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A26879 The catechizing of families a teacher of housholders how to teach their housholds : useful also to school-masters and tutors of youth : for those that are past the common small chatechisms [sic], and would grow to a more rooted faith, and to the fuller understanding of all that is commonly needful to a safe, holy comfortable and profitable life / written by Richard Baxter ... Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1683 (1683) Wing B1205; ESTC R22783 252,758 464

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forsake it not and mystically all that sincerely do consent to it And 7. So it tells us how to exercise Church Discipline that we cast not out those as none of Christs members for their Infirmities who are not proved by sufficient witness to have done that which cannot stand with the sincere keeping of that Covenant And thus Baptism not as a meer Outward washing but as including the Grace which it signifieth and the Covenant and Vow which it sealeth is the very Kernel of the Christian Religion and the Symbol or Livery of the Church and Members of Christ. Q. 35. Are all damned that die unbaptized A. Baptism is the solemn devoting men in Covenant to Christ. All that hear the Gospel are condemned that consent not to this Covenant But the Heart-consent for our selves and Children is our Title-condition before God who damns not men for want of an outward Ceremony which by Ignorance or necessity is omitted Believers Children are Holy because they and theirs are devoted to God before Baptism Baptism is to Christianity what publick Matrimony is to Marriage Ordination to the Ministry listing to a Souldier and Crowning to a King CHAP. XLVI Of the Sacrament of Christs sacrificed Body and Blood Qu. 1. WHat is the Sacrament called the Lords Supper or Eucharist A. It is a sacred Action in which by Bread and Wine Consecrated broken and poured out given and taken and eaten and drunk the Sacrifice of Christs Body and Blood for our Redemption is Commemorated and the Covenant of Christianity mutually and solemnly renewed and sealed in which Christ with the benefits of his Covenant is given to the Faithful and they give up themselves to Christ as members of his Church with which they profess Communion Q. 2. Here are so many things contained that we must desire you to open them severally And first what Actions are here performed A. 1. Consecration 2. Commemoration 3. Covenanting and communication Q. 3. What is the Consecration A. It is the seperating and Sanctifiing the Bread and Wine to this holy use by which it ceaseth to be meer common Bread and Wine and is made Sacramentally that is by signification and representation the Sacrificed Body and Blood of Christ. Q. 4. How is this done and what Action consecrateth them A. As other holy things are consecrated as Ministers Utensils Church-maintenance Oblations the Water in Baptism c. which is by an authorized devoting it to it 's proper holy use Q. 5. But some say it is done only by saying these words This is my Body or by Blessing it A. It is done by all that goeth to a Dedication or Seperation to it's holy use and that is 1. By declaring that God commandeth and accepteth it which is best done by reading his Institution and that we then accordingly devote it 2. By Praying for his Acceptance and Blessing 3. By pronouncing Ministerially that it is now Sacramentally Christs Body and Blood Q. 6. Is the Bread and Wine the true Body and Blood of Christ A. Yes Relatively Significantly Representatively Sacramentally that is it is consecrated Bread and Wine on these accounts so called Q. 7. But why do you call it that which it is not really when Christ saith This is my Body ●●d not this signifieth it A. The Name is fitly taken from the Form And ● Sacramental form is a Relative form If you see ● Shilling of the Kings Coin and the question be Whether this be a Shilling or the Kings Coin or Silver You will answer It is all three The matter of it is Silver The General Relation is Money or Coin The Special Relative form is It 's a Shilling And this is the fittest name when the value is demanded So the question is Whether this be Bread and Wine or a Sacrament or Christs Srcrificed Body and Blood It is all these and the Answer must be according to the meaning of the question It is usual to say of Pictures This is the King and This is such a one and This is my Father c. Certainly the two parts of the Sacrament must be understood alike And of one Christ saith This Cup is the New Testament in my Blood which is shed for you Luk. 22. 20. 1 Cor. 11. 25. Where none can deny that by Cup is meant the Wine and by Is the New Testament is meant Is the Exhibition and Sealing of the New Testament and not the very Testament it self And it s known that Christs common Teaching was by Parables and Similitudes where he saith Mat. 21. 28. A Certain man had two Sons c. v. 33. A Certain Housholder planted a Vineyard c. And so frequently Mat. 13. 21 22 23 37 38 39. He that soweth is the Son of Man The Field i● the World The good Seed are the Children of the Kingdom The tares are the Children of the Wicked one The Enemy is the Devil The Reapers are the Angels that is They are signified This is ordinary in the Gospel Ioh. 15. 1. I am the Vine and my Father is the Husbandman Joh. 10. 7 9 14. I am the Door I am the good Shepheard as David Psal. 22. 6. I am a Worm and no man Mat. 15. 13 14. Ye are the salt of the Earth the Lights of the World that is Ye are like these things Yea the Old Testament useth is for Signifieth most frequently and hath no other word so fit to express it by Q. 8. Why then do the Papists lay so much stress on the Word is Yea why do they say That there is no Bread and Wine after the Consecration but only Christs Body and Blood under the shew of them A. The Sacrament is exceeding Venerable being the very Eating and Drinking Christs own Sacrificed Body and Blood in similitude or representation And it was meet that all Christians should discern the Lords Body and Blood in similitude from common Bread and Wine And in time the use of the Name when the Church was drowned in Ignorance was taken about one thousand years after Christ for the thing signified without the sign As if they had said This is the King Therefore it is not a picture nor is it Cloth or Colours And it being proper to the Priests to consecrate it they found how it exalted them to be judged able to make their Maker and to Give or Deny Christ to men by their Authority and so they set up Transubstantiation and by a General Council made it Heresie to hold that there is any Bread or Wine left after Consecration Q. 9. Wherein lyeth the evil of that Opinion A. The Evils are more and greater than I must here stay to recite In short 1. They feign that to be Christs Body and Blood which was in his Hand or on the Table when he spake the words as if he had then two Bodyes 2. They feign his Body to be broken and his Blood shed before he was crucifyed 3. They feign him to have Flesh and Blood in Heaven which two General Councils have condemned his Body being a Spiritual Body now 4. They feign either himself to have eaten his
Worship which seemeth to me flat Idolatry VII They reserve it as their God long after the Sacrament to adore and to work pretended Miracles by VIII They solemnly celebrate a Sacrament before the Congregation where none communicate but the Priests and the People look on IX They say these Masses by number to deliver Souls out of the Flames of Purgatory X. They have many Prayers for the Dead as in Purgatory for their ease and deliverance XI They Pray to the Dead Saints to intercede for them and help them and to the Virgin Mary for that which is proper to Christ. XII They worship God by Images and adore the Images as the representations of Saints and Angels Yea and of God and some profess that the Cross and the Images of the Father Son and Holy Ghost are to be worshipped with honour participatively Divine These with abundance more and many false Doctrines on which they depend are brought into Gods publick Worship and called The Mass and are added by degrees to that sounder Worship which was called the Mass at first Q. 12. You have spoken much about the Consecration in the Sacrament What is it which you call the Commemoration A. It containeth the signal representation of the Sacrificing of Christ as the Lamb of God to take away the sins of the World Where the Signs are 1. The Materials the Bread and Wine 2. The Ministers Breaking the Bread and Pouring out the Wine 3. The Presenting them to God as the Commemoration of that Sacrifice in which we trust and declaring to the people that this is done to this Commemoration The things signified are 1. Christs Flesh and Blood when he was on Earth 2. The Crucifying of Christ the piercing of his Flesh and shedding his Blood 3. Christs Offering this to God as a Sacrifice for mans Sin And this Commemoration is a great part of the Sacrament Q. 13 What think you of the name Sacrifice Altar and Priest here A. The Ancient Churches used them all without exception from any Christian that ever I read of I. As the Bread is justly called Christs Body as Signifying it so the Action described was of old called a Sacrifice as representing and commemorating it And it 's no more improper than calling our Bodies and our Alms and our Prayers Sacrifices Rom. 12. 1. Eph. 5. 2. Phil. 2. 17. 4. 18. Heb. 13. 15 16. 1 Pet. 2. 5. II. And the naming of the Table an Altar as related to this representative Sacrifice is no more improper than that other Heb. 13. 10. We have an Altar whereof they have no right to eat seems plainly to mean the Sacramental Communion And the Rev. 6. 9. 8. 3. 5. 16. 7. and oft useth that word III. And the word Priest being used of all Christians that offer praise to God 1 Pet. 2. 5. 9. Rev. 1. 6. 5. 10. 20. 6. It may sure as well be used of those whose Office is to be Subintercessors between the People and God and their mouth to God in Subordination to Christs Priesthood Causless scruples harden the Papists We are not offended that the Lords day is called the Sabbath though the Scripture doth never so call it and a Sabbath in Scripture sence was a day of Ceremonial rest and the ancient Church called it the Christian Sabbath but by such allusion as it more commonly used the word Sacrifice and Altar Q. 14. But we shall too much countenance the Papists Sacrifice by using the same Names A. We can sufficiently disclaim their turning a Commemoration of Christs Sacrifice into the feigned real Sacrificing of his Flesh and Blood without renouncing the names Else we must for mens abuse renounce the name of a Sabbath too and a Temple c. if not also of a Church and Bishop Q. 15. You have spoken of the Sacramental Consecration and Commemoration What is it which you call the Covenanting part and Communication A. It containeth the Signs and the things signified as Communicated The Signs are 1. The Actual delivering of the consecrated Bread and Wine first Broken and poured out to the Communicants with the Naming what it is that is given them 2. Bidding them Take Eat and Drink 3. Telling them the Benefits and Blessings given thereby And all this by a Minister of Christ authorized thus to act in his Name as Covenanting promising and giving what is offered And on the Receivers part the Signs are 1. Freely taking what is offered the Bread and Wine 2. Eating and Drinking 3. Vocal Praise and Thanksgiving to God and Professed Consent to the Covenant Q. 16. What are the things signified and given A. I. 1. On Gods part the renewed giving of a Sacrificed Saviour to the penitent Believer 2. The Will and Command of Christ that as Sacrificers feasted on the Sacrifice so the Soul by Faith should thankfully and joyfully feast on Christ by hearty Acceptance of the free Gift 3. The actual Applicatory Gift of the Benefits of Christs Sacrifice which are 1. Our confirmed Relation to Christ as our Head and Saviour and to God as our Father reconciled by him and to the Holy Ghost as our Sanctifier and to the Church as his Kingdom or Body 2. The Pardon of our Sins by his Blood 3. Our right confirmed to Everlasting Life 4. The strengthening of our Faith Hope Love Joy Patience and all Grace 4. Christs Promise and Covenant for all this Sealed to us II. On the Receivers part is signified 1. That in the sence of his own Sin Misery and Need he humbly and thankfully receiveth his part in Christ as Sacrificed 2. That he endeavoureth by Faith to feast on him 3. And that he thankfully receiveth the Blessings purchased to wit his Relation to Christ as his Head to God as his Father and to the Holy Ghost as his Sanctifier and Comforter with the Pardon of Sin the Sealed Promise and Right to Heaven and all the helps of his Faith and other Graces 4. That he resolvedly reneweth the Dedication of himself to God the Father Son and holy Ghost as thus related to these ends Covenanting Fidelity in these relations and renouncing the contraries 5. Doing all this as in Communion with all the Church of Christ as being united to them in the same Head the same Faith and Hope and Love 6. Thankfully praising God and our Redeemer for this Grace Q. 17. Should not one prepare for the Lords Supper by Fasting and Humiliation before or how should we prepare A. We must alwayes live in habitual Preparation and special Fasts are not ordinarily necessary thereto the Primitive Church did communicate not only every Lords day but on other dayes when they met to worship God and therefore used not every Week to spend a day in Fasting for Preparation But as Christians must use Fasting on just occasions so must they do before this Sacrament in case that any hainous Sin or heavy Judgment or danger call for it and preparing
Considerations and Prayers are necessary Q. 18. May one communicate who is uncertain of the sincerity of his Faith A. By Faith you mean either Objective or Active Faith 1. One that is so far uncertain that the Gospel is true and that there is a Life to come as that he dare not say I have no wavering or doubt of it may yet be a true Believer and may communicate if his perswasion be but so prevalent as to resolve him to consent to the Covenant of Grace and take God for his God and Christ for his Saviour and the Holy Ghost for his Sanctifier Gods Law for his Rule his Promise for his Security and Heaven for his Happiness and here to place his Hope and Trust forsaking all that stands against it A weak and doubting Faith may bring a man to Martyrdom and to Heaven if it bring him to trust Christ with Soul and Body in the way of Obedience to him 2. If by Faith you mean the Act of Believing and Consenting God hath made the Sincerity of our Faith necessary to our Salvation but not the Certainty that it is Sincere Every man must do his best to discern the Trust Consent and Choice of his own Heart And he that truly believeth and yet is not sure of it if he can say As far as I am able to know my own Heart by Trial I seriously think that I resolvedly consent to the Covenant of Grace and prefer Christ Holiness and Heaven before all this World and trust to Christ and his Promises for my Felicity ought to come to the Table of the Lord notwithstanding his uncertainty Q. 19. Whence is it that so many Christians are more terrified than comforted by the Lords Supper A. 1. Some of them by an excess of reverence to this above all other Ordinances of God which by degrees brought in the Papists Transubstantiation and Adoration And by a dread lest by unworthy Receiving they should eat and drink their own Damnation And so coming thither with a deeper sence of the danger than of the Benefit And mistaking their Imperfections for this Unworthy Receiving 2. And some come with two high expectations that God must suddenly give them Joy or all the grace that is signified by the Sacrament while they have not the Holy skill to fetch in Comfort by the exercise of their Faith And when they miss of what they expected they are cast down 3. And too many by wilful Sin or Negligence deal falsly with God and break their Covenant and renew their wounds of Conscience and deprive themselves of the Comforts of the Love of God and the Grace of Christ and the Communion of the Holy Spirit Q. 20. Is not the Lords Supper a Converting Ordinance which therefore should be used by the unbelievers or ungodly A. Many things may accidentally by Gods Grace convert a man which are not to be chosen and used to that End Plagues Sickness Death-approaching may convert men Falling into a hainous Sin hath affrighted some to leave their Sin But these are not means to be chosen for such Ends. And the Fear and Care of preparing for a Sacrament hath converted some when it was not the Receiving that did it It is so evident as not to need long proof that God never appointed the Lords Supper to be chosen and used by Infidels or Impenitent ungodly persons as a means to convert them 1. Because it is presupposed that they be baptized who communicate And I have proved that Baptism to the adult presupposed the Profession of Faith and Repentance And that it delivereth Pardon and Title to Salvation 2. Because Faith and Repentance and Covenant-consent renewed are also to be professed by all before they communicate 3. Because it was ever an Ordinance proper to the Church which consisteth of Professors of Faith and Holiness 4. And the Communicants are said to be One Bread and one Body and to Eat Christs Flesh and drink his Blood and Christ to dwell in them by Faith and to have Eternal Life hereby And as for them that say it is not saving Faith but some Commoner Preparatory sort which is necessarily to be professed in Baptism and the Lords Supper I have at large confuted them in a Treatise of Right to Sacraments and the reasons before and now named confute it I adde that their Opinion is destructive to true Christian Love For by them No one should be taken for a Child of God and in a state of Salvation for being baptized and Communicants and so not Loved as such And how Poor a Charity is it to love all Visible Church-members but as the Children of the Devil must be loved Q. 21. Must we Love all as true Christians who are baptized and communicate and profess Christianity A. Yes with these three exceptions 1. That it is not as a certain Truth that we must judge them sincere but as Probable 2. That there be divers degrees of Probability as there be of Profession Some we are almost sure are sincere And some we have more Fear than Hope of And we must measure our Love and Trust accordingly 3. If men by Word or Life Apostatize or plainly contradict and destroy their profession of Christianity thereby they nullisie our Obligation to take them for Christians But till men render their Profession incredible by Contrary Profession or Practice we are by the Rules of Christian and Humane Charity to take all Professed baptized Communicating Christians to be sincere but only in various degrees of probability Q. 22. How must the Lords Supper be improved after the receiving A. By a serious remembring with Joy and thankfulness how great Mercies we have received of God And with chearful Obedience what a Covenant we have made and what duty we have most solemnly promised And in how near a Relation and bond we are tyed to the whole Church of Christ and to all our fellow Christians And frequently to plead these great Receivings and Great Obligations to quicken our Faith and Hope and Joy and to overcome all Temptations to the World and Flesh to Unbelief Disobedience and Despair Q. 23. Some say that no man should be kept from the Sacrament or Excommunicated because it is the Food of their Souls c. A. 1. If none be kept from Baptism Heathens and Infidels and professed deriders of Christianity might be baptized to make a mock of Baptism We must make men Christs Disciples before we baptize them Mat. 28. 19. And then Baptism would be no Baptism nor the Ministry no Ministry the specifying End and Use being changed 2. Then the Church would be no Church but lie common with the World 3. And then Christ would be no King and Head and Husband of the Church that is no Christ. 4. If all may not be baptized all may not communicate for Baptism entereth them into a state of Communion Else the unbaptized and all Infidels might communicate 5. Some baptized persons turn
Books which may be read in another place If any say that I speak against that which I want my self I only desire that it may not be those who cast by my Catholick Theologie Methodus Theologiae c. with no other Accusation but because they are too Scholastical Accurate and hard for them I here bewail it as my great sin against God that in the Youth of my Ministry Pride made me often blush with shame for want of Academical Degrees but usually God will not have us bring our own humane honour to his Service but setch honour from him in faithful serving him Fringes and Laces must be last set on when the Garment is made and not be the ground or Stamen of it There have been men that have desired their Sons to learn all the Oriental Tongues and the rare Antiquities and critical applaud●d sort of Learning not for its own worth but that they might Preach the Gospel with the advantage of a greater name and honour And this course hath so taken up and formed such Students into the quality of their Studies when their Souls should have been taken up with Faith and Love and Heavenly Desires and Hopes that it hath overthrown the end to which it was intended and rendred such Students unfit for the Sacred Ministry and caused them to turn to other things When others who as Usher Bochart Blondel c. have first taken in a digested Body of saving Truth have after added these Critical Studies at full maturity have become rare Blessings to the Church Let those that think all this digressive or unmeet for the Preface to a Catechism Pardon that which the Worlds Miscarriages and Necessities bespeak If at least Masters of Families by such helps diligently used will keep up Knowledge and Religion in their Houses it is not publick failings in Ministers nor the want of what is desirable in the Assemblies that will root out Religion from the Land But if the faithful prove few they must be content with their Personal Comforts and Rewards there is nothing amiss in the heavenly Society and the World which we are entering into Come Lord Iesus Come quickly Amen Lond. Octob. 3. 1682. The CONTENTS Chap. 1. THE Introduction About Catechizing and Learning pag. 1 Chap. 2. How to know our selves by Nature p. 6 Chap. 3. Of the natural Knowledge of God and Heaven p. 9 Chap. 4. Of Gods Kingdom and Government of Man and Providence p. 13 Chap. 5. Of Gods Law of Nature and Natural Officers p. 19 Chap. 6. Of supernatural Revelation of Gods Will to Man and of the Holy Scriptures p. 27 Chap. 7. Of the Christian Religion what it is and of the Creed p. 27 Chap. 8. Of Believing what it signifieth in the Creed p. 70 Chap. 9. Of the first Article I Believe in God the Father almighty maker of Heaven and Earth p. 82 Chap. 10. Of Gods Almightiness and Creation p. 88 Chap. 11. Of the Person of Jesus Christ the only Son of God p. 92 Chap. 12. How Christ was Conceived by the Holy Ghost and Born of the Virgin Mary 97 Chap. 13. Suffered under Pontius Pilate was Crucified Dead and Buried he descended into Hell p. 101 Chap. 14. The third day he rose again from the Dead p. 109 Chap. 15. He ascended into Heaven and sitteth on the right hand of God the Father c. p. 113 Chap. 16. From thence he shall come to Judge the Quick and the Dead p. 116 Chap. 17. I Believe in the Holy Ghost p. 123 Chap. 18. The holy Catholick Church p. 130 Chap. 19. The Communion of Saints p. 136 Chap. 20. The Forgiveness of Sins p. 144 Chap. 21. The Resurrection of the Body p. 154 Chap. 22. The Life everlasting p. 165 Chap. 23. What is the true Use of the Lords Prayer p. 173 Chap. 24. Our Father which art in Heaven Expounded p. 177 Chap. 25. Hallowed be thy Name p. 182 Chap. 26. Thy Kingdom come p. 198 Chap. 27. Thy Will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven p. 209 Chap. 28. Give us this day our daily Bread p. 213 Chap. 29. Forgive us our Trespasses as we forgive c. p. 219 Chap. 30. Lead us not into Temptation but deliver us from evil p. 224 Chap. 31. For thine is the Kingdom the Power and the Glory for ever Amen p. 227 Chap. 32. Of the Ten Commmandments in general p. 229 Chap. 33. Of the Preface to the Decalogue p. 233 Chap. 34. Of the first Commandement p. 239 Chap. 35. Of the second Commandement p. 251 Chap. 36. Of the third Commandement p. 262 Chap. 37. Of the fourth Commandement p. 273 Chap. 38. Of the fifth Commandement p. 290 Chap. 39. Of the sixth Commandement p. 314 Chap. 40. Of the seventh Commandement p. 324 Chap. 41. Of the eighth Commandement p. 337 Chap. 42. Of the ninth Commandement p. 353 Chap. 43. Of the tenth Commandement p. 365 Chap. 44. Of the Sacred Ministry Church and Worship p. 380 Chap. 45. Of Baptism p. 392 Chap. 46. Of the Sacrament of Christs sacrificed Body and Blood p. 412 Chap. 47. How to prepare for a safe and Comfortable Death p. 432 Amend these misprintings with your Pens PAge 31. line 21. for the read that p. 58. l. 24. r. maketh p. 95. l. 21. for least r. last p. 99. l. 6. for light r. sight p. 166. l. 3. blot out with Henoch p. 200. l. 10. for were r. where p. 202. l. 8. r. every p. 208. l. 6. blot out for p. 374. l. 31. for any r. my In some places the same things are repeated the occasions being divers and the Author having not strength and time to correct the Copy Books of Mr. Baxter's sold by T. Parkhurst at the Bible and three Crowns at the lower end of Cheapside near Mercers-Chappel 1. CHristian Directory or Body of Practical Divinity 2. Catholick Theologie in three Parts 1. Pacifying Principles 2. Pacifying Practices 3. Pacifying Disputations fol. 3. Life of Faith in three parts 1. Sermon on Heb. 11. Preached before his Majesty publisht by his Command 2. Instructions for Confirming Believers in the Christian Faith 3. Directions to live by Faith Quarto 4. Disputations of Original Sin Octav. 5. An Apology for the Nonconformists Ministry Quarto 6. Which is the True Church A Defence of Protestantism against Popery 7. An Answer to Mr. Dodwell confuting an Universal Church-Supremacy and defending Dr. Isaac Barrow against it 8. True History of Councels Inlarged and Defended against a Pretended Vindicator of the Primitive Church To which is added Diocesan Churches not yet Discovered in the Primitive times or A Defence of the Answer to Dr. Stillingfleets Allegations out of Antiquity for such Churches THE CATECHIZING OF FAMILIES OR A TEACHER of HOUSHOLDERS How to Teach their Housholds Useful also to School-Masters and Tutors of Youth The Questions are the Learners and the Answers the Teachers CHAP. I. The Introduction Qu. 1. WHat is it which must be Taught and Learned Ans. All
terrified them and told the Rulers what they saw And after all it was to Paul a Persecutor and partly to his company that Christ appeared Q. 6. Why must Christ rise from the Dead A. You may as well ask Why he must be our Savior 1. If he had not risen Death had conquered him and how could he have saved us that was overcome and lost himself 2. He could not have received his own promised Reward even his Kingdom and Glory It was for the Joy that was set before him that he enendured the Cross and despised the shame Therefore God gave him a Name above every Name to which every created Knee must bow 3. His Resurrection was to be the chief of all those Miracles by which God witnessed that he was his So● and the chief Evidence by which the World was to be convinced of his Truth and so was used in their Preaching by the Apostles That Christ rose from the Dead is the chief Argument that makes us Christians 4. The great executive parts of Christs saving Office were to be performed in Heaven which a dead Man could not do How else should he have Inceded for us as our heavenly High-priest How should he have sent down the Holy Ghost to renew us How should he as King have governed and protected his Church on Earth unto the End How should he have come again in Glory to Judge the World and how should we have seen his Glory as the Mediator o● Fruition in the Heavenly Kingdom Q. 7. I perceive then that Christ's Resurrection is t● us an Article of the greatest use What use must ●● make of it A. You may gather it by what is said 1. By this you may be sure that he is the Son of God and his Gospel True 2. By this you may be sure that his Sacrifice on the Cross was accepted as sufficient 3. By this you may be sure that Death is Conquered and we may boldly trust our Saviour who tasted and overcame Death with our departing Souls 4. By this you may be sure that we have a powerful High-priest and Intercessour in Heaven by whom we may come with reverend boldness unto God 5. By this we may know that we have a powerful King both to obey and to trust with the Churches Interest and our own 6. By this we may know that we have a Head still living who will send down his Spirit to gather his Chosen to help his Ministers to Sanctifie and Comfort his People and prepare them for Glory 7. By this we are assured of our own Resurrection and taught to hope for our final Justification and Glory 8. And by this we are taught that we must Rise to Holiness of Life CHAP. XV. He ascended into Heaven and sitteth on the right Hand of God the Father Almighty Qu. 1. HOw long was it between Christ's Resurrection and his Ascension A. Forty dayes He rose on the day which we call Easter-day and he ascended on that which we call Ascension day or Holy Thursday Q. 2. Did Christ stay all that while among his Disciples visibly A. No but appeared to them at such seasons as he saw meet Q. 3. Where was he all the rest of the Forty Days A. God hath not told us and therefore it concerneth us not to know Q. 4. He shewed them that he had Flesh and Blood ho●●●en was he to them invisible the most part of the Forty dayes A. The Divine power that raised Christ could make those alterations on his Body which we are unacquainted with Q. 5. How was Christ taken up to Heaven A. While he was speaking to his Apostles of the things concerning the Kingdom of God and answering them that hoped it would presently be and had given their Commission and the Promise of the Holy Ghost and commanded them to wait for it at Ierusalem he was taken up as they gazed after him till a Cloud took him out of their sight And two Angels like two Men in white stood by them and askt them why they stood gazing up to Heaven telling them that Iesus who was taken up should so come again Q. 6. Had it not been better for us that he had staid on Earth A. No He is many wayes more useful to us in Heaven 1. He is now no more confined in presence to that small Countrey of Iudea above the rest of the World as a Candle to one room but as the Sun in his Glory shineth to all his Church on Earth 2. He is possessed of his full Power and Glory by which he is fit to protect and Glorifie us 3. He intercedeth for us where our highest Concerns and Interest are 4. He sendeth his Spirit on Earth to do his work on all believers Souls Q. 7. What is meant by his sitting on the right Hand of God A. Not that God hath Hands or is confined to a place as Man is But it signifieth that the Glorified Man Iesus is next to God in Dignity Power and Glory and as the Lieutenant under a King is now the Universal Administrator or Governour of all the World under God the Father Almighty Q. 8. I Thought he had been only the Lord of his Church A. He is Head over all things to his Church All Power and things in Heaven and Earth are given him Even the frame of Nature dependeth on him He is Lord of all But it is his Church that he Sanctifieth by his Spirit and will Glorifie Q. 9. If Christ have all power why doth he let Satan and Sin still reign over the far greatest part of the Earth A. 1. Satan reigneth but over Volunteers that wilfully and obstinately choose that Condition And he reigneth but as the Jailor in the Prison as Gods Executioner on the wilfull refusers of his Grace And his reign is far from absolute he crosseth none of the Decrees of God nor overcometh his power but doth what God seeth meet to permit him to do He shall destroy none of Gods Elect nor any that are truly willing of Saving Grace And as for the fewness of the Elect I shall speak of it after about the Catholick Church Q. 10. But is not Christs Body present on Earth and in the Sacrament A. We are sure he is in Heaven and we are sure that their Doctrine is a fiction contrary to Sense Reason and Scripture that say the Consecrated Bread and Wine are substantially turned into the very Body and Blood of Christ and are no longer Bread and Wine Bu●… how far the presence of Christs Soul and Body extendeth is a question unfit for Mans determination unle●… we better knew what Glorified Souls and Bodies are ●… We see that the Sun is eminently in the Heaven An●… yet whether its lucid Beams be a real part of its substance which are here on Earth or how far they extend we know not nor know we how the Sun differeth in Greatness or Glory from
though Hypocrites are the Church-visible and his professed Subjects 3. Subjects by sincere Heart-consent And so all such are his Subjects as make up the Church-mystical and shall be saved So that the Kingdom of God is a word which is sometime of a larger signification than the Church and sometime in a narrower sence is the same Eph. 1. 23. Christ is Head over all things to the Church Q. 7. What are the Acts of Christs Kingly Government A. Law-making Judging according to that Law and executing that Judgment Q. 8. What Laws hath Christ made and what doth ●e rule by A. First He taketh the Law of Nature now as his own as far as it belongeth to sinful Mankind And 2. He expoundeth the darker passages of that Law And 3. He maketh new Laws proper to the Church ●ince his Incarnation Q. 9. Are there any new Laws of Nature since the Fall A. There are new Obligations and Duties arising from our changed State It was no duty to the Innocent to repent of Sin and seek out for Recovery and ●eg Forgiveness But Nature bindeth Sinners not yet ●nder the final Sentence to all this Q. 10. What new Laws hath Christ made A. Some proper to Church Officers and some ●ommon to all Q. 11. What are his Laws about Church-Officers A. First He chose himself the first chief Officers ●nd he gave them their Commission describing their Work and Office and he Authorized them to gather ●nd form particular Churches and their fixed Officers ●t Pastors and necessary Orders and gave them the ●xtraordinary Conduct and Seal of his Spirit that their determinations might be the infallible significations of his Will and his recorded Law to his Universal Church to the end of the World His Spirit being the Perfecter of his Laws and Government Q. 12. How shall we be sure that his Apostles by the Spirit were Authorized to give Laws to all future Generations A. Because he gave them such Commission to teach Men all that he Commanded 2. And promised them his Spirit to lead them into all Truth and bring all things to their Remembrance and to tell them what to say and do And 3. Because he performed this Promise in sending them that extraordinary measure of the Spirit And 4. They spake as from Christ and in his Name and as by his Spirit And 5. They sealed all by the manifestation of that Spirit in its Holy and Miraculous manifold Operation Q. 13. Have not Bishops and Councils the same Power now A. No To be the Instruments of Divine Legislation and make Laws which God will call His Laws is a special Prophetical Power and Office such a● Moses had in making the Iewish Laws which no●… had that came after him But when Prophetical Revelation hath made the Law the following Office●… have nothing to do But 1. To preserve that Law 2. And to expound it and apply it and guide th● People by it and themselves obey it 3. And to determine undetermined mutable Circumstances As the Iewish Priests and Levites were not to make another Law but to preserve expound and Rule by Moses Law so the ordinary Ministers Bishops or Councils are to do as to the Laws of God sufficiently made by Christ and the Spirit in his Apostles Q. 14. What are the New Laws which he hath made for all A. The Covenant of Grace in the last Edition is his Law by which he obligeth Men to Repent and Believe in him as Incarnate Crucified and Ascended and Interceding and Reigning in Heaven and as one that will Judge the World at the Resurrection As one that pardoneth Sin by his Sacrifice and Merit and Sanctifieth Believers by his Spirit And to believe in God as thus reconciled by Him and in the Holy Ghost as thus given by him And he promiseth Pardon Grace and Glory to all true Believers and threatneth Damnation to impenitent Unbelievers And he commandeth all Believers to devote themselves thus to God the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost by a solemn Vow in Baptism and live in the Communion of Saints in his Church and Holy Worship and the frequent Celebration of the Memorial of his Death in the Sacrament of his Body and Blood especially on the first Day of the Week which he hath separated to that Holy Comemoration and Communion by his Resurrection and the sending of his Spirit and by his Apostles And he hath commanded all his Disciples to live in Unity Love and Beneficence taking up the Cross and following him in Holiness and Patience in hope of Everlasting Life Q. 15. But some say that Christ was only a Teacher and not a Law-giver A. His Name is King of Kings and Lord of Lords and all Power in Heaven and Earth is given him and all things put into his Hands the Government is laid on his Shoulders and the Father without him judgeth no Man but hath committed all Judgment to the Son For this end he died rose and revived that he might be Lord of the Dead and of the Living He is at God's right Hand above a●● Principalities and Powers and every Name being Head over all things to the Church Q. 16. May not this signifie only his Kingdom as ●● is God or that which he shall have hereafter only at the Resurrection A. 1. It expresly speaketh of his Power as God and Man the Redeemer 2. And he made his Law i● this Life though the Chief and Glorious part of h●● Judgment and Execution be hereafter How els● should Men here keep his Law and hereafter ●● judged according to it He that denieth Christ to be the Lawgiver denied him to be King and he that denieth him to be King denieth him to be Christ and is no Christian. Q. 17. Hath Christ any Vicegerent or Universal Governour under him on Earth A. No It is his Prerogative to be the Universal Governour for no mortal Man is capable of it As no one Monarch is capable of the Civil Government of all the Earth nor was ever so mad as to pretend to it much less is any one capable of being an Universal Church-Teacher Priest and Governour over all the Earth when he cannot so much as know it or send to all or have access into the contending Kingdoms of the World To pretend to this is mad Usurpation Q. 18. But had not Peter the Monarchical Government of all the Church on Earth in his Time A. No He was Governour of none of the Eleven Apostles nor of Paul nor ever exercised any such Government no nor it seems so much as presided at their meeting Act. 15. Q. 19. But is not a General Council the Universal Governour A. No 1. Else the Church would be no Church when there is no General Council for want of its Unifying Government And 2. There indeed never was a general Council of all the Christian World But they were called by the Roman Emperours and were called General as
to that Empire as the Subscriptions yet shew 3. And there never can be an Universal Council It were madness and wickedness to attempt it To send for the Aged Bishops from all Nations of the Christian World when none is Empowered to determine Whither or When even from the Countreys of Turks and other Infidels or Princes in War with one another that will not permit them And what room shall hold them and what one Language can they all speak And how few will live to return home with the Decrees And will not the Countrey were they meet by nearness have more Voices than all the rest And what is all this to do To condemn Christ as not having made Laws sufficient for the Universal part of Government but leave such a burden on uncapable Men And to tell the Church that Christian Religion is a mutable growing thing and can never be known to attain its ripeness but by new Laws must be made still bigger and another thing Q. 20. But the Bishops of the World may meet by their Delegates A. Those Delegates must come from the same Countreys and distance And how shall the whole World know that they are truly chosen And that all the Choosers have trusted them with their Judgments Consciences and Salvation and will stand to what they do Q. 21. But if the Universal Church be divided into Patriarchates and chief Seats those can Govern the whole Church when there is no General Council even by their Communicatory Letters A. 1. And who shall divide the World into those chief Seats and determine which shall be chief in all the Kingdoms of Infidels and Christian Kings in the World And which shall be Chief when they differ among themselves How many Patriarchs shall there be and where There were never Twelve Pretenders to succeed the Twelve Apostles The Roman Empire had three First and Five after within it self But that was by Humane institution and over one Empire and that 's now down and those Five Seats have many Hundred Years been separated and condemning one another so far are they from being One Unifying Aristocracy to Govern all the World And if they were so then Europe is Schismatical that now differs from the Major Vote of those Patriarchs Q. 22. But did not the Apostles as one Colledge Govern the whole Church A. 1. I proved to you before that the Holy Ghost was given the Apostles to perfect Universal Ligislation as Christs Agent and Advocate and that in this they have no Successors 2. And it was easie for them to exercise Acts of Judicial Determination over such as were among them and near them when the Church was small 3. And yet we read not that ever they did this in a General Council or by the Authority of a Major Vote For that meeting in Act. 15. was no General Council and the Elders and Brethren joyned with them that belonged to Ierusalem and they were all by the same Spirit of the same mind and none Dissenters Every single Apostle had the Spirit of Infallibility for his proper work And they had an Indefinite charge of the whole Church and in their several circuits exercised it Paul could by the Spirit deliver a Law of Christ to the World without taking it from the other Apostles Gal. 2. The Apostles were foundation Stones but Christ only was the Head Corner-stone They never set up a Judicial Government of all the Churches under themselves as a constitutive Unifying Aristocracy by whose major Vote all must be Governed When they had finished the work of Universal Legislation and settled Doctrine and Order for which they stayed together at Ierusalem they dispersed themselves over the World and we never find that they Judicially governed the Churches either in Synods or by Letters by a major Vote but settled Guides in ever Church as God by Moses did Priests and Levites that had no Legislative Power Q. 23. But hath not Christ his Subordinate Official Governours A. Yes Magistrates by the Sword and Pastors by the Word and Keyes These are Rulers in their several Circuits as all the Judges and Justices and Shoolmasters of England are under the King But he that should say that all these Judges and Justices are one Sovereign Aristocracy to make Laws and Judge by them by Vote as one Person political though many Natural would give them part of the Supream power and not only the Official All the Pastors in the World Guide all the Churches in the World by parts and in their several Provinces and not as One Politick Person Q. 24. But how is the Universal Church visible if it have no Visible Unifying Head and Government under Christ A. It is Visible 1. In that the Members and their Profession are visible 2. And Christ's Laws are visible by which he ruleth them 3. And their particular Pastors are visible in their places 4. And Christ was visible on Earth and is now visible in his Court in Heaven and will visibly Judge the World e're long And God hath made the Church no further Visible nor can Man do it Q. 25. But should not the whole Church be One A. It is one It is one Body of Christ having one God and one Head or Lord one Faith one Baptism one Spirit one Hope of Glory Q. 26. But should they not do all that they do in Unity and Concord A. Yes as far as they are capable Not by feigning a new Universal Legislative Power in Man or making an Universal Head under Christ but by agreeing all in the Faith and Laws that Christ hath left us And Synods may well be used to maintain such Union as far as capacity reacheth and the case requireth But an Universal Synod and a partial or National a Governing Synod and a Synod for Concord of Governours differ as much as doth a Monarch or Governing Senate over all the World and a Dyet or an Assembly of Christian Princes met for mutual help and concord in the conjunction of their strength and Councils Q. 27. What is the Pastoral Power of the Church Keyes A. It is the Power of making Christians by the Preaching of the Gospel and Receiving them so made into Communion of Christ and his Church by Baptism and feeding and guiding them by the same Word and communicating the Sacrament of Christ's Body and Blood in his Name declaring Pardon and Life to the Penitent and the contrary to the Impenitent and applying this to the particular Persons of their own charge on just occasion and so being the stated Judges who shall by them be received to Church Communion or be rejected and this as a presage of Christ's future Judgment Q. 28. But have not Pastors or Bishops a power of constraint by the Sword that is by Corporal punishments or mulcts A. No That is proper to Magistrates Parents and Masters in their several places Christ hath forbidden it to Pastors Luke 22. and appointed them another kind of work Q.
the Devil doth for to destroy the Just. As Iezebel did Q. 15. How should good Rulers avoid it A. 1. By causing Teachers to open the danger of ●t to the People 2. Some old Canons made inva●id the Witness of all notorious wicked men How can he be trusted in an Oath that maketh no Conscience of Drunkenness Fornication Lying or other Sin Q. 16. How then are so few destroyed by false Witnesses A. It is the wonderful Providence of God declaring himself the Governour of the World that when there are so many thousand wicked men who all have a mortal hatred to the Godly and will daily Swear and Lie for nothing and any two of these might take away our Lives at pleasure there are yet so few this way cut off But God hath not left himself without witness in the World and hath revenged false Witness on many and made Conscience a terrible Accuser for this Crime Q. 17. What is the positive Duty of the ninth Commandement A. 1. To do Justice to all men in our places 2. To defend the Innocent to the utmost of ou● just Power If a Lawyer will not do it for the Love of Justice and Man without a Fee when he canno● have it he breaketh this Commandement 3. To reprove Backbiters and tell them of their Sin 4. To give no Scandal but to live so blamelesly that Slanderers may not be believed 5. On all just occasions especially to defend the Reputation of the Gospel Godliness and Good men the Cause and Laws of God and not silently fo● self saving to let Satan and his Agents make them Odious by Lies to the Seduction of the People● Souls CHAP. XLIII Of the Tenth Commandement Qu. 1. WHat are the Words of the Tenth Commandement A. Thou shalt not Covet thy Neighbours House Thou shalt not covet thy Neighbours Wife nor his Man-Servant nor his Maid-Servant nor his ●x nor his Ass nor any thing that is thy Neighbours Q. 2. What is forbidden here and what Command●d A. 1. In summe the thing forbidden is SELFISHNESS and the thing Commanded is to LOVE OUR NEIGHBOUR AS OUR SELVES Q. 3. Is not this implyed in the five foregoing Commandements A. Yes and so is our LOVE to GOD in all the Nine last But because there are many more particular Instances of Sin and Duty than can be distinctly named and remembred God thought it meet to make two General Fundamental Commandements which should contain them all which Christ calleth the first and second Commandement Thou shalt Love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart c. And thou shalt Love thy Neighbour as thy Self The first is the Summary and root of all the duties of the other nine and specially of the second third and fourth The Other is the Summary of the second Table dutyes And it is placed last as being instead of all unnamed instances As the Captain leads the Souldiers and th● Lieutenant brings up the rear Q. 4. What mean you by the Sin of SELFISHNESS A. I mean that inordinate self-esteem self-love and self-seeking with the want of a due proportionable Love to others which engageth men against the good o● others and inclineth them to draw from others to themselves It is not an ordinate Love of our selves but a diseased self-love Q. 5. When is Self-Love Ordinate and when i● it Sinful A. That which is ordinate 1. Valueth not a ma●● Self blindly above his Worth 2. It employeth ● man in a due care of his own Holiness Duty an● Salvation 3. It regardeth our Selves but as littl● members of the common great body and therefore inclineth us to Love others as our selves without mu●● partial disproportion according to the divers degree● of their amiableness and to Love publick good th● Church and World and much more God above o●… selves 4. It maketh us studious to do good to others and rejoyce in it as our own rather than to draw fro● them to our selves c II. Sinful selfishness 1. Doth esteem and love an● seek self-interest above it's proper worth It is ove● deeply affected with all our own concerns 2. ●… hath a low disproportionable Love and regard others good 3. And when it groweth to full ma●●gnity it maketh men envy the prosperity of others ●nd covet that which is theirs and desire and re●oyce in their disgrace and hurt when they Stand against mens Selfish Wills and to endeavour to draw from others to our selves Selfishness is to the Soul like an Inflamation or Impostume to the Body which draweth the Blood and Spirits to it self from their ●●ue and Common course till they corrupt the in●●amed part Q. 6. What mean you by Loving others as ourselves A. Loving them as members of the same Body or Society the World or the Church as they are ●mpartially with a Love proportionable to their worth and such a careful practical forgiving Patient Love as we Love our selves Q. 7. But God hath made us Individual persons with so peculiar a Self-love that no man can possibly love another as himself A. 1. You must distinguish between sensitive Natural Love and Rational Love 2. And between Corrupt and Sanctified Nature 1. Natural Sensitive Love is stronger to ones Self that is more sensible of self-interest than to all the World I feel not anothers Pain or Pleasure in it self I hunger and thirst for my self A Mother hath that Natural Sensitive Love to her own Child like that of Bruits which she hath not for any other 2. Rational Love valueth and loveth and preferreth every thing according to the degree of its amiableness that is it 's Goodness 3. Rational Love destroyeth not Sensitive but it Moderateth and Ruleth it and Commandeth the Will and Practice to preferre and desire and seek and delight in higher things as Reason ruleth Appetite and the Rider the Horse and to deny and forsake all carnal or private Interests that stand against a greater good 4. Common Reason tells a man that it 's an unreasonable thing in him that would not dye to save a Kingdom Much more that when he is to love both himself and the Kingdom inseparably yet cannot Love a Kingdom yea or more excellent persons above himself But yet it is Sanctification that must Effectually overcome inordinate self-Love and clearly illuminate this Reason and make a man obey it 5. To conquer this Selfishness is the summe of all Mortification and the greatest Victory in this World And therefore it is here perfectly done by none but it 's done most where there is the greatest Love to God and to the Church and publick good and to our Neighbours Q. 8. What is the sinfulness and the hurt of Selfishness A. 1. It is a Fundamental Errour and Blindness in the Judgment We are so many Poor Worms and little things And if an Ant or Worm had Reason should it think it's Life or Ease or other interest more valuable than a Mans or than all the
that men might not presume to set up any such things of their own on pretence of need or usefulness Q. 3. What doth this great Sacrament contain A. 1. The Parties Covenanting and Acting 2. The Covenant as on both parts with the Benefits given of God and the Duty professed and promised by man 3. The outward signs of all Q. 4. Who are the Parties Covenanting and Acting A. God and Man that is 1. Principally God the Father Son and Holy Ghost and Ministerially under him the Baptizing Minister 2. The party baptized And if he be an Infant the Parent or Owner on his behalf Q. 5. In what Relations is God a Covenanter with man A. 1. As our Creator and Governour offended by sin and reconciled by Christ whom his Love gave to be our Saviour 2. As Christ is our Redeemer and Saviour 3. As the Holy Ghost is our Rgenerator and Comforter sent by the Father and the Son Q. 6. In what Relation stands the person to be baptized A. As a Sinner miserable by guilt and pravity and loss of his blessed Relation to God but Redeemed by Christ and called by him and coming to receive him and his saving Grace Q. 7. What is it that God doth as a Covenanter with the baptized A. You must well understand that two Covenanting acts of God are presupposed to Baptism as done before I. The first is Gods Covenant with Jesus Christ as our Redeemer by Consent In which God requireth of him the work of mans Redemption as on his part by perfect Holiness Righteousness Satisfactory Suffering and the rest And promiseth him as the reward to be Lord of All and the saving and Glorifying of the Church with his own perpetual Glory II. A Promise and Conditional Covenant or Law of Grace made to lost Mankind by the Father and the Son that whoever truly believeth that is becometh a true Christian shall be saved Now Baptism is the bringing of this Conditional Promise upon mans consent to be an actual mutual Covenant Q. 8. And what is it that God there doth as an actual Covenanter A. First he doth by his Minister stipulate that is demand of the party baptized whether he truly consent to his part And next on that supposition he delivereth him the Covenant-gifts which at present are to be bestowed Q. 9. What be those A. 1. The Relation of a pardoned reconciled sinner and adopted Child of God or that God will be his God in Love through Christ. 2. A Right and Relation to Christ as his actual Saviour Head Teacher Intercessor and King 3. A Right and Relation to the Holy Ghost to ●e to Him the Illuminating Sanctifying quicken●●g Spirit of Light and Love and Holy Life and deliverance from the Devil the World and Flesh ●nd from the Wrath of God Q. 10. What is it that God requireth of Man and ●e professeth A. That he truly believeth in this God the Father Son and Holy Ghost and Presently and Resol●edly consenteth to be His in these Relations taking ●im as His God and Father his Saviour and his San●tifier repenting of his sins and renouncing the ●ontrary Government of the Devil World and ●lesh Q. 11. What are the Outward signs of all this A. 1. The Water 2. And the Actions of both ●arties I. The Action of the Minister on Gods ●●rt is to wash the body of the baptized with the Water which in hot Countreys was by dipping ●●em over head and taking them up To signifie ●… That they are washed from the guilt of Sin by ●●e Blood of Christ. 2. And are as dead and bu●●ed to sin and the World and Flesh and risen to a ●ew and Holy Life and heavenly Hope 3. And ●●at by this act we are solemnly bound by God to ●●e Christians II. The Action of the baptized is To be a wil●●●g receiver of this Washing to signifie his believ●●g and thankful receiving these free Gifts of Christ and his solemn self-engagement to be henceforth a Christian. Q. 12. Are Infants Capable of doing all this A. No They are personally capable of receiving both the sign and the Grace even Right to Christ and Life but not themselves of actual believing and covenanting with Christ. Q. 13. Why then are they baptized who cannot Covenant A. That you may understand this rightly yo● must know 1. That as Children are made Sinne● and miserable by their Parents without any act o● their own so they are delivered out of it by th●● free Grace of Christ upon a Condition performe● by their Parents Else they that are visibly born i● sin and misery should have no visible or certain wa● of Remedy Nature maketh them as it were pa●… of the Parents or so near as causeth their Sin a●● Misery And this nearness supposed God by fr●● Grace hath put it in the power of Parents to acce●● for them the blessings of the Covenant and to e●ter them into the Covenant of God the Pare●● Will being instead of their own who yet have no● to Choose for themselves 2. That Baptism is the only way which God ha●● appointed for the entering of any one into the Ch●●stian Covenant and Church 3. That the same Sacrament hath not all the sa●● Ends and uses to all but varyeth in some things ●… their capacites differ Christ was baptized and yet n●● for the remission of Sin And the use of Circu●cision partly differed to the Old and to the In●ants 4. It is the Will of God that Infants be Members ●● the Christian Church of which Baptism is the en●●ance For 1. There is no proof that ever God ●ad a Church on Earth in any age of which Infants ●ere not members 2. The Covenant with Abraham the Father of the ●aithful was made also with his Infant Seed and ●ealed to them by Circumcision And the Females ●ho were not circumcised were yet in the Church ●●d Covenant and when the Males were uncircum●●●ed forty years in the Wilderness they were yet ●embers of the Jewish Church And Deut. 19. the ●arents entered their little ones into the renewed Co●enant And Christ came not to cast all Infants out ●● the Church who were in before 3. Christ himself saith that he would have ga●●ered Ierusalem as a Hen gathereth her Chickens ●●d they would not so that he would have taken ●● the whole Nation Infants and all that were in be●●re 4. And Rom. 11. it 's said that they were broken ●●f by unbelief Therefore if their Parents had not ●een unbelievers the Children had not been broken ●●f 5. And Christ himself was Head of the Church in ●…s Infancy and entered by the Sacrament then in ●…rce though as Man he was not capable of the ●…ork which he did at age Therefore Infants may ●… members 6. And he rebuked his Disciples that kept su● from him because of such is the Kingdom of God He would have them come as into his Kingdom 7. And plainly the Apostle saith to a
own Flesh and Drunk his own Blood or at lest his Disciples to have done it while he was alive 5. They feign him to have been the Breaker of his own Flesh and Shedder of his own Blood and make him to do that which was done only by the Iews 6. They contradict the express words of the Scripture which three times together call it Bread after the Consecration in 1 Cor. 11. When yet they say It is not Bread 7. They condemn the belief of the soundest senses of all men in the World as if it were heresie All our Eyes Touch Tast c. tells us that there is Bread and Wine and they say there is none 8. Hereby they deny all certainty of Faith and all other certainty For if a man may not be certain of what he Seeth Feeleth and Tasteth he can be certain of no sensible thing For we have no Faculties but sence to perceive things sensible as such Nor any way to transmit them to the Intellect but by sense And we can no otherwise know that there is a Bible a Church a Council a Pope a Man or any thing in the World and therefore much less can believe any of them So that all Humane and Divine Faith are thus destroyed yea man is set below a Beast that hath the Benefit of sense 9. Hereby they feign God to be the grand deceiver of the World For things sensible are his Works and so is Sense And he makes us know no supernatural Revelation but by the intromission of some Sence And if God may deceive all men by the way of sense we can never be sure but he may do it otherwise 10. They set up Men who confess their own senses are not to be credited to be more credible than all our senses and to be the Lords of the understandings of all Princes and People in despight of sense And he that is to be believed before our senses is an absolute Lord. 11. They deny it to be a Sacrament For if there be no sign there is no Sacrament 12. They feign every ignorant drunken Priest every time he consecrateth to work greater Miracles than ever Christ wrought and so to make Miracles common and at the Wills of thousands of wicked men I must not here stay to handle all this But in a small Book call'd Full and Easie Satisfaction which is the true Religin I have shewed thirty one Miracles with twenty Aggravations which all Priests are feigned to work at every Sacrament Q. 10. What is it that is called the Mass which the Papists say that All the Fathers and Church used in every age and we renounce A. In the first Ages the Churches were gathered among Heathens and men were long Instructed and Catechized hearers before they were baptized Christians And the first part of the day was spent in publick in such Common Teaching and Prayer as belonged to all and then the Deacon cryed Missa ●est that is Dismist the unbaptized hearers and the rest that were Christians spent the rest of the time in such duties as are proper to themselves especially the Lords Supper and the Praises of God Hereupon all the Worship following the Dimission of the unchristened and suspended came to be called barbarously the Mass or Dismission And this Worship hath been quite changed from what it was in the beginning and the Papists by keeping the Name Mass or Dismission make the ignorant believe that the Worship it self is the same as of old Q. 11. What be the changes that have been made A. More than I may now stay to number Iustin Martyr and Tertullian describe it in their Time to be just such as the Scripture mentioneth and we now commonly perform that is In Reading the Scripture opening and applying it Praying as the Minister was able Praising God Baptizing and administring the Lords Supper After this Ministers grew less able and trusty and they decreed that they should pray and Officiate in set forms yet so that every Bishop might choose his own and every Presbyter must shew it to the Bishops and have their approbation The Creed Lords Prayer and Commandements and the Words of Baptism and Delivery of the Lords Supper were alwayes used in forms before After this they grew to use the same forms called a Liturgie in whole Provinces some Ceremonies were so Ancient that we cannot find their Original that is The Anointing of the baptized the giving them Milk and Honey to taste dipping them thrice cloathing them in a white Garment after to Worship with their faces toward the East and not to kneel in Prayer or Adoration any Lords day in the year nor any Week day between Easter and Whitsuntide and specially to observe those two yearly Festivals and Good Frydaies fast And quickly after the encouraging of persecuted Christians to suffer drew them to keep a yearly day at the place where a Martyr was kill'd or buryed to honour their memories and give God thanks for them After this they built Altars over them And they built their Churches where their graves or ●ome of their bones were laid and in honour of their memory called the Churches by their Names Next they brought their Names daily into the Church Liturgies And next they added to them the Names of such Bishops of those particular Churches as had left an honourable memorial behind them And the Lords Supper was celebrated much like as it is in our English Liturgy save these Names And thus far the changes were then accounted laudable and were not indeed such as should discourage any Christians from Communion Nor do we read of any that were against them Besides which they overvalued the use of Crossing But quickly though by degrees a Flood of Ceremonies came in and Popes and Prelates added at their Pleasure till Gods publick Worship was made quite another thing I. God who is a Spirit and will be Worshipped in Spirit and Truth is by Mass-Priests and Papists Worshipped by such a mass of Ceremonies as makes it like a Stage-play and representeth God so like the Heathens Idols delighted in Mummeries and toyish actions as is greatly to the dishonour of Religion and God II. They have brought in the Worshipping of God in a Language which the People understand not and praying for they know not what III. They have lockt up the very Scriptures from the people and forbid all to use it in their known Tongue translated but those that get a special License for it IV. They abolish all substantial Signs in the Sacrament as is aforesaid and say There is no Bread or Wine and so make it no Sacament V. They give the Laity the Bread only without the Cup. VI. They call the Consecrated Bread by the Name of their Lord God and taking it to be no Bread but Christs Body worship it with Divine