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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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and Impassible and such like For the proof of his Divine Nature or that the Eternal Son called The Word is another Nature from the Flesh taken and a subsistence even before the Flesh born of the Virgin reade Joh. 1.14 Heb. 2.14 16. 1 Joh. 4.2 who being in the form of God took on him the form of a Servant Phil. 2.6 In the Beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and that Word was God Joh. 1.1 Many other are the quotations of Scripture to prove his Divine Nature as Psal 2.7 Acts 13.33 Heb. 1.5 Joh. 17.3 Matth. 1.23 Heb. 1.3 Joh. 2.19 1 Tim. 3.16 Joh. 6.51 1 Pet. 3.19 as also his Humane Nature Rom. 1.3 9.5 Luke 1.31 Heb. 2.11 Luke 1.42 2.7 Gal. 4.4 3.16 Heb. 2.16 Mat. 26.38 Luke 2.52 Joh. 10.18 Luke 23.46 1 Cor. 15.21 Eph. 5.30 4.12 16. Joh. 5.56 Rom. 8.11 Gen. 3.15 49.10 Isa 7.14 Matth. 10.18 23. Luke 1.27 31 34. 2.40 Mat. 4.2 Joh. 4.7 19.41 Mark 4.38 Mat. 27.50 Mark 15.37 Luke 23.46 Joh. 19.30 33. 2. That these two Natures make but one person in Christ or that in Christ are two perfect Natures whole and distinct and double properties also and operations natural but one person for it was requisite that one and the same should be Mediator both by Merit and by Power But they who make two persons make also two Christs with Nestorius the one a Man passive and crucified the other God not crucified and onely assisting the Man Christ by his Grace But this Heresie hath been long since confuted and condemned And that the Divine and Humane Natures of Christ are united in one person accordeth with the holy Scripture Joh. 1.14 Mat. 3.17 Eph. 4.10 1 Tim. 2.5 6. for his Humane Nature was at once both formed and assumed of the Word into unity of person and made proper unto the Word before or without which assumption or personal union it neither was nor had been nor should be Some Hereticks of old have proudly said That of the substance of the blessed Maid Christs flesh ne're formed was but that 't was brought Down from Heav'n into her womb others thought He had not true and real flesh indeed But in appearance onely Be 't our Creed To believe he was true God true Man one Onely natural Son of God alone Two Natures whole perfect distinct to be One undivided personality §. 5. Suffered under Pontius Pilate was Crucified Dead and Buried He descended into Hell THis Pontius Pilate was a Heathen Judge set over the Province of the Jews by the Roman Emperor under whose Government Christ began to execute his office for which he was sent and continuing therein and working Miracles was spitefully entreated of the wicked Jews for the space of three years and upward then villanously betrayed by one of his Disciples apprehended abused and crucified being full Thirty three years of Age and upward though his certain Age is not infallibly set down by any Dead that is On the Cross he gave up the ghost was after pierced to the very heart so that water and blood came out and being found certainly dead he had not his legs broken as theirs were who had been crucified with him And Buried that is for the more certainty that his Spirit was departed out of his body and as for the confirmation of his death so for the mystery of our not onely death but burial unto sin figured thereby he was taken down from the Cross and laid in the Grave or Sepulchre Now it is one thing to believe that Christ suffered another to believe in Christ which suffered for that is onely to have an Historical Faith of Christs Passion without reposing any confidence therein but this is to believe not onely that Christ suffered but also to repose and place our trust and confidence in Christs Suffering and Passion For the right apprehension of the suffering of Christ being God-Man know That the Deity simply considered in it self and by it self could not dye but that person which was God both could and did dye For the Son of God assuming an Humane Nature unto the Unity of his Divine Nature and uniting them together without confusion alteration distraction separation in one person that which is done by the one Nature is done by the person in which respect the Scripture often attributeth the Suffering of Christ to the other Nature 1 Cor. 2.8 Acts 20.28 And though the Divine Nature of Christ suffered not yet did it support the Humane Nature and added dignity worth and efficacy to the suffering of that Nature yea it had also proper and peculiar works as to Sanctifie his Humane Nature to take away our sins to reconcile us to God and the like And this must be cautiously observed by us for a Rule That Christ is not dead for us except we be dead to sin neither is he risen again for us except we be risen again to newness of life And take this for a most sure Principle That we are not Redeemed except we be Sanctified for he did not Redeem us from sin that we should commit it afresh and serve it again It is one thing to know that Christ dyed another thing that he dyed for us and it is one thing to discourse passionately of his death another to feel the operation thereof within us Labor therefore to be so affected therewith as that it may effectually prove thy death unto sin Christ descended into Hell for us when after the very time of his Passion he continued for a time in the state of the Dead and was under the power of the Grave This Article of Christs Descension into Hell is to be understood of the Grave not of his Souls going down locally into the place of the Damned not onely of those inexpressible yea unconceiveable torments which he suffered in his Soul under the eclipse of Gods favor yea under the fearful wrath of God which though in respect of us was to be eternal in him was made temporary having end because himself is Eternal and Infinite So that to believe in Jesus Christ which descended into Hell is to believe that Christ was for a time in the state of the Dead and held under the power of the Grave To believe in Christ which suffered is to believe 1. That Christ from the very moment of his conception sustained calamities and miseries of all sorts for my sake 2. That at that his last time he suffered all the most bitter torments both of body and soul for my sake 3. That he felt the horrible and dreadful wrath of God whereby to make recompence for mine and others sins and to appease his wrath against Mankinde Mention is made of Pilate in Christs Passion for these Reasons 1. Because Christ would receive from the Judge himself a Testimony of his Innocency 2. Because it was requisite he should be solemnly condemned that all the world might know that he though innocent was condemned
when the proper gifts or blessings of the faithful are augmented with perpetual encrease in the godly or converted Rev. 22.11 4. By Consummation or full accomplishment when the godly shall be glorified at the second coming of our Lord. We ought to desire that the Kingdom of God may come for these Reasons specially 1. For the glory of God or in respect of the first Petion because that we may sanctifie and hallow his Name it is required that he Rule us by his Word and Spirit 2. Because God will give his Kingdom onely to those that ask it The wants we are to bewail taught us in this Petition concern either our selves or others 1. We must lament and mourn for our own miserable estate by Nature whereby we are the servants of Sin and so in bondage and thraldom thereto Joh. 8.34 And the best of us do but weakly yield to Christs Scepter and where Sin raigneth there the Devil hath dominion 2. We must bewail the sins of all the world in the transgression of Gods Law whereby God is dishonored his Kingdom hindred and the Kingdom of Darkness furthered We must therefore bewail that there be so many hinderers of Gods Kingdom as namely the Flesh to infect the World to allure the Devil to seduce Antichrist to withdraw the Turk to withstand and the Wicked to trouble men that should be Subjects of this Kingdom Pray therefore Thy Kingdom come The helps which further Gods kingdom and are to be desired of us viz. 1. The Preaching of the Gospel and all other divine Ordinances whereby Gods Kingdom is erected and maintained that they may be where they are not and may be blessed where they are vouchsafed and herein for godly Magistrates and faithful Ministers 2. That God would enlighten the eyes of our mindes that we may see the wonders of his Law that so the Lords ordinances may be blessed unto us 3. That we may be wholly subject unto Christ and that of Conscience not onely in our outward behavior but in minde heart will and in all our affections that we may grow in grace and in the saving knowledge of Christ Jesus 4. We must desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ in the Kingdom of glory for this end that we may make an end of sinning and become more obedient Subjects unto Christ yea wholly ruled by him though for the good of others we must be content to live 5. That both by the hour of death and by the coming of Christ to Judgement this Kingdom in us and all Gods chosen may be accomplished that Satan being trodden under our feet and the power of death destroyed God may be all in all 1 Cor. 15.28 6. That Christ would come in Judgement when all things shall be subdued unto God and all his obedient Subjects shall be fully glorified This we may desire in heart though we must leave the time to Gods good will and pleasure still waiting for it by faith in his Promise 7. That God would enlarge his Sanctuary here on earth gather his elect more and more and still defend and maintain his Church in every place in the world when these desires affect our souls then do we truly say Thy Kingdom come The duties to be practised by us that Gods Kingdom may come viz. 1. We must labor for true humiliation and conversion else we cannot enter into the Kingdom Matth. 8.3 Joh. 3.5 nay otherwise we do but mock God by saying well and doing nothing 2. We must be careful to bring forth the fruits of Gods Kingdom which are Righteousness Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 3. We must hence learn to be contented in all estates of this life whatsoever the hope of this Kingdom which we here pray for must swallow up all the sorrows that earthly calamities can bring upon us Luke 12.32 4. We must all labor in our places and callings to bring one another into this kingdom one neighbor another and one friend another Ezc. 18.30 5. Hence we must learn every day to prepare our selves to dye for by death our souls enter into the glory of this Kingdom which we pray may come unto us whence appears the monstrous hypocrisie of the world whose practice flatly contradicts their prayer Of this Petition 1. The Supplication is for the continuance of Gods gracious Providence over his general kingdom and of all good means and furtherances of his special kingdom his Church 2. The Deprecation is against all impediments and lets of Gods general kingdom as Anarchy Tyranny wicked Laws c. and against all hinderances of his special kingdom as Toleration of Idolatry Heresie Ignorance Idleness Infidelity Impenitency Hardness of heart c. 3. The Thanksgiving is for the Lords exercising his kingdom in the right ordering of the world punishing the wicked rewarding the godly spreading the glorious beams of his Word enlarging his kingdom for worthy Magistrates and faithful Ministers for Faith and all Spiritual graces In this glass we read the superstitious vanity of ignorant souls The rotten hypocrisie of formal Professors The cursed Rebellion of prophane worldlings The Antichristian Tyranny of Idolatrous Papists All which as we tender the Soveraign Power of Christs Scepter the Prerogative of his Royalty and the eternal happiness of our own Souls let us carefully avoid as by making it the language of our hearts so the loyalty of our whole lives to practice Thy Kingdom come A new-hatch'd old-laid Heresie appears That here on Earth yet full One thousand years Christs Kingdom is to come and triumph shall With all his Saints in Pomp Majestical Fond Dreamers Call ye this Terrestrial Which figures that which is Spiritual Raign in our hearts O Lord Protect augment Thy Church This is thy proper Regiment Cast down thine Enemies Compleat the sum Of thine Elect So let Thy Kingdom come §. 7. Thy Will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven THis Petition in order followeth Thy Kingdom come to shew That where Gods kingdom is set up his will is endeavored after and preferred always and not our own will It depends indeed on both the former Petitions for Gods Name is hallowed when his will is done and his kingdom comes when by doing his will we testifie our selves his obedient Subjects Wherein we desire that we and all the people of God upon earth may as readily obey Gods will as the Angels and Saints in heaven So that this Petition is propounded in a Comparison the former part whereof respects the grace of Obedience which we pray for the other the right maner of performing it wherein we must note That this particle As doth not betoken the degree but the kinde of doing Gods will which is the beginning of performing Gods will with continuance and encrease thereof not the Consummation perfection and full accomplishment thereof which yet we are to desire here that at length we may obtain it which though it be impossible in this life yet are we
same 2. By the rightly pacified Conscience which is done by Faith in the heart And the Peace here meant is such a Peace as cometh after War after conflicts for sin after knowledge of Gods displeasure with thee after the sense hereof and after all this a knowledge of Reconciliation again Now many in an evil estate live and dye peaceably but deceive not thy self that is onely because they were never acquainted with the Doctrine of Justification and Sanctification because they never saw the danger for to be sure that I am free from a danger and not to know a danger is all one and doth breed a like confidence and security Thus as it is a great mercy to have a true and sound Peace so to have a Peace not well grounded and bottom'd is the most dangerous Judgement in the world That thou mayest therefore the better judge whether thou hast this Sign of the forgiveness of thy sin know That this Peace is threefold 1. With God properly called Reconciliation God in Christ at one with Man Man through Christ at one with God 2. With our selves when the conscience sanctified ceaseth to accuse and the affections subject themselves to the enlightened minde 3. With our Christian Brethren Arguments to perswade us of the forgivenes of our sins if we come unto Christ 1. By the Scripture-expressions so frequently ratifying this Truth 2. By Christs Practice when he was on earth 3. Otherwise Christs Blood should be shed in vain 4. By the Example of others pardoned 5. Else no flesh should be saved 6. God should not else be worshipped and served 7. By the infiniteness of Gods Mercy The universality of Gods Promises touching the forgiveness of sins is threefold 1. Without exception of Time for At what time soever a sinner shall repent him of his sins I will put away his iniquity saith the Lord. 2. Without exception of sins for Albeit your sins were as scarlet they shall be made as white as snow Isa 1. 3. Without exception of person for Whosoever shall depart from his wicked ways and turn unto God he will receive him The Duties to be performed of us in believing the forgiveness of sins to the faithful viz. 1. To pray unto God earnestly every day above all things of this world for the pardon of our sins because this is so great and wonderful a grace 2. To love the Lord and our Savior Jesus Christ with all our hearts and with all our might because God is the Author of this great grace Christ Jesus hath merited the same for us 3. To break off all our sins by Righteousness and not continue any longer therein because we have been enough endangered through sin and are still in the same danger if we continue in it 4. Not to have in any account the Popes Indulgence for sins but to abhor his Blasphemous Pardon for them seeing this is in Gods power onely Four Grounds of possibility of Pardon be the sin never so great 1. That the Mercy of God is infinite yea above all his Works 2. Men of years living in the Church of God and knowing the Doctrine of Salvation shall not be condemned simply for their sins but for continuing and lying in them 3. It pleaseth God many times to leave men to themselves and to suffer them to commit some sin that woundeth Conscience but yet we may not hence think that he is the Author thereof but our own depraved Nature 4. The Promises of God touching Remission of sins and life eternal in respect of Believers are general and in regard of all and every man indefinite This Doctrine of forgiveness of sins doth teach us 1. To acknowledge our selves before God to be grievous sinners to have godly sorrow for them and to seek pardon by daily Prayer for the forgiveness of them 2. To have a circumspect care and fear not to offend God at any time yea a most earnest desire to please him better then we have done Psal 103.3 4. Joh. 5.14 3. To return all praise and thankfulness to God for this so infinite Mercy which appeareth in nothing more then in the forgiveness of our sins 4. To shew back again our love toward our heavenly Father according to the measure of his love towards us the greater sins he hath pardoned the greater love should be returned 5. That the receiving of this Mercy from God must work in us mercy towards our brethren Luke 6.36 Eph. 4.32 Col. 3.13 The sum of this Article may be this Remission of sin is Gods Will not imputing to the Elect to all of them and to them onely their sins but Christs Righteousness which Remission of sins is the work of all three Persons of the Deity granted for Christs Intercession and Merit but freely in respect of us and is received by Faith through the working of the Holy Ghost upon our Conversion and Repentance You that are skill'd in Physiognomy Have ye observ'd in men Condemn'd to dye How to the life they do resemble Death Or 's if they liv'd by Artificial breath But travelling to their Execution say A Pardon overtakes them in the way How then the Scene is alter'd they survive Themselves and seem to be now twice alive Draw the Curtain Reade The Gospel saith The Pardon 's seal'd and it is ours by Faith §. 12. The Resurrection of the Body THe Resurrection of the Flesh is a restoring of the substance of our Bodies after Death even of the same matter whereof they now consist and a reviving and quickning of the same bodies with life incorruptible by the same Immortal Soul whereby they now live which God will work by Christ in the end of the world by his Divine Vertue and Power which restoring also shall be of the Elect unto the Eternal Glory of God but of the Reprobate unto Eternal Pains Thus although the body after death lie rotting in the Grave yet at the last day it shall be raised again by Gods great Power and being joyned to the Soul shall stand before Gods Judgement Seat to give account of all it hath done whether good or evil and be rewarded accordingly When Christ as Man for thus onely he can remove from place to place his Godhead ever filling all places shall come down visibly and openly with great Glory and Troops of Angels about him to Judge those that shall be then living for the world shall be full of people even to the hour of his coming and then the Dead being raised out of their Graves even all from the first Adam shall be joyned with the living who shall onely in stead of dying be changed and thus all people together of all Countreys and Nations shall be presented before his Tribunal to receive Sentence according to the Equity yea and Justice of his Gospel whether of Absolution to pass into the Kingdom of his Father or of Condemnation into the Kingdom of Hell with the Devil and his Angels for ever Now though amongst those
any man in thought conceived it 1 Cor. 2.9 and which life we begin to live the soul entreth into it at the time of every faithful ones bodily death and the body also at the time of the general Resurrection for there is no sleeping of the soul as some dream neither any other place to keep it in nor ever was To believe everlasting life is to be assuredly and certainly perswaded 1. That after this life there shall be also a life wherein the Church shall be glorified and God magnified of her everlastingly 2. That I also am a Member of this Church and therefore partaker of everlasting life 3. That I also in this life have and enjoy the beginning of life eternal Life is three-fold 1. Of Nature wherein the good and bad promiscuously live together 2. Of Grace wherein onely the Sons of God in the Spiritual Kingdom of Christ live in this life it is the same with that death whereby they dye to sin 3. Of Glory in the blessed presence of God for ever Contrary to that death wherewith the bodies and souls of the wicked shall be tormented eternally That is Everlasting 1. Which hath neither beginning nor ending So God is everlasting 2. Which hath no beginning but hath an ending So the Decrees of God 3. Which hath a beginning but shall have no end as everlasting life Three degrees of eternal life 1. In this world when we begin to repent and believe in Christ and have true peace of Conscience 2. In death for that cuts off all sins both Original and Actual 3. When body and soul reunited go both together into everlasting Glory We may claim to our selves everlasting life by a double Right through Christ viz. 1. Because for us he hath fulfilled the whole Law 2. By Right of Inheritance for Christ being made ours we are the children of God Rom. 8.17 How far we are in this life made partakers of heaven and everlasting life 1. The purchase of it is made for Christ by his Blood hath purchased it 2. We have received the first-fruits of it as Peace of Conscience Joy in the Holy Ghost free access unto the Throne of Grace with confidence in Christ and the like 3. We are actually entred into the Kingdom of Grace which is the beginning and a part of the Kingdom of Glory 4. We have the earnest of the Spirit as a Pledge and Pawn till we come to the full possession of the purchased Inheritance 5. Christ our Head hath full and actual possession whereupon we being Members of his body are in him exalted and set in heavenly places In this life not onely we may but we ought also to be assured of everlasting life otherwise we shall never have it And we may thus by these infallible signs be assured of it viz. 1. By Faith by a full perswasion of the good will of God towards us 2. By the beginning of true Repentance 3. By the Peace of Conscience by a desire of and joy in God Eternal life is called a Rest and that for these two Reasons 1. Because then and there we shall Rest from all our works that is from our sins for then we shall sin no more but shall know God even as we are known 2. We shall Rest from all troubles and miseries of this life Rev. 14.13 hence it is called Abrahams bosom Luke 16.22 23. which in the faithful is even in this life begun by the outward Ministery of the Word and the inward Ministery of the Spirit the consummation whereof hereafter shall never be given to whom the beginning thereof that is Faith and Conversion hath not arrived in this life The life of Life Everlasting is the Beatifical Vision or the perfect Vision of God when Gods Elect shall see him as he is 1 Joh. 3.2 Yet that we be not deceived herein we must know that perfect sight is twofold viz. 1. Simple Perfect Sight when man sees a thing wholly as it is in it self and thus God is not seen by the minde of man 2. Comprehensive Perfect Sight when the creature seeth God so far forth as it is capable of his knowledge and thus shall men see God in the world to come perfectly and be filled therewith though they know him not wholly as he is in himself even as a vessel cast into the Sea may be perfectly full of water though it receive not all the water in the Sea The duties of this faith are these 1. Carefully to break off those sins the doers of which are expresly threatned that they shall never enter into the Kingdom of Heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 10. Gal. 5.19 2. To strive to enter and to walk on in the way that leadeth to everlasting life and never to go out of it to our dying day and this is the way of good works Joh. 5.29 3. To use the remembrance of eternal life as a salve against all sores as a Cordial to comfort our hearts against our greatest heaviness 4. To pray that this time might be hastned wherein we shall enter into life and even to rejoyce when we see it approach to any of us in particular Amen signifying verily certainly or undoubtedly is added for these Reasons 1. To shew that we do not in word onely believe those things whereof we have made confession but from our very hearts 2. Not waveringly but certainly and without doubting 3. Not as if we were secure for our firm and stedfast belief of these things but earnestly craving this Faith at the hands of God and thus it is as much as So be it Amen in the close of our Prayers as well as of this Confession doth not onely express our desire of the things we ask but also testifies our Faith in assurance of Receiving them according to our lawful desire So that it is not here to be taken as it is commonly onely for a bare assent of the people answering the Minister in the Congregation but as a declaration of Faith both in Minister and People Here words are of no use expressions vain The humblest fancy a presumptuous strain Bright Cherubins a Quill from off your Wings Might reach this Note which should the low-tun'd strings Of Mortal Tongues endeavor to express Would if 't were possible but strain it less And though the blessed Musick of your Quire We cannot understand we may admire Mean-while our Faith shall rest in Hope in this That know we shall when we enjoy your Bliss CHAP. V. §. 1. The Decalogue THe Commandments were given about Two thousand five hundred years after the Creation not that men were left all this time without Law for there was a Law written in their hearts Rom. 2.14 but to make that more plain which by the corruption of Nature was become very dim and much defaced so that as long as men have been there hath also been a Law although not expressed in words yet written in the heart wherefore if it be well observed we shall finde
and Traditions are ordinarily better observed and more regarded then this Commandment of God The people indeed would rather go to Church then to work but to carnal Delights and Recreations rather then either forgetting the Memento wherewith the Lord more specially commands as well due preparation before as unsophisticate performance in the actual celebration of this holiest of days Such as make no conscience to take the Lords day from him are Spiritual Thieves and meddle with that which is not their own never considering the wrong and injury that they offer unto the Almighty God rested on the Seventh day that is he ceased to create any New parts of the World as being now perfect and such as he would have it to be Good Reason therefore had the Lord of this day on pain of Eternal death of Body and Soul in Hell the place of the Damned strictly to charge and command that every Soul keep this whole day holy to his glory How dares then any creature-Man think his own thoughts speak his own words or do his own works on this glorious day Isa 58.13 the Lords own holy day He that walks away this day in vain Discourse idle Pastimes and sinful Recreations steps every step he thus prophanely steps one step forward to Eternal Death He that gathered but Sticks thereon was stoned to death because he had not kept that Statute which God had enacted as by solemn Proclamation That all sorts that profess themselves his Servants should wait upon him on the Sabbath It was Christs own custom to preach the Gospel in the Synagogues on this day so also the Disciples Acts 20.17 17.1 2. 1 Cor. 16.11 The Doors of the Temple were shut the six days but opened from morning until the evening upon the Seventh day Ezek. 46.1 2. And this sanctifying of the Lords day is a Moral Duty and bindes perpetually otherwise we should have but Nine Commandments whereas they are often called the Ten Words Exod. 34.28 Deut. 14.13 10.4 And Christ came not to destroy but to fulfil and keep the Law Mat. 5.17 Know then we may not make this day a day of vain pleasures and carnal delights a day of Sports and Recreations thinking it sufficient if we follow not the works of our Calling neither may we on this day go or ride about our worldly matters to buy bargain sell and talk with others robbing God of his day to spare one of our own neither is it sufficient to observe onely so much of this day as is enjoyned by Laws and Injunctions of men and prophane the rest of it thereby dividing the Lords day between God and our selves And every sin is so much the greater by how much less the thing is for which men sin I say the less the thing is for which a man will sin and transgress the Law of God the greater always is his sin because the greater is his contempt of God Thus was it with him that gathered Sticks on the Sabbath day and was stoned to death for his pains And thus it is with such as recreate away the Sabbath by walking the Fields who offend God more therein then he that worketh thereon in his Calling for his Necessity Yet here by the way we are to beware of a Jewish Superstition which Christ often refutes in the Gospel that is to think it unlawful to perform on the Sabbath day whatsoever works belonging to the necessity either of his own life or of others for by the end of the Commandment it appears That such works onely are forbidden as hinder the Exercise of the Ministery of Gods Word The parts of this Commandment are two viz. 1. The Commandment That the Sabbath be sanctified that is that it self viz. the Seventh day be allotted for Gods Service Gen. 2.3 Exod. 20.11 16.26 20.10 2. The Reason of the Commandment drawn from Gods Rest on the Seventh day after the Creation and his hallowing thereof Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day that is with great care and Religion and that for these Reasons 1. Because the breach and violating of the Sabbath is the breach and violating of the whole Worship of God for the neglect of the Ministery soon corrupts the whole Doctrine and Worship of God 2. Because by the exacting of this Typical Sabbath God would signifie the greatness and necessity of the Spiritual Sabbath 3. Because God will have the external Sabbath to serve for the beginning and perfecting of the Spiritual Sabbath in us In this Commandment we are commanded to keep holy the Sabbath day which is done 1. By preparing our selves by Prayer and emptying our hearts of sin 2. By assembling together to Pray unto God to Praise him to hear his holy Word and to Receive the blessed Sacraments 3. By meditating upon Gods Works and the Word which we have heard suffering it so to work in us as that we may be furthered in all holiness of life 4. By collecting and distributing to the Poor by visting the sick and reconciling dissentions among Neighbors In this Commandment is forbidden all Prophaning of the Sabbath which is 1. By doing worldly works which are not of present necessity by journeying about worldly Affairs idle resting or absenting our selves from the publike Duties of Gods Word and Worship 2. By forgetfulness of the Sabbath upon the six days by which we often bring upon our selves a necessity of prophaning the same 3. When being Parents or Governors we leave such as are under our charge to their liberty upon that day The Reasons of this Commandment are 1. Partly expressed therein and are taken 1. From the Lords Example who rested the Seventh day from all his works of Creation 2. From his Blessing inseparably linked unto the hallowing of this day 2. Partly enfolded therein are these 1. The Law of the Sabbath is Ancient and was of force in Paradice before Mans Fall 2. Because it is most Equal the Lord allowing us six days to labor in 3. Because the Seventh is the Lords peculiar day so that without Sacriledge we cannot any way prophane it God will have all our children and family to cease from their labors on this day for two causes 1. That these also may be brought up by their Parents and Masters in the service of God and may be admitted unto the Ministery of the Church 2. Because he will have especially on the Sabbath day Love and Bountifulness towards our Neighbors to be shewed and seen in the Church Strangers also are commanded to intermit their labors and that if they were converted to true Religion because they were of the houshold of the Church if they were Infidels it is commanded them not in respect of themselves but in respect of the Israelites and that especially for these two Reasons 1. Lest by their ill Example they should give offence unto the Church 2. Lest their liberty might be an occasion to the Jews to accomplish by them those labors which it was
Leaving man to the liberty and mutability of his own Will not hindring his Fall by supply of Grace and by Satans Tempting who being himself faln and envying Gods Glory and Mans Happiness subtilly addressed himself in the Serpents shape 3. Mans Yielding who being left to the mutability of his own Will voluntarily enclined to that evil whereunto he was tempted The Sins committed in the first Sin of Adam viz. 1. Discontent in not being contented with that estate wherein he was placed 2. Pride against God Ambition and an Admiration of himself 3. Incredulity Unbelief and Contempt of Gods Justice and Mercy 4. Stubbornness and Disobedience even when there was but one Commandment and man qualified to keep it 5. Unthankfulness for Benefits received at his Creation 6. To his Posterity Unnaturalness Injustice and Cruelty 7. Apostacy or manifest Defection from God to the Devil whom he obeyed and believed Man through the Devils instigation was the first Author of Sin the true Cause thereof therefore God is not the Author of Sin 1. Because he is of his own Nature Good the Chief Good no evil thing then can proceed from him 2. It is written Gen. 1.31 All that God had made was very good 3. The Law of God condemneth all evil things and commandeth all that is good 4. He were unjust if he should punish Sin in man if himself were the Author of it 5. The Description of Sin is a destruction of the Image of God in man 6. The many places in Scripture to the contrary Psal 5. Jam. 1. Eccl. 15. Rom. 3. The Causes of Gods Permission of the first Sin viz. 1. To shew his Justice and Power to the Wicked and his Mercy to the Chosen Rom. 11.32 Gal. 3.22 2. That it might stand for an Example of the weakness and infirmity of the Creatures even the most excellent of all the rest The greatness of Adams sin viz. 1. He regarded not the Promise of God whereby he was willed to hope for Everlasting Life 2. He despised the Commandment of God restraining him from the forbidden Fruit. 3. He brake out into horrible Pride and Ambition whereby he would be equal unto God and seek an estate higher then that wherein he had set him though it were most excellent 4. He shewed an unfaithful Heart to depart away from the living God his Creator so that he did not believe or not regard the Threatning of God that he should dye if he sinned 5. He brake out into foul and fearful Apostacy from God to the Devil from his Maker to the Tempter giving more credit to the Father of Lyes then to the God of all Truth of whose Goodness he had such great Experience Other Sins in Adams sin of eating the forbidden Fruit 1. Disloyalty in being content to hear his Maker blasphemously discredited and in his heart consenting to the Blasphemy in charging God of Envy for forbidding him to eat of the Tree of Knowledge 2. Intemperance in that he was carried so far by his Appetite as to exceed the Bounds set him 3. An Inordinate Love to his Wife swaying him to eat more then the Love of God to refrain 4. Curiosity in that he would try what Vertue lay hid in the Fruit. Our former state and condition by Nature is oft and seriously to be thought on and that in respect 1. Of Christ the more to magnifie his Love Psal 8.1 4. 1 Tim. 1.12 2. Of our selves to humble us and to keep us from insolent boasting in those Priviledges whereof through Christ we are made partakers 1 Cor. 4.7 3. Of others to move us the more to commiserate their woful estate who yet remain as we once were to conceive hope and use means of their alteration Tit. 3. The heinousness and grievousness of obstinate sinners viz. 1. Obstinate proceeding in sin keepeth all Mercy from us as a thick Cloud that suffereth not the comfortable Light of the Sun to shine in our faces Rom. 11.25 28. 2. It maketh the least sin that a man committeth or can commit to be like to that Sin against the Holy Ghost that shall never be forgiven neither in this world nor in that to come Mat. 12.32 for it is not so much Sin simply that condemneth a man for then all men should be condemned insomuch as all men have sinned as Obstinacy and Wilful continuing in sin 3. It is a Sin against the Gospel it self and the very Doctrine of Salvation If then we believe in earnest that we shall come to Judgement if we take not Heaven and Hell the Eternal Joys of the one and the Everlasting Torments of the other for meer Fables if we think the Blessedness of the holy Angels worth the having or the condition of the infernal Spirits worth the avoiding Let us not continue in sin Rules how to perceive the grievousness of our sins viz. 1. Compare them with other mens sins as with Adams sin for doubtless we have many sins considered in the fact come after his onely in time and yet by that sin Adam brought not onely on himself but on all his Posterity Mortality and Destruction the first and second Death 2. Let us consider our sins in the Punishment thereof that is Subjection to all Wo and Misery yea and to Death it self in this life and to Death Eternal after this life with the Devil and his Angels This is the Reward of every sin in it self 3. Consider these thy sins as they were laid on the holy Person of our Savior Christ which he endured not onely outward bodily Torments on the Cross but inwardly in Soul apprehended the whole Wrath of God due unto us for the same which caused him to sweat Water and Blood and to cry My God my God why c. 4. Have recourse to the last Commandment which forbids the very first Thought and Motions in the Heart to sin though we never give Consent of Will thereto nay though we abhor the Fact it self How God doth punish Sin viz. 1. Most grievously for the greatenss of sin because the Infinite God is offended thereby 2. Most justly because every sin violateth his Law and therefore even the least sin meriteth Eternal Death abjection and casting away 3. Most certainly as in respect 1. Of his Justice which punisheth whatsoever is not agreeable to it 2. Of his Truth because he had before denounced That he would punish men if they obeyed not his Commandment The degrees of the Punishment the wicked do and shall suffer for sin viz. 1. In this Life when the Conscience for their misdceds doth gnaw vex and punish them then beginneth their Hellish and Infernal Worm 2. In Temporal Death when they departing out of this life without comfort go into the place of Torment and Vexations Luke 16. 3. At the Day of Judgement when again to every of their Bodies reunited to their Souls the Pains of Hell to both shall be consummated The Effects of Sin viz. 1. Sins that follow are the Effects
it Must we never pray it because it may not always be absolutely necessary may it therefore be never expedient Hence then never let any sober Christian more undervalue this Form for Prayer for the reason onely of others thinking too highly of it nor admire it for the reason of others vain undervaluing it but pray it in Knowledge Faith and Fervency without which the words are as a dead letter This Form is compleatly Comprehensive of all things petitionable whether Spiritual Temporal or Eternal an exact Epitomy of what God hath promised to give or man hath leave to ask It is that Form of words for Prayer which our Savior taught his Disciples commanding them when they pray to say Our Father which c. Next follows that Creed which vulgarly is stiled Apostolical whereby we make Confession of that Faith which believes in one God even the true God one in Essence Deut. 6.4 Three in Persons 1 Joh. 5.7 The Father the Creator Psal 134.3 the Son the Redeemer Rom. 5.18 the Holy Ghost the Sanctifier 1 Pet. 1.2 which Believes that the Holy Eph. 1.3 4. and Catholick Church Isa 54.2 consists of the Faithful people of God which Believes that there is a Communion of Saints Eph. 4.15 16. Pardoned of all sins Isa 44.22 Appointed to Rise from Death and to enjoy Eternal Life both in Body and Soul Joh. 6.39 40. In the next a word of the Decalogue in general How in the Table of mans Heart it stood engraven before it was repeated in stone Also how and in what maner the Law was given How many ways the Decalogue's divided with Rules concerning the substance and meaning thereof in general Various and voluminous are the Expositions on the Commandments but here as in a Map quasi uno intuita thou mayest descry the whole Region of the Law of God The same may be said of the whole Work as it stands in relation to the subject it treats of Now because we are not under the Law but under Grace some have dream'd That the Enacting of the Gospel hath Repealed the Statutes made when Moses was Speaker the Lord awaken them Do we now make void the Law through Faith God forbid yea we establish the Law Rom. 3.31 David a man in request with God a man after his own heart took the Testimonies of God for his Heritage for ever made them the joy of his heart and resolved to keep the Commandments of his God Psal 119.112 115. and in ver 126. he saith It is time for thee O Lord to work for they have made void thy Law and in the next Verse most passionately declares his affection saying I love thy Commandments above gold yea above fine gold A plain Discovery why others reject them But if thou wilt live keep the Commandments Prov. 7.2 keep them exactly universally constantly chearfully and sincerely Have no Gods but One and that the onely true God Worship no Created thing In vain do not take Gods Name in thy thoughts actions or otherwise Consecrate the Seventh day Reverence thy Superiors but not with Religious Worship Commit no Adultery by the eye or otherwise Do not play the Thief in thy Calling or otherwise Give no false Testimony and endeavor after that excellent gift of Contentation Thus with holy David have thou respect to all the Lords Commandments and that continually Psal 119.117 for the Lord sheweth Mercy unto Thousands of them that love him and keep his Commandments Exod. 20.6 The next is touching the Infinite Love of God to Man The Decree of Election according to the good will and pleasure of God from all Eternity The Creation of all things out of nothing without any Instruments Means Assistance or Motion onely by the Word of God alone The Redemption of Man by the Imputation of the sufferings of the punishment due for sin in the person of our Mediator Vocation whereby we are called from Darkness to Light from a state of Nature to a state of Grace from out of the World to the Kingdom of Heaven from being Limbs of Satan to be Members of Christ from Children of Wrath to become the Heirs of Heaven Justification whereby God absolveth true Believers from the guilt of sin by the Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ Sanctisication or the inward changing of a justified man purged from all the corruption of Nature and endued with inward Righteousness whereby the Image of God is restored in him Adoption whereby the justified through the Union they have with Christ are accounted of God as his own Children Regeneration or the repairing of the decayed estates of our souls the Holy Ghost actuating the hearts of Gods Elect to a free constant and faithful exercise of a holy life Conversion or mutation of a corrupt Minde Life and Will into a good stirred up in the Chosen by the Holy Ghost through the Preaching of the Gospel Repentance that inward and continual sorrowing and mourning for the Commission of sin joyned with Faith Humiliation and a constant turning from all sin unto God with a hatred and loathing thereof thus accompanied with both inward and outward amendment and New Obedience whereby a man is renewed unto that whereunto he was enabled by Creation whereby being endued with Faith and Repentance he doth according to the measure of Grace received endeavor to yield Obedience to all Gods Commandments with the whole man for which end even the Revelation of the Mystery which was kept secret since the World began was made known to all Nations Rom. 16.26 The next speaks of Fasting that holy and extraordinary Abstinence from the commodities of this life for our better humiliation and preparation to Prayer when any Judgement on our selves or Brethren is either threatned feared begun or executed How this part of Divine Worship hath been of late years prophaned in this Land may to this day be read in the Euroclydons of Gods fearful Judgements Insomuch as it s now necessary that we Fast for our Fasts For did we not Fast to Wrath to Revenge to Strife to Envy to Debate Did we not Feast our Lusts when nought but the posture of a Bulrush could denote our Fasting Did we not Fast at Noon to surfet at Night Did we not even then afflict our Brethren in stead of our Souls Did we not finde pleasure in the day of our Fasts and exact all our Labors Did we not draw Iniquity with cords of Vanity even then when we should have loosed the Bands of Wickedness Did we not even then load on weights grievous to be born in stead of undoing the heavy Burthens Did we not even then also receive the gain of Oppression in stead of letting the oppressed go free Did we not then likewise take the staff of Life from such as were half famished before in stead of dealing our bread to the hungry Did we not then also cast the poor out of their own Dwellings in stead of bringing them that were cast out into our own
Will Eph. 1.9 3. The End which is Gods Glory Eph. 3.10 4. The Efficacy which is Gods Power Rom. 1.16 Touching the Scriptures we are principally to consider these 4 things 1. Who is the Author of them that is as hath been shewed God himself Gal. 1.11 12. 2. Who are the instrumental Causes they are as hath been likewise shewed the Prophets and Apostles 2 Pet. 1.21 3. To whom they belong even to all sorts and degrees of men and women Psal 111.2 119.9 4. What is the property thereof viz. All-sufficiency without any patching of mens Decrees or Inventions to teach the true knowledge of God 2 Pet. 1.16 1 Cor. 1.17 〈◊〉 the Scripture is the Word of God and 〈◊〉 Doctrine of infallible Truth and certainty may be firmly proved from these unanswerable Arguments drawn from Scriptur●it self 1. From the Causes thereof wherein consider 1. That the first and principal is the Author thereof even God himself to him do the Scriptures refer themselves and also shew how God is their Author Now nothing is falsly ascribed to God but God in time will bring the same to nought and therefore if the Scripture had not been Gods Word it would long ago have vanished 2. The cause Conservant for the Devil by wicked men and Hereticks hath labored to take away Gods Word from mens hearts and hands but yet it is still preserved in the Church which argues that it is kept by a greater power then is in all men and all Angels that is by the power of God 3. The causes Instrumental they were holy men of God Prophets and Apostles who for vertue und piety exceeded other Writers far beyond all comparison and if they had been meer Polititians their writings would have shewed it for the Penmen of holy Scripture have herein faithfully registred their own faults which no politick person would have done 2. From the Matter therof which stands 1. In doctrine which is The Law set forth in most excellent purity nothing being therein against it or common Equity The Law is perfect Reason the Gospel above Reason yet not contrary to Reason The Gospel wherein is set down Doctrine altogether above mans Reason touching Christs Incarnation and mans Redemption by his death and although these things be above Nature yet we finde them true wholesom and good in experience of conscience which also proveth that they are the Word of God Men may devise strange things above Nature but they can never be wholesom to the conscience 2. In stile the phrase is plain and familiar and yet in any one speech there is more majesty then in all the writings of men 3. From the End thereof for it sets up Gods Worship and mans Salvation and yet gives nothing to Men or Angels but all to the glory of God but for the writings of men they do either directly or by insinuation ascribe something to the writers thereof 4. From the Effects thereof For 1. Though it is against our corrupt Nature crossing and condemning the same yet it winneth men to the love thereof and to obedience thereto which could not be unless it were the Truth of God for we abhor and detest the words of men that be against our Nature 2. It serves notably to comfort a man in all distresses whatsoever even in the pangs of death when no word of any man can do him the least good but onely his word that is the Lord of our soul and the God of our life 5. From the two properties of Scripture 1. Antiquity Among humane writings we have none of certainty in things they record that go so high as the Creation but the Scripture sets down things done from the beginning 2. Mutual Consent for though the Books of Scripture were written by divers men in sundry Ages and Times yet all agree within themselves there is no contradiction in Scripture but the writings of men have not this consent no not in the same Author whom commonly we shall finde contradicting himself 6. From the signs and true miracles thereof as the parting of the Sea the staying of the Sun and Moon and many others yea the Incarnation of the Son of God the Miracle of miracles 7. From the Contraries Contrary to the word of God is the will of the Devil and mans corrupt Nature the Devil hates Scripture and mans corrupt Nature repines thereat when it is checked and controlled thereby Now that which is contrary to these two must needs be holy and true and that is the word of God 8. From Testimonies whereof there be 2 kindes 1. Of holy Martyrs who in all ages have sealed the truth thereof preferring the word of God before their own lives whence it is truly said Sanguis Martyrum semen Ecclesiae And though Hereticks have dyed for falshood yet there is great difference in their ends the true Martyrs have unspeakable joy in the Spirit in their torments but Hereticks have no such joy but a natural sensless blockishness whereby they undergo these torments 2. Of Gods Spirit which is the principal testimony for when men begin to learn and obey the word of God then the Spirit of God settles their Conscience in the perswasion of the truth of Scripture which is infallibility it self The Testimony of the Holy Ghost touching Gods Word is obtained and discerned from the Testimony of man by doing these two things 1. By resigning our selves to become truly obedient to the Doctrine taught John 7.17 2. By praying unto God for his Spirit to certifie our Consciences that the Doctrine revealed is the very Doctrine of God Mat. 7.7 8. Luke 11.13 Jam. 1.7 The Majesty of the Scriptures consisteth chiefly in these three excellencies 1. In the Majesty of the Spirit of God which shineth in them 2. In the Consent of all the parts among themselves 3. In the Fulfilling all the Prophesies delivered long before yet accomplished precisely each of them in their proper place The Authority of the Scripture doth not as the Papists affirm depend on the Church for these Reasons 1. The reproach of God by making the Testimony of mans voyce greater then the voyce of God 2. Our Comfort for Faith is grounded on approved witness therefore not on man 3. The truth of God is plainly exposed to the mocks and scoffs of the wicked if we affirm that our Religion is from God onely because our selves say so 4. Because the Authority of the Church depends on the Scripture 5. The Scripture it self is in many places against this opinion John 5. 1 Cor. 2. 1 John 5. The Popish twofold Scripture 1. Inward Scripture or a consent of Doctrine written by the Holy Ghost in the hearts of all Catholicks and this say they is right Scripture Unparalleld Blasphemy 2. Outward Scripture which is written in Paper or Parchment which hath no certain sense as they falsly affirm but as the present Church determines thereof but this is a devilish Doctrine abolishing the true Word of God
come hereunto as unto mystical meat not as to carnal 3. We must feed on Christ by faith as verily as we eat the visible Signs with our bodily mouthes 4. There must be an Annunciation of the death of Christ that is a shewing forth of the Lords death 1 Cor. 11.26 This duty of shewing forth the Lords death is twofold 1. Partly inward consisting in the inward application and godly meditation of 1. The wrath justice of God against sin 2. The greatness of sin which nothing could do away but Christs death 3. The mercy and love of Christ in dying for us 2. Partly outward in outward celebration and publike declaration Rom. 10.10 After we have received the Lords Supper we must labor 1. To feel in our selves the hatred death of sin and the entrance of grace 2. To perform that in our life following which we promised in our preparation 3. To meditate where we have and what we have done which seals a blessing or a curse 4. To think every day of the mercy of Christ and daily to render thanks and praise for it which thanksgiving must not be onely in words but in every action of our life Psalms proper for thanksgiving are the 8 23 66 103. 5. To express our charity by Alms-giving to the Poor 6. To use all care and caution not to fall into our old sins lest the latter end be worse then the beginning and that not onely for the present but ever after we renew our faith and repentance Praise and thanksgiving is required as necessary and as a special duty to God when we have tasted of his bounty and loving kindeness and especially for Spiritual blessings 1. Because it is the will and pleasure of God who is so good unto us as to require it of us who can give him nothing else and this reason the Apostle gives 1 Thess 5.17 18. 2. Because of all Sacrifices this of praise and thanksgiving is the chief and principal as well in respect of the enduring and continuance of it as in respect of the use and end of it It was in Paradice before the Fall it was before the Flood it was before the Law under the Law under the Gospel and shall continue for ever It is performed of Men and Angels in heaven and earth it shall never end no not when other exercises of our Religion shall cease Rev. 5.13 11.17 3. Because it is not onely the end of the other works of Religion but also the end of the works of God It is the end of our Election Eph. 1.5 6. of our Creation Prov. 16.4 of our Redemption Luke 1.68 74 75. Eph. 1.3 7. of our Justification 1 Cor. 1.31 It is the end of our Sanctification of our Salvation and of our Glorification to give all praise all power all honor and glory to him that sitteth upon the Throne and to the Lamb for evermore 4. The worthiness and excellency of this exercise is manifestly proved by the unwillingness and untowardness of our corrupt Nature to perform it we are ready enough to pray for the gift not so ready to praise the giver fervent in asking cold in thanksgiving The impediments to be removed and the means to be used that we may rightly discern the Lords body in receiving it are these viz. 1. Carnal and natural weakness in the minde The Remedies whereof 1. Endeavor to get out of our natural state of life 2. Earnest endeavor for the Spirit of God 3. Frequent and fervent Prayer 2. Ignorance the Remedies whereof are 1. A serious consideration of Gods Judgements against it 2 Thess 1.8 2. To search the Scriptures to be conversant therein 3. To have recourse to godly Ministers 3. Hardness of heart the Remedies whereof are 1. To avoid the occasions as custom in sin carnal security contempt of the word and the like 2. To let the word have admittance to us to enter and take place in us 3. We must pray unto Almighty God to soften our hearts 4. We must take heed of the slights of Satan and of the deceitfulness of sin betimes 4. An unregenerate Will the Remedies whereof are 1. To deny renounce our selves with all we have 2. To call often upon God with fervency to guide us by his Spirit as we may be able to resist our lusts 5. We must shake off the custom of sinning the sin of unbelief and impenitency carnal wisdom presumption of our own knowledge pride and vain-glory forgetfulness of God and his word and such like If therefore we would come worthily to the Supper of the Lord 1. We must as hath been said try our selves by the Law of God whereby cometh the knowledge of sin Rom. 3.20 7.7 2. We must labor to understand and believe the common corruption of all mankinde standing partly in Original sin and partly in the fruits thereof Rom. 3.9 3. We must feel the curse of everlasting death due to us Gal. 3.10 4. We must learn what Covenant God hath made with us touching Grace and Mercy that we may be raised up to comfort in the Son of God our Redeemer 5. We must fervently desire to be made partakers of the Lords Supper and feel how much we stand in need of it 6. We must consider the correspondent proportion between the Signs and the thing signified Unworthiness in receiving the Lords Supper is twofold viz. 1. Of an evil Conscience as when a man lives in any sin against his conscience Take heed of this for it is proper to the Reprobate 2. Of infirmity as when a man truly repents and believes and makes conscience of every good duty but yet sees and feels wants in them all and in regard whereof himself unfit for the Supper but this may not justly hinder from coming to this Sacrament So that there are two sorts of men who receive unworthily viz. 1. Those that are not yet in Christ 2. Those that are within the Covenant but yet come remissly and negligently The wicked receive in the Lords Supper 1. The bare Signs onely as bread and wine 2. Those Signs to their condemnation or they eat their own condemnation that is through incredulity and abusing of the Sacrament to be abalienated and repelled from Christ and all his benefits and so to draw upon themselves temporal and everlasting punishments except they repent The wicked in the use of the Sacrament receive nothing beside their own condemnation but the bare Signs onely and that for these Reasons 1. Because the benefits of Christ are received onely in the right use of the Sacrament 2. Unto whom nothing is promised in the word to him the Sacraments seal nothing 3. Spiritual things are received by faith which the wicked have not 4. To be wicked and to receive the Sacrament truly and intirely implieth a contradiction The causes for which the wicked are said to eat unto themselves damnation viz. 1. Because they prophane the Signs and consequently the thing signified by
no notice of others necessities of such complained the Church of the Jews in her captivity Lam. 1.12 These bewray too much self-love 2. Such as who though they take notice yet are not at all moved to any compassion of such the Prophet Amos complaineth Amos 6.6 These discover too great senslesness and plain inhumanity 3. Such who though they be moved yet perform not this duty because they think it an idle frivolous thing nothing available and profitable of such Job speaks Job 21.15 These manifest too much distrust in God and plain Atheism They are not to be prayed for whom we know our prayers cannot help These are 1. All such as are dead for their estate is unchangeable 2. They which sin against the Holy Ghost 3. They concerning whom God hath given an express command and charge to the contrary and who are expresly and apparently rejected of God for who pray for such gainsay the revealed will of God Thus we read not that Samuel prayed for Saul after the Lord expresly forbade him 2 Sam. 16.1 and thus the Lord forbade Jeremiah to pray for the people Jer. 7.16 Motives to publike prayer 1. The more publike prayer is the more honorable and acceptable it is to God because it is an honor to him even when one faithfully prays unto him and that it is the more acceptable his promise shews Matth. 18.28 2. It is more powerful thus to prevent a Judgement or rather to remove it the Prophet assembles all the people together to pray Joel 2.16 17. So did the King of Niniveh Jonah 3.8 3. It is a sign of communion an outward sign whereby we manifest our selves to be of the chosen and called flock of Christ 4. It is an especial means of mutual edification for thereby we mutually stir up the zeal and enflame the affection of one another 5. The neglect of it is a note of prophaneness from which blame Seperatists and Schismaticks though they would seem very Religious cannot well acquit themselves they are not of Davids minde who mourned when he could not come into the house of Prayer Psal 48.1 c. These would too untimely seperate the Tares from the Wheat before the Harvest Prayer in a Family is very necessary because 1. A Family hath need of peculiar blessings beside the common which in the Church are prayed for yea and hath received many for which peculiar thanks is to be given 2. A true Christians house if Gods worship a principal part whereof is Prayer be there from time to time performed is made Gods Church which is a great honor unto a Family Rom. 16.5 Phil. 4. 3. By prayer a Christian brings Gods blessing into his house for where God is called upon there is he present to bestow his blessings as he blessed Obed-Edom and all his houshold while the Ark was in his house 2 Sam. 6.11 It is very needful that secret prayer be added both to publike prayer at Church and private prayer in a Family and that for these Reasons 1. Hereby we may more freely pour out our whole hearts to God and make known our minde 2. This kinde of prayer affordeth the truest tryal of the uprightness of a mans heart for a man may a long time continue to pray in the Church and in a Family and his prayer be meer formal even onely for companies sake 3. This argueth great familiarity with God 4. It bringeth greatest comfort to a mans heart and they which content themselves with Church and Family-prayers have very just cause to suspect themselves 5. Such Wives Children Servants and other inferiors as live in any house under prophane Governors that will not have prayers in their Families may by this kinde of prayer make supply thereof unto their own souls for none can hinder secret prayer The difference betwixt praying wishing viz. 1. Wishes are sudden and inconsiderate straightway ceasing Prayer is with deliberation and giveth not over without speeding of the thing desired 2. Wishes are without respect of the means and care of right or wrong in attaining the thing wished for Prayer is with submission to the lawful use of the means and care of prevailing by right onely 3. Wishes are for the most part of things worldly Prayer is chiefly for things Spiritual and heavenly one onely Petition of six in the Lords Prayer being for things Temporal 4. Wishes are sometimes for things Spiritual and heavenly but very unconstant as Balaams wish Let me dye the death of the righteous but Prayer persevereth like Jacob wrestling with God Reasons to enforce us to the practice of this duty of prayer 1. Prayer is one of the most principal parts of Gods worship for herein we acknowledge him to be the Giver of all good things the Searcher and knower of all hearts and hereby we testifie the Faith Hope and Confidence we have in God it is called The calves of our lips Hosea 14.2 because it is a Sacrifice well-pleasing to God 2. By prayer we do obtain and also continue and preserve unto our selves every good grace and blessing of God specially such as concern eternal life for God promiseth his Spirit to them that ask it by prayer Luke 11.13 3. The true gift and Spirit of prayer is a pledge of the Spirit of Adoption and therefore the Spirit of prayer is called the Spirit of Grace Zech. 1.3 4. By prayer we have Spiritual communion and familiarity with God for in preaching of the word God speaks to us and in prayer we speak to God and the more we pray the nearer and greater fellowship we have with him 5. It is specially commanded of God as a special means to obtain all blessings 1 Thess 5.17 6. The gracious Promises God hath made unto effectual prayer may allure us to pray Mat. 7.7 7. Consider the efficacy power and force of prayer Jam. 5.16 8. The excellency thereof and the priviledge we have by it to have free liberty to come to God 9. The profit of prayer for it hath the promise of this life and of the life to come Rom. 10.12 10. The necessity thereof for without it we shew our selves destitute of Grace and so in the state of condemnation Jam. 4.2 Motives to prayer repeated 1. Gods express charge and command David obeyed it Psal 27.8 and indeed this of it self were fully sufficient without any other motives 2. Gods worship Prayer being the most principal especial and proper part thereof 3. The honor of God for he is not by any thing more honored then by Prayer by which we do acknowledge him to be 1. Every where present and in every place to hear his children 2. To be the Fountain of all Blessings therefore we give the praise thereof to God 3. To be a God full of pity and compassion which maketh us to lay open our griefs distresses to him 4. To be an Almighty God able to give whatsoever we desire 5. To be a bountiful God who giveth to all liberally
3. That we might be advertised of the fulfilling of the Prophesie Gen. 49.10 The Scepter shall not depart from Judah c. 4. For that his innocency might appear he was not to be privily taken away by the Jews nor to be drawn to death by tumult or disorderly In the sufferings Death Passion of Christ these things are specially to be considered 1. The History it self of Christs Passion agreeing with Gods Sacred Oracles and Prophesies 2. The cause of his Sufferings 3. The fruit or effects of Christs Passion 4. His example that we are also to enter into eternal life and heavenly glory by death as did Christ 5. The due Meditation in the whole The History of Christs passion runs thus 1. They apprehend him as they would a Varlet that had done some outrage coming unto him with swords and staves in the night time 2. They carry him first to one High Priest then to another then to Pilate then to Herod and back again to Pilate amongst whom he is mocked laughed at scornfully intreated and buffeted questioned withal spitted on and crowned with Thorns 3. They compel him to carry his heavy Cross till he nigh fainted under the burthen being without all pity and compassion towards him 4. Though they could not charge him justly with any fault at all worthy the least punishment insomuch as Pilate that Heathen Judge would have acquitted him yet they cryed out Crucifie him Crucifie him and had rather one Barabbas a Traytor and a Murtherer should be released then he 5. They hung him up between two Thieves the most harmless and innocent man in the world is numbred amongst the wicked and evil doers 6. Not content to pierce his hands and feet with nails by fastning him to the Cross but like hard-hearted wretches they gave him vinegar mingled with gall to drink in his great heat and thirst and upbraided him with scoffs when he was on departure 7. Not astonished at the wonderful darkness The renting of the Temples vail The opening of Graves The coming forth of the Dead their malice expired not with him but even after he was dead they pierced him with a spear even to the heart Joh. 19.34 In the cause of Christs Death and Passion consider these four 1. The object moving that is Mans Misery and the Devils Tyranny 2. The efficient cause 1. Impellent Internal being the love of God towards his creatures 2. The Obedient which was the very Son of God obedient to his Father 3. The Instrumental as the Devil the Scribes Pharisees and the rest 3. The Formal cause being the Passion it self historized by the Evangelists 4. The Final cause 1. That God might be glorified for his Justice and Mercy 2. That Salvation might be purchased for Man who was lost by reason of sin 3. That Christ might destroy the works of the Devil 1 Joh. 3. The fruit or effect of Christs Death is twofold 1. General Christ by his Passion conquered The Devil whom he hath bound Hell which he hath spoiled Death which he overcame The World which he despised The Punishment which he hath suffered Heaven which he hath opened 2. Special 1. Obedience is performed to God 2. The Devil is vanquished 3. Man is freed from sin and justified 4. An Equalification of Jew and Gentile 5. Death is disannulled The Meditation of our Saviors Passion consists chiefly in these six particulars viz. 1. How great was the Wrath of God for sin which could not be appeased but by the death of his onely begotten Son 2. How infinite was the Mercy of God the Father who would rather his Son should undergo the most ignominious death then that Man his creature should perish 3. How unconceiveable was the Love of the Son of God who for Mans sake took upon himself the wrath of his Father 4. We must apply the Merit of Christs Passion to our selves by faith his Obedience being made our Righteousness whereby through faith we appear to God not as sinners but justified 5. What the Lot of the Righteous is in this world who must suffer with him that they may be glorified with him Rom. 6. 6. That our future life may be formed into a better mould Rom. 6. being dead unto sin by the power and efficacy of his death The Reasons why Christ suffered so ignominious a death 1. That we might know the curse due for our sins to have layen upon him and so should be stirred up to the greater thankfulness considering how detestable a thing sin is that it should call for so ignominious a death 2. That it might be an exasperating of the punishment and so we so much the more confirmed in a true faith 3. That the Truth might answer to the Types and Figures and so we might know that they are all fulfilled in Christ The causes of Christs Burial viz. 1. That we might know that he was dead indeed 2. That the last part of his Humiliation whereby he did debase himself for our sakes might be accomplished 3. A certain Type was thereby to be fulfilled it was foretold by the Type of Jonas 4. He would be Buried that we might not be afraid of the grave but might know that our Head Christ Jesus had laid open the way unto us by Death and the Grave to celestial Glory 5. That we might know how we are indeed delivered from death for in his Death a testimony and record whereof is his Burial consisteth our Salvation 6. That it might be manifest That he was able indeed to rise again and that his Resurrection was not imaginary but the real and true Resurrection of a reviving corps 7. That we being Spiritually dead that is to sin might rest from sin The duties required of us to set forth our Faith in Christ crucified are these viz. 1. Godly sorrow in bewailing our sins the onely cause of these great sufferings of our dear Savior 2. The mortification of our fleshly members and sinful concupiscences and that for three special causes 1. By continuing in sin we make our selves accessary's of Christs death 2. Because all such as unto whom Christs death is effectual to do away their sins are conformable unto him in his Death and Burial 3. Because no man following the trade of sin can be Christs Disciple 3. Patience and joy in suffering any thing for Christs sake and the Gospel and that chiefly for two causes 1. By suffering we are made like unto him Mat. 10.25 2. Because in suffering for his Truth he doth grace us forasmuch as he doth take us for his Martyrs and Witnesses 4. To remain unterrified with the pangs and approaching of death unto us because Christ in dying overcame death and took away the sting thereof 5. For this infinite love of Christ toward us to love him most earnestly again and all his members the Faithful for his sake That Christ descended into Hell all found Christians acknowledge but in the interpretation of this Article there is not that
consent as were to be wished For the dissent of Opinions touching the same they may be all comprised in these viz. 1. Some hold the words He descended into Hell meerly literally that is into the place of the damned or some lower place thereabout They which understand it of the place of the damned say That he went thither to triumph over all the damned ghosts and devils as a most glorious Conqueror both of Death and Hell the most powerful Enemies or that as God onely and not Man he descended powerfully and effectually but not personally into Hell and that the Deity exhibited it self as it were present in the infernal parts to the terror of the Devil and other damned Spirits They which understand it of some place thereabout say That he went thither and that by a local descension as the Papists assirm to deliver the Fathers and Patriarchs that were detained as they dream for their Original sin in Limbo The grounds pretended for both are alleaged out of Eph. 4.9 1 Pet. 3.19 Psal 16.10 Acts 2.25 But they that stand for Limbo alleage Heb. 9.8 11.39 2. Others hold them literally but expound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Grave saying That he dyed and was buried that is anointed to the Burial and descended into the Sepulchre 3. Others interpreting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Grave make the descent figurative thus He descended into Hell that is remained in the grave until the third day these suppose he descended into Hell as Man onely and that as some think in Body onely as when death as it were prevailed over him lying in the grave as others deem in Soul onely when he went unto the place of the Reprobate to the encreasing of their torments 4. Others interpret it as an Idiom or phrase peculiar to the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He descended into Hell that is was in the state of the dead for thus the Greeks were wont to speak of a man departed whether good or bad This Opinion takes best 5. Others hold it to be meerly figuratively spoken That Christ descended into Hell as God and Man in one person That in Body and Soul he went as it were into Hell when upon the Cross and elswhere he suffered the terrors and torments prophesied of Isa 5.3 6 10. Psal 116.2 and mentioned Mat. 26.38 or 27.46 Luke 22.42 when he suffered the torments of Hell viz. The anger of God against the sins of all the Elect poured forth upon his Soul driving him into that bloody Agony in the Garden and making him on the Cross cry out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me This Opinion takes with many Now of all these that which stands for Limbo must not remain unexpunged as by reason of sundry positive Reasons of Scripture to the contrary so also in regard of the impertinency of the places alleaged How Christs temporal punishment is said to be equivalent to eternal 1. In respect of the worthiness of the person for it was the onely begotten natural Son of God that did suffer 2. For the grievousness of the punishment because he sustained the torments and sense of the wrath of God and the horror of death for the whole world Psal 118.5 Hence it was that Christ so trembled at his death when many Martyrs have entertained an ordinary death without it The use of this Doctrine of Christs Passion teacheth us That sin is most of all to be eschewed by us which could not be expiated but by the death of the Son of God That we ought to be thankful for this his so great a benefit of unspeakable grace and favor bestowed on us and that all our sins how many how great and how grievous soever they be are expiated and done away by the death alone of Christ Yet know That whereas it is frequently affirmed in Scripture That Christ dyed for all it is not meant generally for every particular person but restrictively for all sorts of people that is for Believers of all sorts both of Jews and Gentiles Behold the Son of God come from the Womb Vnto the Cross to drop into the Tomb He that is Life Eternal the Most High And Mighty Lord of Life vouchsafes to dye He that fills Heaven and Earth is pleas'd to have His lodging in a Cradle and a Grave Blinde Jews before your Day was turn'd to Night At Noon ye could not see for too much light Gentiles believe or know this for no news Your Sins will prove new Crucifying Jews §. 6. The third day he rose again from the Dead He ascended into Heaven and there he sitteth at the right hand of God TO believe in Christ risen from the dead is to believe that he shook off death from himself quickned his dead body reunited his body unto his soul restored unto himself a blessed celestial and glorious life and that by his own proper power And I also believe That he therefore rose again from the dead that he might make us partakers of his Righteousness Sanctification and Glorification which he hath purchased for us by his merit This is that Holy One of whom David prophesied that He should not see corruption Psal 16.10 who but a little before his death told his Disciples himself that The third day he would rise again Mark 9.31 10.34 The accomplishment of which Truth stands on sacred Record both by his appearing after that he was risen from death to life to Mary Magdalen Joh. 20.14 to divers women Mat. 28.9 to two Luke 24.13 15. to ten Joh. 20.19 to all the Disciples to more then five hundred at once 1 Cor. 15.6 to sundry persons by the space of forty days together Acts 1.3 and by the testimony also of the Apostles Peter Acts 1.22 and Paul Acts 17.2 3. So that whoever is a perverse Sadduce to this Truth strikes at the very Root of the Christian Religion He ascended into Heaven that is he being revived from the dead his soul coming again into his body walking here a while upon the Earth for the space of forty days eating and drinking sometimes with his Disciples not for any need of sustenance but for the more assurance of his Resurrection and offering his body to be felt and handled comforting and instructing them and then in the open sight of them all he went up body and soul into the Heavens they looking and marvelling at it This was foretold by David Psal 68.18 and by Christ himself John 14.2 20.17 was prefigured in Enoch Gen. 5.24 and in Elias 2 Kings 2. and witnessed Acts 1.22 Eph. 4.10 so that Christs Ascension is a local true real and visible Ascension Translation or removing of Christs body from Earth into Heaven which is above all visible Heavens to Gods right hand where he now is and whence he shall come to Judgement Acts 1.11 This his Ascension must be understood of his Humanity onely for his Divinity was always in Heaven And there he sitteth at Gods right hand
exceeding vertue of God 2. Perfect Glory perfect Dignity and full Divine Majesty What is meant by Christs session at the right hand of the Father 1. The perfection of Christs Divine Nature that is the equality of the Word with the Father which he did not receive but ever had 2. The perfection of Christs Humane Nature which compriseth 1. The personal union of the Humane Nature with the Word For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily Col. 2.9 2. The Collation or bestowing of gifts on him far greater and more in number then are bestowed on all Men and Angels 3. The perfection or excellency of the Office of the Mediator that is the Prophetical Priestly and Royal Function which Christ now as the glorified Head of his Church doth in his Humane Nature gloriously exercise in Heaven 4. The perfection of Christs honor that is the Adoration Worship and Reverence which is yielded unto him both of Men and Angels Heb. 1.6 The benefits we receive by Christs sitting at the Fathers right hand are all the benefits of the Kingdom and Priesthood of Christ glorified 1. His Intercession for us 2. The gathering governing and guarding of his Church by the Word and Spirit 3. His defending of the Church against her enemies 4. The abjection and destruction of the Churches enemies 5. The Glorification of the Church The difference of Christs Ascension and ours stands thus He ascended by his own power and vertue we shall not by our own but by his John 3.13 He ascended to be Head we to be his Members He to glory agreeable for the Head we to glory fit for Members Christs Ascension was the cause of ours but it is not so of the contrary Whom seek'st thou Mary What is Jesus he He goes before thee into Galilee This was the Angels voyce Nor was the news Less strange to his Disciples then the Jews Though herein for himself he did no more Then what he did for Lazarus before He 's now ascended and has verifi'd What Enoch and Elias typifi'd He sits at Gods right hand and has thereby In Earth all Power in Heav'n all Majesty §. 7. From thence he shall come to judge both the Quick and the Dead THe last Judgement shall be a manifestation or declaration and seperation of the just and unjust who ever have lived or shall live from the beginning of the world unto the end proceeding from God by Christ and a pronouncing of Sentence on these men and an execution thereof according to the Doctrine of the Law and the Gospel which Execution is not an annihilation or final destruction of the Body and Soul or a perpetual senslesness but an infinite and endless continuance of those Torments which the Wicked in this life despairing do begin to feel forsaken and abjected of God subject to all torments both of Body and Soul And in this last Judgement Absolution to the godly shall be principally according to the Gospel but shall be confirmed by the Law Condemnation to the wicked shall be principally by the Law but shall be confirmed of the Gospel Sentence shall be given on the wicked according to their own Merit but on the godly according to Christs Merit applyed unto them by faith a Testimony and Witness of which Faith shall be their Works Now the Judge shall be Christ John 5.22 neither yet are the Father and the Holy Ghost removed from this Judgement but Christ immediately shall speak and give Sentence and that in his Humane Nature and when he speaketh the Father shall speak by him so that the Judgement shall belong to all the three persons of the Godhead as concerning their Consent and Authority but unto Christ as touching the publishing and executing of the Judgement yea and the Church also shall judge as touching the Allowance and Approbation of this Judgement whereunto they shall then subscribe Luke 22.30 What Christs coming to Judge both the Quick and the Dead signifies 1. That at the second coming of Christ shall follow the renewing of Heaven and Earth 2. That the self same Christ shall come who for us was born suffered and rose again 3. That he shall come gloriously to deliver his Church whereof I am a Member 4. That he shall come to abject and cast away the wicked The Reasons why or causes for which Christ-Man shall be Judge are these 1. Because the Church is to be glorified by the same Mediator by whom and for whom it was justified Acts 17.31 2. That we may have comfort and consolation knowing him to be our Judge who hath purchased us with his blood 3. To deliver his Church and cast away the wicked 4. The Justice of God because they have dealt contumeliously with the Son of Man Zech. 12.10 5. Christ-Man must be Judge because he must judge men therefore he must be beheld of all But God is invisible 6. That he may the more confound the wicked his Enemies who shall be forced to behold him their Judge whom they have so much withstood so wickedly dishonored The Day of the Lord or the time of Judgement is twofold 1. General when Christ shall come to judge the Quick and the Dead in the end of the world 2. Particular at the day of our death when every particular soul must appear before the bar of Gods Tribunal and give an account of what it hath done How Christ shall come to Judgement 1. Truly visibly and locally not imaginarily Mat. 24.30 2. He shall come furnished and prepared with glory and divine Majesty with all the Angels with the voyce and trump of the Archangel and with divine Power 3. The dead shall be raised and the living changed 4. The world shall be dissolved with fire not annihilated but purified 5. He shall come suddenly to the great joy and comfort of all his How the Devil is said to be already judged yea and the wicked also 1. By the Decree of God 2. In the Word of God 3. In his own Conscience 4. As touching the beginning of his Condemnation For what causes the last Judgement shall be 1. The chief and principal cause is the Decree of God 2. A less principal and subordinate cause is both the Salvation of the Elect who are here vexed and the Damnation of the wicked who here do flourish 3. Because of Gods Justice whereof in this life is not a full and perfect execution The threefold effect of Christs coming to Judgement 1. A gathering together at the sound of the Trumpet both of the dead and the living Dan. 12.2 2. A seperation the Elect shall be set at his right hand the Reprobate at his left Mat. 25.33 3. The Judgement it self the Elect shall be with him the Reprobate shall be cast into Hell Mat. 25.46 The execution of the last Judgement shall be thus 1. By the force and vertue of the Divine Power of Christ 2. By the Ministery of the Angels 3. The World Heaven and Earth shall be dissolved
conformity and agreeableness with the Law is inchoated or begun in them 3. In respect of their separation because they are selected and separated from all other men Union is taken three ways 1. Essentially so God is not one with us nor we with him for there is no proportion between finite and infinite 2. Personally or hypostatically as when things are so joyned that they make one person neither thus is God one with us or we with him 3. Spiritually which is the conjunction of us with God and God with us whereby we are one with him in Christ and he in Christ with us Thus we are said to be in Christ as our Savior not as God onely or Man onely but as both one Christ The Bond whereby we are united to Christ is twofold 1. One on Christs part even the Spirit of Christ 1 Joh. 4.13 2. The other on our part which is Faith Ephes 3.17 So likewise we are said to be in Christ two ways viz. 1. In regard of the external conjunction of his Body the Church by which we are initiate into his Name by Baptism This is common both to true and false Christians 2. By the true internal coadunation or conjunction of the Spirit which is proper onely to the Elect. The three special Vertues which unite us to Christ 1. Faith the hand whereby we lay hold on him as he by his Spirit doth on us 2. Hope the anchor whereby we hold fast what we have laid hold on maugre all the storms and assaults of Satan 3. Love the glew or sodder whereby we are thus knit and united to him and become one with him Christ is said to be present with us in five respects viz. 1. By his Spirit and Godhead 2. As touching our faith and confidence wherewith we behold him 3. In mutual dilection and love 4. In respect of his Union with Humane Nature that is in the conjunction of the soul with the body 5. In respect of that hope which we have of our consummation or coming unto him Christs Humanity is present with all the Elect in whatsoever places they be dispersed through the whole world not by any substantial presence of the flesh in the Bread and within their bodies but 1. By the efficacy and perpetual value of his Merit 1 Joh. 1.7 2. By the efficacy also of his Humane Will Psal 110.4 Heb. 5.6 3. By conjunction and union not by any natural connexion of Christ and our flesh but by Faith and the Holy Ghost in Christ our Head and dwelling in us his Members Eph. 3.17 we are Members of his Body of his Flesh and his Bones and of they twain shall be one flesh Eph. 5.30 This is a great secret We have communion with God three ways 1. If we walk not in darkness that is if we do not the works of darkness 2. If we walk in the light that is if we practise what we know of the light 1 Joh. 1.6 7. 3. By the blessed Sacraments The Signs of true communion with God 1. A true love towards our Brethren giving no just occasion of evil or offence 2. A true and lively faith in Christ apprehending his Merits and applying him to be our Savior Joh. 12.46 3. A true following of Christ that is in his love patience humility obedience The Priviledges of the Saints which arise from their Union with Christ their Head are many and great and sure respecting This life The time of death The life to co●● The Priviledges in this life which the Saints have by vertue of their Union with Christ viz. 1. A most glorious condition which is to be a part of Christ a Member of his body 2. The Attendance of good Angels who are sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of Salvation Heb. 1.14 3. An Honor to make even Christ himself as he is Head of the Church perfect the Saints being Members the Church is said to be the fulness of him that filleth all in all Eph. 1.23 which is to be understood of that voluntary condition which Christ was pleased to descend unto to be the Head of a Body the Head of his Church the Saints 4. A kinde of Possession of heaven while we are on earth Eph. 2.6 Joh. 5.24 1 Joh. 5.12 This is somewhat more then Hope serving to strengthen it and to give us assurance of that heavenly Inheritance 5. A most happy kinde of Regiment under which the Saints are even such an one as the Members of an head are under which Ruleth not as a cruel Lord and Tyrant but meekly gently with great compassion and fellow-feeling 6. An Assurance of sufficient supply of all needful things which the Saints want and of safe protection from all things hurtful if it seem otherwise at times Christ in his wisdom sees it fit it should be so 7. A Right to all that Adam lost for Christ is the Heir of all Heb. 1.2 whence the Apostle saith All things are yours 1 Cor. 3.21 The wicked then must needs be usurpers for they are not of the body 8. A Right to more then Adam ever had even to Christ himself and all that appertaineth to him as to the purity of his Nature to the perfection of his Obedience to the merit of his Blood to the power of his Death to the vertue of his Resurrection and the efficacy of his Ascension O blessed Union and thrice blessed they that have a part therein The Priviledges which the Saints by their Union with Christ receive in the time of Death even all that time that passeth from the departure of the Saints out of this world unto the general Resurrection 1. When Soul and Body are separated one from the other neither is separated from Christ so as to be left to destruction for though the bodies of the Saints be consumed with worms they are not utterly destroyed as appears by the Metaphor of sleep 1 Thess 4.13 2. The Bodies of the Saints are not onely not utterly destroyed but shall be glorified bodies for the rotting of the body is but as the rotting of corn in the earth that it may rise a more glorious body 1 Cor. 15.36 Thus the Saints are said to sleep in Jesus 1 Thess 4.14 and to be dead in Christ verse 16. 3. The Grave is as a Bed to the bodies of the Saints quietly to repose therein till the day of Resurrection and Reunion with the Soul but it is a Prison to the wicked to hold them fast until the day of the General Assize indeed the bodies of the wicked shall also rise again but to be for ever tormented in Hell The Priviledges after death which the Saints have by vertue of their union with Christ may be referred to these 1. Their Resurrection which simply considered in it self is not the Priviledge of the Saints but Resurrection of life to the wicked appertaineth the Resurrection of condemnation 2. Their Glory in heaven The Signs of certainty of heavenly Communion
and Threatnings of God must be fulfilled for the certainty of them is unchangeable but they could not be fulfilled if the dead should not rise 2. The Mercy of God is perfect as which extendeth it self to the whole man and which will have us wholly saved therefore our bodies also shall rise again 3. The perfect Justice of God requireth that the same wholly whereby they sin should be punished with eternal pains but the wicked both in their whole body and in their soul do sin therefore their bodies also must be raised again 4. Christ is a perfect Savior because he hath saved and reconciled to God whole Man therefore our corrupt body also shall be raised by Christ 5. God is the God of the whole Man not of a part onely This Reason Christ useth against the Sadduces Mat. 22.31 6. God published his Law unto Man after the Fall therefore he will have man once keep it but that is not done in this life therefore it shall be done in the life to come and therefore men shall rise again The comfort we have by our Resurrection viz. 1. Our souls after they shall depart out of our bodies shal presently be taken up to Christ Luke 23.43 Phil. 1.23 2. Our flesh being raised up by the power of Christ shall be again united to our souls and shall be made like to the glorious body of Christ 1 Cor. 15.53 The use our Faith may make of the Resurrection 1. Our Faith may herein comfort us in all distresses whatsoever 2. It will mitigate the sorrow we entertain for the dead 3. It will lessen our fear of death while we believe a better life after death 4. It will make us swift to good works and to deserve well of those with whom we are to have eternal Society hereafter 5. It will withhold us from evil that we defile not our souls and bodies preserved by the Blood of Christ to live with God Angels and Saints Israels descent into the Red-Sea and the Lords deliverance of them thence The flourishing of Aarons Rod Ezekiels Vision of dead bones The Jews Captivity in and deliverance from Babylon and Jonahs preservation in and from the Belly of the Whale are all Types of the Resurrection And if the Doctrine of the Resurrection be shaken and overturned then all Religion is pulled up by the Roots let us therefore beware of such Vipers as lurk in the bosom of the Church There were even among the people of God Sadduces that taught that man perished wholly and that after death there should be no rising or returning to life but that he perished as the Beast Mat. 22.23 And in the Church of Corinth some were found which said There is no Resurrection of the dead 1 Cor. 15.12 Some have confessed indeed the Immortality of the soul so also did some of the Heathen but touching the Resurrection they have fancied it to be in this life and not after death as if the Resurrection were nothing else but Regeneration a dying to sin and rising again to newness of life or not unlike to Hymeneus and Philetus who said That the Resurrection was already past 2 Tim. 2.18 This Heresie for its continuance is not a little beholding to the Family of Love who hold that Heaven and Hell are in this life and no other Resurrection of the body or day of Judgement or coming of Christ then in this world Nor is it much less beholding to the Anabaptists who deny that the same bodies which now we have and shall lie in the dust shall ever rise again but hold That God at the second coming of Christ will make us new bodies This is to maintain a New Creation of new bodies and to deny the Resurrection of the former But all those Heresies we are to abandon and to let our Faith close with the Will of God revealed in his Word as we tender the benefit we expect by the Resurrection You that are crumbled into Dust or gave Your living Bodies to a fiery Grave Or say those Corps which should the Worms have fed The Fin-wing'd scaly Creatures nourished Converting Flesh to Fish Grant this and shall Those Bodies we may now just Nothing call Arise again 'T is so The Scripture saith They shall and Reason must give place to Faith Who could raise seed to Abraham of Stones Can re-incarnate Dust and rotten Bones § 13. And Life Everlasting Amen BY Life Everlasting is meant that ever-enduring happiness and all those joys which the Lord imparteth to all his Elect in the world to come not onely Life in but Joy not onely Joy but Riches not onely Riches but Glory and all these not in some measure but in excess not mixed but absolute without grief without want without dishonor not by intermission and fits but continually not after some long time to end but everlastingly This is the blessed estate of the faithful in the world to come without end or misery in joys unspeakable in body and soul that habitation or dwelling of God in Angels and Men by the Holy Ghost and the true knowledge of God his Will and all his Works kindled by the same Spirit in their hearts and true and perfect Righteousness and Wisdom that is a perfect conformity and correspondence of their will and powers and operations with the Minde and Will of God as also a joy resting on God and a sufficiency of all good things in God as touching both soul and body which shall never be interrupted hindred or have an end which is given to all the Elect and to them onely Joh. 10.28 Now as they are Elected so they are but chosen to Eternal life but as they are converted so they are in part admitted unto it and begin to be put into possession of it Thus the souls of the faithful departed do in a most happy and blessed estate tarry and wait for their full deliverance and Redemption in the Resurrection and Glorification of their bodies in the mean time resting from their labors being in the hand of God the true Paradice and Kingdom of Christ are received of him and gathered to the souls of the faithful which are perfected and to Abraham the Father of all which believe Whence this Article is added in our Creed to signifie That the just shall not rise again to misery or to a momentary felicity but to eternal blessedness The main difference betwixt our estate in this world and in the world to come being That here we must believe what we know but in part there we shall perfectly know whatsoever is to be believed The comfort which the faithful take in this Article of Everlasting Life is That forasmuch as they feel already in their hearts the beginning of Everlasting life 2 Cor. 5.2 3. it shall at length come to pass That after this life they shall enjoy full and perfect bliss wherein they shall magnifie God for ever which blessedness neither eye hath seen nor ear hath heard neither hath
4. That he is Just To leave my wicked ways and to restrain my self from sin 5. That he is merciful To turn unto him by Repentance 6. That he is Omnipresent To carry my self as in his Presence 7. That he is Omniscient To keep my heart upright before him continually 8. That he is Infinite To stand in awe reverence and fear of him The Vices repugnant unto the knowledge of God viz. 1. Atheism which is the Acknowledgement of no God 2. Ignorance or not knowing the true God and his Will 3. Errors conceived or false Imaginations and Opinions of him 4. Prophaneness which is a Regardlesness of God and of his special Service 5. Magick Sorcery or Witchcraft in such as desire the help of it as well as in those who use it 6. Superstition Soothsaying Observation of Dreams Divinations Signs and Predictions or Foretellingof Wizards 7. All trust or confidence reposed in the Creature 8. Idolatry whether Inward when another is worshipped then that one true God or when the Worship of God is given unto Creatures by Praying unto them Trusting in them or Setting the heart upon them which kinde doth properly belong unto this First Commandment or Outward when though the true God is worshipped yet after another maner then God himself hath prescribed 9. The contempt of God which is to know those things of God which are true but not to be moved thereby to love him Were all the Wisdom of the East in one Compris'd Couldst thou discourse with Solomon From th'Isop to the Cedar or of ought In Heav'n Earth Hell Couldst thou foresee a Thought And so prevent it or by strength of Brain When 't is thought Argument it back again Hadst thou all Arts and Sciences refin'd Couldst joyn East to West or divide the Winde Wer 't thou for Wisdom the Worlds Nource or School And knew'st not God thou wer 't a damned Fool. §. 2. Of Faith or Trust in God THe second Duty required in this Commandment is To Trust in the onely true God and in him alone to put all trust and confidence Psal 20.8 This is Faith by which whosoever is united unto Christ the same is Elected Called Justified Sanctified and shall be Glorified Joh. 3.36 5.24 By this Faith is not meant an Historical Faith as to know and think all those things to be true which are manifested from above either by Voyce or by Visions or by any other maner of Revelation and are taught in the Books of the Prophets and Apostles and thus to be perswaded of them for the asseveration and Testimony of God himself firmly assenting to the truth of those things contained in the Scripture for the Authority of God that spoke them which Faith is good in it self but made ill yea sin by them that cannot apply it Thus Simon Magus is said to have believed Acts 13. By this Faith is not meant a Temporary Faith as to assent unto the heavenly Doctrine which is delivered by the Prophets and Apostles to profess it and to rejoyce in the knowledge thereof and to glory therein for a time yet not for any feeling of Gods grace towards them but for other causes whatsoever and therefore without any true Conversion and final perseverance in the Profession of that Doctrine for this kinde of Faith is led as in a string with the commodities of this world and with them doth live and dye By this Faith is not meant the Faith of working Miracles which is a special gift of working Miracles that is a certain perswasion springing from an especial Revelation and Promise of God whereby a man firmly resolveth That some extraordinary or miraculous Work and contrary to Nature shall come to pass by Gods Power which he hath foretold and would have to be done in the Name of God and Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 13.2 which Faith so flourishing in the Primitive Church ceaseth in those days for that the Doctrine is now sufficiently confirmed so sufficiently indeed as he that will not now believe without a Miracle may stand for a Wonder himself But by this Faith is meant Justifying Faith wrought in the hearts of the Elect by the operation of Gods Spirit grounded on Gods Promises whereby we do undoubtedly believe that God hath freely forgiven us all our sins applying Christ Jesus in particular to be our Savior and Redeemer From this Faith Gods people can never finally and totally fall away howsoever it may be sometimes shaken obscured and eclipsed so as it may not so manifestly appear at one time as at another and this Faith is incident onely to the Elect Acts 13.48 For it is a principal Grace of God whereby man is ingrafted unto Christ and thereby become one with Christ and Christ one with him Eph. 3.17 By this Faith in Christ we are partakers of the Merit of the Death and Resurrection of Christ so as it is Satisfaction for us and Forgiveness of all our sins a special grace or habit infused into the Soul by the Holy Ghost whereby we are enabled to believe not onely that the Messias is offered unto us but also to take and receive him as a Lord and Savior Thus Justifying Faith cometh not neither proceedeth or ariseth out of the instinct of Nature neither out of sense or experience neither out of Demonstrations or Reasons borrowed from Philosophy but it cometh and dependeth of a peculiar and supernatural Revelation or Divine Testimony it proceedeth from the Holy Ghost who kindleth it in our hearts by the Preaching of the Gospel Eph. 2.8 and confirmeth it by the use of the Sacraments Mat. 28.19 20. Now we are not said to be made Righteous through Faith onely or that we please God through the worthiness of meer Faith but because onely the Satisfaction Righteousness and Holiness of Christ is our Righteousness before God 1 Cor. 1.30 and we cannot take hold of it or apply it to our selves any other way then by Faith 1 Joh. 5.10 Yet Faith without Righteousness is Presumption as Righteousness without Truth is Hypocrisie And thus Faith is as it were an Addition of a New Light to Reason without which Reason is purblinde and begins to breed in the heart when the party begins to be touched in Conscience for his sins and hungers withal and thirsts after Christ and his Righteousness the first act of the understanding being to assent to the Truth contained in the Promises wherein Christ is offered and then the act of the Will to consent unto them that is to embrace them But before a man will be willing to take Christ the heart must be changed by God for none will take Christ upon Christs conditions till they be throughly humbled and have their hearts broken that know what the wrath of God is and have their Consciences awakened to see sin till they have been stung with a sense of their sins till they be heavy and have felt the weight of Satans yoke till then they will not come under the yoke
the wicked 1. The Impellent Cause is sin because it is an evil merit and deserveth evil 2. The Principal Efficient Cause is the Justice of God inflicting punishment for sin 3. The Instrumental Causes are divers Angels and Men both good and bad and all other Creatures 4. The Final Cause is That the Justice of God may be satisfied The Causes of the Cross of the godly viz. 1. The Acknowledging and purging out of sin 1 Cor. 11.32 Psa 119.71 2. The Hatred of the Devil and wicked men Joh. 15.19 1 Pet. 5.8 3. The Tryal and Exercise of Godliness Eccl. 34.10 4. Particular Defects and Failings in the Saints as in David and others 5. The Confirmation of the Truth by their Martyrdom Joh. 21.18 6. Their glorious Delivery that is the Manifestation of the immeasurable Wisdom Power Mercy and Justice of God in their wonderful deliverance 1 Sam. 2.6 7. The making of a Conformity between the Members and Christ their Head both in Affliction and Glory 2 Tim. 2.12 8. A Testimony and Confirmation of the Judgement and Life to come because Gods Justice and Truth requireth that in the end it go well with the good and ill with the bad but this cometh not to pass in this life In all Chastisements how sharp soever God is alway to be acknowledged just in laying them upon us 1. Because his Punishments though many times very grievous yet are alway less then our deserts and offences Psal 103.10 2. Because our sins are the procuring Causes of all the Evils we suffer Mic. 7.9 3. Because in all his Corrections and Judgements he remembreth Mercy Hab. 3.2 The Comforts and Consolations which are to be opposed to Afflictions to invite us to Patience viz. 1. Remission of Sins and Reconciliation unto God in Christ Rom. 5.1 8.3 2. The Necessity of Obeying God and the love which we owe him Job 2.10 Psal 3.9 3. The worthiness of Vertue that is of Obedience towards God the true Vertue Mat. 10.37 16.25 4. A good Conscience the godly being assured of Remission of sins purpose to obey God being confident of pardon in Christ resolve to suffer any thing 5. The Final Causes thereof as Gods glory Psal 119.75 Our Salvation 1 Cor. 11.32 The Salvation of others Acts 5. 6. The comparing together of Ends and Events it is better to suffer now then hereafter 7. The Hope of Recompence for the Reward is great in Heaven Mat. 5.12 8. The Example of Christ for the Servant is not above his Master Joh. 15.20 and of his Saints who have suffered before us 9. The Certain presence and assistance of God in all cases and chances of this life 1 Cor. 10.13 Psal 19.15 10. The final and full Delivery whereof are three degrees contrary to those of punishment 1. In this life when we have the beginning of eternal life 2. In our Bodily Death when the Soul is carried into Abrahams bosom 3. After the Resurrection when we shall be perfectly blessed both in Body and Soul The way to comfort our selves in trouble 1. It is our duty to acknowledge Gods Mercy to be great who might lay a heavier burthen on us 2. We must with boldness come by Prayer unto the Throne of Grace that we may put him in minde of his Mercies 3. We must thereby be drawn unto Repentance acknowledge our sins to have deserved far greater Judgements then yet we suffer and turn unto God with all our hearts 4. We must praise the goodness of God in sparing us and not pouring out the full Vials of his wrath upon us 5. We must remember That we think not our selves hardly dealt with taking heed that we murmure not nor complain against God 6. We must be patient and not discouraged under the Cross As the hand of Gods particular Providence is in all our Afflictions these three ways 1. He decreeth and fore-appointeth them 2. He effecteth them 3. He ordereth and disposeth them So his presence with us in Affliction hath these three ends or effects viz. 1. To work our deliverance from the Cross so far forth as it shall be for our good 2. To temper and moderate our Afflictions 3. To give us strength and power to bear his Affliction The fruit of Affliction viz. 1. Consideration they make men to see and consider their sins 2. Humiliation they serve to humble men in their Souls before God 3. They serve to work Amendment of life 4. Abnegation they cause men to deny themselves and relie wholly on the Mercy of God 5. Invocation they make us cry heartily and fervently unto God 6. Patience Affliction brings forth Patience Patience Experience 7. Obedience whereof we have an Example even of Christ himself Heb. 5.8 Prosperity worketh in us effects contrary to those of Affliction 1. It maketh us proud and insolent 2. It stirreth us up to serve our own wicked lusts fed by it 3. It hardneth us against the affection of Mercy 4. It maketh us cold negligent and distracted in prayer 5. It provoketh us to impatience wrath and self-confidence 6. It besots us with the love of the world and our selves alienating our thoughts from the heavenly life For what causes God humbleth his servants by Affliction 1. That all glory and praise may be given to him alone 2. That we may put away the vain confidence which naturally is in us and cleave to him alone 3. That we may be the better fitted for Mercy the better prepared to receive his gifts 4. That we may humble our selves pray repent pity others renounce the world and desire life Eternal Why the Lord sometimes defers deliverance from Affliction 1. To humble us throughly and to bring us to an utter denyal of our selves 2. That we may acknowledge from whence our Deliverance comes 3. To make us distrust the World and draw our thoughts to the life to come 4. To prevent greater evils and dangers wherein we might run God is said to deliver us two ways 1. By preservation and keeping us that we shall not come into danger 2. By freeing us from the trouble into which we are faln And this is 1. By taking the misery from us 2. By takingus from the misery Directions to arm us with Patience and to keep us from despising Gods corrections 1. In all Afflictions look as David did 2 Sam. 16.10 unto him that smiteth and know that they come not by chance but by Gods wise-disposing Providence and that purposely to breed in us true remorse 2. Consider that the Lord can adde Cross to Cross till he pull down our proud stomacks break our stiff necks and bring us to utter confusion yea that his Wrath is as his Greatness Infinite 3. Take notice of the Judgements which other men by despising the Lords corrections bring upon themselves 4. Make use of the least Cross and begin speedily to humble thy self if thy heart begin to be touched suffer it not to be presently hardned again but more and more humble
thy self Directions to keep us from fainting under the Cross 1. We must not cast both eyes on our selves and our own weakness and the weight of the Crosses that lie upon us but lift up one unto God and unto his goodness and consider how ready he is to succor in all time of need 2. Call to minde his manifold Promises both those which respect his gracious Assistance of us in the Tryal and his mighty deliverance of us out of it 3. Remember Examples of former times how he never oppressed them that patiently endured his corrections The benefit the Saints have by their peace with God in case of Affliction 1. It keepeth many Judgements from us which fall upon the wicked yea which otherwise would fall on us for the Threatnings of God are made against such as hate God and are hated of him 2. It alters the nature of all Troubles which befal us the sting is pulled out the curse is removed they are not vindictive for revenge but rather medicinal for physick 3. By it we are assisted and supported in all to the great admiration of others 4. By reason thereof we obtain at length full freedom from all Troubles and Crosses according to Gods many faithful Promises made to his children Psal 34.19 Prov. 11.8 1 Cor. 10.13 The Promise of Comfort in Affliction is accomplished four ways 1. When God tempers and allays the Sorrows and Afflictions of them that mourn according to the measure of their strength 1 Cor. 10.13 2. When God removes the grief with the causes thereof thus he comforted Manasseh 2 Chron. 33.13 14. 3. When God gives inward comfort to the heart and conscience by his Word and Spirit Rom. 5.3 4. When God by death puts an end to all miseries bringing our Souls to eternal life Thus Lazarus was comforted Motives to Patience 1. We must know That as all Affliction is from God so he will be with us and have care over us under the Cross for he is present with his Servants in their Afflictions 2. This meditation must enter into our Souls and never depart from us that God will turn all our sorrows and sufferings unto the best and that every Affliction upon the Servants of God hath some special goodness in it 3. We must consider what we have deserved and how we may justly be punished not onely in that maner but in a greater measure 4. We are made to suffer here that we might not suffer elswhere 5. It is the Will of God that we should suffer to which we must willingly obey and humbly submit our selves Phil. 1.29 For all Afflictions come to pass not by accident chance or fortune but by the special Providence of God who hath commanded Obedience 6. We must consider that the party distressed hath partners in the Cross That God will assist us in the patient bearing of them That God promiseth a blessed issue That by means of them Prosperity is made more pleasant and delectable 7. That the Lord vouchsafeth us the Honor to be Martyrs Witnesses of his Truth made like unto Christ himself yea that while we are made partakers of Christs sufferings the Spirit of God resteth upon us wherewith we are marvellously comforted 1 Pet. 4.14 8. We must look upward to our reward which is great in heaven Mat. 5.12 The lets or hindrances of patience viz. 1. Self-love the very bane and poyson of all good and holy desires 2. The desire of Revenge that indeed which belongs not to us 3. Infidelity when we cast off all confidence in God who maintaineth the lot of all those that trust in and depend upon him 4. The want of premeditation and consideration how we may continue and go through all adversity without starting back in any kinde from our profession Means to procure Patience 1. To pray to God for it for he is the Author of it Rom. 15.5 2. Constantly to profess the Gospel to hear the Word and practise it Rev. 3.10 3. We must labor for the Spirit of God which may work patience in us for it is a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 The Vices repugnant to Patience viz. 1. Impatience which is through the not knowing and distrust of Gods Wisdom Providence Justice and Goodness not to be willing to obey God in suffering but through grief to fret against him not expecting or desiring any help or deliverance from him but by yielding unto grief to be thereby solicited unto Despair 2. Temerity or Rashness which is through foolishness not knowing or not considering the dangers our own calling or the Will of God through a confidence in our selves to adventure on dangers without need or necessity 3. Too light regard of Crosses Prov. 3.11 So some despise them as matters not much to be regarded not looking to God who smiteth This is commonly caused either by stupidity of minde or stubbornness of will such endure many troubles but receive no good by any Into this fall the wicked sort 4. Too great fear of such Crosses as God layeth on men Heb. 12.5 Thus others faint and sink under the burthen of them as if they were unsupportable not to be endured fixing their eyes too fast upon the Justice and Wrath of God Into this Extreme fall the weaker sort yea many of the dear Saints and Servants of God Psal 6.6 Wouldst thou be Fire-proof in the midst of Flame Or burn a Martyr yet not feel the same In Chains more free then Kings on Thrones wouldst be Fetter'd and manacled to Liberty So great a pleasure done thee by thy pains Thou mayst be bound as by so to thy Chains Thrive by the Cross and have Affliction prove No Scourge of Justice but the Rod of Love If so put on this Armor of Defence This never-Conquer'd Vertue PATIENCE §. 5. Of Hope HOpe is an infallible and most comfortable expectation of all the Promises made by God unto the Faithful for Christs sake and so of an allaiment of present afflictions and of a final deliverance from the same and lastly an earnest looking for all those blessings necessary to salvation according to the good will and pleasure of God This Hope springeth from Faith for he that is certain of the present will of God towards him that is assured of his grace and favor hath also certain and assured promises of the time to come For God is unchangeable yea and the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Now when we believe on true sound and undeceiveable grounds that Christ is ours that heaven is ours that our sins are pardoned and that we are the Adopted sons of God then comes in Hope and that passionately expecteth that which is to come yea though Persecution Fire Sword Famine Pestilence Bondage and thousands of other crosses and calamities involve us to eclipse our Faith this Hope holds us above the Waves makes us danger-proof roots us unanchorable and at length brings us safe to our expected haven The diverse Acceptation of Hope in
seasoned with some taste of his Wrath and Indignation This indeed is the true Tryal of our Faith even when above and against Reason we relie on the Mercy of God in the Apprehension of his Anger In which time of Temptation men are unfit Judges of themselves and of their condition how it stands between God and their Souls even the faithful themselves at such time may cry out and complain as if they were without both Faith and feeling of any favor of God who yet even then is not absent from them neither hath forgotten them The hour of Temptation with the Faithful is the time of winter wherein their Faith and Graces seem as it were benumm'd but when the Rejoycing Beams of the Sun of Righteousness break forth dissipate and chase away from the poor bemisted Soul the thick cloud of false and forged Suggestions his Faith appears the spring of Graces approacheth they shew forth by lively effects That they still retained life and were not dead to the present operation of unspeakable comfort in the late clouded Soul In such Distresses let no man think the Weight of his sins can over-ballance the Merit of his Savior The Celestial Lights may suffer Eclipses and we must walk by Faith not by Feeling Now the true Application of Life Everlasting promised in and by the Blood of Christ is the general Remedy for all Distresses But note That the distressed in minde are not fit for comfort till they be humbled for their sins for till then the Word of God is misapplied and so abused Despair is a sin whereby a man makes shipwrack of all Hope of the Mercy of God in Christ arising from a false consideration of his sins which he hath committed or the good which he hath omitted with a perswasion that God is neither able nor willing to forgive him Thus the Desperate man believeth not that God is either good true faithful or powerful he may indeed have some conceit that he is so in general but that he is so to him in particular and for his good this he will not be perswaded of but with Judas conceits that God is not willing to pardon him or rather that he will not pardon him Mat. 27. or with Cain That he is not able to forgive him Gen. 4.13 Thus Despair impeacheth the most glorious Attributes of God his Power as if he were not able to make good his Promise his Truth as if he were unfaithful his Mercy as if it were dryed up with the heat of mens sins his Omnipresence as if he were not ever by us Thus it stops the currant of Gods Mercy barreth up the gates of Heaven against men and openeth the mouth of Hell for them which if thou wilt avoid beware of Infidelity for that is the Mother of Despair And thus Despair ariseth partly from too deep an apprehension of the power of the Devil as if he were Infinite and he able to do whatsoever his Malice would or unlimited God letting the reins loose and permitting him to do what himself pleased and partly from too light an esteem of that power which is to be had in God as if he were not sufficient to keep us safe and of the Mercy of God as if it were not Infinite Temptations to draw us to doubt of that help we have in God and to Despair are properly termed The fiery darts of the devil which he shoots into our thoughts to poyson the Soul with their venomous heads thereby to draw us into Perdition These Temptations where they light and fasten pierce deep showers of them did the Devil shoot at poor Job David complains much they were let fly at him yea he flung some even at Christ himself in the wilderness Mat. 4.3 in the garden Mat. 26.37 c. and on the Cross 27.46 He that Despairs sucks fiery burning poyson into his Soul hath the Brimstone of Hell sulphering in his very bowels not a drop of the gracious Promises of God to quench it because he thinks the Puddle-pool of his sins greater then the Ocean of Gods Mercy This fire either stupifies the Spiritual Senses and dries up the life of the Soul or torments him like Cain Saul and Judas intolerably without all hope of redress Whosoever therefore by reason of their weakness or through the violence of some Temptation have so let fall their shield of Faith as that Satans fiery darts have touched their Conscience and pierced their Soul let them not thereupon utterly despair and give themselves up to the power of Satan but know That a Renewing of Faith by a speedy recourse to the Promises of God in Christ is a liquid Balsam to quench the flame Virtual to draw out the fire and Soveraign to cure the wound Faith applying the Vertue of Christs Sacrifice to a perplexed and troubled Soul dispelleth the inward anguish thereof but he that after some failings and spiritual wounds puts off all Hope as if Death and Destruction without all Remedy must needs follow thereupon is like him that will rather dye then take Physick murthers his Soul because it was sick hastens his own Damnation and by a Blasphemous prejudice to the unvaluable Merits of Christ through Infidelity becomes the wilful Destroyer of that Soul which might have lived for ever had he had the grace of Faith to apply the Remedy The special distresses of the Minde are five and arise either 1. Of a Divine Temptation 2. From outward Affliction 3. Of the Temptation of Blasphemy 4. From a mans own Sins 5. From a mans own Body Distress in minde is when a man is disquieted and distempered in Conscience and consequently in his Affections touching his estate before God which hath two Degrees 1. The less which is a single fear grief suspence or doubt touching his Salvation 2. The greater which is Despair when a man in his own sense and apprehension is without all hope of Salvation All distresses of the Minde ariseth from Temptation either begun or continued therefore according to the divers kindes of Temptations must the Distresses of the minde be distinguished which as formerly may be all reduced to these two Heads viz. 1. Of Tryal which is twofold 1. Combat of the Conscience directly with the wrath of God called a Divine Temptation 2. Of the Cross whereby God proves and makes tryal of the Faith of his children 2. Of Seducement which is threefold 1. Immediately from the Devil called the Temptation of Blasphemy 2. From a mans own sins both Original and Actual 3. From Imagination corrupted irregulated and depraved Despair is of three sorts of men viz. 1. Of Epicures Prophane men and Atheists who rejecting all Hope and refusing to wait for Mercy their Conscience convicting them that there is nothing to be expected but damnation give themselves over to all maner of wickedness laboring to extinguish out of their hearts That there is a God a Heaven or a Hell Jer. 18.12 2. Of those men who are overcome with
holy policy are to fortifie themselves against it because it springs from so fair and unsuspected a Fountain even from Zeal godly Duties and good Actions who are with much Humiliation and fervency of Spirit to pray and strive against it because it singles out the Chosen of God and takes up his seat in the sanctified Soul who are with wonderful care to countermine the sly insinuations wherewith it unavoidably windes it self into their hearts lest when they seem to disclaim Pride they prove proud that they are not proud who cannot be too secure of their Sentinels on the heart-guards because there is no profoundness of Knowledge no measure of Grace no eminency of Zeal can be exempted from hazard of Surprizal by this last and most cunning encounter of Satan by Spiritual Pride Great reason therefore hath the childe of God strongly to fence his heart with a gracious and unfained humility against this sin lest gazing on the dangerous speculations of his own worthiness the eye of his Conscience become blinde to his own Deficiencies Corruptions and Infirmities lest his Self-conceitedness and a vain over-valuing of his own Gifts and Vertues call the Truth of them into question and extinguish the life of Sincerity lest an adulterous self-liking of his own excellency be justly plagued with a scandalous fall into some gross sin lest this Viper nourished in the bosom of his Soul take unseasonable heat and warmth from his Zeal and endanger the whole frame of his New man Now the onely Soveraign means to preserve the life and vigor of Graces in the Soul and to keep thence this pestilent canker-worm of Spiritual Pride is with much earnestness and prayer to labor after and settle surely in the heart a true and undissembled Humility This kinde of Secret or Privy-Pride is not so properly a breach of this Commandment as the outward and more open Pride whose concomitant Companions and Branches are Envy Anger Impatience Indignation Self-will and Obstinacy Presumption Hypocrisie Boasting Ingratitude Contempt Disobedience Ambition and Curiosity as also a fained Modesty or Humility which is a double Pride being to hunt after the praise and commendation of Humility by refusing in shew and apparence and by denying of those things outwardly which yet a man secretly covets and in his minde attributes unto himself either truly or falsly This is Pride under a vail which if Plenty and Prosperity in outward things answer the expectation doth soon appear in its proper Peacockcolours to be nothing else but the very heighth and pinacle of all Pride and Arrogancy whose true Properties follow The properties of the proud man viz. 1. To ascribe his gifts not to God but to his own worthiness and ability and to refer his gifts and counsels principally to his own glory and therefore to stand in admiration of himself and his gifts 2. Not truly to fear God neither to acknowledge and bewail his own defects 3. To be always aspiring to some higher place and calling 4. To attribute to himself those things which he hath not to attempt things above his power and not belonging to his calling 5. To contemn and debase others in respect of himself to believe none but to covet to excel and be eminent above others 6. To be angry with God and Men to fret and fume against God when his desires and counsels are hindred and also to accuse God of Error and Injustice if Gods counsels agree not with the judgements and affections of men Pride is twofold 1. Inward in the soul which consists Partly in the Minde which is a corrupt disposition thereof whereby a man thinks himself to be better then indeed he is This was the proud Pharisees sin Luke 18.11 12. Partly in the Will which is an inward affection whereby a man is not contented with that estate wherein God hath placed him but desires a better This befel Adam and Eve and does most of their Posterity in every Age. 2. Outward which proceeding from the former shews it self in the effects in her proper colours by apparel gestures language actions and most vain phantastick self-conceits Inward Pride must be carefully avoided for these Reasons viz. 1. Because whatsoever outward good works the childe of God can do by Grace the same may a wicked man do through Pride and Hypocrisie as conceive a Prayer Preach the Word and Practice the outward duties of Repentance of Love and such like for Pride is a sin that will counterfeit Grace and man cannot discern it truly but God onely 2. Many other sins prevail in the wicked but Pride is the sin that troubleth the children of God and when other sins dye then will Pride revive yea it will rise as it were out of Grace it self for the childe of God may be proud because he is not proud proud of his Humility therefore Paul must be buffeted by the messenger of Satan lest he should be puffed up with the abundance of Revelations 2 Cor. 12.7 The way to avoid this dangerous sin of Inward Pride viz. 1. We must be careful to know the Pride of our own hearts for every man hath it in him more or less and the more we see it the less it is but the less we see it the more it is indeed for he that is most humbled is not altogether free from this Inward Pride 2. When we see our Pride we must labor to subdue it which may thus be done 1. By considering the Judgements of God upon this sin it poysoned Angelical Perfection and afterward occasioned our Parents casting out of Paradice and remember Herod who for this sin was eaten up of worms Acts 12. 2. We must search into our selves and labor to see our own wants and corruptions as our Blindeness of Minde Unbelief c. The want of feeling our wants occasions Pride 3. We must meditate upon the Death and Passion of Christ and how can a man think that Christ endured that bitter Passion for and yet not be humbled with the sight of his sins which had a part in the cause thereof Reasons taken from the state of the Regenerate Soul why the childe of God should fence his heart against Spiritual Pride viz. 1. The consideration of our deficiencies even in our most religious duties and best performances 2. The consideration of our own forwardness to march under Satans Banners and our base unworthy vassallage therein before our Regeneration 3. The consideration of the bottomless depth of Gods bounty to us which hath raised unto us whatsoever gifts we have 4. The consideration of the danger which may happen to the whole man by giving entertainment to Spiritual Pride for either it may perswade us to embrace some groundless singularity of unwarrantable Opinions or by Gods just Judgement draw upon us a deadness of heart a dulness of zeal an intermission of the operations of Grace or the like inconveniences The three Errors which did deceive the Pharisee does many other proud persons 1. His
when he counterfeits godliness his dissembling of Piety makes every sin he commits leave a double blot of guilt on the painted Sepulchre of his Soul Without Integrity and Uprightness of heart our Prayers hearin of Sermons partaking of the Sacraments or the performance of any other holy Exercises doth nothing avail If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me Isa 1.15 Sincerity is as Salt that seasoneth every work the life and substance of all other Graces without it the best things are no better then sins against God but to such as are pure in heart he is good and gracious Psal 79.1 125.4 5. Hence it is that men in this Age hate the Saints under pretence that they are the Hypocrites and this hath been the Devils policy against all holy men in all Ages David was said to be a subtile man to deceive others Paul was reckoned the great Impostor of the world nay Christ himself was called a Deceiver And indeed no man speaks against Religion or hates Religion under its own notion under its own name but somewhat else as Hypocrisie indeed such as have not Grace themselves cannot possibly judge of Grace in others Now in the state of Formal Hypocrisie may concur immunity from notorious sins all natural and moral Perfections admirable variety of Learning Policy and all other acquired Ornaments of the Minde an outward performance of all duties of Religion some measure of inward illumination a resemblance or shadow of the whole body of true Regeneration and a perswasion of being in the state of Grace even thus far a man may go in the profession of Christian Religion and yet for want of true sincerity be a stranger from the power of Faith and from the life of godliness yea though a man were a moral Saint an Angel among the Pharisees absolute in all other Perfections yet without the inward power of Grace to give them the life of sincerity he is but a spectacle of commiseration to Angels and Men. The difference betwixt this Moral civil man and the Hypocrite is onely this That the Hypocrite doth much of the First Table little of the Second but the Civil man doth much of the Second Table little of the First neither doth what he doth in sincerity both do what they do in Hypocrisie yea though Moral Honesty and outward Righteousness be in themselves good and in a kinde necessary yet by accident are many times a strong bar to keep men from the power of godliness and unfeigned sincerity for resting therein and not stepping forward they content themselves with a probable error of being in the state of Crace and with a plausible passage unto eternal Death for he which reacheth but to civil Honesty comes far short of being in Christ and consequently of true happiness Thus the two main Engines whereby the Devil deludes the world and ensnares the Souls of Unregenerate men are Civil Honesty and Formal Hypocrisie Hypocrisie is either 1. In works commanded of God but not done after that maner which God requireth 2. In works not commanded of God yet done for ostentations sake as all superstitious and humane Traditions which appertain not to the edifying of the Church The causes or Reasons that many profess God that serve the Devil 1. Pride or Self-love which so overcometh their hearts and blindeth their eyes that they cannot see their wickedness or judge of themselves and their own Misery as they should 2. Because the heart of man is so deceitful he can speak with his Tongue what he meaneth not in his heart beguiling with lying lips and a double tongue Hypocrisie is threefold 1. Privy Hypocrisie by which a man maketh profession of more then is in his heart This kinde of Hypocrisie ariseth from Spiritual Pride and sometimes mixeth it self even with the fairest and most sanctified actions of Gods dearest children soonest insinuating into the holiest heart 2. Gross Hypocrisie by which a man professes that which is not in his heart at all and so deceives others but not his own heart This most properly is Hypocrisie 3. Formal Hypocrisie by which a man doth not onely deceive others but also his own heart with a false conceit and perswasion that he is in a happy state The Reasons why the gross Hypocrite is more miserable and of less hope then the open sinner 1. Because he sins against the light of his Conscience which maner of sinning makes him incapable of saving Graces 2. Because by his outward profession he so dazles the eyes of men that he bars himself of those Reproofs and wholesom Admonitions whereby the open sinner is many times reclaimed humbled and converted 3. Because all publike Reprehensions and Admonitions from the Ministery he posts over from himself to the open sinner as not belonging to himself 4. Because he is justly obnoxious to an extraordinary measure of Gods hatred and indignation and weight of vengeance The unhappy issue of the Formal Hypocrite 1. A cursed Security wherein he slumbers to eternal destruction 2. A wretched Opposition to more sincerity then he findes in himself 3. A searedness deadness and benummedness of Conscience 4. An Impatiency of having his Formality censured by the Ministery of the Word 5. A Neglect of a more sound search into the state of his Soul Reasons moving the Formal Hypocrite to think well of himself and his own state good 1. A comparing himself with those which are more sinful 2. A prejudice which he conceives from the imputation which the world layeth upon the children of God 3. An outward Success in worldly matter much plenty in outward things 4. A Misconceit of Gods Justice and a straining and a racking of his Mercy beyond his Truth and Promise 5. A Misapprehension of the Opposition in the passage of Grace 6. A Misobservation upon the Death and Ends of other men A performance of outward Duties of Religion without the power of Grace upon the Soul and an universal Sanctification in all the faculties thereof cannot produce any sound comfort in the heart or acceptation with God and that for these Reasons 1. Because the iniquity defect or exorbitancy of any particular of one circumstance maketh an action evil but an absolute integrity of all concurrents is required to make a good work acceptable to God comfortable and profitable to a Christian 2. Because except our Righteousness exceed that of the Scribes and Pharisees we shall not enter into the kingdom of Heaven 3. Because the principal and holiest Exercises the most solemn and sacred actions of Religion without sincerity and Sanctification of heart are but as the cutting off a Dogs neck and the offering of Swines blood which Truth ariseth out of Isa 1. Mic. 6. Hag. 2. Psal 50. and many other places Hypocrisie though long covered will be at last uncased and that for these Reasons 1. Because it is like a wound healed outwardly but festering inwardly and therefore at last the corruption cannot but break
shorten their days Psal 37.37 38. Eccl. 8.12 Isa 3.10 11. Who say there is to Man no Honor due Belye that God that 's infinitely True And by this specious fond Delusion Vsher an Vnity of Confusion Both in the Church and State disjoynting more The Frame o'th'World then Babel did before Childe Reverence thy Parents thou shalt have By far the longer Journey to thy Grave But if the Lord doth sooner call thee hence Eternity shall be thy Recompence The Sixth Commandment Thou shalt do no Murther THe Sum of this Commandment forbiddeth all kinde of evil and commandeth all kinde of good to our Neighbors person So that the scope or end of this Commandment is the preservation of the life and safety of mens Bodies and of the welfare both of our selves and others herein being forbidden all those things which tend to the destruction of our life or the life of others And the defence of our Neighbor is here commanded because Negative Commandments include Affirmatives Thou shalt do no Murther therefore thou shalt help and aid thy Neighbor Thou shalt do no Murther that is according to thine own pleasure and lust but when the Magistrate punisheth God punisheth Now the Vertues of this Commandment are such as either hurt not men as particular Justice Mildeness Equability Peaceableness and the like or such Vertues as help and further the Safety of men either by repelling evils as Commutative Justice true Fortitude holy Indignation and Zeal or by doing benefits as Humanity Mercy Amity and the like So that herein we are commanded to preserve as much as in us lieth the life and health of our selves and others especially of our Neighbor and most especially the life of his Soul by good Counsels Exhortations and Admonitions Now here know therefore That to give or accept the Challenge to fight the single Combat is unlawful That which the Natural man accounteth Valor God esteemeth a Vice and therefore it is no disgrace to refuse it but rather true grace in yielding obedience unto God for no man must sin against God for the saving of his Credit and Reputation among men Duellists if they are slain are accessary to their own wilful and untimely Murther if they kill presently after the Murther committed they have cursed Cains fearful Mark stamp'd on them There was never any man rightly informed either in the Principles of Nature or in the gracious way to Heaven in the sober Passages of Morality or in the Justice of State or Policy or acquainted with the fairness of true Honor that ever gave any allowance to the Reputation of Honor falsly so called purchased by private Quarrel in the Field Now as Murther is one of those sins the Earth findes most unsupportable and cryeth the loudest of any other to Heaven for Vengeance So among all the several kindes thereof Parricide is the abominablest and most odious such as of old no particular Law was made against as being supposed an act too unnatural for any Childe to commit which Supposition deceived even Solon that wise Law-maker among the Heathen and caused him by his own confession to omit the Enacting Punishment against such Offenders Cic. pro Ros Ame. Yet when this inhumane impiety was known to the world the Civil Law ordained this most exquisite ingenious punishment That if any one should kill his Parent the Sword or Fire or any other usual punishment should not be his but being sewed in a Sack together with a Dog a Cock a Viper and an Ape he should be cast into the next Sea or River Just Cod. cap. 9. Tit. 17. as unworthy to live the life or dye the death of men unworthy the Element of Air while he lives or of Earth being dead To this high degree of Murther borders that ungodly and unnatural act of Parents in destroying their own Children whether at any time after Birth or in the Womb after Conception for that which hath received a Soul formed in it by God if it be unjustly cast away shall be Revenged yea if both or either of the Parents through any wilful default whatsoever cause the childe to miscarry they make themselves guilty of that miscarriage if both miscarry they make themselves guilty of the blood of both at least in the Court of Conscience before God Lastly because this horrible sin of Murther is most commonly occasioned by Duelling we must yet further know That the Law both of God and Man condemneth this common practice of Brawling Fighting Quarrelling or Challenging one another into the Field for private and personal wrongs Whosoever think it a disgrace to refuse such Challenges think it also a disgrace to walk in the ways of God and to obey the good Edicts of Princes and wholesom Laws of the Commonwealth The greatest disgrace is Not to yield Obedience unto God it is no credit to sin against him to salve a supposed Honor and Reputation among men for no man ought to revenge his own Cause or Quarrel Likewise the causes of these Duels are most commonly very wicked as sometimes Pride and Vain-glory sometimes Drunkenness and Lust sometimes Covetousness and Greediness of Gain and the cause of all these causes the Devil himself who was a Murtherer from the beginning The effects thereof are no better for they cause deadly Fewds breed Hatred never to be appeased nourish Contention and Confusion hinder Prayer and holy Exercises of Religion shed mans blood made in the Image of God and bring down the Vengeance of God upon our own heads Let all such therefore as challenge or accept of Challenges consider That he that killeth is guilty of execrable Murther before God and he that is killed is guilty of his own death and no better then one of the Devils Martyrs for as God hath his Martyrs that dye in his Cause so the Devil also hath his Martyrs that dye in his These words Thou shalt do no Murther do signifie 1. Thou shalt not desire to Murther either thy self or others 2. Thou shalt not intimate or signifie any desire of Murthering either thy self or others either in words behavior countenance or otherwise 3. Thou shalt not put this desire in execution This Commandment hath these two parts viz. 1. The forbidding of Murther and therein all the degrees and steps by which we come unto it 2. The commanding of keeping Peace and Friendship with our Neighbors The steps or degrees towards Murther are these three viz. 1. Hatred conceived in the heart Lev. 19.17 2. Rash sinful Anger which is a declaration of that hatred lying hid in the heart 3. Every hurt purposely offered to the person of our Neighbor whereupon ensueth sometimes Murther it self That Murther may be committed in the very Affection or Will may be thus manifested 1. Because when the Effect is commanded or forbidden the Cause is so also 2. From the scope or end of the Commandment God will not have us hurt any therefore he forbiddeth the means also whereby we may hurt 3.
and turn unto God Ezek. 18.13 4. Our Repentance must be speedy and always so long as we live Matth. 24.13 Revel 2.10 No man ought to defer his Repentance on this ground That Christ was merciful to the Thief at his death Luk. 23.43 For 1. That one example is recorded that none should utterly despair 2. Onely that one that none should presume 3. It cannot be proved that he put off his Repentance to that day 4. It is not safe to make an extraordinary Action as this was a patern For Christ did miraculously work on that thief to give in that moment of his Humiliation an evidence of his divine Power Reasons why we ought to hasten our Repentance viz. 1. Because we are uncertain of the means not knowing whether God will offer the same to morrow or no. 2. Because we are most uncertain of our lives 3. Because the longer we live having not repented we get the greater measure of sin Sin by custom becometh stronger and our selves the weaker thereby to repent thereof 4. Otherwise we provoke Gods wrath against us and cause him to remove the means from us We must witness our Repentance by acknowledging our particular sins and trespasses for these Reasons viz. 1. Because Repentance onely made generally and confusedly is never true but a common and hypocritical Repentance of one resolved and setled to continue in sin and not yet touched with a true feeling thereof Indeed for unknown sins which we in weakness and ignorance commit the Lord accepteth a general confession and acknowledgement which no doubt may be said of the poligamy or marrying of many Wives and other daily infirmities provided we daily renew our Repentance for all known sins and lead the whole course of our lives penitentially 2. Because we must make a particular account to God at the hour of death not a general one of gross sins onely but a particular one of all specials also The true signs of sound Repentance viz. 1. Care to avoid all sin as well as any one not for fear but love not because man but God commandeth a diligent care study and endeavor to amend what is amiss and to labor to practice the contrary Vertue 2. Impatience till we have cleared our selves and made our peace with God for committed sins and a purging of our selves of other mens sins with a clear Conscience in all things 3. A holy Indignation or Anger against our selves and the sins we before took pleasure in either in our selves or others 4. Fear because it is sin fearing to offend God because of his Mercy a filial fear to sin to displease God or to hazard his favor 5. Desire or fervent affection to God to Spiritual things a longing after the Grace of God a thirsting after Christs Righteousness and the sincere Milk of the Word 6. Zeal for God and his Worship which makes us not to perform it perfunctorily a knowing Zeal after Gods Glory a holy Contention or Emulation to exceed in Piety 7. Revenge when we are holily revenged of our selves for our sins by the contrary Vertues a holy Revenge judging and condemning of our selves for our sins in our selves or others by our occasion Motives to true sound Repentance viz. 1. The Commandment of God himself so often urged and repeated Jer. 13.12 8.6 18.11 This was Johns Proclamation in the Wilderness Mat. 3.8 This Doctrine was preached to our Parents in paradice was afterward figured out by Circumcision before the Law and by Purification after the Law Isa 1.16 2. Such as Repent not lie under the bondage of Satan they are as Captives and Prisoners bound to obey his Will and to do him Service 2 Tim. 2.26 3. Such as dye without Repentance remain for ever without Remission and Forgiveness they are lost and must needs perish if they repent not before 2 Pet. 3.9 Luke 13.3 4. The Threatnings denounced and executed upon the Rebellious and Disobedient are made Examples and Admonitions unto us Gods Vengeance justly faln upon others should serve to amend us 1 Cor. 10.6 5. The Certainty and Suddenness of the last and general Judgement What maner of persons ought we therefore to be in holy Conversation and Godliness 6. We must be all led to Repentance by the unspeakable Fruits that follow it as Pardon of Sins Reconciliation with God Peace of Conscience Hearing of our Prayers and in the end Blessedness in the Heavens Ezek. 33.11 7. The Exellency of it which appeareth 1. In the Antiquity of it being the first Sermon in Paradice 2. In the Continuance of it having always been in the Church and shall be to the end 8. The Profit of it which may appear in these five things viz. 1. It freeth us from the Snares and Subtilties of Satan 2 Tim. 2.25 26. 2. It preventeth the Judgement of God in this Temporal life Jonah 3.4 10. 3. It procureth the Mercies of God Temporal Spiritual and Eternal Mal. 3.7 Ezek. 18. 4. It freeth us from Death Spiritual and Eternal 5. It saves our Souls from Death and hides a multitude of Sins Jam. 5.20 9. The Necessity of it because without it we may perish for ever Luke 13.5 3. The means to attain unto repentance viz. 1. A careful diligent profitable and constant Hearing of Gods Word Acts 2.38 41. 2. To beg it at the hands of God by Prayer for it is the gift of God onely Ezek. 36.26 Duties required of us after we have repented viz. 1. We must pray to God to uphold us that we may not fall again into our former Sins and Transgressions 2. We must labor to convert others and be a means for the beating down of Sin in them and for the raising of them up to Newness of Life XIV OBedience is that whereby a man being endued with Faith and Repentance doth accordingly to the measure of Grace received endeavor himself to yield Obedience to all Gods Commandments from all the powers and parts both of his Soul and his Body And this is called New-Obedience because it is a Renewing of that in man whereto he was perfectly enabled by Creation This Obedience much consisteth in observing the Works of Christ which we must not understand of doing them according to the rigor of the Law but of a purpose and endeavor to keep them For this is a Priviledge belonging to all that are in Christ That God accepteth their wills and endeavors of Obedience for perfect Obedience it self whereupon they who have but little knowledge if they have care to get more knowledge make conscience to obey that which they know shall also have the Reward promised for true Religion stands not in Knowledge but in Obedience and this is true Obedience to make Conscience of every sin in our own persons to take heed of the infection of sin in others and to abstain from the appearance of evil and all this not for a day or a year but from time to time in all I say all our
respect sake which we owe our Bodies 1 Cor. 12.23 24. Special Rules for Direction in the right adorning of the Body viz. 1. Every one must be content with their own natural Favor and Complexion that God hath given them 2. We must place the principal Ornament of our Souls and Bodies in Vertue and good Works and not in any outward thing 3. In the use of Ornaments we must be very sparing and keep our selves within the mean 4. Ornaments must be used not always alike but according to occasions as in this time of Holy Feasting we may use them more freely then at other times 5. We must adorn our Bodies to a right end viz. That thereby we may honor them and in them honor God The right and spiritual use of Apparrelling our selves viz. 1. To consider our Cloaths are but as the Plaister of our shame and thereby to humble our selves 2. When we clothe our selves to remember to gird up our loyns to prepare our selves for Christ whether by Death or by Judgement 3. By putting on of our Garments we must be admonished to put on Christ Rom. 13.14 4. By putting off of our Cloaths we are admonished to put off the old Man the Body of Corruption Sick Soul hast surfetted with Sin No doubt Thy safest Physick is to Fast it out Or is Gods hand his just Revenging hand Threatned inflicted on thee or the Land Or doest thou want some Blessing Go thy way Prepare thy self to Mourn to Fast and Pray But if God stops a Plague or sheaths his Sword Thou may'st be glad Rejoyce but in the Lord And let thy Holy Feasting never be Without Thanksgiving Fear and Charity CHAP. VIII Of Ecclesiastical Discipline ECclesiastical Discipline is that other Key of the Kingdom of Heaven which is joyned with that of the Preaching of the Gospel and doth open or shut when according to the Commandment of Christ they who in Name are Christians but in their Doctrine or Life shew themselves aliens from Christ Rom. 12.7 c. After they having sometime been admonished will not depart from their Errors and Wickedness are made known unto the Church or to them that are appointed for that matter and purpose of the Church and if neither then they obey the Admonition are of the same men by interdiction from the Sacraments shut out from the Congregation of the Church and by God himself out of the Kingdom of Heaven And again if they profess and indeed declare amendment of life are received as Members of Christ and his Church Matth. 18.17 c. 1 Cor. 5.2 c. 2 Thes 3.14 15. This Ecclesiastical Discipline is to be ministred by the Pastors of the Church whereunto are adjoyned certain Elders for this end as Necessities shall require chosen of the Church For Excommunication is an Action of the Church performed in the Name of Christ whereby a grievous Transgressor or an open ungodly and obstinate Sinner is banished from the Fellowship of the Faithful by the judgement of the Elders by the consent of the Church by the Authority of Christ and by the Holy Scriptures They who are to be Excommunicated are chiefly such as deny some Article of the Faith or shew that they will not repent nor submit themselves to the Will of God according to his Commandments neither make any scruple of persisting stubbornly in manifest Wickedness The chief and principal part in Excommunication is Denunciation whereby is denounced That he that denyeth Faith and Repentance is no Member of the Church as long as he continueth such And this Denunciation whereby one is Excommunicated is not in the Power of the Minister of the Church but in the Power of the Church and is done in the name of the Church because this Commandment was given by Christ unto the Church and not for the destruction of the Sinner which is to be Excommunicated but for his Edification or Salvation 1 Cor. 5.5 Some draw the Original of this Church Censure even from Adam whom the Lord cast out of Eden and by an Angel kept him from re-entring and suffered him not to touch or taste of that Tree which was a Sacrament of Life unto him So some observe touching Cain whom the Lord cast out and banished from his face and indeed the Face of God may be called The place of his solemn Worship where he more specially appears In the time of the Law were many Ceremonies to this purpose the unclean were kept from coming to the Tabernacle from entring into the Temple from the partaking of the Sacrifices and from eating the Passover Num. 19.13 20. 9.13 And Abraham is commanded to cast out the Bond-woman and her son out of his Family which was the Church Gen. 21.10 11. So in the New Testament Matth. 16.19 18.18 The use of the Keys to open and shut and the words of binding and loosing come directly to this purpose This was executed on Hymeneus and Alexander 1 Tim. 1.19 20. From all which it is very clear That Excommunication is a sentence of the Church whereby a Member thereof convicted of some grievous Crime and by no means brought to Repentance is driven out of the Church and cut off from the Communion and Fellowship of the Faithful that thereby he may be driven to Repentance The Church is the City of God Excommunication is the Sword That the School of Christ this is the Rod That the Temple of God this is as it were the Whip to scourge out such as abuse it and themselves That the Body of Christ this is as a Medicine to cure the sick Members thereof That the Vine and Sheepfold this serveth to keep the Foxes and Wolves from it The Mark whereat Excommunication aimeth and the end whereto it tendeth is That the Sinners being ashamed may be brought to Repentance and that such as live in the Church might not be corrupted for the cause of the Institution of Excommunication is not so much the punishment of Sin as the Salvation of a Sinner the edifying of the Church and the glory of God For the Church according to the Doctrine of Christ smiteth none with the Spiritual Sword but such as are impenitent and doth not this unto death but unto life and therefore receiveth them that repent The Censure of Excommunication must be used as an Ordinance of God not as an Invention of Man not onely knowing the nature and use of it but practising it to the glory of God and to the good of others Not like the Church of Rome that playes fast and loose with the souls of men for gain nor like their Apes of Modern Times little regarding whether the Excommunicate repented or not but more advising them to pay their Fees and discharge the Court then to repent of their Offences The persons that are liable to this Censure of the Church are onely such as have confessed Christ and called upon God the Father together with us albeit they have denied him in their deeds