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A60361 The compleat Christian, and compleat armour and armoury of a Christian, fitting him with all necessary furniture for that his holy profession, or, The doctrine of salvation delivered in a plain and familiar explication of the common catechisme, for the benefit of the younger sort, and others : wherein summarily comprehended is generally represented the truly orthodox and constant doctrine of the Church of England, especially in all points necessary to salvation / by W.S., D.D. Slatyer, William, 1587-1647. 1643 (1643) Wing S3983; ESTC R38256 385,949 1,566

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Mandate in the first words of the precept expressed Redoubled mandate in the next words of the explication of the precept but the seventh c. Example of God himselfe working the sixt resting the seventh day Reasons annexed of his so blessing this day other dayes with it and by it So sanctifying it to the holy use of his worship and service in it appointed so it is the whole scope of the Commandement from the first words of the memento remember to doe it to the last words the reasons rendred why so respectively commanded What followeth The fifth Commandement and first of the second Table as next to our duty to God expressing our duty to superiours SECT 7. The fifth Commandement The order of the fifth commandement first of the second Table and reasons of it with divers necessary rules for the better understanding or conceiving of the rest of the Commandement and differences of the two Tables as first of the affirmative and negative Commandements or parts of them compared Secondly of the ground of the duties of both Tables Thirdly of sinnes of divers degrees and imparity of offences Fourthly of sinnes of the first and second Table and Analysis of the same with the reason why the Commandements of the first Table have reasons annexed and not they of the second but this called the first Commandement with promise as nighest them and concerning those in whom is Gods image of authority The Analysis of this fifth Commandement with the parts or duties and opposite abuses therein intimated or expressed who are to be accounted fathers in what respects and what manner they are so and how diversly thereby distinguished with their general duties whereby to be worthy of honour hereby 〈◊〉 ●●timatca of 〈◊〉 ●eriours and inferiours in gifts of minde or yeares in nobility and gentry in wealth and such externall matters the gifts of fortune in and good actions government and authority or private as Masters of families and their charge Parents and children and other the like Superiours and inferiours in the common and usuall oeconomioall or politick societies as of Tutors or Guardians and Pupills husband and wife their mutuall duties Masters and servants Governours in Colledges Schooles and any like societies or mysteries so of the Prelates and people or Preachers and their congregatiens Kings and Princes or Soveraignes and their subjects as under them the Magistrates and other the Kings Officers and the comm●● people with their severall duties and neglects thereof or enormities and vices opposite illustrated and explained where also in generall the duty of obedience in all lawfull commands in all singlenesse of heart and not with muttering and murmuring or other despitefull repirings and so in the duries in either side even all the vertues in a manner comprehended the reasons of the Commandment and promise of blessing in long life how to be understood and indeed when given of God though else a shorter life here so appointed by God no lesse to be accounted a blessing as well as the lands possession the good gift of the Lord. 1. VVHat is the fifth Commandement Honour thy father and thy mother that thy dayes may be long in the land c. 2. What is the order of it The first of the second Table as next to the honour of God importing our duty to superiours for good orders sake and better observation of the rest by their command as also this and all the Commandements of the second Table to be observed for the honour of God principally and in respect of the first Table according to the rules aforesaid manifesting the difference of the second Tables and Commandements among themselves and the dependancy of this 3. What rules were they 1. That every negative Commandement bindeth alwaies and at all times every affirmative only alwaies but not so precisely to all and every particle of time 2. That the Commandements of the first Table are to be kept for themselves absolutely those of the second for the first 3. That though every sinne deserveth death eternally yet there is and may be imparity of sins in many respects 4. That the sinnes against the first Table simply and in themselves considered are more heynous then those against the second though such aggravation or respects else of extreme malice presumption or infirmity or the like may over balance or much alter the same 5. There is so neare a tie and relation between the Commandements that whosoever faileth in one is guilty of all As that it is indeed a breach of the whole Law An offence against the royall Law of charity the intent and sum of all An offence against God the author of them all A contempt of his Majesty and command 4. What the meaning of the first rule That the negative commandement or negative part of the Commandement is at all times and every particle of time to be observed as not to deny God or set up any false gods abuse his holy name prophane the Sabbath dishonour parents commit murder adulterie stealth or other offence forbidden at anytime but all time and every and the least particle of time must be free from offence or the commandement is broken and in it the whole Law though the affirmative part or duty commanded is broken as honouring God or Parents observing the Sabbath or doing good actions cannot be performed at all times and every particle of time but at set and determinate times and occasions and that with some remission and relaxation as seene in sanctifying the Sabbath because of our weake nature requiring respitation so that as the Schoole phrase is the affirmative is semper but non ad semper the negative both semper and ad semper that is no minutes permission of the offence though some minutes relaxation of the duty may be necessity requiring 5. How the second rule explained That the Commandements of the first Table are meerly and absolutely to be observed for themselves and the love and honour of God in them commanded and who doth observe them but for fashion sake or worldly respects beforemen and to please others for feare of punishment or shame or the like doe mainly erre and offend and are guilty of sin though the action be performed but the Commandements of the second Table are to be observed for conscience of the first Table commending the love of God to us and the love of our neighbour for Gods sake whose image wee are and who do observe the Lawes of the second Table for the praise of men more then the love of God or of morality onely and to bee like dealt with againe and friendly to those deale friendly with them as Publicans and sinners doe the like though the action be done are farre from the performance or duty of the Commandement required to be done for the love of God 6. How the third rule explained That though eternall death be the wages of sin as an offence against the infinite Majesty of God
themselves unworthy of honour and respect by their Insolent carriage towards inferiours Light Dissolute Unmercifull Unjust behaviour in their places Inferiours their despising unreverence disobedience and dishonour of superiours by any Vndutiful Vnreverent Despitefull words behaviour actions towards them 17. How are the opposite or opposed parts seene or intimated here The honour reverence love and obedience required of inferiours expressed in this word Honour to which opposed dishonour unreverence despising or disobedience as the gravity good example mercy justice moderation and beneficence intimated in this word Father which sheweth what superiours are required to bee else not fathers opposite to which are insolent light dissolute unmercifull and unjust carriage and behaviour whereby they seeme to leave and lose the name of father 18. Who are then accordingly accounted Fathers 1. The Prince who is parens or pater patriae so Abimelech the name of the King of the Philistims King father 2. Magistrates patres conscripti so Senatours Councellors of Estate Fathers of the State and Fathers of the King as Ioseph to Pharaoh Gen. 45. 8. 4. Superiours in First knowledge and science Iubal father of them that play on the Organs Iabal father of them that make Tents Gen. 4. Secondly holinesse as Elisha called so by the King of Israel Shall I smite father 2 King 6. 21. Thirdly by instruction oversight and government as Elisha said of Eliah My father my father 1 King 1. 12. Fourthly in estate or riches Job 31. 18. 5. Ancient in yeares fathers by age 6. Spirituall Pastors Ministers and Teachers Fathers in Christ. 7. Masters of families and servants Patres familias 8. Naturall and legall parents as fathers mothers fathers in law mothers in law also Godfathers and Godmothers Benefactors and who in any the like respect guardians or have delegated power or tuition and government over us as children and inferiours to bee understood by all these severall respects and bonds of nature law or other contract 19. In what manner are they so Fathers By the law of 1. Of Nature naturall parents father in law c. 2. Nations 1. Kings and Soveraignes 2. Magistrates Senatours Councellors of State 3. Judges and Officers of justice 4. Spirituall Pastors and Fathers in Christ. 3. Contract Masters of Families Guardians Tutors and such other superiours for our instruction or aid c. by our selves or others appointed or desired How may these superiours be distinguished Into superiours In 1. Gifts 1 Received frō God whether Inward of the mind as in Arts wisedome Learning vertue or the like Outward as in Age the ancient Degree of Birth nobility or gentry Schoole or church dignity Wealth the rich or potent 2 Bestowed on us as Benefactors Guardians and helpers 2. Authority governors of Family Schooles Corporation Church Commonwealth in governm oeconomic scholasticall cōfederacy ecclesiastic politicall What the generall duties of superiours that they may worthily be accounted so Wisedome and gravity together with good example good deeds 20. What the generall duties of inferiours To exhibit honour Inwardly in reverent estimation of their worth and wisedome place and authority Outwardly both in the 1. Signe of reverence whether Rising up to them Going to meet them Bowing the knee Vncovering the head Standing before them Giving them the precedency Silence when they speake Words of reverence 2. Deed as occasion is offered to minister unto them 21. What the opposite vices in generall 1. In superiours neglecting inferiours lightly or foolishly 2. Inferiours neglecting or despising their superiours unreverently undutifully 22. What the duties in particular of superiours in inward gifts of minde In humility to acknowledge them received from God and thence willing to employ them to his glory and the good of others opposite to which is insolence and abuse of them 23. What of inferiours herein In thankfulnesse acknowleding reverence and respecting them as the gracious instruments of God for our good and in modesty even to account our equals rather superiours or betters then any way to deny deprave or disdaine their good gifts 24. What the duties of the ancient To bee sober and grave ready to instruct the younger sort both by their wisedome and good example as patternes and presidents of good and no wayes of lewdnesse or evill 25. What the duties of youngers To reverence them as fathers learne and imitate their good examples and no wise to despise the aged contemne their counsell or direction 26. What duties of those dignified by nobility gentry or other degrees of eminency By magnanimity magnificence and other heroicall and divine vertues to remember the giver of all good and use the same to his honour the good of the Church and Commonwealth thereby shewing themselves worthy of that honour who otherwise shall seeme but bubbles of honour and a shame or disgrace to their degree 27. What the duty there of inferiours To reverence respect honour them according to their worthinesse places and degrees readily exhibiting the signes thereof and no way to presume against them or neglect them 28. What the duty of the wealthy To remember the giver and that they are but stewards and shall bee called to account to use their riches as instruments of liberality and bounty to the helpe and releefe as well as protection of the poore and helplesse and not to niggardlinesse and avarice or oppression and cruelty 29. What duties of inferiours The reverent esteem and welwishing to them and their estate as the blessings of God and instruments of their good and not to disdaine presume or murmure against them or God 29. What requiredin Benefactors In that act of bounty or charity to give willingly cheerfully freely and discreetly bis dat qui cito and not grudgingly or for his own profit so not given or without discretion so cast away or with delay so qui sero dat diu noluit tardius beneficium perdit gratiam and the like exprobation or casting in the teeth of a good turne 30. What duty of the receivers of a benefit Thankfully to acknowledge and remember it with testification both by word and deed if occasion be offered as well as prayer opposite to which forgetfulnesse of a good turne or requiting evill for good 31. What the opposite or negative part of all the former Easily collected from the premises and partly expressed in them a neglect of those good duties in any respect by any of the parties or in stead thereof the return and exercise of the contrary to them 32. Who are those other superiours in authority Governours 1. Of families as Parents over children Husband over wife and family Master over servants apprentices 2. Of Schooles or Universities or other Corporations Master Guardians and Presidents 3. Of Church as Bishops Pastors and Minister 4. Of Common-wealth the Prince our Soveraigne and all Magistrates 33. How the order of these First Oeconomicall duties as that the first government in the world Secondly instruction in Vertue and Religion so Scholasticall and
the Churches command 10. But have not some kept their old names as those of yeares baptized Yes it may be so and no doubt but parents or themselves or others upon good occasions may and have authority at other times to change them as aforesaid 11. How are names then said received in Baptism Generally or for the most part and by common practice of all or most being a particular or personall and speciall priviledge doth not infringe or overthrow an universall law 12. But we finde many received names before baptisme It is true at Nations conversions and with people of yeares converted to Christianity it being at their owne choice to keepe or change their names but we speake generally here of children comming to baptisme of whom as well as the ancient manner thereof we shall speake more hereafter in the Sacraments 13. Jt is then most convenient to give names in Baptisme It is as at our birth wee receive the name of man and sirname of parents so at our new birth or regeneration in baptisme to receive a new name or Christian name in remembrance of the family of Saints whereinto we are by this meanes engrafted so also was it in Circumcision in whose place Baptisme succeedeth 14. But divers instances may bee given to the contrary for Circumcision To bee understood then of breach of the ordinance or in case of necessity or some extraordinary incumbrance or priviledge that doe not disanull or infringe a generall law 15. For Gersom he was named ere circumcised It was a plaine breach of the ordinance and Moses like to have beene punished and died for the fact and perversnesse of Zipporah his wife 16. All the children of Israel in the wildernesse not circumcised yet had names assuredly But that a place and case of extraordinary necessity and incumbrance when much good order and discipline was neglected and sometimes superciliously by the factious Israelites contemned 16. Benoni was named by Rachel before circumcision But as her wish onely held and at circumcision Benjamin by his father who had the absolute authority 17. But Saint John Baptist and Christ also by the Angels before circumcision Extraordinary revelation was the preparation of names for those sanctified persons yet the 8. day according to the Law ordinarily circumcised and the names solemnly imposed or published to the accomplishment of the very letter of Moses Law 18. It standeth then with best reason or conveniency to have the name imposed in baptisme It doth and from all antiquity so received at our new birth to receive that new or Christian name and that the Godfathers should impose or publish the same 19. Is that most convenient Yes for so is the generall use and we have no custome in the Churches to the contrary but many reasons for the same As 1. Not against Scripture but consonant to them 2. It is most anciently received and used 3. It proceeds from the love of parents requesting it and them undertaking it 4. It is a benefit to the infant if the parents die 5. It is a helpe to the parents by aiding and remembring them 6. It is a comfort encouragement and stirring up of the childe to remember the duties 7. It is a meanes to increase mutuall love and friendship among neighbours by performing this duty one for another 20. But why are children baptized being infants and not rather when they come to yeares and discretion For divers good reasons especially these foure viz. 1. Imitation of Circumcision in whose place it succeeded 2. After the example of Christs receiving little children 3. For that the covenant pertaines also to them as well as the parents and so that seale 4. That we may be so presented to God as earely as may be 21. How in imitation of circumcision As which was commanded the eight day and that being the seale of the Covenant and so this hence administred also to infants as that was by Gods speciall command 22. How from the example of Christ He not only not refusing the little children or their good will that brought them but blaming them that would have them kept from him and commanding them to be brought and suffered to come and more expressing his will and good will By his 1. Receiving them 2. Taking them in his armes 3. Laying his hands on them 4. Blessing them and his 5. Exhortation to all men to follow their innocency 6. Promising them and them only heaven 7. Affirming their Angels to stand before his Father in heaven c. 23. How pertaines the covenant to them As made to Abraham and his seed all the saithfull and their seed whosoever borne of faithfull parents and in the bosome of the Church and to whom as the Covenant so especially this seale at first as that of circumcision doth pertaine and though never so little ones yet we see respected by God and Christ in mercy 24. Why also presented so in the Church That as early as may be conveniently they may be testified so and Registred in the number of Gods children as what greater happinesse and so never too soone and from which to be kept a misery or abatement of the blisse as the utter deprivation endlesse misery 25. Then it is good children should be soon baptised As with conveniencie may be and to that purpose are divers Canons of the Church and though God can save without meanes yet we are called upon to shew our duty and love in not neglecting the ordinary meanes of our salvation 26. Is baptisme then a meanes thereof It is though not Ex opere operato in the bare worke yet our conduit of grace by the faith in Christ and application of other saving graces implied in the right use and receiving of the same 27. Then it is faith and not baptisme that saveth But that faith requireth also Baptisme as baptisme implyeth the vertue of faith and as Christ originally faith instrumentally so Baptisme Sacramentally cooperate worke and assure our salvation 28. Both faith and baptisme then are required Yes they are for he that beleeveth and is baptised shall be saved and except a man be borne of water and of the spirit he cannot be saved so not the bare circumcision but a new creature required 29 How doth this then pertain to Infants As they are borne in the bosome of the Church and the Covenant also made to them and are So 1. Presented to God in the Church and 2. By faithfull parents and 3. Upon Gods gracious promise in Christ in that covenant of grace 4. In the faith of the Church and parents 30. But is this enough For them it is but for others of riper yeares is required a due disposition to faith and repentance actually performed and grace to shew forth the fruits of the spirit and so in men of yeares as they are found in grace they were though fit to bee baptized as we read of Cornelius the Eunuch and others 31. Many then are baptized that are not
Ecclesiasticall government to which subordinate and generall confederacies and Corporations mixed between private and publicke governments or societies Thirdly politicall duties of all sorts in all kinds of governments in the world whether Monarchy Aristocracie Democracie where there are commanders and subjects to command 34. What duty of Parents The love and care of them love or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 naturalis the fountaine of the other whence unnaturall parents that bring forth children and not care for them the care being seene in due providing for life naturally by 1. Nourishing them and 2. Bringing them up 3. Training them up in honest calling 4. Directing them in all matters of moment 5. Helping and storing for them as God giveth meanes For life spirituall by godly education instruction chastisement their prayers for them and blessings and the opposite hereof to be without naturall affection To traine them up in idlenesse and vanity To be neglective of providing for them or their education or instruction naturall or spirituall things or to curse and not blesse them 35. What the duty of children To answer their parents care and love with love and duty To reverence and obey them Matth. 21. 30. Eph. 6. 1. To stand in awe of them and submit to their instruction correction To preserve their parents goods and helpe them if need require To shew themselves thankfull as the Storke to her parents So a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if need or age require to help them with goods service reliefe To love and reverence them that be neare and deare unto them for their sakes Opposite to which is to neglect these duties not to love them but to hate revile scorn strike or deride them To be ashamed of parents contemne and despise them To be disobedient and unkinde To refuse or despise their instruction correction and to these heads or some of them may bee referred the duties of Tutors and Guardians towards Pupills and their Pupills towards them that as they succeed parents in government to succeed in fatherly love care and consequently Pupills to shew dutifull respects and love to them as good children to such their parents 36. What the duties of husbands and wives In generall mutuall love benevolence and conjugall fidelity in particular of the husband as head to guide direct and instruct protect cherish and defend provide things needfull and governe in loving sort giving honour also to her as the weaker vessell The wife as in subjection to her husband to acknowledge him her head reverencing fearing and obeying him being amiable and gracious seeking to please and cherish him be his assistant in the house and all duties of a good wife and huswife opposite to which is neglect of these duties and so his being his wives underling contrary to the law of nature and ordinance of God his hating striking or wronging her denying things needfull in his power or being too uxorious in in fond doting too imperious in rigour towards her As on her part her usurping dominion using unreverence unquietnesse causing trouble and griefe to him or being a crosse and not a helpe to him or idle at home or gadding abroad 37. What the duty of Masters To governe those under them with equity and moderation accounting them as children under us or brethren in Christ and fellow-servants in respect of our Master in heaven so commanding things lawfull honest possible and proportionable to their service paying their wages and wishing and procuring their good both in body and soule by instruction and else while with us and after esteeming them as our poore friends opposite to which is our neglect of them being too hard or tyrannizing over them commanding things unlawfull unpossible or too remisse in not correcting or not cockering them or suffering them in idlenesse not restraining and reproving them 38. What servants duties To love and reverence their Masters so to tender their credit and welfare submit themselves to their commands corrections and to be diligent faithfull and true thrifty and carefull to please their masters in all lawfull things opposite to which neglect and disobedience murmuring and answering againe idlenesse and unfaithfull wastefull and not carefull of their credit or displeasure 39. What the duties of other governours in Schools or other societies As they have the place of Fathers and Superiours to have a fathely love and care over them and their welfare opposite to which to neglect them or tyrannize over them and abuse their authority 40. What of the governed To demeane themselves with that reverence humility and respect as may become dutifull children to such fathers not neglective of their places or despising their authority to the disturbance of good order and bringing in impiety and hellish confusion 41. What duties of Ministers and Ecclesiasticall Fathers To be blamelesse and so behave themselves in their place that it may be to the edification of the Church both by their 1. Preaching in season and out of season 2. Their governing of the Church of God committed to them and their private families 3. Living and good example Opposite to which their inability and insufficiency impiety idlenesse and neglect of their charge or other irreligiousnesse prophanenesse or faults in preaching governing or living unworthy their place or calling 42. What duty of the people towards them Love reverence and submission to their Ministery and charge that they may performe their duty with cheerfulnesse not with griefe and so allowing liberall maintenance and their dues as those Elders that doe their duty well are worthy of double honour opposite to which hate neglect mocking or despising them resisting disobeying or abusing them denying or diminishing their dues with a mocking and a lying unto God Gal. 6. 6. or taking away and withdrawing them which is sacriledge or robbery and spoyling of God Mal. 3. 10. 43. What duty of Kings or Soveraignes In that high place and representation of Gods supreme authority the commendable exercise 1. Of that Soveraigne power in 1. making good Lawes 2. Seeing them executed 3. Creating Magistrates 4. Containing them in their duty 5. Mixing mercy with justice 6. Lawfull pardons 7. Waging war or concluding peace 8. Admitting or considering of high appeals godly to the glory of God justisie to the good of the Common-wealth II. Vertues of 1. Piety in all their actions 2. Justice in all their actions 3. Clemency in all their actions 4. Bounty in all their actions 5. Wisdome in all their actions 6. Fortitude temperance humility and generall all vertues to the good example of his subjects as Regis ad exemplum c. opposite to which is negligence and remissenesse in these duties bordering upon idlenesse or rigour degenerating into cruelty and tyranny 44. What subjects duties Honour obedience loyalty and service both with body and goods attended with love of their person desire of their welfare and prayer for their prosperity opposite to which neglect and contempt to speake evill or to curse him
childbed or any other sicknesse 16. VVhat the opposite of this 1. Both incontinency in single life or widowhood 2. Breach of wedlocke 3. Using the mariage bed First immoderately and lustfully Secondly immodestly without shamefastnesse or honesty Thirdly unseasonably at forhidden times 17. VVhat meanes of preserving chastity to bee observed I. Either generall 1. Prayer for continency as the gift of God 2. Keeping company with sober and chaste persons II. Speciall preservatives and remedies 1. Sobriety and moderation of delights 2. Temperance in diet 3. Diligence and painfulnesse in our callings 4. Vigilancy over our affections 5. Modesty in eyes and countenance Speech and behaviour Attire and gesture 6. Marriage it selfe the lawfull remedy if the other means faile provided that such as have not the gift of continency may marry and keep themselves undefiled members of Christs body 18. What opposite to this I. Both frequenting the company of unchaste drunken effeminate and wanton persons places suspected and infamed II. Intemperance in gluttony drunkennesse and the like III. Idlenesse and slothfulnesse IIII. Immodest 1. Eyes beholding unchaste or beautifull and wanton persons obscene pictures reading lewd bookes or playes 2. Countenance impudent and harlots forhead 3. Speech gesture and gate wanton mincing and dancing 4. Attire proud and excessive V. Unlawfull marriages vowes divorces either expresly and ipso facto adultery or the occasions and meanes of it 19. What signes of chastity to be noted Sobriety modesty and shamefaltnesse keeping good and chaste company and avoiding suspicious shew of evill which are both meanes and signes of chastity and so doubly worth the regard as on the contrary wantonnesse immodesty impudency haunting unchaste company suspected places and at suspected times both signes and meanes of unchastity 20. What duty of procuring or preserving others chastity The generall care thereof in all as occasion serveth and especially For parents to provide for their childrens honest bringing up behaviour and marriage For Magistrates to provide good lawes and due execution with severe punishments to represse uncleannesse 21. What the opposite hereof To be accessory or procurers of others unchastity as bawds the divells instruments to bring naughty packs together those that counsell consent hire or allure to uncleannesse or prostitute them whose chastity they ought or promised to protect and so Parents Magistrates or others that connive at such offence deny or forbid the remedy marriage or execute not due punishment against the offenders 22. What are the degrees in this sin 1. In this order the first means motives and all occasions of this sinne by gluttony drunkennesse intemperance or other meanes whatsoever 2. Motions of the heart whether with or without consent of the will so who seeth a woman to lust hath committed adultery Mat. 5. 28. 3. Outward appearance of evill in adulterous and unchaste eye and countenance tongue gesture attire c. 4. Fornication and the act of uncleannesse in any sort 5. Adultery and other the monstrous and unnaturall sins whose punishments ordinarily by divine and humane lawes is death and sometimes with more infamous aggravations thereof 23 How account you of the first degree As the high way to the foulest of the rest and therefore he that would avoid crying and great sins ought to make conscience of the smallest as occasions draw on the action and gluttony and drunkennesse marshall in chambering and wantonnesse the heart is made the shop and store house of sin and the eyes the lewd shop windowes to let it in or set it to sale evill words corrupt good manners light and vaine apparrell curious ornaments frizeled haire and the like signs of loosenesse and immodesty as idlenesse the way to wantonnesse and that to impudency which at last bringeth forth fornication and adultery or other grosse and crying sins 24. What of pride in atire dancing and gadding abroad As appearances of evill and fruits of the flesh if not open defiance and enmity with God and so noted alwaies as pride the forerunner of shame wanton dancing of all good men condemned as an extreame folly and enticement to lewdnesse if not used with rare moderation as for the dancing in armour in the Pirrichian dances or men or women by themselves for exercise or joy of some great good hap or victory as Miriam as David before the Arke excellent and commended by all but for lascivious and amorous dances men and women confusedly together with wanton gestures kissings and dalliance the fuell of lust and as Herodias daughters dancing cost Saint John Baptists head so this many a headlesse soule and for gadding abroad the token of the wanton and idle widdowes 1 Tim. 5. 12. and of the harlot and those of loose behaviour Prov. 7. 9. and cost Dinah her honesty and the Sichemites their ruine 25. Some speake very bitter words against dancing Very true and so to be understood of wanton and dissolute dancing and at unfit times or in too impudent and foolish manner with mimique and even zany gestures and fashions as loosely as lewdly performed the very fellowes to kindle the flames of lust and impudency and such indeed was the gravity of the Romans at sometimes and some other Nations that they highly detested or were displeased with such lightnesse and folly as Demosthenes before his Athenians reproached Philip of Macedon and his Courtiers for common dancers such as having filled their bellies with meat and heads with wine fell scurriloussy and loosely a dancing and Salust of Sempronia said she was to fine a singer and dancer to be honourable withall and Cioero in his Apologie for Murena challenged also for dancing not minding to excuse it of him putteth it of or slatly denieth it with a concession nemo saltat sobrius and Plutarch in the vertues of women putteth it that shee ought to be no dauncer 26. But doe not the Fathers and Doctors say as much Yes for Saint Basil saith thou caprest and leapest with thy feet in dances unwise as thou art when thou shouldest rather bend thy knees in prayer to thy Creator but what gaine is got thereby surely this that virgins returne robbed of their virginity married wives of the truth to their husbands all lesse chaste then they went and more dishonest then they should though lesse perhaps then they would as if not in act which peradventure may be yet stained in thought which cannot be eschewed 1. So Saint Chrysostome saith to the maides and wives that daunce at marriages and so pollute their sex in such lascivious daunces the divell beareth a part as dauncing with them 2. Saint Ambrose that it is better to dig and delve on holy-dayes then to daunce and where banquets are concluded with dauncing there chastity is commonly but in an evill case 3. Vives in his instruction to a Christian woman hath not a little to this purpose who holdeth it for a strange vanity and saith he certaine Asians seeing the Spaniards daunce ran away for feare thinking them lunaticke nothing
may be administred to an Infant being in the same state and condition with us as theirs with them in every respect 31. How in respect of the institution Because Christ commanding them to teach and baptise all Nations as Abraham and his seed and sons together before so the fathers and their children now to be received into the new Covenant and not the fathers alone but the children with and in the estate persons and condition of the father as whiles they are in minority they are accounted a part of him and so where whole housholds baptised and Christ commanded the little children to be brought unto him gave them his blessing and reproved them that would have kept them from him 32. How by the doctrine of the Apostles Because as Christ receiving them and testifying that theirs is the Kingdome of heaven the Apostles also teach as Saint Peter treating of Baptisme and remission of sins by Christ Acts 2. 39. sheweth the promise is made to them and their children and Saint Paul that in and to beleeving parents the children are sanctified 1 Cor. 7. 14. that were else uncleane but now are holy and what is this but within the covenant and capable of that seale of grace especially as also the practice was 33. How the practice of them That whole housholds baptised as the houshold of Stephanus and Lydia baptised by Saint Paul 1 Cor. 1. 16. and the Jaylor all that belonged to him Acts 16. 33. and so hath been the practice since of al times of receiving children to Baptism especially of beleeving and faithfull parents 34. What reason for it Because there is so neare a relation betweene the parent and children that what the estate of the parent is such is the estate of the childe reputed to be till it come to yeares of discretion nay it is taken for a very part or limbe of the parent and so according to reason and the words and intent of the Covenant within compasse of it and capable of the seale 35. But they want actuall faith and repentance Though in their single persons they doe yet as in the persons of their fathers and godfathers that represent them they may be said to have it and so in all respects capable of the seale as also wee see an estate assured in Law to the father and childe by some ceremony used and the childe capable of it though not yet capable of understanding to know what is done 36. How is it added that when they come to are they are bound to performe Because though in infancie before they knew or could doe good or evill their parents estate and condition was reckoned theirs yet come to yeares of discretion actually required of them as distinct persons of themselves and now in the estate of them Ezeck 18. 20. that every ones sins on his owne head and required every one to live by his owne faith and if allowed in nonage a beneficiall hand to receive a benefit or blessing must also finde being come to age an officious hand to performe a duly or condition 37. When is this chiefly shewne or declared At confirmation when the godfathers having seen the childe in the rudiments of Religion well instructed from that particular engagement at the font with the parents in some sort may seeme discharged thenceforth only in common duties of Christianity obliged as the childe is then publickly by profession of his owne faith with the duties thereof charged the others exonerated answerable to which was that order of the Jews to have the childe at thirteen yeares of age for Bar-mitzuah into their number communion and Synagogue as it were admitted and thenceforth to answer for and charged with his owne sinnes as the father was before whence the father with great joy then calling tenne men for witnesses of the childs instruction and sufficiencie in the knowledge of their Law Rites and Religion with praising God for it and praying for his continuance and proficiencie therein desireth such his admission and himselfe to be discharged this in all chiefest respects thus nearly suiting with our confirmation as aforesaid as it is appointed to be used 38 Is this the generally received doctrine Yes and confirmed by all ancient Fathers and never opposed unlesse by the Anabaptists and giddy-headed Sectaries that are commonly content with nothing that is not new ●angled and of their owne broaching and invention 38. How in such as are of yeares converted Then as in whole Nations conversions all they of discretion bound to make actuall profession of their faith so all such were demanded their faith and how they beleeved and making profession of their faith I beleeve in God c. and also their repentance and desire of Baptisme they were admitted and baptised and whose children if they had any under age were baptised with them or which they had after in their infancie 39. Who may baptise Those that had the commission the Apostles and their successours to whom it was said Goe teach and baptise c. 40. How of others that doe it Understood a presumption to goe against or beyond our Saviours commission 41. How many sorts of Baptisme According to the parts of it so distinguished into the 1. Externall Baptisme in the water the symbole of the other 2. Internall of the soule that twofold In the bloud of Christ to remission of sins Of the Spirit to the souls renovation by his graces And others make a fourefold Baptisme Either Fluminis that of the water Matth. 3. so John Baptist. Flaminis that of the Spirit so Christs Baptisme Sanguinis of Martyrdome 10. Marke 38. Luminis sine doctrinae Acts 18. 35. 19. 4 Whereby the Baptisme understood the doctrine of John The two first properly so called the latter figuratively as also the Baptisme of the Fathers in the cloud and in the sea 1 Cor. 10. 2. 43. What difference between Christs and Johns Baptisme The same in substance and the end or effect admission into Gods favour and grace and to repentance and newnesse of life to the faith of Christ that was to come but differing in the circumstances 1. Of the time as that before Christ exhibited or that he had fulfilled all things this in the full complement of grace 2. Of the maner of Johns Baptisme into Christs to come and preparing the way by repentance this of Christs into his death as already come 3. Of the Ministery of John the forerunner this in the plenitude of the power of the Messiah 4. Of the reference that the first had to the complement in Christs person performance and baptisme And so he said I indeed baptise you with water but there is one among you that baptiseth with the holy Ghost and with fire 44. Doth not John hereby then more distinguish them No not in respect of the substance but only the circumstance of his Ministery compared with the fulnesse and power of Christ in which his was to have complement and receive
names of Daniel and his fellowes when he consecrated them to his Idols service Dan. 1. 7. 2. The Turkes doe by their Christian Renegadoes and their Janizaries 3. The Popes doe usually change their names at entrance to the Papacy 4. Kings of Scotland have done Ominis causâ changing their names one for another as Iohn to Robert 5. Queenes of England many before the Conquest tooke the name of Algive in honour of a worthy Queene of that name so did the Caesars from Julius Caesar and divers others 28. How if for any evill intention It is unlawfull and aggravated according to the quality of the offence and villany intended 29. Who have power to change names The same that have power to impose them 30. Who are they Superiours as parents or ones selfe so God gave Adam his name Adam named his wife Eva and gave names to all creatures Eva named her sonne Cain Rachel hers Benoni whom Jacob named againe Benjamin the Angell from God and Zachary John the Baptist the Angell Gabriel from God Jesus before conceived in the wombe 31. How for alteration of them So also Abram called Abraham by God Sarai Sarah Iacob Israel Benoni Benjamin by Jacob Simon also Peter by Christ Saint John Baptists name by his father changed Naomi saith of herselfe call mee Marah The Popes doe usually change their names and fathers may change their childrens with diseretion or on good occasion if they mislike them 32. Is it not a falshood or lye to change ones name No for superiours and ones selfe have such power authority over the name on good occasion 33. How in doing ill or mischiefe Then it is not onely a falshood or lye but a mischievous and malicious lye or otherwise capitall according to the nature and quality of the offence and villany thereby intended against any else an equivocation or imposture and so an offence and heynous sinne before God and men 34. How the concealing of ones name According to the former lawfull and tolerable on good occasion as in danger of life or other eminent perill or inconveniency so Beza that silencing his owne name writ a Treatise in Nath Neskius name Bucer of Aretius Fellinus with lesse envie to be read of others so in ancient stories many as Saint Athanasius in danger of killing silencing his name and Saint Paul supposed silencing his in the Epist. to the Hebrewes to be read with lesse envy or prejudice by his Countrimen who hated his person as is seene in his story 35. The occasion then ought to be good of the changing and concealing of ones name Yes or else it argueth lightnesse or rashnesse and folly if not worse 36. Names are also imposed for some good reasons and occasions as well as distinction It is apparantly seene in all the chiefest and the best of the ancients and especially in the holy Scriptures so Adam earth Eva mother of the living Noah rest Abraham Israel David beloved Salomon peacefull Jesus a Saviour and our Christian names for that blessed hope we have in Christ our Saviour 37. What then doest thou particularly minde by thy Christian name My Christian duty calling and profession 38. As how As 1. my duty to God my heavenly Father the Church my Mother Christ my Saviour and all the faithfull my brethren and kindred in the flesh and more especially in him 2. My calling to this happy estate begunne in Baptisme where I receive this name 3. My profession of this faith then promised for me at Baptisme by them that gave mee this name SECT 3. Quest. 2. The imposition of the name and benefit thereof Authority of such imposers of the name with the ancient and laudable use in the Church and therefore retained Of taking new or keeping the old name in and after baptisme Of the new name received in baptisme and for that compared with circumcision Divers instances to the contrary and reasons of them The generall and received use now and reasons of it Why children baptised as in imitation of circumcision and from Christs example of receiving them The covenant also pertaining to them and they can never be too soone presented to God this being the ordinary meanes of salvation and way to heaven How faith required with baptisme and in very infants of faithfull parents and in the bosome of the Church Charity binding us to doe and thinke the best we can of all So the new Christian use and benefit of Baptisme Further described as thereby made a member of Christ the members of Christs mysticall body● and the difference and degrees of them as in a well governed common-wealth the like to be seone The profit of being Christs members that we thereby become best the children of God How Christ Angels Men and all Creatures Sonnes of God the elect and their hope and preeminence The falling Angels And their losse and misery How workes required As signes of sons and heires not cause of inheritance The Lawyers question discussed And how heaven An inheritance or kingdome and the excellency of that inheritance 1. VVHo gave you this name My Godfathers and Godmothers who were my sureties to God in receiving his Covenant of grace and promising and undertaking covenants on my part to be performed 2. When was it In my Baptisme at the Font solemnly before God and the congregation 3. What benefit thereby I was thereby made A member of Christ The childe of God Inheritor of the kingdome of heaven 4. Why doe you call the Sureties Godfathers and Godmothers Because betweene God and me for my good they did undertake such things for mee and in my name that I should have done my selfe if I had beene able 5. What authority had they for it The ancient use and institution of the Church and primitive times continued to our dayes the order of the present Church and times concurring with the bond of charity doing good for one another and at the request of my naturall parents 6. Js it an ancient use or custome Yes as used neere from the Apostles times it appeares in the Ecclesiasticall Histories and Decretals as Higinus Bishop and Martyr in the 5. Decretall mentioneth so in our Church from the first plantation of faith here even Adulti those of yeares had Godfathers as appeares by Cunigils King of West Saxons baptized by Birinus whose Father in law and Godfather King Oswald was 7. But how have Godfathers authority to name the childe At the request of the parents who have the absolute authority to name it 8. Are the parents hereby barred No it is likely as they request the sureties and that they doe it so at their request and in love that they have the greatest stroke and it appeareth the Priest was went before at the Church doore to aske the name of the parents 9. How then is it said the Godfathers doe it or are required to name it For publique testification of it so they doe it and that most publiquely and solemnly by
joyned Baal as the Idolatrous Israelites 3. Joyned with God Angels or other Powers Intelligences or the like Nature fate or such dreams of the old Philosophers or Heathen whereby in effect Atheisme and denying him and his truth without the true God setting up many gods as the Gentiles in generall their many gods recorded in the Scriptures Dagon Ashteroth Moloch Bel and the Dragon c. In the Heathen Stories their Jupiter Mars Mercury and where majores minores dii more in number then the Nations or the Cities and Countries The Egyptians in particular gods of all sorts of things Sunne and Moone and Stars Serpents Fowles Fishes Beasts and men as Osiris ibis c. 19. What Idolatry All setting up of Idolls whether in the heart or Temples to worship them and so of two sorts 1. In the heart internally set on them 2. In the Temples externally to worship them against which especially is the second Commandement 20. Is there no other Idolatry Yes all falling away from the Lord and trusting in or seeking to the creature in neglect of him is before him accounted Idolatry so to trust in or set our heart upon this world with worldlings Upon uncertain riches whence covetousnesse Upon Idolatry pleasures of the Epicures Upon glutony and drunkennesse with the voluptuous pride and vanities of life long life and the like to the forgetting of God and trampling his Commandements under foot is to set up Idols and setting our hearts upon these Idolls ' and fancies of our hearts set up above him in our esteem 21. Who then as thus Idolatrous Both the Covetous worldings Idolatrising to his god Mamon Epicures making their belly their god Ambitious that on aspiring to high places set all their devotion Proud that honor Lucifer for their god Cockering parents that as Eli did above God set their love or dotage on their children and generally all sinners that leave God to serve sin c. or put their trust in creatures leaving the Creator whether wholly or in part totall or partiall Idolatry 22. Who are they Such as against God trust in Princes or any childe of man In the arme of flesh and bloud In force of united Nations In their wit and policy In Ships or Castles or Munitions In great persons their favourites In horses and chariots yea Men Angells or Divells and flie to any other helpes forgetting and neglecting God cannot be said free from Idolatry not David numbring his people nor Achitophel with his plots or Haman with his policy more then Nebuchadnezzar with his arme of flesh and great Babell 23. Who doe idolatrize to Men Angels or the Divels Those who trust in or flie 1. To men and their helpe above God 2. To Angells or Saints to invocate them besides or contrary to Gods will and commandement 3. To Witches and Wizards to helpe them where God leaveth them 4. Evill and wicked arts and meanes that God hateth and condemneth as leaving him his providence and goodnesse 24. What is it to love and honour God Not only to have him or him alone in our hearts in exculsion of other vaine gods but also to exhibite our duties and devotions to him best expressed in those tearmes of his honour and love the exhibition of honour to him as our Lord ' and Master Of love as to our good God and Father 25. What is opposite to this Both Ignorance next door to Atheisme sowing error and bringing forth Sin and Idolatry opposite to his love neither seeking to know or love him Prophanenesse near kin also to Atheism or a kinde of Atheisme in the living and therein expressing it in lewdnesse and denying God by the life and deeds opposite to his honour which is set forth by a godly life 26. How many sorts of ignorance 1. Either purae negationis in such as cannot understand the truth naturall corruption or blindnesse 1 Cor. 2. 14. Rom. 3. 11. 2. Pravae dispositionis affected ignorance wanting knowledge Either 3. Carelessely a carelesse ignorance 4. Stubbornely refusing it a perverse ignorance 27. What the fruit thereof Error and so Atheisme Idolatry and all kinde of sinne and foolishnesse Whiles the foole saith in his heart there is no God and so shew little love trust or confidence in him and consequently poore service or honour of him but much wickednesse abomination and prophanenesse 28. But may not a small measure of knowledge bee pleasing unto God Yes if it be joyned with a desire to have more and study to serve him according to the same and not an affected carelesse or stubborne ignorance 29. But often seene the more knowledge the lesse grace The more is the malice of the Divell seene the fault not being the knowledge by which God is most honoured but in abuse of the gift as good things may be abused yea optimi corruptio pessima and so much the more lamentable if lost or abused but it is the Divells policy and he will take most paines so to pervert and corrupt the best things yea assaile even the Saints and their best grace that did not leave our Saviour unattempted but such as in seeming knowledge fall away shew indeed that they knew nothing as they ought to know 2 Cor. 8. 30. But ignorance is the mother of devotion Yea of blinde devotion but truest devotion will hearken to the voice of wisdome to be guided thereby 31. How is ignorance the mother of prophanenesse As by not knowing caring or remembring there is a God men rush into ill as a horse into the battell or upon destruction without all feare or understanding or as prophane Esau hated of God preferred a messe of pottage and earthly things through ignorance before heavenly blessings 32. How prophanenesse seen In 1. Brutish living that also without all practice of devotion prayer or other godly Meditation Exercises with an irkesomenesse of godlinesse and all good duties 2. Securely living in open and notorious sin or courses as without feare or care grace or shame without God before their eyes 3. Prostituting themselves to sin as slaves to Satan and children of Belial tumbling both themselves and their associates headlong into hel of such we ought to beware destruction and unhappinesse being in their waies and the way of peace have they not knowne and no feare of God before their eies this the fruit of their ignorance 33. Is this the greatest sin against this Commandement It might seeme so by the uglinesse of it but there are sinnes also of a higher nature and degree and monstrous in the perversenesse against knowledge and conscience such as sinne against the Holy Ghost and sacriledge in respect of the heart though alias ressectu Oris Operis actionum ad extra They may be referred to the third Commandement and so as other compounded sinnes may bee found in other or divers Commandements 34. How are we to love God With all our heart with all our minde with all our soule and with all our
strength 35. How is the love of God seen By adhering to him so with all our minde seen in knowing beleeving in remembring him With all Our heart in trusting hoping fearing and rejoycing in him soule in humility and submission patience and obedience gratitude and thankfulnes to him Strength to the uttermost of body and soule in all good duties to his honour 36. How in generall is the love of God considered 1. For the measure 1. Simply without measure and as before with all heart minde soule and strength comparatè 2. Comparatè above all things else Matth. 10. 37. Luke 14 26. 2. The manner absolutely and first our friends in the Lord. Secondly our foes for the Lord. Hence rising zeale of Gods glory opposite to this 1. Either in the defect want of the love of God with all our hearts above all things Hatred of God and his graces encreased by sin 2. Disorder loving our selves above God and his Commandements the world in the riches pleasures pride and other carnall things 37. VVhat are wee to consider in the knowledge of God The matter God and his truth and goodnesse revealed The measure according to our calling meanes time alotted The manner spirituall and holy knowledge in humility and effectuall to grace and salvation Opposite to this in the excesse curiosity wise above sobriety The defect 1. exceedingly ignorance simply affected 2. In a sort a small measure of knowledge too little for the quantity and 3. For the quantity a literall or speculative knowledge without care or conscience of godlinesse or the power thereof 38. VVhat in beleeving to be considered In generall faith in God and assent to the word of God In speciall to the threatnings of the Law and promises of the Gospell and for the Quantity with full understanding consent and assent Quality lively and working by charity Opposite to this in excesse credulity to even vanity without Gods word In defect in understanding by ignorance Consent by doubting Assent by wavering In Quantity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quality idle and dead faith And that either legally infidelity working carnall security Or evangelically counterfeit faith of hypocrites heretiques c. 39. VVhat in remembring God to be considered The laying up and treasuring in our mindes the things concerning God and secondly often calling such things to minde especially his mercies and judgements opposite to which if wee forget him his holy word mercies or judgements or so partially or slenderly remembring them without care conscience or obedience 40. What is assiance or trust Adhering to God and depending on him in all our needs whether we have means or not as who can helpe without above meanes Opposite to which if On the contrary in Excesse we tempt God Defect wee carke and care or use unlawfull meanes leaving God In disorder we trust in instruments and meanes as wealth world men many mighty wizards or divels 41. What hope A kinde of trust with faith fixed on God and his goodnesse expecting from him deliverance from ill and exhibition of good things whether for this present life or the life to come opposite to which in excesse is presumption in defect is despaire and so as wee ought to trust and hope in him and him alone are we to take heed wee presume not nor despaire or in participation of both with Epicures grow carelesse and without hope 42. What is his feare An awfull and son-like feare which though the object be Gods anger against sinne yet is more loath to offend him so good a God and mercifull then for the danger of punishment effect of his anger opposite to which is carnall security senselesnesse and despaire 43. What is rejoycing in God Delighting in him as the supreme good in his word his mercies and promises and the heavenly and inestimable comfort wee receive by them with joy in the prosperity of his house his Church his servants and honour which filleth the heart with more content then any carnall and worldly things Psal. 4. opposite to which are miserable delights of sinfull worldly carnall and voluptuous men 44. What is humility and submission to God A removing of all conceit of our owne worthinesse and humble acknowledgement of our owne vilenesse in nature and defect of sinne and desert of punishments together with consideration of Gods mercies and bounties to us whereby to bee cast downe before him that hee may raise us up Opposite to which a high conceit of our owne selves our worth and merits to the robbing him of his honour and praise and our forgetfulnesse of duty 45. What is patience An humble subjection of our selves to the crosse or hand of God in his chastisements and tryalls which must needs bee for our good and so found to be as his children by Our Meekly Cheerfully and comfortably Constantly Enduring entertaining them Opposite to which rashnesse and senselesnesse in excesse in defect impatience murmuring fainting and despaire or seeking issue by unlawfull meanes whiles wee will endure much for the world nothing for God 46. VVhat obedience The submitting our wils to the will of God and that onely rightly if voluntarily not forced totally not by fits or in part sincerely without hypocrisie and continually to the end Opposite to which either Disobedience to him by sinnes of omission and commission and that by negligence or contempt Obedience to men or other things more then God yea to sinne the flesh the world and the divell Gods enemies Disorder in the manner not voluntarily or totally sincerely or continually 47. VVhat gratitude or thankefulnesse A testification both by word and deed of a thankfull minde for all his benefits in all estates whether prosperity or adversity acknowledging him and him alone the author of all good things Opposite to which is unthankfulnesse and not acknowledging this or ascribing it to our owne power wit worth worke fortune idols or instruments or meanes forgetting the prime fountain 48. How to love God with all our strength With all powers of body and soule and so in the whole man to exercise all these good duties to his honour 49. How his honour set forth Both by word and deed internally in the soule and externally in the body and whose life and conversation to expresse and advance the praise and glory of God and so to avoid all prophanenesse which is especially to his dishonour Hence springeth 1. Internally zeale of Gods glory 2. Externally holy life and behaviour 50. What is the zeale of Gods glory A servent desire of the advancement thereof both in our selves and others and cheerfully using of the meanes thereof together with removing all impediments of the same proceeding from sincere affection guided by knowledge and discretion seene in the moderation in respect of all circumstances and especially of the time and seasonablenesse 50. What opposite to this Either want of zeale in luke warmnesse Apoc 3. 15. coldnesse Zeph. 1. 12. Or corrupt zeale mixed with Maliciousnesse bitter zeale Covetousnesse
with a leud disposition is though in it selfe godly to that depraved humor but an occasion of rebelling and rebellious headstrongnesse and scorning in impatiency and impotency with spurning against it and disobedience 6. But obedience to the Law is true justice Yes for the man that doth those things shall live in them Levit. 18. 5. Gal. 3. 12. Rom. 10. 3. Luke 10. 28. 7. But none may be justified by the Law No yet not because the Law is not perfect or not able to justifie for the Law is perfect holy just and good but because we are not able to justifie it for the Law is spirituall but wee carnall Rom. 7. 12. c. 8. Why can none fulfill it Because wee are all sinners and deprived of grace as of the glory and image of God Rom. 3. 23. yea sin is in the very regenerate Rom. 7. 20. 9. What is the use of the Law 1. To teach us these things and the excellency of Law and Law-giver 2. To shew us what true righteousnesse is 3. To humble us and shew us our weaknesse and infirmitie 4. To stir us up to better duties and seek Christ and his power and grace so to bring us to him 5. To direct us being in him how to live acceptably in striving to walke in the same 10. How is this use of the Law then branched Into the civill and spirituall use thereof both in respect of reprobate or righteous 11. What the civill use To shew the difference betweene good and evill and what the acceptable will of God is and to leave all without excuse 12. What the spirituall use To the reprobate not only to leave them without excuse but even to 1. Shew their sin in the full extent and so to make them appeare more ugly and deformed that are by nature void of good 2. To harden them that whereas they cannot performe it take occasion thereby to bring forth more evill and so to them the letter killeth and kindling the heat of sinne in them maketh it more strong 13. Why should they be condemned since they are not able to performe it We are not to looke that we are able but what we ought to doe not what In 1. Our corruption we want but 2. What we received in our creation that is what the Lord gave us and the Lord requiring but his owne we being not able the fault is in our selves 14. What the use to the children of God Twofold Either 1. Before they be converted to humble them and shew them their owne weaknesse whereby they may feele the sweetnesse of Christ in deliverance from the torments of hell deserved which unlesse humbled by the Law we could never be sensible of but feeling it desire the release and so a Schoolemaster to bring us to him And yet more 2. After they be in Christ for a rule of righteousnesse and godly obedience to bridle the affections while we strive for perfection 15. What is then further expressed in this preface First the caution for our more due consideration of these things and our weake estate and inability to performe the duties in the law required in those first words My good childe know this that thou art not able to doe c. 16. How is our inability seene In that we are not able as of our selves to think a good thought much lesse to doe a good deed as of our selves since our depraved nature in Adams fall is not only deprived of all goodnesse but enclined and prone to all evill 17. Was no man ever able to performe them None except Adam in his state of innocency and Christ who was both God and Man 18. How is the estate of man to be considered 1. In his first creation and estate of innocency able to fulfill them as them in Gods Image righteousnesse and true holinesse 2. In his fall and nature as now it is depraved and deprived of all goodnesse and so not able to fulfill it 3. In his new birth and regenerate estate in Christ yet so not able perfectly to fulfill the law but failing in many things yet in some measure yeelding acceptable obedience 19. How was that perfection in Adam seene As he was perfectly good created in the Image of God in righteousnesse and true holinesse having his soule endued with divine knowledge free will and affections holy in integrity and innocencie 20. How the depraved nature of man As he is corrupted in his powers of body and soule and his 1. Understanding darkned full of ignorance and error 2. His will crooked and contrary to the will of God 3. His affections impure and so bad that nothing so good but it will loath or hate it nothing so bad and vile but they will wish and seek it 4. His weaknesse such that no power to any good in thought word or deed 5. His strength of corruption so great that it will turne best things into ill to its self and good things into occasion of falling the graces of God into wantonnesse 21. How this more manifested In that they in this estate are compared to blind and deale and worse things even filthinesse it selfe so Job 14. 4. Who can bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse and Rom. 7. 18. In me dwelleth no good thing and David There is none that doeth good no not one they are all corrupt and become abominable destruction and unhappinesse is in their waies and the way of peace they have not knowne yea the unregenerate do nothing but sin and their best actions and waies but sin and to death 22. How those in estate of grace Yet they cannot perfectly fulfill the law but faile in many things as Jam. 3. 2. In many things we offend all for though there be sincere and sound obedience from the heart and guided by Gods Spirit yet it is but imperfect obedience while the corrupt nature in the old man cleaveth so neer to us and is not quite expelled but hindreth many a good worke whence the combat betweene the flesh and the spirit when not the good that wee would but the evill that we would not is done Rom. 7. 21. and so like Schollars practised in Christs Schoole in these exercises of grace there will be faults in our doings easily found we are not skilfull to the full or masters in the art of godlinesse while we are in viâ here only we shall be in patriâ when all imperfection shall be done away 23. Are none then perfect here Not absolutely but a kinde of perfection is attributed to the godly 1. As perfectio partium opposed to hypocrisie so sincere and true godlinesse as in David Josiah and others 2. Though not perfectionem graduum or an absolute fulfilling of the law and all righteousnesse without failing in any thing for this is in no man to be found of all the sons of Adam that are only men so rejected 1. Pelagianisme that gave perfection to mans naturall faculties and freewill 2. Semipelagianis●e
Magistrates that set forth his honour 2. All faithfull Pastors Prelates and Teachers that set forth the true faith 3. All godly Elders that governe well and give good example 4. All holy Confessors and Saints that have so set forth his glory 5. All glorious Martyrs Apostles Prophets Patriarkes and good men that have done and do their best endeavours to set forth and witnesse the truth 24. What doe you then pray for in this respect That God will be pleased to enable them with his graces more readily and cheerfully to set forth his glory as that 1. The King and Magistrate may be Carefull and zealous Prudent and Religious Just c. 2. Pastors and Prelates may be Faithfull in their places Diligent in their duty Conscionable and carefull of their charge all others may be godlily disposed according to their severall offices and duties and so to praise God for any his excellencies and graces appearing in them to the advancement of his Kingdome 25. What is opposite to this Kingdome The Divell and all his wicked agents and instruments raised up against God and his truth such 1. All evill Princes and Lawes 2. All evill Magistrates and negligent Pastors and slothfull 3. All evill and false Prophets and Idolaters 4. All evill blasphemers and 5. Generally all ungodlinesse and vanity 26. What of these That God would be pleased to overthrow root out and destroy all such as the power of the kingdome of Satan and opposite to his Kingdome 27. What in summe is there then expressed or intimated in this Petition 1. The part expressed as before shewed the 1. Petition it selfe for our selves 2. Intercession for others let thy Kingdome come for all our good II. The part intimated both a First confession of a 1. due that Gods Kingdome ought to be advanced 2. Duty from us and others that we ought so much as in us lies to advance that Kingdome 3. Defect in us and others too common to be too negligent hereof Secondly deprecation against all oppugners and opposition thereof whether in our selves or others Thirdly thanksgiving and praise 1. For the graces in us or others tending to the propagation of his Kingdome 2. For his so gracious government of us and of all things 28. How sum you up this in order 1. Confession of a 1. Due that it is most holy and just that Gods Kingdome should come and his power thereof declared 2. Duty of our selves and others that O Lord it is our duty all of us to endeavour the same and wish and seeke by all meanes to advance it 3. Defect that there is even too supine a negligence in us and others in this as well as in many other good duties II. Our petition for 1. Gods power to be shewne in advancing it 2. For our owne well disposednesse that it may be such that we may doe our best to promote it and that his Kingdome may come in us III. Our intercession for others that others may be as well disposed as we our selves and that his Kingdome may come in their hearts IV. Our deprecation that God will be pleased to pull downe all enemies of his Kingdome and all opposition and opposers with their malice and envy V. Our thanksgiving that it hath pleased him 1. So graciously to governe all things as hee doth to a good end 2. To give us grace to desire the same and to seeke it as well as many others 3. Further to assure our selves and soules of that his Kingdome so to be encreased perfected and consummate in his due time in us and others to the glory of his grace and power 29. What the third petition That Gods will may be done as readily by mee and all Gods people upon earth as by those blessed Saints and Angels in heaven where it is to be done with all joy courage and alacrity 30. What is the order of it After the desire of sanctifying Gods name and of the advancement of his Kingdome that in that Kingdom his will may be done by us and all men whereby better to be assured we are his subjects as well as those willing and ready Ministers of his Saints and Angels in heaven that his illustrious Kingdome of glory 31. What the parts The 1. Object the will of God 2. Action to be done or performed 3. Collimation of the action after the sublimed rule of Angels obedience and duty 32. What is the will of God Understood to be either his 1. Secret will which we are not to search into but he will see in due time and manner performed 2. His revealed will which is for us and other children which is required of us to be knowne and performed and so for us and our instruction revealed in his holy Word Law and Gospel a most sure and true record written for our remembrance 33. What the doing or performance of it Our holinesse in the 1. Faith knowing and beleeving it 2. Practice of good workes and obedience answerably to be thought on and proposed by us to be done as it is required at our hands by God and so herein professed obedience generally to Gods holy will and commandements and that in speciall sense as not only the actions but the heart and cogitations submitted to the performance thereof as in the last Commandement the very inmost cogitations of soule and thought to be reduced to this obedience and the love of God and thither tendeth that following collimation and direction 34. How is this that rule of direction or imitation In earth as it is in heaven understood either I. Improperly in 1. Our bodies and members that are earthly as well as in our soules and mindes that are heavenly 2. The lower parts and powers of our affections as well as higher power of will 3. Those that are yet uncalled as well as those that are called and already in the heaven of the Churches bosome and Kingdome of grace 4. In our owne selves endeavouring as in Christ to perfect the same II. Properly in earth by us that dwell in this world in the midst of many temptations and provocations to sin as well as by the inhabitants of heaven Saints and Angels free from all temptations and discouragements 35. How is it so done If as by them usually performed so we strive to doe it obeying both 1. Voluntarily which is with all our hearts willingly freely cheerfully readily without hypocrisie grudging repining murmuring griefe or delay 2. Totally endeavouring to his whole will for the matter of it manner of it every part of it so his will and not ours to the denying of our selves 3. Continually so with Constancie in our good intention Perseverance to the end and thus striving to perfection of obedience we yeeld true and sincere obedience which though in us imperfect when thus regulated by this perfect obedience and aiming at that perfection of Angels though not attaining unto it is accepted of God and so to the proportion of our ability here
O Lord take evill out of our wayes and remove all lying lips and deceitfull tongues and keep us from blasphemy and all cursed speaking and whatsoever may polute us or prophane thy holy and sacred Name that ought to be sanctified 4. In our thanksgiving for all graces reeceived so O Lord we remember those blessings bestowed on our souls that we doe desire thy glory or in any measure performe the same Others that O Lord many on earth doe with us sanctifie thy Name shewing thy praise and so consort with those holy Quires in the heaven that doe ever sing thy honour Our blessed hope of continuance for ever in that holy course of sanctifying thy name and that confidence of that thy grace 7. How in the second Petition 1. In our confession of Gods glory Thy kingdome O Lord is an everlasting Kingdome and thy dominion endureth throughout all ages and thou O Lord art King for evermore Our duty it is meet O Lord that wee should desire thy glory and advancement of thy Kingdome Our neglect but in stead thereof wee have neglected our duty and in too many things we lament our misdeeds rather promoted the kingdome of Satan 2. In our petition and intercession of us all that thy kingdome may come both by us and all people thy kingdome may bee desired and promoted and that thou wilt 1. Governe thy universall kingdome to thy glory and in the same erect 2. Enlarge and confirme thy kingdome of grace and thereby also 3. Perfect and hasten thy kingdome of glory for the good of us and all Saints 3. In our deprecation that O Lord thou wilt bee pleased to remove all impediments of thy kingdome in us and all others and destroy the kingdome of Satan and Antichrist 4. Thanksgiving for the 1. The advancement of thy kingdome O Lord both in thy universall government and guiding all things to thy glory and particularly in thy kingdome of grace for thy erecting increasing and restoring the kingdome of Christ and the Gospel 2. The blessed hope wee have of thy everlasting kingdome of glory in the heavens 8. How in the third Petition 1. In our confession of Gods great power and authority that thy will O Lord is the perfect rule of all right cousnesse and goodnesse and so worthy to be obeyed by all as for thy wills sake they had a being and all things are and were created Our duty that it is just and meet that we and all creatures should obey thy will and conforme our selves unto it In our defects that we have been too negligent and disobedient children and have gone astray from our mothers womb it is too apparant and we lament the same 2. In our requests and intercession for our selves and others Lord let thy secret will be done according to thy good pleasure and thy revealed will so likewise by us and all creatures with ready cheerfull and willing obedience here on earth as it is in heaven 3. Deprecation Remove O Lord all obstacles both of our stubborne and uncircumcised hearts and whatsoever is displeasing to thee either in us or the world as all sinne and disobedience 4. Thanksgiving for our selves and that measure of obedience which wee are enabled unto and for thy will accomplished in us for our good Others in the like sort that doe thy will or patiently suffer the same and that thy Saints doe it jo fully Our hope and assurance that it shall be fulfilled by us and in us to our comforts though lesse perspicuously here yet more perfectly hereafter in heaven 9. How in the fourth Petition 1. In our confession of 1. Gods bounty That thou O Lord openest thy hand and fillest all things living with good feedest the hungry the Lions and young Ravens that call upon thee clothest the Lillies and refreshest all things with thy goodnesse 2. Our duty to looke up to thee the spring of all comfort and fountaine of living waters 3. Our neglect that O Lord wee have been too neglective and undutifull we have not herein honoured thee wee have fallen from thee trusted to our strength and arme of flesh and uncertaine riches we bewaile our foolishnesse and offences II. In our request or petition and intercession for all other our necessities Give us this day our daily bread all necessaries for this life yea comfort both of body and soul spirituall and temporall food and blessings with comfort to eate our bread III. Deprecation of evill and famine O Lord to keep us from hunger and want from plague pestilence and famine from battell and murder and from sudden death and all other misery and wayes of the destroyer IV. Thankesgiving 1. For ourselves and others the peace plenty and prosperity wee enjoy our daily food and comforts received both temporall and spirituall of our souls and bodies 2. For our hope and assurance of his favour and continuance of all blessings that O Lord we and all that are thine may bee sure wee shall want no manner of thing that is good for body or soul and we doe therefore praise thee and will ever sing of thy mercies 10. How in the fifth Petition 1. Confession of Gods mercy That there is mercy with thee O Lord and plenteous redemption and therefore thou shalt be feared and thou O Lord onely canst absolutely forgive sinnes 2. Confession of our duty that we should flye to the shadow of thy wings for mercy to cover our transgressions and wee ought to forgive our enemies 3. Our neglects that 1. O Lord we have gone astray every way from thee and have not hearkened to thy law and we are miserable sinners 2. Our neglects that we have not sought thee or thy mercies betimes we have not repented as we ought we lament both our sinnes and unrepentance 3. Our neglects that wee have not been mercifull as wee ought to bee the better assured and prepared for mercy c. II. In our request and intercession Lord forgive us our trespasses our sinnes and ignorances our infirmities and presumptions our unrepentant and unmercifull behaviour as we desire that wee may have thy graces more freely hereafter to performe these things and so O Lord make us to forgive others that we may be forgiven III. Deprecation Take from us O Lord our hard and stony hearts and give us hearts of flesh that we may obey thee repent us of our sinnes and forgive others as wee hope for forgivenesse from thee remove sinne and all obstacles of mercy or penitence all unmercifulnesse and impenitence IV. Thanksgiving 1. For Gods mercies that thou O Lord art so ready to forgive more then we to ask 2. For his grace that hee hath promised and assured us his mercies in Christ and hath so forgiven sealed to us his forgivnes of our many misdeeds 3. For that measure of grace and repentance give us to fly from sin desire repentance shew mercy 4. For our hope and assurance of his mercies to our selves and others and all graces
s. 3 q. 37. vid. Name of God L Lawes and their soverall sorts p. 3. s. 1. q. 6. and Law how written ib. q. 42. Law and its use p. 4. s. 1. q. 10. Last ●udgement p. 2. s. 9. q. 5. Life and eternity vid. Everlasting life Long life how a blessing p. 3. s. 7. q. 62. Lords Supper parts and relat p. 5. s. 3. q. 4. the mysteriousnesse of it q. 38. c. ●igures and manner of it ib q 47. preparation to it ibid. s. 4. q. 20. Love of God p. 3. s. 3. q. 34 p. 3. s. 13 q 3. Love of neighbour ibid. Lying and falshood vide truth M Magistrates vi Parents Masters theirs and servants duties p. 3. s. 7. q. 38 Marriage p. 3. s. 9. q. 52. Member of Christ how p. 1. s. 3 q. 38. Mysterys of Religion vid. Sacraments and Lords supper Mystery of the Trinity vid. Trinity Mysterious names ●ehovah ●esus c. p. 5. s. 2. q. 76. c. Mystery of godlinesse ibidem Mystery of Iniquity vid. A●tichrist Morality of the law p. 3. s. 6. q. 28. s. 1 q. 25. Murther and the seuerall sorts p. 3. s. 8. q. 6. c. N Names and their use p. 1. s. 2. q. 17. Imposition and change of them ib. s. 2. q. 1 c. Name of God p. 3. s. 5. q. 5 c. p. 4. s. 4. q. 12. how ●hallowed or propha●ed ib. p. 5. s. 2. q. 75. name ●ehovah q. 79. Nativity of Christ miraculous p. 2. s. 5. q. 14. Necessity of Christs humanity p. 2. s. 5. q. 26. O Oaths and vowes p. 3. s 5. q. 25. Obedience active passive p. 4. s. 4. q. 44. Obedience and ●umiliation of Christ p. 2. s. 6. q 4. c. Obedience to Parents and Superiors p. 3. s. 7. q. 13 c. Oppression vid. Stealing Parents p 3. s. 67. q. 18. Passion and sufferings of Christ p. 2. s. 6. q. 27. c. Petitions and division of the Lords prayer p. 4 s. 3. q. 4 s. 4. q. 1. c. s. 8. q. 3. c. Polithisme vid. Atheisme Prayer and the parts p. 3. s. 4. q 34. p. 4. s. 2 q. 3. sorts and other requisites ibidem Preaching and other duties in Gods service p. 3. s. 4. q. 45. p. 5. s. 5. p. 33 ●uty of preachers and hearers Preface of the Law p. 3. s. 2. q. 4. c. other circumstances ibidem Profanes p. 3. s. 3 q. 32. Q Qualification and maner of true prayer p. 4 s. 2. q. 26. Quallity name and nature of the Beast vid. Antichrist R Religion what it is p. 1. s. 1. q. 37. and the truth of it p. 2. s. 2 q. 11. Resurrection and Assention of Christ p. 2. s. 8. q. 9. tipes of it ibid. Resurrection of the body p. 2. s. 12. q. 17. Repentance explained p. 1. s. 5. q. 32. p. 5. s. 2. q. 18. Requisites in Baptisme p. 5. s. 2. q. 27. c. Reverence and Devotion used in prayer p. 5. s. 2. q. 62. and in the church ibidem Robbery vid. stealing Rules for right expounding the law p. 3. s. 2. q. 36. p. 3. s. 57. q. 3. Rules and other requisites of Prayer p. 4. s. 2. q. 28. S Sabbath and sanctifying it p. 3. s. 6. per tot Sacrament p. 5. s. 1. q. 1. c. number and true use ibid. s. 1. q. 50. Sacriledge p. 3. s. 10. q. 33. Selfe murther p. 3. s. 8. q. 37. Servants vid. Masters Service of God and duties therein p. 3. s. 4. q. 44. p. 3. s. 6. q 62. Session of Christ in glory p. 2. s. 8 q. 46. c. and last judgement ibid. s 9. per tot Sins their severall sorts and divisions p 1. s. 4. q. 35. Sin against the holy Ghost p. 2. s. 10. q. 33. Slander vid. lying and Murther Sons of God vid. Father p. 2. s. 4. q. 47. p. 4 s. 3. q. 7. Soul murther vid. murther and lying State of nature and grace p. 4. s. 1. q. 18. Stealing p. 3 s. ●0 q. 9. c. Subjects their duties vid. Kings Sum of the Catechisme p. 1. s. 1. q. 42. p. 5. s. 5. q. 1. and use of it ibid Superiors vid. Parents Supper of the Lord p. 5. s. 3. q. 11. name and benefits p. 10. c. vid. Lords supper Swearing vid. Oathes T Tables of the law and their division p. 3. s. 3. q. 2. Temptations of divers sorts p. 4. s. 6. q. 3. Theft vid. Stealing Title of the Catechisme p. 1. s. 1. per tot Trinity of persons in the Godhead p. 2. s. 2. q. 31. and unity ibid. p. 2. s. 3. q. 20. Truth in charity p. 3. s. 11 q. 9. c. V Union vide Communion Vow vide Oathes Vow in Baptisme p 1. s. 4. q. 2. c. Use of the law p. 4. s. 1. q 9 W Word and will of God p. 1. s. 4 q. 71. p. 5. s. 5. q. 9 vide Bible Worldly vanities and lusts p 1 s 4 q. 50. Worship of God p 3. s. 4. q. 7. X. Initialis litera vacat tanquam nostris exotica and note xpus set for Christus and xpt for Christ generally so taken and is so generally mistaken being indeed the Greeke Chi Rho the first letters of the abreviation of the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christus a like mistake of some in H. supposed the lattin H. in the other name IHS being indeed the Greek Eta and so they the three first letters of the sacred name Iesus so abreviated Y Younger sort their duty p 3 s. 7 q 25 q. 35. Youth vid. children Z Zeal vid the love of God The Printer to the Reader Gentle Reader WHereas the Authour by reason of sicknesse and other infirmities could not be so present in assisting the Correction as he desired if any small Errata or mistakes have escaped our best vigilancie such as Instruction for Institution favour for savour or some particles as but and in wanting superabounding or set one for another it will be thy courtesie and ingenuity in reading to certifie and amend them the current of the sense as it were enforcing or shewing the true scope of the meaning there intended and as it is I doubt not but thou wilt be glad to peruse it and that with good contentation and comfort so that thou mayest reap both pleasure and profit by it is the hearty desire of him that wisheth thy best good Farewell FINIS