 19. Rom 3.19 31. Rom 7.12 As touching the ceremoniall Law that which was a sin or duty then is not a sin or duty now under the Gospel and therefore the ceremoniall Law is not in force now as to our practice But as touching the morall Law that which was a sin then is a sin now as lying perjury c. which shewes that the morall Law is still in force now under the time of the Gospel Q. Is the Law given that we should looke for life and solvation by it A. No because by it all the world is guilty before God If we were without sin we should be saved by the Law but being all wretched sinners the Law curseth us and we must looke elsewhere for a worthinesse to answer Gods judgement Rom 7.4 6. Rom 3.20 23. Gal 3.17 Q. To what use then was the Law given The first use of the Morall Law A There is a twofold use of it 1. To convince us that we are under sin wrath that so we might be brought to seek salvation in Christ alone Gal. 3.19 24. Q. How doth the Law force a sinner unto Christ A. There be five effects or operations of the Law whereby it drives one to Christ The first is to make sin knowne in its true greatnesse and sinfulnesse both for the extent and danger of it By the Law we come to know our selves to be greater sinners and in worse case then we could imagine we find and feele that to be sinne which before we knew not and many things to be greater evils exposing us to greater wrath then heretofore we conceived as our naturall corruption the first motions unto sinne c. Rom 3.20 Rom. 7.7 8 9 13. Rom 5.13 Q. What is the second worke of the Law forcing us to seek Christ A. It shews us how farre short we come and how unable we are to doe any one thing that is good in any measure manner and degree as is required Many think they are holy and please God well enough because they know not the holynesse and rigour of the Law Rom. 7.11 13 18. Mat. 19.18 20. Q. How thirdly doth the Law shew us our need of Christ A. By it we finde and feele the emnity contrariety that is in our nature against God Tell a man of his sinne or duty O the heart is sad upon it the Law is a burthen to him the heart rebels against it and could even wish there were no such Law yea no God to take vengeance Sinne is a burthen to a regenerate person but Gods Law is not grievous to him 1 Joh. 5.3 On the other side to
servants it must have an institution from God else we sin against God who alone hath power to give any grace and to appoint the means of obtaining it The first Commandment requires that we worship the only true God and that we doe not give his properties and honour to another the second Commandment prescribes the true manner of worshipping that true God Q. Well then here we are forbidden to worship God after our own wits and wils What is particularly forbiden in this kind 1. Images for religious use A. 1. The making of any Image either of God or of any Creature for religious use that is to help us in our worshipping of God The likenesse and representation of any thing whatsoever is a false help und meane of worship Exod. 32.1 4. Ps 106.20 Jer. 10.8 14 15. Ezek. 8.10 Jer. 50.38 Jer. 51.17 18 19. Q. Is it unlawfull to make an Image of the Trinity or of any Person in the Godhead Pictures of God unlawfull A. It is utterly unlawfull and a great dishonour to figure the incorruptible God by the shape of a base and corruptible man or bird or other creature Deut. 4.15 16 17 18. Rom. 1.23 Act. 17.24 29 Esa 40.15 18 19. Hab. 2.8 It abuseth our understandings the party thinks there is some good in an Image else he would not make it and that 's a lie He lieth that shews me a Toad and saies it is the picture of an Angel so c. All the pictures of Christ in the flesh as that on Christ on the Crosse and resurrection are lies false in their representations and false in the conceit of any good by them Q. Is it unlowfull to make the image of a man or Angell or other creature to help us in the worship of the Creator A. It is utterly unlawfull to make or to have the likenesse of any creature for religious use to serve God thereby in at or before it To think that by doing any part of worship before an Image one shall please God the better or that it will be a mean of good unto us this is to rob God of his due What promise of Gods presence audience or acceptance before an Image do you find in the whole Scripture c. Esay 42.8 2 Kings 18.4 1 Ioh. 5.21 Rev. 9.20 Ezek. 8.10 11. Act. 7.43 1 Chron. 14.12 Deut. 27.15 the congregation are bound to curse this man v. 26. Thou shalt not bow downe to them nor serve them 2. All outward respect done to Images vid. Catechis Rom. part 3. c. 2. Q. What is forbidden in those words A. 2. We are forbidden to give any honour or outward reverence to any Image as to come before it to make our prayers to bow the knee to put off the cap or to shew any token or reverence unto it It is a cursed thing to doe any honour to an Image in word by speaking favourable of it or in deed as to put off the hat to bow the knee to give money and offerings for the maintenance of it or to be at the feasts held in honour of the creatures c. 1 King 19.18 Hos 13.2 1 Cor. 9.7 10. with 1 Cor. 10 14 20 21. Dan. 3.5 11 18. Exod 32.5 6. Ezek. 18.6 Judg. 6.31 Esay 66.3 2 Chr. 25.14 we must not kisse the Calves nor blesse an Idoll Q. What thirdly is here forbidden 3. All helping forward of Idolatry A. All outward service tending to the honour worship and service of Saints Angels Images or any other creature whatsoever As the building of Temples dedicating of Daies Altars Garments Priests Feasts to them and raising of money for the maintenance thereof Hos 8.14 Hos 10.1 2. 1 King 12.32 33. Esay 46.6 Exod. 32.2 Q. Under this grosse sinne of making and worshiping of Images are condemned all other superstitious corruptings of Gods worship without an Image Now How is Gods worship corrupted without an Image A. By will-worship that is all such means and manner of divine worship 4. Will-worship humane traditions as is not prescribed by God but brought in by man It is will-worship to observe what God hath not commanded and to forbeare what God hath not forbidden for conscience sake as going to God by Saints worshiping of Angels vowes of continency placing of holinesse in meats daies garments and places Lastly the inventing or using of New Sacraments as the Popish Masse and the five new Sacraments Adoration of the Altar and of the consecrated Elements of Bread and Wine together with all religious Ceremonies and Rites in and about the worship of God wherein is placed any holinesse vertue necessity or efficacy All such manners and formes of worship be obhorred of the Lord. Col. 2.18 21. 23. 2 Chron. 28.3.4 1 King 12.33 Ier. 19.5 Q. Why are such things unlawfull A. Because they be imposed or taken up for Conscience sake made the matter of Gods worship according to the Traditions and Commandements of men without any Authority of God Mat. 15.9 20. Esay 29.13 Mar. 7.4 7. Act. 17.25 To place holinesse or sin or duty in any invention and ordinances of Men is a superstition of deluded and seduced soules Q. What is the thing commanded in this precept A. That we worship God with a pure worship that is by those meanes and in that manner as God himselfe hath prescribed as hath been shewed in the first question Tell me next Q. What be the chiefe Parts of Gods outward worship under the New Testament A. They be foure 1. The a Preaching and hearing of the Word 2ly The exercise b of Prayer publique and private 3ly The c administration of the Sacraments 4ly And singing of d Psalmes a Act. 2.42 Luk. 4.16 Act 13.15 b 1 Tim. 2.1 8. Act. 16.13 16. 1 Cor. 1 2. c 1 Cor. 11.23 d For singing of Psalmes read 1 Chron. 16.7 9. Act 16.25 1 Cor. 14.26 with 1 Chron. 25.3 Col. 3.16 Q. In what manner must this worship of God be performed A. First for the inward man Care of the inward man in Gods worship each part of Gods worship must pe performed 1. In a faith with feeling affection b 2. And with a cleane heart 3. Not c resting in the work done but desiring to please God and expecting a blessing by them a Rom. 14.23 2 Chron. 17.6 Psal 63.1 2. Psa 84.2 6. b Ezek. 33.31 32. Mat. 15.8 Ezek 14.3 Psal 50.16 Esay 1.11 Job 16.17 c Ier. 7.4 10 11. Hos 7.14 Zach. 7.5 Mal. 1.7 8 13 14. Mal 3.14 1 Pet 2.2 Exercises of Religion must be performed not only as a duty but as a means of grace Q. How must Gods worship and service be performed by the outward man A. With such humility and reverence And of the outward man as becomes people that have to doe with an holy Lord God Heb. 12.28 29. 1 Cor. 11.22 28 29. Act. 20.9 It is a sin either to disuse or to neglect the outward worship of God or to
renouncing of our own righteousnesse and worthinesse as also our own desires reasons wits wills and dearest contentments for Christs and the Gospells sake that so we may preserve faith a good conscience according to the rule of the words whatsoever crosse shall happen to us in so doing Spirituall Combat is the strugling between the flesh and the Spirit between Grace Corruption in the same faculties of the soul of a regenerate person our new nature inclining us to good and to please God our corruption inclining to carnall contentments By the World unto which we must be crucified we mean the sinfull courses opinions waies and fashions of the world Lust in any evill motion and inordinate desire of the soule after any thing as after riches honour revenge food preferment therefore covetousnesse is Lust and so is pride anger and other motions of the flesh Concupiscence signifies the habituall indisposition of the heart to that wh●ch is good and its pronenesse to that which is evill as also every evill motion of the heart that swerves from the Law of God All this is called evill Concupiscence By Principles Principled we mean the rules and grounds wherewith men are seasoned guided in their course as carnall Principles are carnall grounds rules spirituall Principles are spirituall considerations moving and guiding in a businesse Heretick is one that departs from the true Faith obstinatly cleaves to error in Doctrine Shismatick is one that unnecessarily makes or causeth others to make a seperation from any true and found Church to the disturbance of the outward established peace thereof By Wil-worship we meane any thing that is brought into Religion and made matter of conscience by mans device or authority without warrant from the word of God By Superstition we meane the ascribing of Holynesse or any spirituall and supernaturall vertue to any creature gesture place day words or actions which is not given to the said creature by Creation or divine institution When we commend Good workes we meane not onely the works of charity and outward pomp but the whole course of obedience in our thoughts words and actions as the word of God requires of us By Christian Liberty we meane not a liberty to sinne as if we might sin more frely and safely because of Christs death but we meane that liberty which Christ hath obtained to us against the bondage of the Law condemning all that doe not fulfill it And also our freedome from the ceremonies of Moses Law and from all human ordinances so that they doe not bind in conscience Perseverance signifies a constancy and cotinuance in faith and obedience to our end Apectacy is a totall and finall departure from the faith once professed Back-sliding is a falling again into our old sinnes for a time out of which we recover through Gods grace being renewed againe by repentance By Spirituall Desertions we meane that trouble of minde which ariseth from losse of assurance and feeling of Gods favour occasioned usually by our backsliding in to some sinne or great carelessenesse and unevennesse in our walking with God By Temptations we meane sometimes allurements to sinne and somtimes the exercise of our faith wherein Sathan laboureth to question our Son-ship and interest in Christ This kind of Temptation is usually called distresse of minde Dispaire is finally to doubt of Gods favour and mercy refusing to rest on it Presumption is a conceit that we are in good case when we have no solid grounds to thinke so it is also a venturing to practise this or that without warrant of Gods word Assurance is the well grounded peace of conscience awakened and enlightned and quieted upon good grounds that his sins be forgiven in Christ Jesus When we pray that God would Sanctifie any of his dealings to us as crosses afflictions preferments deliverances or any other outward mercy we pray that God would give grace with outward mercies holy wisdome and gracious hearts to make right use of them that in all things we may be brought nearer to God in the exercise of faith humility thankfulnesse and better obedience for time to come Laus Deo TO THE READER THe foregoing TREATISE Christian Reader intituled Principles of Faith and good Conscience is so called because it doth containe not only points of Faith and positive Truths touching the chiefe Heads of Religion but also the most materiall points of Practicall Divinity properly so called that is to shew the work of Grace in the Conversion of a sinner and in the hearts of them that be converted and how a Christian may judge of his spirituall estate to God-ward * As in cap 4. 5. 8. 13. 14. 18. c. I have had some thoughts of publishing a just Treatise touching the state of Nature and of Grace the Translation of a sinner from the state of Nature to the state of Grace from death to life together with the Causes Order and effects thererf And this may be done if God be pleased to give me Life Liberty and Peace to the Church In the mean time Accept and make use of this short Discourse intended for the good of the Ignorant and the comfort of weake Christians The markes of Gods Children Blessed are the Pure in heart Blessed is the man in whose spirit there is no Guile so saith the spirit Psal 32.2 and Mat. 5.8 Markes of Gods children drawn out of Gods word Of saving knowledge Q. WHat is the first Marke of a Child of God A. Saving knowledge is a marke whereby Gods Children may be known from all others Iohn 17.3 1. Mark This is life eternall to know thee the only true God and whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ Q. What be the properties of saving knowledge A. They be foure The triall of it 1. Saving knowledge makes us to see our own Ignorances and strayings Prov. 9.10 12. Eph. 5.8 13. Rom. 7.9 Psal 119.130 Pro. 20.27 Q. What is the second property of saving knowledge A. It makes a man ashamed to doe evill and vile in his own eyes Eph. 5.8 12. 1 Thes 5.5 6 7 8 9. Rom. 6.21 Ier. 31.19 Q. What 's the third property of saving knowlege A. It is a guiding light especially in those things that belong to our own Peace and duty Psal 119.105 Rom. 2.20 21. Mat. 7.5 Q. What 's the fourth signe of saving knowledge A. It is not an idle but a working knowledge making a man to abstaine from evill and exercise himselfe in that which is good 2 Pet. 2.20 Jer. 22.16 Ps 119.104 Job 28.28 Hos 8.1 2. Vse Then it seemes that they which know much and yet are not bettered by their knowledge in Holinesse Christian life Also they that by their knowledge can guide others and yet doe not take to heart the thing that belong to their own peace duty their knowledge is but vaine Rom. 2.20 21. Rom. 1.18 2 Tim. 3.5 Lastly all such persons as be in darknesse and perceive it