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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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not My Father A. 1. To signifie that all Christians must pray as Members of One Body and look for all their good comfort and blessedness in Union with the whole and not as in a separate State Nor must we come to God with selfish narrow Minds as thinking only of our own case and good nor put up any Prayer or Praise to God but as Members of the Universal Church in one Chore all seen and heard at once by God though they see not and hear not one another And therefore that we must abhor the pregnant comprehensive Sin of selfishness by which wicked Men care only for themselves and are affected with little but their Personal concerns as if they were all the World to themselves insensible of the Worlds or the Churches State and how it goeth with all others 2. And therefore that all Christians must love their Brethren and Neighbours as themselves and must abhor the Sin of Schism much more of Malignant Enmity Envy and Persecution and must be so far from disowning the Prayers of other Christians on pretense of their various Circumstances and Imperfections and from separating in Heart from them on any account for which God will not reject them as that they must never put up a Prayer or Praise but as in concord with all the Christians on Earth desiring a part in the Prayers of all and offering up hearty Prayers for all The imperfections of all Mens Prayers we must disown and most our own but not for that disown their Prayers nor our own They that hate or persecute or separate from Gods Children for not praying in their Mode or by their Book or in the Words that they write down for them or for not worshipping God with their Forms Ceremonies or Rites or that silence Christ's Ministers and scatter the Flocks and confound Kingdoms that they may be Lords of Gods Heritage and have all Men sing in their Commandded Tune or Worship God in their unnecessary Commanded Mode do condemn themselves when they say Our Father And to repeat the Lords Prayer many times in their Liturgy while they are tormenting his Children in their Prisons and Inquisitions is to worship God by repeating their own Condemnation Q. 13. It seems this Particle Our and Us is of treat importance A. The Lord's Prayer is the Summary and Rule of Mans Love and just Desires It directeth him what to Will Ask and Seek And therefore must needs contain that duty of Love which is the Heart of the New Creature and the fulfilling of the Law The Will is the Man And Love is the Will What a Man Wills and Loves that he is in God's account or that he shall attain And therefore the Love of God as God and of the Church as the Church and of Saints as Saints of Friends as Friends and of Neighbours as Neighbours and of Men though Enemies and Sinners as Men must needs be the very Spring of acceptable Prayer as well as the Love of our selves as our selves And to pray without this Love is to offer God a Carrion for Sacrifice or a lifeless sort of Service And Love to all makes all Mens Mercies and Comforts to be ours to our great Joy and that we may be thankful for all CHAP. XXV Hallowed be thy Name Qu. 1. WHy is this made the first Petition in ou● Prayers A. Because it containeth the highest Notion of ou● ultimate end And so must be the very top or chief o● our desires Q. 2. What is meant by God's Name here A. The proper Notices or Appearances of God t● Man and God himself as so notified and appearing t● us So that here we must see that we separate not any o● these three 1. The Objective signs whether words or works by which God is known to us 2. The inward Conceptions of God received by these signs 3. God himself so notified and conceived of Q. 3. And what is the Hallowing of Gods Name A. To use it Holily That is in that manner as is proper to God as he is God infinitely above all the Creatures That is Sanctified which is appropriated to God by separation from all common use Q. 4. What doth this Hallowing particularly include A. First that we know God what he is 2. That our Souls be accordingly affected towards him 3. That our lives and actions be accordingly managed 4. And that the signs which notifie God to us be accordingly reverenced and used to these Holy Ends. Q. 5. Tell us now particularly What these Signs or Names of God are and how each of them is to be hallowed A. God's Name is either 1. His sensible or intelligible works objectively considered 2. Or those words which signifie God or any thing proper to God 3. And the inward light or conception or notice of God in the mind And all these must be Sanctified Q. 6. What are God's works which must be so Sanctified as notifying God A. All that are within the reach of our knowledge But especially those which he hath designed most notably for this use and most legibly as it were written his Name or Perfections upon Q. 7. Which are those A. First The Glorious wondeful frame of Heaven and Earth 2. The wonderful work of Mans Redemption by Iesus Christ. 3. The planting of his Nature Image and Kingdom in Man by his Spirit 4. The marvellous Providence exercised for the World the Church and each of our selves notifying the disposal and Government of God 5. The Glory of the Heavenly Society known by Faith and hoped for Q. 8. How must the first God's Creation be Sanctified A. When we look on or think of the incomprehensible Glory of the Sun it 's wonderful Greatness Motion Light and quickning Heat of the multitude and magnitude of the glorious Stars of the vast heavenly Regions the incomprehensible invisible Spirits or Powers that actuate and rule them all when we come downward and think of the Aire and its Inhabitants and of this Earth a vast Body to us but as one Inch or Point in the whole Creation of the many Nations Animals Plants of wonderful Variety the terrible depths of the Ocean and its numerous Inhabitants c. All these must be to us but as the Glass which sheweth somewhat of the Face of God or as the Letters of this great Book of which God is the Sence or as the actions of a living Body by which the invisible Soul is known And as we study Arts for our Corporal use we must study the whole World even the Works of God to this purposed use that we may See Love Reverence and admire God in all And this is the only true Philosophy Astronomy Cosmography c. Q. 9. What is the Sin which is contrary to this A. Prophaneness that is using God's Name as a common thing And in this instance to study Philosophy Astronomy or any Science or any Creature whatsoever only to know the thing it self to delight our mind with
Joy to whom in this Unity God commnicateth his Glory and if we think not of the Glorious Head of the Church who will then be our Mediator of Fruition as he was of Acquisition nay if we think not of those loving blessed Angels that rejoiced at our Conversion and were here the Servants and will be for ever the Companions of our Joy And if we think not of all our old dear Friends and Companions in the Flesh and of all the Faithful who since Adam's Dayes are gone before us and if we think not of the attractive Love Union and Joy of that Society and State we shall not have sufficient Familiarity above but make God as inaccessible to us Delight and desire suppose attractive suitableness Inaccessible excellency draws not up the Heart I thank God for the Pleasure that I have in thinking of the Blessed Society which will shortly entertain me with joyful Love Q. 12. But may not Everlasting signifie only a long time as it oft doth in Scripture and so all may be in mutable Revolutions as the Stoicks and some others thought A. 1. What reason have we to extort a forced sence against our own Interest and Comfort without any warrant from God 2. The nature of the Soul being so far Immortal as to have no Inclination to its own death Why should we think it strange that its felicity should be also everlasting 3. It can hardly be conceived how that Soul can possibly revolt from God and perish who is once confirmed with that sight of his Glory and the full fruition of his Love Whether Nature be so bad as to allow such a revolt If the Devils had bin as near God and as much confirmed in the Sight and Sense of his Love and Glory as ●●e Blessed shall be I can hardly conceive how they could possibly have fallen Q. 13. How may I be sure that I shall enjoy this Everlasting Life A. I told you before 1. If you so far believe the Promise of it as made by God and purchased by Christ's Righteousness and Intercession as to take this Glory for your chief felicity and hope and to prefer it before all Worldly Vanity Pleasure Profit Honour or Life to the Flesh and to make it your chief care and business to seek it and rather let go all than lose it and thus patiently wait and trust God's Grace in Christ and his Spirit in the use of his appointed means unto the end it shall undoubtedly be yours for ever CHAP. XXIII What is the true use of the Lord's Prayer Qu. 1. WHat is Prayer A. It is Holy Desires expressed or actuated to God with Heart alone or also with the Tongue including our penitent Confession of sin and its Deserts and our thankful acknowledgment of his Mercies and our Praising God's works and his Perfections Q. 2. What is the Use of Prayer Seeing God cannot be changed and moved by us what good can it do us and how can it attain our ends A. You may as wisely ask what good any thing will do towards our Benefit or Salvation which we can do seeing nothing changeth God As God who is one maketh Multitudes of Creatures so God who is unchangeable maketh changeable Creatures and the Effect is wrought by changing us and not by changing God You must understand these great Philosophical Truths that 1. All things effect according to the Capacity of the Receiver 2. Therefore the various effects in the World proceed from the great variety of Receptive Capacities The same Sun-beams do cause a Nettle a Thorn a Rose a Cedar according to the seminal Capacity of the various Receivers The same Sun enlightneth the Eye that doth not so by the Hand or Foot or by a Tree or Stone And it shineth into the House whose Windows are open which doth not so when the Windows are shut and this without any change in it self The Boatman layeth hold on the Banck and pulls as if he would draw it to the Boat when he doth but draw the Boat to it Two wayes Prayer procureth the Blessing without making any Change in God First by our performing the condition on which God promiseth his Mercy Secondly By disposing our Souls to receive it He that doth not penitently confess his sin is unmeet for Pardon And he that desireth not Christ and Mercy is unmeet to be partaker of them And he that is utterly unthankful for what he hath received is unmeet for more Q. 3. Who made the Lords Prayer A. The Lord Iesus Christ himself as he made the Gospel some of the Matter being necessary yet before his Incarnation Q. 4. To whom and on what occasion did he make it A. To his Disciples to whom also he first delivered his Commands upon their request that he would teach them to pray Q. 5. To what Use did Christ make it them A. First To be a Directory for the Matter and Method of their Love Desires Hope and Voluntary choice and endeavours And 2. To be used in the same Words when their case required it As Man hath three Essential Faculties the Intellect Will and Vital executive Power so Religion hath three Essential parts viz. To direct our Understandings to believe our Will to desire and our Lives in practice Q. 6. What is the Matter of the Lord's Prayer in General A. It containeth First What we must desire as our End And Secondly What we must desire as the Means premising the necessary Preface and concluding with a suitable Conclusion Q. 7. What is the Method of the Lord's Prayer A. I. The Preface speaks 1. To God as God 2. As our reconciled Father in Christ described in his Attributes by the words which art in Heaven which signifie the Perfection of his Power Knowledge and Goodness and the Word Father signifieth that he is Supream Owner Ruler and Benefactor 2. The word Our implieth our Common Relation to him as his Creatures his Redeemed and Sanctified Ones his Own his Subjects and his Beneficiaries or Children II. The Petitions are of two sorts as the Commandments have two Tables The first proceed according to the order of Intention beginning at the highest Notion of the ultimate End and descending to the lowest The Second part is according to the Order of Execution and Assecution beginning at the lowest means and ascending to the highest III. The Conclusion enumerateth the parts of the ultimate End by way of Praise beginning at the lowest and ascending to the highest The Method throughout is more perfect than any of the Philosophers Writings Q. 8. Why do we not read that the Apostles after used this Prayer A. It is enough to read that Christ prescribed it them and that they were Obedient to him We read not of all that the Apostles did 2. This is a Comprehensive Summary of all Prayer and therefore must needs be brief in the several parts But the Apostles had occasion sometime for one branch and sometime for another on which they particularly
enlarged and Seldom put up the whole matter of Prayer all at once 3. They formed their Desires according to the Method of this Prayer though they expressed those deres as various occasions did require Q. 9. Is every Christian bound to say the Words of the Lords Prayer A. The same answer may serve as to the last Every Christian is bound to make it the Rule of his Desires and Hopes both for Matter and O●der But not to express them all in every Prayer But the Words themselves are apt and must have their due reverence and are very fit to summ up our scattered less ordered Requests Q. 10. But few Persons can understand what such generals comprehend A. 1. Generals are useful to those that cannot distinctly comprehend all the particulars in them As the General knowledg that we shall be happy in Holy and Heavenly Joy with Christ may comfort them that know not all in Heaven that makes up that happiness so a General desire may be effectual to our receiving many particulars 2. And it is not so General as God be merciful to me a Sinner an accepted Prayer of the Publican by Christs own Testimony There are six particular Heads there plainly expressed CHAP. XXIV Our Father which art in Heaven Expounded Qu. 1. WHo is it that we pray to whom we call Our Father A. GOD himself Q. 2. May we not pray to Creatures A. Yes for that which it belongeth to those Creatures to give us upon our request supposing they hear us But not for that which is Gods and not their own to give nor yet in a manner unsuitable to the Creatures Capacity or Place A Child may Petition his Father and a Subject his Prince and all Men one another Q. 3. May we not pray to the Son and the Holy Ghost as well as to the Father A. As the word Father signifieth God a● God it comprehendeth the Son and the Holy Ghost and as it signifieth the first Person in the Trinity it excludeth not but implyeth the second and the third Q. 4. What doth the word Father signifie A. That as a Father by Generation is the Owner the Ruler and the Loving Benefactor to his Child so is God eminently and transcendently to us Q. 5. To whom is God a Father and on what Fundamental account A. 1. He is a Father to all Men by Creation to all lapsed Mandkind by the Price of a sufficient Redemption But only to the Regenerate by Regeneration and Adoption and that effective Redemption which actually delivereth Men from Guilt Wrath Sin and Hell and Justifieth and Sanctifieth them and make● them Heirs of Glory Q. 6. What is included then in our Child-like relation to this Father A. That we are his own to be absolutely at his dispose his Subjects to be absolutely Ruled by him and his Beloved to depend on his Bounty and to love him above all and be happy in his Love Q. 7. What is meant by the words which art i● Heaven A. They signifie I. God's real Substantiality He is existent II. God's incomprehensible Perfection in Power Knowledge and Goodness and so his absolute sufficiency and fitness to hear and help us 1. The vastness Sublimity and Glory of the Heavens tell us that He who Reigneth there over all the World must needs be Omnipotent and want no power to do his will and help us in our need 2. The Glory and Sublimity tell us that he that is there above the Sun which shineth upon all the Earth doth behold all Creatures and see all the wayes of the Sons of Men and therefore knoweth all our Sins Wants and Dangers and heareth all our Prayers 3. Heaven is that most perfect Region whence al● good floweth down to Earth Our Life is thence our Light is thence all our Good and foretast of Felicity and Joy is thence And therefore the Lord o●… Heaven must needs be the Best the Fountain of a●… Good and the most amiable End of all just Desire and Love Yet Heaven is above our Sight and comprehension and so much more is God III. And the word Art signifieth God's Etemity in that Heavenly Glory It is not who wa st or who wilt be Eternity is indivisible Q. 8. Is not God every where Is he more in Heaven than any where else A. All Place and All things are in God He is absent from none Nor is his Essence divisible or Commensurate by Place or limited or more here than there But to us God is known by his Works and Appearances and therefore said to be most where he worketh most And so we say that God dwelleth in him who dwelleth in Love That he walketh in his Church that we are his Habitation by the Spirit that Christ and the Holy Spirit dwell in Believers Because they operate extraordinarily in them And so God is said to be in Heaven because he there manifesteth his Glory to the Felicity of all the Blessed and hath made Heaven that Throne of his Majesty from whence all Light and Life and Goodness all Mercy ●nd all Justice are communicated to and exercised on Men. And so we that cannot see God himself must ●ook up to the Throne of the Heavenly Glory in our Prayers Hopes and Joyes Even as a Mans Soul is undivided in all his Body and yet it worketh not alike ●● all its parts but it is in the Head that it useth Reason Sight c. and doth most notably appear to ●thers in the Face and is almost visible in the Eye ●nd therefore when you talk to a Man you look him ●● the Face and as you talk not to his Flesh but to his ●ensitive and intellectual Soul so you look to that art where it most apparently sheweth its sence and ●●tellection Q. 9. Is there no other Reason for the naming of Hea●en here A. Yes It teacheth us whither to direct our own desires and whence to expect all good and where our own Hope and Felicity is It is in Heaven that God is to be seen and enjoyed in Glory and in perfect Love and Joy Though God be on Earth he will not be our Felicity here on Earth every Prayer therefore should be the Souls aspiring and ascending towards Heaven and the believing exercise of a heavenly Mind and Desire For a Man of true Prayer to be unwilling to come to Heaven and to love Earth better is a contradiction Q. 10. But do we not pray that on Earth he may use us as a Father A. Yes that he will give us all Mercies on Earth conducing to heavenly Felicity Q. 11. What else is implyed in the word Our Father A. Our Redemption and Reconciliation by Christ and to the Regenerate our Regeneration by the Holy Ghost and so our Adoption by all which of Enemies and the Heirs of Hell we are made the Sons of God and Heirs of Heaven It is by Christ and his Spirit that we are the Children of God Q. 12. Why say we Our Father and
just we must defend them by all lawful means that is by Prayer to God by Argument by Petition to the King and by helping their Flight or hiding them And if a King would ravish or murder your Mother or Wife you may hold his hands while they escape as you may do if he would kill himself in Drunkenness or Passion But you may not on such private accounts raise a War against him because War is a publick action and under the Judgment of the publick Governour of the Common-wealth and not under the Judgment of your Parents or any private person Q. 13. But if the King Command me one thing and my Parents another which of them must I prefer in my obedience A. Each of them have their proper Office in which they must be preferred and obeyed Your Mother must be obeyed before the King in telling you when to Suck or Eat Your Parents must be obeyed before the King in matters proper to Family-Government as what daily Food you shall eat and what daily work for them you shall do and what Wife to choose c. But the King is to be obeyed before your Parents in all matters belonging to National Government Q. 14. But what if it be about Religious acts as what Pastor I shall choose What Church I shall joyn with how I shall spend the Lords day c. Must I prefer the King or my Parents in my Obedience A. While you are in your Minority and understand not the Kings Laws you must obey your Parents and if they command you any thing contrary to the Kings Commands they must be answerable for it as the Case shall prove some Commands about your Religion belong to your Parents and some to the King and they are accordingly to be obeyed It is not the Kings Office but your Parents to Catechize you to teach you to Read and Pray to choose your School-master or Tutor In these therefore your Parents are first to be obeyed And it is your Parents office to choose where you shall dwell and consequently to what Pastor you shall commit the conduct of your Soul And also how in the Family and in Private you shall spend the Lords day But the determination of all those publick Circumstances which are needful to be imposed on all Christians in the Land belongs not to your Parents but to the Supream Power Q. 15. But what if the King and the Bishops or Pastors differ about matters of Religion to be believed or done which of them must I obey A. If it be in things belonging to the Kings determination as what Translation shall be used in all the Churches when Synods shall meet who shall have the Tythes Glebe and Temples what National Fasts or Thanksgivings shall be kept and such like you must obey the King But if it be in things proper to the Pastoral Office as who shall be judged Capable of Raptisme or of the Lords Supper and Church-Communion Who shall be admonished ●xcommunicated or absolved by the Pastors what ●ext the Minister shall Preach on and on what ●ubject in what Method and in what Words what ●e shall say to troubled Consciences or to the sick ●r to others what words he shall use in Exhor●ation Prayer or Thanksgiving all these being part ●f the Pastors work you are to obey him in them all ●ut neither Prince nor Pastor have power against God Q. 16. But what if the Bishops or Pastors be di●●ded which of them must we obey A. 1. Those that obey Gods Laws 2. Those ●hat impose the safest course where the matter on ●ne side is no sin when on the other we fear it is ● All other things being equal those that are most ●●animous and concordant with the universality of Christians and the Primitive Church And our own Pastors rather than others And the Godly and ●minently wise before the ignorant and ungod●● Q. 17. But what if the Bishop or Pastor who is ●●er us differ from most in the Nation And if the National Bishops and Ministry differ from most other ●rreign Churches as England from France Spain ●●aly Germany Moscovy the Greeks Armenians ●●assines A. The things in which the difference is supposed must not be thus confounded either they are necessary points of Faith or Practice to all Christians in order to Salvation 2. Or else they are controverted Opinions not so necessary 3. Or else they are matters of local occasional mutable practice 1. As to the first All true Christians are agreed in all things necessary to our Common Salvation ●… any oppose these and draw men from the Church on that account he is a Heretick In this case God● Law must be known to us all to which we must stick whoever gainsay it 2. In the second case of disputable less necessary Opinions we must suspend our judgements ti●… evidence determine them But judge them most probably to be in the right who are in those matter discerned commonly to have greatest skill and sincerity But the Ignorant cannot subscribe to any o● them in the dark 3. In the third case as what Time and Plac●… we shall meet at what Subject we shall hear wha●… Catechism-questions we shall answer when we sha●… Communicate and with what individual Persons i●… what words the Assembly shall pray and praise God●… c. we are to obey our own Pastors and no●… Strangers As every Wife is to be governed by he●… own Husband and every Child by his own Parent●… and every Servant by his own Master I scarce thin●… our Papists Monarchical or Aristocratical woul●… have an universal Husband Parent or Master or ●… Council of Husbands Parents or Masters of all th●… World or all the Kingdom set up for such acts ●… these Q. 18. But is there no Command to Parents Prin●… and Pastors for their duty as well as to Chil●…n and Subjects for theirs A. The Commandements written on stone were ●…cessarily brief and the duty of Rulers is here im●…yed and included Q. 19. What is the duty of Parents for their ●…ldren A. 1. To take due care of their Lives Health and ●…cessary Maintenance 2. To teach them when ●…ey are capable to know God and his Word his Do●…ine Laws Promises and Penalties to know ●…emselves their Souls their Relation to God their ●…ty to him their Original pravity and guilt and ●…nger To know Jesus Christ his Person Life ●…octrine Death Resurrection Ascension Glory ●…ngdom Intercession and Judgment To know ●…e Holy Ghost as sent by Christ to indite and ●…l the Scripture qualifie the Apostles and Evan●…lists to deliver infallibly Christs Commands and ●…ord them to all after Ages and accordingly set●… the Churches to confirm their Ministry by Mi●…les and to sanctifie all true Christians to the end ●… the world To know the use of the ordinary ●…nistry and of the Communion of Saints To know ●… Covenant of Grace and the Grace of Pardon ●…option and Sanctification which we