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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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not lawful for them to work by themselves and so the Law of God should be deluded The Cattel also was commanded to Rest whose Rest had no respect or consideration of Gods Worship but was commanded onely in respect of men and that for these two Reasons especially 1. That all occasion of laboring might be cut off by forbidding the labor or use of their Beasts 2. That also they sparing bruit Beasts might learn how greatly God will have regard to be had of mercy and favorableness towards men It was the Seventh day that God consecrated to Divine Service for these Reasons 1. That by the Example of his own Rest as a most forcible and effectual Argument he might exhort men to the imitation thereof 2. That this Rest of the Seventh day might be a Monument of the Creation then finished by God and of his perpetual preservation and governing of his Work ever since that day unto his own glory and the Safety of his chosen In this consecration God requireth these two things most especially viz. 1. That on the Sabbath day there be not onely a private serving of God as on other days but also a publike serving of him in the Church 2. That on that day all other labors should give place both to the private and publike Worship of God which on other days every one doth exercise according to his Vocation and Calling Now here we must know That there is a threefold difference of forbidding works and sins viz. 1. Labors are forbidden but in respect onely as they hinder the Ministery of the Church or as they give offence to our Neighbor 2. Labors are forbidden onely to be used on the Sabbath day sins at all times 3. The ceasing from labors is a Type of ceasing from sins which is the thing signified by that Type The Institution of the Sabbath in Paradice consisteth of two parts 1. A Blessing God did bless it in regard of himself because he kept it in his own person 2. Sanctification he hallowed it also in regard of Man by commanding it to be sanctified or kept in performance of holy Duties Thus two things are requir'd in a Sabbath 1. A Rest which consisteth in a ceasing from labor 2. A Sanctification of that Rest to an holy use This is the Sabbath of the New Testament The Sabbath was commanded of God for two causes viz. 1. Declarative considered in two respects 1. By that bodily Rest the Lord meant to warn the people of Israel to abstain and rest from their own works being carnal and defiled that they might suffer the Holy Ghost to work in them so that it was a Type or shadow of our Regeneration 2. That circumstance served to signifie the Everlasting Rest of the Kingdom of Heaven which was as it were part of the former 2. The other end of bodily Rest is That we may wait upon the Ministery of the Church meditate upon Gods Works diligently apply our selves to the love of our Neighbors and the instruction of our Families The former end was taken away by the coming of Christ This latter remaineth and is perpetual There are likewise two things to be considered in the Sabbath viz. 1. The things Ceremonial and Temporary As the Jews might not begin a Journey on the Sabbath day Exod. 16.29 nor kindle a fire thereon Exod. 35.3 nor carry a burthen Jer. 17.21 2. The things Moral and Perpetual As that there should be a day of Rest that this day should be sanctified and that this holy Rest should be observed in a Seventh day The Sabbath signifieth a Quietness or Rest or ceasing from labor for these Reasons viz. 1. Because God rested on that day 2. Because it is an Image of the Spiritual Rest to come 3. Because we also and our Families and our Cattel are to rest and cease from our works on that day that God may then shew and exercise his works in us Again there is a threefold consideration to be had of the Sabbath viz. 1. Legal commanded in Exod. 20.8 which is for the exercise of 1. Faith 1. To meditate on Gods Works 2. To beg a blessing on our Endeavors 3. To Exercise our selves in Prayer 2. Charity 1. To the Poor 2. To our Servants and laboring creatures 2. Spiritual that the Old man with all his corruptions may be rooted out and the New man may be made perfect 3. Celestial wherein both in Soul and Body we shall rest from the labors and incumbrances of this present life Likewise there are three degrees of the Sabbath not unlike these of the Sacraments viz. 1. External and Elementary in which as touching the outward celebration both good and evil men communicate together 2. Internal and Spiritual whereof the Elect onely and the Faithful do participate 3. Of Perfection and Consummation which onely remains for ever whereunto we ascend by the second and for which the Faithful do earnestly contend The Sanctification of the Sabbath is twofold viz. 1. Publike which is the solemn performance of Spiritual works tending to the publike Worship of God As 1. The Reading Hearing and Preaching of Gods Word 2. The Administration of the Sacraments according to Gods Institution 3. Publike Prayer by the Minister the Congregation in minde firmly assenting thereto 4. Collections for the Poor for such as want and may command our Charity 2. Private which is done apart from the Congregation still to Gods glory as 1. That every man in the beginning of the Sabbath in the Morning do privately prepare himself by Prayer to the publike service that followeth Also by examination and humbling of himself before God in respect of his particular sins Eccl. 4.27 2. Reading or hearing the Word of God and godly Books diligently Isa 35.16 3. That when the Congregation is dissolved we spend the rest of the Sabbath in Meditation and conference of the Word before Preached of the works and creatures of God Acts 17.11 4. That we visit the afflicted both in minde and body privately exercising our selves in the works of Charity and Mercy Neh. 8.12 5. That to Gods glory we shut up the Sabbath with Prayer and Thanksgiving Hence appears That the general parts of sanctifying the Sabbath are these which we are to remember and practice as often as the Sabbath comes even to the end of the world 1. Rightly and truly to teach and instruct the Church concerning God and his Will 2. Rightly to administer the Sacraments according to Gods divine Institution and so accordingly to use the same 3. Diligently to frequent the publike Assemblies of the Church and there attentively to give ear unto the heavenly Doctrine plainly opened and delivered and afterward diligently to meditate thereon and to examine it Acts 17.11 4. Publike Invocation of God whereby we joyn our Confession Thanksgiving Prayers and desires with the Church 5. To give Alms that is to perform the duties of Love and Charity thereby shewing our obedience to the Doctrine Neh. 8.10 6. The
Fury These Symptomes give it to be a Spiritual Frenzy caused at first by Spiritual Pride and now attended on by desperate Presumption If the Cephalick Vein of Ignorance were speedily opened and an infusion taken of Humility and Knowledge to the weight of their Zeal probably the Cure would follow Others have the faculties of their Souls so chain'd and manacled to Carnal Objects as that they cannot exercise them about Holy Duties but are quite dead to Good Works and wholly forget the Duties both of their Publick and Private Callings otherwise then relating to a Carnal Interest yea are so Spirit-bound that they cannot hear a Sermon without nodding to the Preacher that they must take a nap or two nor say their Prayers but between sleeping and waking begin them in a Fog and conclude them in a Dream In this Spiritual Lethargy if the still voyce of the Gospel be but Cradle-Musick the Thunder of the Law should be the Graves-Expositor It is within the Bill of Mortality to finde some who having lost the Function of Vital Graces all checks of Conscience all sense of Sin all motions of the Spirit lie gasping for Spiritual Life while the breath thereof is checked by Customary sinning This is a Spiritual Apoplexy onely the Spirit of God can restore that Soul But to lose the use of some special Grace for a time the operations of this or that gracious Quality is a most common defect incident to the soundest of Gods Servants now to suffer an eclipse of his Favor anon the Motions of his Spirit then the comfortable sense of Assurance sometimes to be wavering in the Faith at other times to be nigh swallow'd up in Doubtings are all the Symptomes of a Spiritual Palsie He that is thus affected must give himself unto Prayer That God would fix and stablish his Heart confirm his Faith and cause the influence of his Love to revive his Hope sealing it up unto full Assurance To commit the Sins we would not is the Epidemical Disease of the most Regenerate and we are all naturaliz'd unto daily failings This is a Spiritual Epilepsie or the Falling-sickness hereditary thence the more difficult to be cured yet the Righteousness of Christ well applied will do it if as thou fallest thou rise again by sound Repentance and so keep to the strict Dyet of New Obedience But if a Soul be suddenly taken with strange and violent Fits of some desperate Sins who formerly had been unaccustomed thereto acquiescing all his time under the silence of a calm Conscience and now rusheth into horrid acts of the grossest Enormities Conclude that Soul in a Spiritual Convulsion the very Heart must be let Blood by sound Repentance till the Corruption of the Inner-man the evil Affections and vicious Inclinations which held a candle to the Devil to level his Temptations be all discordiated Let the dark Understanding that discerns not Spiritual things the Mystery of Salvation Excellencies of Christ or Beauties of Holiness take Bartimeus for his Guide and pray fervently for Spiritual Eye-salve that Christ would touch and unseal his judgement but if his Eye offend him or any Lust as tender to him as the Apple thereof Exoculation is the Remedy prescribed Matth. 5.29 And he who hath an Imposthume in his Ears when God talks with him in the language of his Mercies or his Judgements of his Word his Spirit or his Works wants an Ephatha But seldom are his Lungs Ulcerless whose Heart is not in Charity yet let not such unsheath the Razor in his mouth and possibly the Disease may not be mortal Or say the Soul is imposthumated by corrupt Affections through a long continuance of slimy distillations and unclean thoughts from the heart to the obstruction of the Spiritual Breath whereby the Graces languish and the Vitals thereof decay Is not this a Spiritual Hectique a Consumption in the highest degree Must not that Soul be cleansed from all filthiness both of the Flesh and Spirit and make a constant use at every Spring to sin and fall from Grace the Diet-drink of Repentance Adde to this the Restorative of Faith whose principal Ingredients are Gods Promises and Christs Righteousness then keep to the strict Diet of a Gospel-Conversation and by the Mercy of God through the Merit of Christ that Soul shall recover Pantings of the Heart after a full Meal of Spiritual Dainties or upon a full stomack after some plentiful Feast of Heavenly Manna is no strange Malady in the childe of God If those pantings proceed from a fulness of the Spirit and not from an emptiness of Grace if they are after Christ and his Righteousness not after the World and its Vain-gloriousness it s then a blessed Malady and the Cure is mortal in this case trouble not the Physitian But if those pantings of the Heart be through too much vacuity of Grace occasioned by worldly Cares or carnal Grief whereby follows a loss of Appetite to that Food which came down from Heaven thereby rendring the stomack unapt for digestion of Spirit-savoring Meats In this case such things as callifie and corroborate the Heart are not improper Let therefore thy Prayer be as Frankincense thy Humility as Camomil thy Faith as Mastick thy Penitence as Wormwood of each a like quantity in this Distemper will afford an excellent Plaister to apply to the Heart Obedience to the sixth Commandment is a soveraign Remedy against a Spiritual Plurisie and if thou spit Blood the Rule Paul prescribes the Romans Rom. 12.18 is very proper for thy Constitution Also Envy Pride and Ambition are very Tympanous Maladies which in time engender a Spiritual Dropsie but Charity Humility and Self-denial will evacuate those flatuous Humors Likewise Abstinence is the onely Cure after a Surfet of sin to which adde Fasting and Prayer But if thou art troubled with the Stone I mean in the Heart Remember who was Davids Key-keeper who wert thou all Adamant can filiarize thee unto Abraham The immoderate heat of any Lust which hath its origination from the Heart will in time spread it self by the Faculties into the whole Soul and impede the operations of Grace This is a Spiritual Feaver whereof there be divers kindes If this be thy Malady whether a Burning-Feaver through the violence of some strong Temptations Satans fiery Darts or through the Inflammation of some inordinate Lust or whether a Putrid-Feaver through the foul corruptions of Nature and filthiness of sin or whether a Quotidian-Feaver whereby the whole course of thy life is but as one fit of sin or whether a Tertian or a Quartan-Feaver wherein through the intermission of the opportunities and occasions of sin thou enjoyest some intervals of a better disposition though no health or whether a Hectique-Feaver whereby a sinful slame is kindled not onely in the meer Natural Qualities and Inferior Inclinations of the Minde but also in the more Noble Faculties and higher Region of the Soul which through the habitualness of that equal Heat in
the pursuit whereof 3 things are to be observed 1. The gathering of the Doctrine 1. Out of the Coherence 3. Out of the drift 3. Out of the Division 4. Out of the words themselves 1. In the Sense 2. In the Meditating of them 2. The proof of the Doctrine which is either by 1. Reason taken out of the word 2. The Text it self 3. The use of the Doctrine which is 1. For Knowledge 1. To confute Falshood 2. To confirm Truth 2. For Conscience 1. To comfort the afflicted 2. To humble the proud The word of God must be preached with boldness Eph. 6.19 which is manifested 1. By an equal and impartial preaching of the word without respect of persons 2. By a declaration of the whole truth of God as occasion requireth concealing no part thereof for any by-respects of favor fear reward or danger Acts 20.27 3. By a grave plain free delivery of Gods word without affectation or popular applause Gal. 1.10 4. By reproving sin and that with authority Tit. 2.15 that transgressors may be ashamed and tremble 5. By despising all shame fear reproach and disgrace which by prophane and wicked persons may be brought upon the Ministers for performing their Calling as they ought Repetition of the same points that have been formerly handled is very expedient for these Reasons 1. Because men are commonly dull in hearing slack in coming weak in remembring and fow in practising 2. Because it is safe and sure for all hearers to have often repetitions many witnesses make sure work and confirm strongly and stedfastly the things taught Phil. 3.1 3. Because repetitions work a deeper impression in us and serve to beat it into the Conscience as well as into the understanding but the best repetition is when we make repetition of it to our selves by practising it The end and purpose of Gods instituting the Ministery of the word was 1. That God may be invocated and magnified in this life by mankinde not onely privately but also by the publike voyce of the Church 2. That the publike and ordinary preaching of the Doctrine the pouring out of prayers and giving of thanks and the use of the Sacraments may be an exercise to stir up and cherish faith and godliness as which without exercise doth easily through our infirmity wax cold 3. That men may provoke one another by their example unto godliness and to the magnifying and praising of God Psa 22.22 4. That there may be preserved and maintained a consent and agreement in the Church in the Doctrine and Worship of God Eph. 4.11 12 13. 5. That the Church may be seen and heard among men and may be discerned from the other Blasphemous and Idolatrous multitude of men and that the Elect may be gathered to the true Church and the Reprobate be left the more excuseless Rom. 10.18 6. That God may apply himself unto our infirmity by teaching men by men 7. That God may shew his love towards men in that he vouchsafes to admit them to be Ministers of that great and weighty work which also the Son of God himself did administer 8. That by this exceeding love of God to us sons of men we might be won in all humility and thankfulness to receive the word and in obedience to practise the same in our life and conversation Our obedience towards the Ministery comprehendeth 1. Reverence that is an acknowledging of Gods Order and Will in the ordaining and maintaining of the Ministery and in the gathering of his Church by it that is a declaration both in words and deeds of this our acknowledgement and judgement of the Ministery 1 Cor. 4.7 2. Love whereby we gladly both frequent divine Assemblies and hear and learn the Doctrine of the Church and wish well unto the faithful Ministers of the Church not onely in respect of that duty of charity which we owe but also in respect of the Ministery which they discharge 3. Obedience in those things which are belonging to the Ministery whereunto belong the works of love towards God and our Neighbor even the whole life of a Christian which is that Spiritual and Moral Sabbath 4. Thankfulness that is such duties as tend to the preservation and maintenance of the Ministery that it may be honestly provided for for God will have his ministery to be maintained to the end of the world 5. Lenity and moderation in bearing with such infirmities of the Ministers as do not enormously or manifestly corrupt or hinder the Ministery and hurt the Church by offence 1 Tim. 5.19 It is the duty of all men to further the work of the Ministery and by all means to promote it which may be done by these means 1. By commending to God by Prayer the Ministery of his own Ordinance and that he would send able Ministers where they are wanting Matth. 9.38 and continue them where they are and by our thankfulness to him for bestowing this gift on us which he hath denyed to many places and people 2. By repenting of those sins which may hinder either the obtaining or continuing of it Isa 62.7 3. By making a reverend use of this gift of God in being subject unto it governed and reformed by it Heb. 13.7 4. By lamenting the state of the Church which is destitute or deprived of this gift Psal 74.9 5. By providing in time of vacancy sufficient men whom God must chuse before we make choyce of Patrons shall one day answer to God for the souls of such as perish through their default 6. By acknowledging our selves unworthy of so great a blessing and by giving up our whole selves unto God for it To despise and resist the Ministry of the word or the Ministers therein is to despise and resist even God himself 1. Because they come not in their own name neither do they discharge their own Message they are no other then the mouth of God they come not from themselves neither for themselves their Authority and Calling is from God 1 Cor. 3.5 2. God doth account all things done to them in the execution of their Ministery as done to himself Matth. 10.40 Let their prophane Persecutors of these Times seriously consider hereof The greater our means are to prevent sin the more we offend if we reject those means 1. Because such sin against knowledge having the word to instruct them and their own consciences to convince them knowledge maketh every sin the greater Luk. 2.47 Joh. 15.22 2. Because it argueth obstinacy and hardness of heart and wilfulness which maketh the sinner the more sinful The parallel of the Ministery of the word and Salt as it is comparatively set down in Mat. 5.13 1. Salt will bite and fret being applyed the nature thereof being hot and dry so the Law being applyed doth rip up mens hearts to make them see their sins it doth fret and bite them by the curse thereof to cause them to renounce themselves 2. Salt makes meat savory unto our taste so the
same Seeing Ministers must be faithful in their Calling it follows that they may not be 1. Ignorant not able to break the bread of life that hinder the Kingdom of God and greatly advance the Kingdom of Satan Such are much like Jeroboams Priests 1 Kings 12.31 13.33 34. fit instruments to further Idolatry and to promote all maner of impiety 2. False Teachers these also destroy the souls of the people by false Doctrine the former did starve them these do poyson them by both ways the people perish 3. Idle and unprofitable which clothe themselves with the fleece of Christs flock but feed not his sheep Idle persons in any Society are thieves Eph. 4.28 Surely then these persons are sacrilegious ones incurring the just rebuke of Spiritual theft and felony 4. Unskilful not being able to divide the word of Truth aright yet usurping the Pulpit not to preach but to abuse the place the people themselves the Word nay God himself 5. Scandalous who pull down with one hand faster then they build with another they wait indeed at Gods Altar but are the servants of Satan 6. Flattering teachers that few pillows on every elbow dawbing with untemper'd morter they preach to please men and are afraid of displeasing The two parts of a Ministers Office which must always go together 1. Doctrine for Gods word must be preached that men may hear it 2. An unblameable Conversation bringing forth good works that men therein may see the will of God for the Minister must not onely by Doctrine instruct the ear but by a godly life exemplifie his Doctrine unto the eye 1 Tim. 4.12 Be unto them that believe an example in word and in conversation The course which is to be used by Gods Ministers in the preaching and dispensing of his holy Word 1. They must preach and dispense and publish the Word of God to all men without exception Grace though it be not Universal yet in the Ministery of the Word it must be offered to all good and bad 2. They must observe what fruit and effect the Word hath with them whether it work reformation of life in them or not 3. Having waited for their conversion they must labor to convince their very Consciences of the truth which in heart and life they deny but if after all this they give evident signs of malicious and obstinate enmity against the Word scorning and railing at the Doctrine of God and on the Ministers thereof then are they to be cast out by the Church and to be barr'd from the word of life until they repent The peoples duty toward their faithful Ministers 1. They must pray for their Minister that the Lord would give him wisdom and knowledge in all things 2 Tim. 2.7 2. The Church must take notice what her power and authority is in choosing of Ministers it hath no absolute authority to ordain unworthy men and obtrude them on the people 3. The people must so demean themselves toward their faithful Pastors as that they may have occasion to rejoyce in their Calling and charge over them that they may see they have not labored in vain Heb. 13.17 4. The hearers must not spurn at despise contemn or hate their persons but they ought to joy in the joy of their Ministers 2 Cor. 2.13 5. We ought to be ready to hear and obey in all things delivered and made known unto us out of the word not singling out what we list in part to follow and cast the rest from us 6. We must love them sincerely and heartily this will cause reverence and regard of them we must account them as our Spiritual fathers 1 Cor. 4.15 The Word preached without the Spirits Ephphatha is a dead letter and without a Conversation that keeps harmony with the purity of Doctrine but the dumb sound of an empty vessel The experience of the fruit and efficacy of the Word in the Ministers own person is the best Commentary he can have for the opening of it unto others without which like Noah's Ark-Carpenters after they have built for others may themselves perish at the general Deluge This Key by sacred Dispensation Vnlocks the Mystery of Man's Salvation The Saints high-way to Heaven to them the breath Of life the thunder of Eternal death To such as come to greet it with a scoff Or by their lives deny the power thereof The people once for fear of death deny'd To hear the voyce of God and joyntly cry'd Let Moses speak A happy change God gives Onely by hearing of his voyce man lives §. 5. The Word Heard AS the contempt of the Word is an abridgement of all sin gathered together in one so the practical embracement thereof is the powerfullest Antidote against the poyson of any sin Practice must be ever joyned with knowledge of the word for not the hearers of the Law but the doers thereof shall be justified before God Rom. 2.12 And such as are hearers onely and not doers of the Word deceive but their own souls James 1.22 Yea when in admiration at Christs Doctrine she that bare him was pronounced Blessed he replies Nay rather blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it Luke 11.27 28. So that it is not as our lives seem to maintain the sitting and hearing and after repeating of the Sermon which God onely requires for to hear as God would have us hear is another thing It is like the Lessons in Musick which we have never learnt till we be able to practice To understand what Faith is what Love is what Patience is is nothing but to have Faith to have Love to have Patience is the true hearing Since then it is our duty to live in the practice of that we hear be it our duty also to pray to God the Father in the name of Christ That he would vouchsafe his Spirit unto us whereby our hearts may be enclined disposed and bent to an unfained love and obedience of his Precepts delivered in his Word yea our prayers must be for the performance of such obedience in our life as that our Consciences may not onely not accuse us but also excuse us before God in regard thereof or at least in regard of our true endeavor and desire to obey But disobedience to the Word which in its kinde God hateth as the sin of Witchcraft is the common sin of this Age men content themselves with the bare action of hearing like the Papists who think God is well served with the work done but the work is not indeed done till we conscionably practice what we hear Thus the principal thing we omit which is the treasuring up of Gods Word in our hearts that upon just occasion we might practice the same yea which is yet more deplorable we are so far from yielding conscionable obedience to the Word that the endeavor thereunto is commonly judged Superfluous niceness and over-curious preciseness Which most damnable Censure together with this sin of hearing and
not doing will continue as it hath brought already many fearful Judgements upon us unless by timely true Repentance it be cut off yea this very Word which God hath graciously ordained as the ordinary means of our Salvation if now heard unpractised will one day prove the savor of death to our eternal Condemnation Consider this therefore thou that centrest Religion in Formality consider it seriously as thou expectest Heaven or fearest Hell for being now premonished this very subject thou now readest stands on Record against thee to the great and terrible Day of Judgement To the profitable hearing of Gods word three things are required 1. A preparation before we hear which consists 1. In removing all impediments 2. In using all good helps and means to further us 2. A right disposition in hearing 3. The duties to be practised after hearing Rules of direction to be observed in preparation before hearing 1. We must be swift to hear James 1.19 by disburthening our selves of all impediments 2. We must lift up our hearts to God in Prayer that he would give us the hearing ear 3. The hearer must in hearing set himself as in the presence of God The lets and impediments hindring the effectual hearing of the Word which are to be removed and avoided before we come to the hearing of the same 1. Presumption when the hearer presumes of his own parts able to teach his Teachers And in this may be included Prejudication for we must take heed of all sinister affection to the Ministers person Luke 10.16 2. Troubled affections specially rash anger either against his Teacher or others for we must take special heed of corrupt affections as envy hatred malice guile anger and the like 1 Pet. 2.1 2. 3. The immoderate desire of riches and all worldly cares Mat. 13.22 4. Overcharging our selves with too much eating and drinking 5. Itching ears 2 Tim. 4.3 See the place 6. We must put off our shoes from off our feet that is the dirty and filthy affections of our souls Exod. 3.5 7. We must shake off the sin of Unblelief being fully perswaded that it is the Word of Truth 8. All carelesness and carnal security and come with thirsting souls 1 Pet. 2.2 9. We must take heed of dissentions and diversity of opinions about the Truth 1 Cor. 11.17 18. 10. Hardness of heart whereby the word is made as a dead letter effectual onely to our condemnation This is a fearful sin The helps and means to be used before the hearing of the Word 1. Godly meditation seriously to consider as we go and to meditate whither we are going 2. To meditate of the Corruptions we are most addicted to and of the Graces we most want 3. To consider to what end we go to hear to the word of God 4. Before we go we must resolve to suffer our selves to be reproved as well as instructed 5. We must use earnest and fervent Prayer 1. For the Minister that God would give him the door of utterance 2. For our selves that God would bless his word unto us 3. For others that God would bless his word unto them also Rules of direction to a right disposition the several duties required in the time of hearing 1. When the Word of God is in delivering every hearer must hear with judgement that is His own private judgement The judgment of the Minister The judgement of the Holy Ghost 2. Every hearer must have care that the Word of God be rooted and grounded in his heart like good seed in good ground 3. We must set our selves as in the sight and presence of God who seeth our very thoughts 1 Chron. 28.9 4. To hear with fear and trembling because it is not the word of any mortal man but of the ever-living God 5. With reverence not looking so much on the person of the Minister as on God speaking in him 6. With alacrity chearfulness and willingness 1 Chron. 28.9 Mat. 13. 7. With meekness and submission to whatsoever is delivered Jam. 1.21 8. With attention restraining our hearts from wandring from the delivered word Luke 19.48 9. We must fit and accommodate our selves to every part of the Sermon properly applying the same to our selves 10. We must hear with faith believing the word preached to be the truth of God himself Heb. 4.2 11. With constancy without tediousness not thinking the time long For the rooting of the word of God in our hearts there are four things specially required 1. A true and right understanding thereof 2. It must be mingled with faith Heb. 4.1 that is General to believe it Special to apply it 3. We must labor to be affected with the word 2 Chron. 34.27 4. The word of God must dwell plenteously in us Col. 3.16 The means to remove hard-heartedness in hearing of the Word 1. They must labor to be touched in heart with the sense and feeling of their Spiritual poverty and want of Gods favor in the pardon of their sins 2. To hear the word of God with an honest heart joyned with a constant purpose of not sinning 3. To be as careful to bring good affections as a good understanding The frequent and most common impediments that hinder the effectual and saving hearing of the word 1. Straying and wandring thoughts thereby making our selves but Idol-hearers 2. Undecent and unsavory gestures as a wandring eye gazing and gaping after every occurrent and occasion that offereth it self 3. Removing of the body not onely shifting and stirring it up and down but arising out of our places and removing to place other or beckening with our hands or nodding with our heads 4. Unreverent talking and uncivil laughing as if the place of Gods publike Worship were a Theatre for Sights or a place of Mart and Exchange where every one might single out Companions 5. A secure and sensless sleeping when we have drowsie ears and hearts 6. A careless coming and a shameless departing out of the Church and a seperating of our selves from the Congregation before it be dismissed and dissolved The duties required after hearing the word 1. It must be treasured up in our hearts and practised in our lives Psal 119.11 2. Serious meditation examination and application of what we have heard we must meditate on the Word with lifting up of the heart unto God 3. We must have experience of the Word of God in our selves Psal 34.8 4. Beside our Self-examination after we have heard the Word Psal 119.59 we must be obedient unto it and testifie our obedience Jam. 1.22 5. Godly conference touching the particulars of the Sermon This confirms the memory and helps very much to further knowledge and edification 6. We must use prayer unto Almighty God as well private as publike for a blessing on what we have heard 7. Above all we must constantly endeavor to practice what we have heard for onely they receive the blessing Luke 11.28 The causes of not profiting after hearing the word are chiefly of these
Gods love towards us That we shall be heard for Christ the Mediators sake And it hath the chief place among Good Works yielding us the greatest testimony of our Salvation by enabling us to perform other good Duties Or thus Prayer is a Petition joyned with an ardent and earnest desire whether uttered in words or not uttered whereby we ask of the true God revealed in his Word those things which he hath commanded to be asked of him proceeding from an acknowledgement of our necessity and misery with humility repentance and confession of our own unworthiness made in true conversion unto God and in a confidence and sure trust in Gods Promises for Christs sake our Mediator For the right understanding of which Promises this Rule must be remembred That the Promises of God are not made directly to the work of Prayer but to the person that prayeth and yet not to him simply as he doth this good action of Prayer but as he is in Christ for whose Merits sake the Promise is accomplished whereby it is most evident That our Prayer is not the cause of the blessings we receive from God but onely a way and instrument in and by which God conveyeth his blessings unto his children in whom is required in Prayer a special particular faith to apply to themselves the Promise of God concerning that thing which they ask in Prayer which special faith we can never bring with us in Prayer unless we have a special saving faith whereby we believe our reconciliation with God in Christ So that the unfained desire of a touched heart is a Prayer in acceptance before God though knowledge memory and utterance to frame and conceive a form of Prayer in words be wanting Psal 10.17 for Prayer is not a work of the memory or a work of the wit but the work of a sanctified heart it is the work of Gods Spirit the very essence whereof consisteth in making known the inward desires 1 Sam. 1.15 Psal 62.8 always in the mediation of Christ by reason of the infinite Majesty of God and sinfulness of the creature with awful fear and inward reverence manifested with seemly words if it be oral Prayer befitting our matter not over-curious nor careless with reverent Psal 95.2 6. and humble gesture Ezra 9.5 6. to express which kneeling is most proper Paul useth it Eph. 3.14 Acts 2.30 if we cannot conveniently kneel then stand so did the poor humble Publican when he prayed Luke 18.13 other gestures when no necessity requireth argue little reverence less humility we must also come in assurance of faith to be heard and accepted Heb. 10.22 Jam. 1.6 which is strengthned by meditation on the Promises concerning such things as we pray for 2 Sam. 7.27 28. which full assurance as a lusty gale of wind carrieth our Prayers with full fail to heaven the desired Haven wavering and doubting like opposite uncertain winds carry them to some other place and so they return without speeding The supplicant must also be lowly in minde and holy in life Isa 1.15 the blinde man knew God heard not impenitents Joh. 9.31 he must have a true understanding sense and earnest desire of what he prays for in sincerity of heart and fervency of spirit Jam. 5.16 for Prayer ascends no higher then faith and fervor of Spirit carry it Yet notwithstanding which earnestness and fervency in Prayer it may be no true Prayer as the wicked mans prayer made in his extremity which is termed but howling Hosea 7.14 So a thief is earnest with a Judge to spare him but this is but carnal earnestness Thus God takes our prayers by weight not by number not by labor not by earnestness which is a thing that may come from the flesh but if it come from his Spirit he accepts it and then though we may have a secret answer to our prayers yet may we wait long before the thing it self be given us but then God continues a secret strength to us that we may wait and hold out yea though we never have any request in this world granted yet we must think this sufficient that we can and do pray unto God for by whose Grace have we alway continued in prayer but by the gift and Grace of God God indeed answers some sooner some later some he answers quickly and some he defers longer but importunity will prevail with him so as thou shalt have Christ and after thou hast him thou must look to the Priviledges thou hast by him onely remembring as the priviledges thou hast by him so the condition of after-obedience For Prayer is the means which God hath sanctified to unlock the closet of his Graces and he being the Fountain of all Blessings if we use not Prayer aright it may be truly said to us as the woman of Samaria spoke Joh. 4.11 Thou hast nothing to draw with and the well is deep from whence therefore canst thou have that living water yea what the Lord did miraculously to Stephen when he opened the heavens and shewed himself to the outward view that he doth ordinarily to the Saints in prayer he shews himself to their mindes and inward affections Touching the time of Prayer if it be the secret and lifting up of the heart to God called Ejaculation then pray continually pray without ceasing Eph. 6. but if it be a set and solemn prayer either in private or in the Congregation the Word of God appoints no precise hour for this kinde because now there is no difference between time and time in regard of Conscience for performing the worship of God and the duties of Religion the Lords-day onely excepted In the New Testament the distinction of days and hours is taken away Paul was afraid of the Galatians because they made difference of days times moneths and years in respect of holiness and Religion Gal. 4. And as touching the place of Prayer in regard of Conscience Holiness and Religion all places are equal and alike in the New Testament since the coming of Christ the house or field is holy as the Church and if we pray in either of them as we ought our prayer is as acceptable to God as that which is made in the Church for now the days are come foretold by the Prophet Mal. 1.11 which Paul expounds 1 Tim. 2.8 yet nevertheless for order decency and quietness sake publike prayer is to be made in publike places as Churches and Chappels appointed for that use But undenyable it is that all places are alike in respect of Gods presence and of his hearing for he is Omnipresent wheresoever a man hath occasion to pray there God is which concerns them to consider who make the Church a more holy place for prayer then other-where and therefore reserve all or most of their prayers till they come thither forgetting that wheresover two or three of the faithful are gathered together there God is in the midst of them for now difference of place in respect of Gods presence is
God 5. A true ardent desire of those things which are to be asked else we are hypocrites 6. A thorough sense and feeling of our own wants else we pray not at all 7. Lowliness of minde self-denyal impartially weighing our own baseness Humiliation that is true Repentance 1. Because God oweth us nothing 2. We are his enemies before our conversion 8. A considence and full perswasion of being heard for the Mediators sake Heb. 10.22 To this purpose meditate on the Promises 9. In fear before prayer meditating on the excellency and glory of God in prayer holding our hearts close with God that they wander not 10. With seemly words befitting the matter not strained nor careless 11. With reverent submiss and humble gesture 12. In holiness of life for the prayer of a righteous man availeth much Jam. 5.6 yea the prayer of a faithful man is more forcible then the power of a whole Army witness Moses against Amalek Exo. 17.11 13. In sincerity of heart and with fervency of Spirit even an hungring thirsting and longing desire Other conditions in an acceptable Prayer to be observed viz. 1. We must ask while the time of Grace and Mercy remaineth for if the day of Grace be once passed we shall be excluded with the foolish Virgins Mat. 25.8 9. Now the time whilest God offers mercy to us in his Word is the acceptable time this is the day of Grace 2. We must not ask as seemeth good unto our selves but according to Gods will and as his word alloweth lest we be denyed with the sons of Zebedee for asking we know not what Mat. 20.22 3. We must not doubt of Gods granting us those things which we ask according to his will for the wavering minded man shall receive nothing of God Jam. 1.5 6. 4. We must refer the time and maner of Gods accomplishing our requests to his good pleasure lest with the Israelites we seem to limit the Holy One of Israel Rules to be observed that we may conceive aright of God in Prayer 1. We must not conceive him in the form of any earthly or heavenly bodily or Spiritual creature whatsoever for thus not to conceive him is a degree of conceiving him aright We must not frame in our mindes any Image of God at all as that he should be like unto man or any other creature but we must conceive of him both in his works as our Creator Governor and Preserver and also in his properties as most wise most just most holy merciful c. Thus we may better conceive of him by his Works and Attributes then by his Nature 2. We must conceive that God is one in Substance and three in Persons We must not confound the Persons nor divide the Substance but conceive of one God in three Persons and three Persons in one and the same Godhead so he must not be conceived absolutely that is out of the Trinity but as he subsisteth in the Person of the Father Son and Holy Ghost 3. When we direct our prayers or any worship to any one Person of the Trinity we must include the rest in the same worship yea further we must retain in minde the distinction and order of all the three Persons without severing or sundring them The whole Trinity hath a work in this holy exercise of Prayer For The Holy Ghost frameth our Requests Rom. 8.26 The Son offereth them up unto the Father Rev. 8.3 The Father accepteth them thus framed and offered Rom. 8.27 The helps of preparation to Prayer viz. 1. Meditation 1. Of the Majesty of God to whom we pray 2. Of the matter of our prayers which are for Temporal things Spiritual things Eternal things 3. Of our own corruption and want of Grace 2. A stedfast belief to perswade our selves that there is a God one in Essence three in Persons rewarding those that call upon him and whereby we lay hold on Christ assuring our selves of the power goodness mercy and bounty of God Heb. 11.6 Before Prayer these things are necessary 1. Repentance and after sins committed a still renewed repentance 2. Reconciliation if need require to our brother 3. Preparation in heart and minde as one that is to speak familiarly with God in which preparation these things are required 1. The minde is to be emptied of all carnal and worldly thoughts 2. A consideration of the things to be asked 3. A lifting up of the heart to God 4. The heart must be touched with a reverence of the Majesty of God The impediments to be removed before we can pray 1. Pride for God abhors the proud Prov. 16.5 he hears them not Job 35.12 2. An absenting our selves from the word a careless and negligent hearing the same a deriding scorning and contempt of it Prov. 28.9 Zech. 7.13 3. Cruelty oppression and unmercifulness towards the poor Pro. 21.13 4. All corrupt affections as anger malice hatred discord wrath envy 1 Pet. 3.5 6 7. 5. A delight in sin taking pleasure in it and making a sport of wickedness Psal 66.16 Special Duties required in the act of Prayer 1. Our prayer must be the speech of the soul and heart not of the tongue onely Psal 25.1 2. In the minde the right understanding of what we ask Mat. 20.22 3. In the heart 1. Reverence in regard of Gods Majesty Mal. 1.6 2. Humility in regard of our own unworthines Gē 18.27 Ps 51.17 4. Every Petition must proceed from a lively sense of our poverty specially in Spiritual matters with an earnest desire to have them supplied Acts 237. 5. Every Petition must proceed from a saving and a justifying faith being fully perswaded in our hearts that God both can and will grant our requests Jam. 1.6 7. 6. Every Petition must be grounded on Gods word and not framed to the carnal conceit and fancy of mans brain and be onely for good things 1 Joh. 5.14 7. Our Prayer must in the name merit and mediation of Christ alone be presented to God alone not to Saints Angels the Virgin Mary or any other creature 8. We must pray by the help of the Spirit it must be the voyce of Gods Spirit speaking in our Spirit Rom. 8.26 9. We must pray for our brethren as well as for our selves for our enemies as well as our friends Mat. 5.44 10. Our Prayers must be without vain repetitions much babling and wandring thoughts 11. Every Petition must be made in obedience that is we must have a Commandment enjoyning us to ask the thing we pray for and a Promise to assure us that it shall be granted and yet here this Caveat must be remembred That we leave both the time and the maner of accomplishing our requests to the good pleasure and wisdom of God 12. There must be instancy in the act of Prayer and perseverance till the thing asked be granted 13. Every true Prayer must have in it some thanksgiving unto God for his benefits received It appears from what hath been said That in Prayer these
of right confession of sins in prayer to God 1. We must impartially confess to God to the best of our knowledge and remembrance our special and particular sins 2. We must set out our sins in their right colours making them appear vile and heinous as they are 3. It must proceed from the heart Jer. 31.18 hypocritical confession is no confession 4. We must confess our sins with an hatred of them for many hypocrites confess like Judas their particular sins but it is of custom without conscience or of passion without remorse or of fear without change whereas the sins that are in us should more grieve us then the Judgements that are upon us 5. Our confession must not be extorted or enforced but freely and willingly performed otherwise it is not true confession 6. In our confession this must be observed That we ought not so far to dwell upon the meditation of our sins that we forget the mercies of God and faith in his Promises and forgiveness of our sins 7. It belongeth to us and our confession ever to joyn prayer to God for the pardon of our sins without which all is vain 8. We ought so to confess our sins as that we have also a full purpose to leave and forsake them we may not think to finde mercy so long as we continue in that for which we crave it The vain repetitions in prayer condemned by our Savior Christ Mat. 6.7 comprehend many abuses in the maner of prayer viz. 1. Meer babling when words are used for prayer which contain neither requests unto God nor giving of thanks nor confession Such is the use of the Ave-Maria or the Angel Gabriels Salutation to the Virgin Mary yea the rehearsal of the Ten Commandments and of the Creed for Prayers is but meer babling 2. Ignorance in prayer as prayer in an unknown tongue and thus many sin that use the Lords Prayer without understanding of the words 3. Cold and dull praying when the lips draw near unto God but the heart not affected therewith 4. Superstitious prayers when as Gods worship is measured out by set numbers This opinion takes place with our common people for they think that God is served by the work done if the words be said they think all is well 5. Rash praying without due preparation when men pray onely on the sudden by the motion of the Spirit as they call it too many are of this minde as allowing no set form of prayer to any sort of people but however conceived prayer be most comfortable yet without due preparation of the heart it is most subject to vain repetitions 6. All vain and superfluous speech in any maner of Invocation wherein the heart is not affected according to the will of God Perseverence in prayer is grounded on Gods wise disposing Providence and is necessary to all faithful Christians for these Reasons 1. Because the Sacrifice of true prayer is a sweet and delightsom Sacrifice to God Heb. 13.15 16. 2. God thus tryeth the faith and patience of his Saints whether they can and will continue to wait upon him 3. By perseverance prayers move more earnest and fervent but as for cold prayers God will spew them out Rev. 3.16 4. God thus moveth his children to search their hearts to see if they can finde any cause in them why God heareth them not Jos 7.6 c. 5. God doth thus commend his blessings so much the more unto us for good things much desired oft craved long expected are the more welcome when they are obtained and we moved to be the more thankful for them Prov. 13.12 The Signs of extraordinary ardency in prayer are such as these viz. 1. Extraordinary distemper of the body thus was it with Christ Luke 22.44 and Nehemiah Neh. 2.2 2. Unusual motion of the parts of the body as in Hannah 1 Sam. 1.13 in Solomon 1 Kings 8.22 in the Publican Luke 18.13 and in Christ himself Mark 14.35 3. Deep sighing and groans as in David Psal 38.9 The sighs of the Spirit are inexpressible Rom. 8.26 4. Loud crying David roared all the day Psal 32.3 Christ cryed with a loud voyce Mat. 27.46 5. Often inculcating and repeating the same petition Thus did Christ Mat. 26.39 42 44. So did Daniel Dan. 9.18 19. This is far from babling or vain repetitions 6. Tears these Christ poured forth Heb. 5.7 So did the sinful woman Luke 7.38 yet tears simply in themselves are not acceptable to God but onely as they are Signs of true Prayer when they proceed from a broken heart and a contrite Spirit The faults or abuses in our prayers viz. 1. When we make our prayers unto any other then God or unto him in any other name then in Christ 2. When the power or grace of God is tyed to some certain prayers to a certain number or set form 3. When God is prayed to onely with the mouth without the heart 4. When any prays unto God with a vain opinion of his own righteousness 5. When any impenitent person or that laboreth not to amend his life prayeth 6. When a man prayeth without faith The duties required after Prayer viz. 1. A particular faith whereby he that prayeth must be assured that his particular request shall be granted 2. We must with patience and hope expect the fulfilling of our requests 3. We must use all good means whereby we may shun those things we pray against or attain to these blessings and graces we pray for we must do and practice that which we pray for and use all lawful means that we can to obtain it 4. We must take heed of fainting or growing weary but labor to persevere and hold out which implieth these three things viz. 1. When we cleave to Christ constantly 2. When we will take no denyal 3. When we are content to wait in prayer and not give over We are bound to desire the prayers of others for these Reasons 1. For the testification of the earnestness of our desire 2. To shew that we acknowledge a Communion of Saints which perform mutual duties one to another 3. We manifest a sense of our own weakness yea much humility 4. We maintain mutual love which consisteth not onely in offering and doing kindenesses but also in craving and accepting the like We are also bound to pray for others as well as our selves Because 1. Therein we acknowledge God to be not onely our own Father but also the common Father of others in which Christ taught us to say Our Father 2. Hereby we perform a duty of Love one of the most principal duties that be it is an act both of Charity and Justice they which neglect it sin 1 Sam. 12.13 3. There is no one thing wherein and whereby we can be more beneficial and do more good to any then in and by faithful and fervent prayer They are justly to be reproved who pray not for others and they are of three sorts viz. 1. Such as will take
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
and upbraideth not 6. To be a God true of his Promises therefore we crave the accomplishing of them 4. The necessity of prayer for it is the means which God hath appointed to obtain every good thing Mat. 7.7 Jam. 4.7 5. The utility or profit we receive by this duty of Prayer which is exceeding much and very beneficial to us many ways as 1. To obtain every good thing Christ hath passed his most certain and general Promise for it Joh. 16.23 2. To prevent Judgements threatned Jer. 26.19 and remove them being inflicted Jam. 5.18 3. To preserve nourish and strengthen in us all Spiritual graces Col. 1.9 c. 4. To obtain pardon and remission of sins Acts 8.22 5. To subdue in us the power of sin Psal 19.13 experience can well witness this to those that use prayer 6. To sanctifie all Gods creatures to our use and whatever we do 1 Tim. 4.5 usurpers are they that use them otherwise 6. The efficacy thereof for it prevaileth over all Creatures reasonable or unreasonable and of reasonable both visible as Man and invisible as Angels whether evil or good yea it prevaileth with God himself Examples of all which may be these Daniel by prayer stopped the mouthes of the Lyons Dan. 6.22 Davids prayer turned Achitophels counsel into foolishness 2 Sam. 15.31 Thereby the Devil even when he is surest possessed is cast out Mat. 17.21 At Elisha's prayer a mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about him 2 Kings 6.17 By prayer Jacob had power over the Angel which was called The Angel of the Covenant Christ Jesus true God Hos 12.4 who therefore was called Israel because he prevailed with God Gen. 32.28 7. The great honor thereof whereby the Saints have a free access to the glorious Throne of Grace The Romish Church doth neither know nor teach nor practice the duty of prayer aright and that for these Reasons 1. They pray not in knowledge but in a strange tongue and allow of Ignorance as the Mother of Devotion 2. They commend doubting and speak against Assurance and so pray not in faith nor obedience 3. They pray not in humility for mercy for their sins for they think to merit by their prayers 4. They direct not their prayers to God onely in the name of Christ but to God and his Saints making the Virgin Mary their Mediatress In the close of all take this seasonable direction with thee touching praying for or against our Enemies We may lawfully pray against the evil cause that an evil man maintaineth but not against the person of that evil man Now if any extraordinary man hath truly and indeed the Spirit of discerning to judge whether Gods and his enemies be incurable and hath a pure zeal to Gods honor therein he may lawfully pray against such their very persons as David did in the 109 Psalm Prayer the Souls Incense sent by faith to God Attracts his Blessings and diverts his Rod It does acquaint us with the Lord and makes A trembling Terror cease th' Infernal Snakes It makes the weak victorious yea the Sun Stand still Go back It stays a Plague begun When th' Earth had in a Burning-Feaver layen Full three years space it caus'd a gracious Rain It wings the Soul for that Celestial good Which eye ear heart ne're saw heard understood §. 2. The Lords Prayer VVE must imitate and follow the matter and form of the Lords Prayer in all our prayers but are not so tyed to the very words of this Prayer but that we may freely use them or other words at our pleasure for our Savior himself oft-times prayed in other words and so did the Apostles neither is there such vertue as that by the bare repetition of them we can binde God to grant our requests or that we should never pray in other words But as the Ten Commandments contain all things to be done of us the Creed all things to be believed by us so the Lords Prayer doth comprehend all things to be asked by us of Almighty God Some think it is to be used onely as a Direction by which we may learn how and what to pray and that the words themselves are not to be used others think it the onely Prayer to be used at all times and upon all occasions The former opinion grounds it self on Mat. 6.9 the latter on Luke 11.2 The truth is the use of this Prayer is not onely to direct for matter or for words but for both but in praying the very words take heed lest the tongue run without the heart as it must needs do in those that ceremoniously rehearse them making haste to have done before they ever truly began Wherefore to pray these words rightly he that prayeth must in some convenient measure understand them and have his minde taken up with them in the uttering the heart still conveying it self into the meaning of every petition and if thus this Prayer be said it is well used alone or added to other prayer Now we must know That other prayers though differing from this in order yet if consonant thereto in matter may also be used by us for otherwise Paul in his Epistles would not have used such variety of order and maner in thanksgivings requests and deprecations for his Spiritual children for himself and for the whole Church So that though this order be generally to be followed yet neither is it always necessary nor yet is it a swerving from this Direction though some of these petitions onely be asked in some of our prayers and others be omitted But the error is when we go beyond the Rules here given us doting too much upon worldly things or having proud unfaithful or malicious hearts we make our prayers the labor of polluted lips In the Lords prayer are contained 1. A preface and therein a compellation Our Father wherein seven things are to be considered 1. Who is to be called upon that is God whom we are to call by the Name of Father wherein we must observe That Father here is not the Name of one Person onely but of the whole Essence 2. That God will hear such as call upon him because he is their Father 3. That he is able to grant and answer their requests for he is in heaven 4. Who ought and also are able to pray aright and they are the Sons of God 5. That Faith is here required for by Faith we become the Sons of God 6. Through whom we must pray that is in the Name of the onely begotten Son of God 7. The difference betwixt the prayers of Christians and of Turks or Jews for ours are made by faith in Christ 2. Six requests viz. 1. Hallowed be c. which is then done when the true knowledge and glory of God is celebrated by men 2. Thy Kingdom c. that is let thy Church be extended multiplied preserved enlarged and guided by thy Spirit 3. Thy will be c. which is then done when
are not spoken circumscriptively as though God were contained in the Heaven or as though if the Heavens were not God could not be as the Inhabitants of the Earth cannot be when the Earth ceaseth for God was before all Heavens and Earth and Creatures but because his glorious Presence and Attributes are most eminently visible in Heaven and also to set forth his most mighty power Psal 115.3 he is by an excellency said to be in Heaven Heav'n is thy Throne Great God how then dare we Who but the Creatures of thy Footstool be Look Heaven-wards and cast an eye aloft Or lift hands to ' gainst which we have so oft This Charter thou hast seal'd us by thy Son The Priviledge of our Adoption Heav'n thy Throne Vanish distrust carnal fear Thou canst our Prayers grant as soon as hear But teach us by thy Spirit this holy skill To ask in Faith what answers to thy will §. 5. Hallowed be thy Name BY the Name of God is meant the whole worship of God or Gods Name is any thing that may be referred unto God in which he may be considered as his Word his Sacraments his Servants and his Works So that by the Name of the Lord we are to understand That whatsoever it is whereby the Lord is made known unto us according to his most glorious Attributes as Wisdom Power Justice Mercy c. and this may be either by his Titles his Word or his Works Now we must know That Gods Name cannot be more sanctified in it self then it is but the sanctifying of it that we here pray for is That it may be sanctified in us which may be when it heareth well by our walking worthy of this holy Name which is amongst us called upon and professed for contrariwise it is said to be blasphemed Rom. 2.24 And whereas thy Name O Lord is used as unholy by prophane worldlings vindicate and deliver it from such abuses and make us to stand for thine honor against such and provide for the preservation of the same from being used as a common thing working in all thy people an holy consent to hallow it together abstaining from all common unworthy usage thereof And open our eyes that we may know thee aright and may discern thy Power Wisdom Justice and Mercy and enlarge our hearts that we may sanctifie thee in them by making thee our Fear Love Joy and Confidence and open our lips that we may bless thee for thy goodness yea open our eyes that we may see thee in thy Works and strike our hearts with reverence of thy Name appearing in them and grant that when we use any one of them we may honor thee in our sober and sanctified use thereof This Petition comes in the first place because it is the end and scope of all the other for the end of all things must be Gods glory and it is placed before Thy Kingdom come to teach us That no man can be a true Subject of Gods Kingdom unless that in his heart he maketh principal account of Gods glory Thus the first of the three first Petitions in the Lords Prayer concerning God immediately concerns Gods glory it self The other two the means whereby Gods glory is manifested and enlarged amongst men For Gods glory is then manifested and his Name hallowed among men when his Kingdom doth come and his Will is done And this order of the Petitions that the first three concern Gods glory the other three our selves teacheth us how gracious the Lords is towards us sinful men allowing us if we come with one request for the advancement of his glory to come with another for our own benefit if with three for him with three for our selves also but first in order are his three for if we seek our selves first and chiefly we ask in vain The order of placing the Petitions concerning Gods glory first and then those concerning our selves teacheth 1. That God is absolutely to be respected and for himself but Man for Gods cause 2. That the first and main thing by the Lord intended in Creating all is his own glory and whatsoever is good for man is subordinate to this and onely so far forth to be sought after as it maketh for Gods glory 3. That the glory of the Lords Name is so dear unto him as that he did not onely make it his Mark in the Creation but in every particular duty done by man he setteth it still as his Mark as here in Prayer in giving the Law in the Gospel at the very Nativity of the Blessed One the Angels are heard lauding and glorifying God The Name of God signifieth 1. God himself Psal 116.13 2. Gods Commandment and Charge his Divine Will and Authority Mat. 28.19 3. The Divine Attributes Properties and Works of God in which signification it is here principally understood Holy signifieth 1. All the Properties of God for all the vertues of God are holiness 2. That holiness which is in his Creatures that is their conformity with God which is begun in the godly and is perfect in the Angels 3. The ordaining and appointing of things to holy uses The word of Hallowing is here taken in all these three senses To hallow or sanctifie is in Scripture used three ways viz. 1. Of us 1. When we hallow or sanctifie our selves and others that is when as touching external and outward things we prepare our selves and others to glorifie God 2. When we hallow and sanctifie God that is 1. When we acknowledge God to be holy or to be such as he hath declared himself in his word and works 2. When we profess God to be holy and so magnifie him according to his will both in minde and word as also in deed and works 3. When we refer the true Doctrine knowledge and profession of Gods holiness and likewise our Prayers and actions and even our whole life unto that end whereunto we ought and whether God hath commanded it to be referred that is to the glory and worship of God himself 2. Of God when he doth sanctifie others 1. Inwardly by his holy Spirit 2. Outwardly by his word which he effectuateth 1. By seperating them from their sins 2. By reviving and quickning them by his holy Spirit 3. By the continuing of both 3. Of Christ 1. Passively because 1. The word was ordained and consecrated by the Father to the Office of the Mediatorship 2. The humane Nature of Christ was consecrated out of that whole lump or mass that is was selected from among all Creatures to the union with the Word 3. His humane Nature was preserved from sin for the performance of the Mediatorship 4. Because Christ is hallowed and sanctified of us 2. Actively because he sanctifieth 1. Himself 1. As he is the Word the Word did sanctifie with his Father that flesh which he took by preserving the same from sin and by endowing it with all gifts 2. As he is Mediator he sanctified himself by his voluntary
by fire at the execution of this Judgement there shall be a change of this present state and a purifying of the creatures but not a consuming of them 4. This change shall come suddenly 5. There shall be a casting of the wicked into everlasting pains and an advancing of the godly into everlasting happiness and glory Why God would have us certain of the last judgment viz. 1. In respect of his glory that we may be able to refute Epicures who account this heavenly doctrine of the divine Judgment to come for a fable 2. For our comfort that amidst our evils and miseries we may know there shall come a time when we shall be delivered from this corruption and rottenness 3. That we may retain and keep our selves in the fear of God and our duty and that others also may be reclaimed from evil 4. That the wicked may be left excuseless for they are warned sufficiently that they should be ready at every season For what Reasons God would not have us certain of the time of the last Judgement 1. That he might exercise our faith and patience 2. That he might bridle our curiosity 3. That he might keep us in his fear in godliness and in exercising of our duty Why God deferreth the last Judgment 1. To exercise Faith Patience Hope and Prayer in the godly 2. That all the Elect may be gathered unto the Church 3. That he might grant unto all a time and space of Repentance as at this time and that he might leave the wicked without excuse Rom. 2.4 There are a certain sort of people that superstitiously sit up all night at certain times of the year fondly conceiting that Christ will come to Judgement on one of these nights but such most grosly erre and that these four ways especially 1. In that they prescribe certain set times for Christs coming whereas no man knoweth it Mat. 24.36 42. 2. In that they conceit he shall come in the night from that Text Luke 17.34 which is uncertain the night being there taken as a part for the whole by the figure Synecdoche and he calleth it the Day Luke 17.30 3. In that they imagine That they which are asleep when Christ cometh cannot be well prepared to meet him whereas Repentance maketh the soul prepared at all times 4. In that they interpret the Precept of Watching to bodily watching of the Eye whereas it is not meant of that onely but of the heart also This Judgement shall be in the end of the world whereof there are three parts The one before the Law another under the Law the third under the Gospel or under Christ which is called The end of the world The end of days The last time because there shall not be so long space between Christs first coming and his second as was from the beginning of the world unto his first coming But of that day Christ himself as Man knoweth not Mark 13.32 Tremble O Earth Tremble and be afraid Behold the Son of God he that was laid At first in Swathing-bands then in a shrowd Comes with Thousands of Angels in a Cloud To judge both Quick and Dead Silence Who may Language the Joy or Horror of that Day When all from Adam shall be chang'd or rise To meet their Judge or Savior in the Skies To hear the Sentence of Eternal Rest Or that which is too sad to be express'd §. 8. I believe in the Holy Ghost WHich is as much to say As I acknowledge the Holy Ghost to be God and so confess him to be one with the Father and the Son also I acknowledge his Office of Sanctifying and making holy the people of God And as I depend upon God the Father as my Creator and daily Protector and upon God the Son as my Redeemer and daily Mediator so I depend upon God the Holy Ghost as my Comforter and the worker of Grace and all Vertue in me being of my self a lump of Sin and mass of Corruption yet I acknowledge not three Gods but one God a Trinity of persons in Unity of Godhead So that the Holy Ghost is the third person of the true and onely Godhead proceeding from the Father and the Son and Coeternal Coequal and Consubstantial with the Father and the Son and is sent from both into the hearts of the Elec● to sanctifie them unto eternal life And though extraordinary Revelations are ceased yet the Holy Ghost in and by the Word revealeth some things unto men for which cause he is called and that truly The Spirit of Revelation Now that the Holy Ghost is very and eternal God appears from his creating of all things Gen. 1.2 Psal 104.24 29 30. And Christians are to be Baptized in the Name of the Holy Ghost Mat. 28.19 as well as of the Father and the Son As God he chooseth assigneth and sendeth forth men for the Ministery of the Gospel Acts 13.2 4. As God he decreeth Orders for his Church and People Acts 15.28 As God he is to be invocated and prayed unto as well as the Father and the Son 2 Cor. 13.13 The Holy Ghost is of one Substance Majesty and Glory with the Father and the Son for these three the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost are one 1 Joh. 5.7 who proceedeth from the Father and the Son for the Father sendeth the Comforter in the Name of the Son Joh. 14.16 and the Son sendeth the Comforter the Spirit of Truth from the Father Joh. 15.26 And whereas we believe the Holy Ghost to have proceeded from the Father and the Son understand Proceeding is here a communication of the Divine Essence whereby the third person onely of the Godhead receiveth from the Father and the Son as the Spirit from him whose Spirit it is the same whole Essence which the Father and the Son have and retain Of God the Holy Ghost three things are to be considered by us viz. 1. What the Holy Ghost is viz. of the same Essence with the Father and the Son a distinct person proceeding from both 2. The Office of the Holy Ghost which doth sanctifie us many ways 1. Because he is the key of all heavenly Treasures illuminating our understanding to receive the Mystery of Faith 2. Because he is the Earnest of the Promises 3. Because he is the Seal wherewith the Truth of the Divine Promises is signed and sealed in our mindes 4. Because he is the Minister of Truth guiding us in the way of all Truth 5. Because he is the Author of light expelling the darkness gathered by sin 6. Because he is the Fountain of Wisdom and Understanding 7. Because he is the water that purgeth us from all filth consecrating us into the Holy Temple of God fertilizing us to bring forth the fruits of Righteousness 8. Because he is the Fire that purgeth away the corruption of our mindes enflaming our hearts with the love of Righteousness 3. Our Faith in the Holy Ghost 1. That we believe in God the
not be too many The duties to be performed by us in believing the holy Catholique Church 1. To renounce and abandon all wicked Societies because we profess fellowship with Saints betwixt whom and these there is no agreement 2. To be companions of Saints viz. of such as be of an holy life and not to think it a disgrace to be holy and pure and to be of a good and pious life separate from the prophane multitude 3. To walk in the light of Gods holy Word by vertuous living because of our fellowship with Christ and through him with God the Father for God is light 1 Joh. 1.7 4. To do good unto all but especially to those of the houshold of faith in being like-affected towards them not onely in distributing our temporal but spiritual goods 5. To be comfortable in all our Sufferings because our Head is not without a sympathy and feeling of our miseries and will not suffer us to be tempted beyond what we are able 6. To have heavenliness within us by leading an heavenly life whilest we live upon earth because there is a communion betwixt us and the Saints in heaven When Tyrants Storms of Persecution raise And when Religion blows too many ways When Rome 's Euroclydon does roar like Hell And that Whores Cup doth to a Deluge swell This is that Ark which when the Floods abate Doth land the Faithful on Mount Arrarat Truths Pillar wreath'd with Innocence and Love Whose Stems below and Basis is above Christ's black yet comely and beloved Spouse His own true Vine thrice happy are the Boughs §. 10. The Communion of Saints THe Communion of Saints is that holy and sweet fellowship which all the Members of Christs Church have with their Head Christ Jesus and one with another whether they are Believers here or departed Nor is this the least of Christs benefits bestowed on the Church by the Holy Ghost For herein all the Saints have the same Reconciliation the same Redemption the same Righteousness the same Sanctification the same Salvation by and for Christ All the Saints have the same benefits common which are necessary to Salvation Eph. 4.4 And all the like special gifts though not all a like measure but are so distributed to every Member as that some excel others in gifts and graces in the Church for the gifts of the Holy Ghost are diverse and to every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ Eph. 4.7 The chief part of the Communion of Saints is the union or coherence of all the Saints that is of the whole body of the Church with Christ the Head and of his Members among themselves which is wrought by the Holy Ghost even by the same Spirit who dwelleth in Christ the Head and in all his Members So that to believe the Communion of Saints is to believe That the Saints of which number I must needs certainly be assured my self to be one are united by the Spirit unto Christ their Head and that from the Head gifts are poured down unto them both those which are the same in all necessary to Salvation as also those which being diverse and diversly bestowed upon every one are requisite for the edification of the Church And that they are by the same Spirit likewise united among themselves The mystical union between Christ and every true Believer is not onely in regard of soul but of body also which being once knit shall never be dissolved but is eternal whereupon the dying dead rotten and consumed body remaineth still a Member of Christ abideth within the Covenant and is and shall be ever a Temple of the Holy Ghost Touching which union in regard of the soul Christ dwelleth therein or in the heart of every true Believer as the soul in the body and acts the soul as the soul acts the body without whom the soul is dead to all goodness So that if thou finde that thou art no more able to pray nor no more able to do any duty then thou wast before that thou livest in thy lusts as much as ever thou didst that thou hast not that new heart that new Spirit that new affection which the Scriptures speak of then be sure that Christ dwelleth not in thy heart thou hast no communion with him or his Saints The Union of Christ and the Church is a great Mystery Eph. 5.32 not to be measured with the line of our own Reason which can never fathom the depth thereof a Secret that could not be opened but by Divine Revelation nor being opened can be conceived but by the illumination of the Spirit Thus though it be above our capacity yet being revealed we must believe it as we do the mystery of the Trinity of Christs Eternal generation of the Personal Union of his two Natures of the Proceeding of the Holy Ghost and the like So that in our Meditation of this Mystery we must conceive no carnal no earthly thing of it because it is a Mystery it is altogether Spiritual and heavenly From the natural Union of our head and body and from the Matrimonial Union of man and wife we may by way of resemblance but help our understanding in the Union of Christ and his Church but notwithstanding the comparisons we may not draw the Mystery it self to any carnal matter for it is onely and wholly Spiritual This plainly discovereth the strange folly of the Papists who make our Union with Christ meerly carnal conceiving it to consist in a corporal commixion of Christs flesh with ours in which conceit there is a great deal of gross absurdity no great Mystery Now the maner of our Union with Christ is not by being united onely to his Humane Nature but by being united to Christs Person God-Man For as his Divine Nature in and by it self is incommunicable so the Humane Nature simply considered in and by it self is unprofitable for the Deity is the Fountain of Life and Grace which through the Humanity of Christ is conveyed unto us And though he be in heaven and we on earth yet this Union being supernatural and Spiritual there needeth no local presence for the making of it the Spirit of Christ being conveyed into every of the Saints as the soul into every part of the body makes the Members one Mystical Body their Head What the communion of Saints signifies 1. The Union of the Church with Christ and of his Members among themselves 2. The communion or participation of all Christs benefits 3. The distribution of special gifts bestowed on some Members for the good of the whole body 4. An obliging or binding of all the Members to imploy and refer all their gifts to the glory of Christ their Head and to the Salvation of the whole Body and of every Member mutually The faithful are called Saints in three respects 1. Imputatively that is in respect that Christs sanctity and holiness is imputed unto them 2. Inchoatively that is in respect that
and Paul 6. In Pleasures as in Moses when he left Pharaohs Court 7. In case of Provision for Posterity 8. In matters of daily imployment The Titles given to true Faith viz. 1. It is called the Faith of the Elect Tit. 1.1 for none but the Elect have it and all the Elect have it at one time or another when once they have it they never utterly and totally lose it 2. It is called Saving Faith because it bringeth us to Salvation Eph. 2.8 3. It is called Justifying Faith because it is that means or Instrument which Gods Spirit worketh in us whereby we apply unto our selves Jesus Christ in and by whom we are justified Rom. 3.28 4. It is called Sanctifying Faith because by it God purifieth our hearts Acts 15.9 How far the sense of Faith may be lost in men 1. It may be so covered over and smothered as it may not be discerned they may for a time have no Assurance of it 2. All the joy and comfort of it wherewith they were formerly upheld may be clean taken away and they even faint for want of it 3. No fruits thereof may appear they may be as Trees in winter little conscience of any duty dull in hearing Gods Word cold in Prayer nothing remaining but a formal Profession if that 4. Their Consciences may prove a very Rack a grievous Torture and Torment unto them 5. They may think it is like to be recovered with a wet finger with a light sigh or a groan but they may call cry and roar again and again before they be heard 6. And when they recover it it may be they shall never attain to that measure which once they had or if to that measure of the thing it self yet not of the joy and comfort of it They may carry the grief of this their Fall to their graves The difference between Faith and Presumption viz. 1. Faith driveth a man out of himself and casts himself wholly on Christ Presumption makes him boast of himself and makes him self-conceited 2. Faith resteth on a sure ground even Gods Word Presumption relieth onely on a mans surmise and meer conjecture 3. Faith is joyned with the use of the means Presumption not onely carelesly neglecteth but arrogantly contemneth all means 4. Faith is wrought by degrees as first by Knowledge then by Grief after by desire Presumption is a sudden apprehension of the minde 5. Faith makes a man work out his Salvation with a holy jealousie yea with fear and trembling Presumption is over-bold 6. Faith makes a man depart from all iniquity and keep a clear Conscience Presumption is accompanied with much pollution 7. Faith is most sure in time of Tryal then the strength of it is most manifested Presumption maketh greatest flourish when there is least danger 8. Faith continueth unto the end and never quite falleth away Presumption is subject to decay totally and finally Motives to labor for and to grow in Faith 1. Without it whatsoever we do is sin Rom. 14.23 2. We cannot please God in any one action without Faith Heb. 11.6 3. We cannot hear Gods Word with profit except we have Faith Heb. 11.6 4. We cannot Pray without this Faith Jam. 1.6 5. We cannot Receive the Benefit of the Lords Supper without it 6. We cannot be saved without it Mark 16.16 7. We must grow in Faith because we need more strength daily and daily meet with greater Assaults 8. We shall hereby grow in joy and gain the favor and love of God the more 9. We shall the more prevail in Prayer 10. By growing in Faith we shal bring the more glory to God The means of getting Faith are twofold 1. Outward which are either such as both work and strengthen Faith as the Word of God or onely such as strengthen it as the Sacraments 2. Inward or rather the Cause which is the Sanctifying Spirit of God who softneth quickneth openeth our hearts making them to bring forth the blessed fruit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 1 Cor. 2.4 5. The way to obtain and encrease Faith viz. 1. To be vigilant Hearers and to continue Hearers of Gods Word Rom. 10.17 2. To labor for a good Conscience and to keep it when we have it 1 Tim. 1.19 3. Godly effectual and fervent Prayer to God for it Luke 17.5 4. The worthy receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper which though it doth not confer Faith ex opere operato yet it confirms and strengthens it 1 Cor. 11.25 26. 5. That to our uttermost power we use and well imploy that ability whatsoever it be that we have by nature or by special gift 6. That we resist not any motion of Gods Spirit like the rebellious Jews nor put off from us the Promises of the Gospel as if they belonged not to us and think our selves unworthy of eternal life The true desire of the heart after Christ which worketh Faith may be known 1. By the Cause which is the Gospel and nothing but it can do it because by it alone is Christ revealed and offered 2. By the Order which followeth upon grief for sin and despair of succor in our selves or others 3. By the Quality for it is an hearty and true desire an inward desire of the Soul and also a vehement and earnest desire greater then the desire of any other thing can be 4. By the Fruits as a conscionable care in using and fervent Prayer for blessing the means of Faith 5. By the Continuance of it which raiseth up and preserveth an appetite after Christ even after we have tasted him The Fruits Effects Signs of Effectual Faith 1. It purifies the heart and sanctifies the person therefore Faith and Repentance are put together a purged and sanctified heart renewed in Soul and Body Acts 15.9 2. The Spirit of Prayer 3. Peace in the heart that which passeth all understanding Peace of Conscience or Joy resting on God Rom. 5.1 4. To hold out in cleaving to Christ Constancy and perseverance in Christ unto the end Jude 20.21 5. The Concomitants of it which are Love Hope Joy Humility 6. The justifying of us before God 7. Our whole Conversion which followeth Faith and beginneth at the same time with Faith 8. The fruits of Conversion and Repentance even good works 9. Increase of Spiritual and Corporal gifts 10. Justification Regeneration and all the benefits purchased by the blood of Christ 11. It is an effect of Election none have it but the Elect Acts 13.48 Tit. 1.1 12. The continual working of it for true Faith is never idle Gal. 5.6 13. Hearing of the Word with joy and practising it Joh. 10.27 14. A striving against Doubt Distrust Despair of Gods Mercy if we have not attained a full perswasion And this is acceptable to God Isa 42.3 The principal effects of Faith whereby it may be best proved may be drawn to these two Heads 1. A quiet Conscience whence proceedeth 1. A holy Security of minde having peace with God
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
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
commending their Errors and Vices or not advising them according to their place with due Reverence of enormous and pernicious faults committed by them The Duties of Magistrates may be reduced to these Heads viz. 1. To see that God be honored and that the good things taught and established be done as God hath appointed 2. To give Judgement faithfully and speedily in matters belonging to their Judgement 3. To command the observing and keeping of the Decalogue 4. To execute the Decalogue or the Commandments of the Decalogue that is to observe and maintain the obedience thereof by punishing them that transgress against Discipline either in Goods Name Body or Life 5. To Enact some positive Laws for maintenance of Civil Order which otherwise would not stand serving also for the keeping and obedience of the Decalogue The Vices contrary to the Duty of Magistrates viz. 1. Slackness or slothfulness viz. 1. Not to Require of the people the Discipline of the whole Decalogue 2. Not to Ordain those things which are required to the preservation and order of Civil Society 3. Not to defend the Innocent against Injury 4. Not to restain or to punish too lightly such as offend against the Discipline of the Decalogue or against the positive Laws 2. Tyranny which is 1. To Command things which are unjust 2. To Punish that which is no sin 3. To Punish more grievously then the degree of the fault doth deserve The Reasons wherefore Superiors ought in performance of their duty to go before others viz. 1. By vertue of their Authority they bear Gods Image therefore in doing their duty they honor that Image 2. By reason of their pluce they ought to go before such as are under them 3. A saithful performance of their duty is a special means to keep their Inferiors in compass of theirs 4. Their Failing in duty is exemplary it causeth others under them to fail in theirs and so it is a double sin 5. Their Reckoning at the great Day of Account shall be the greater for of them who have received more more shall be required The general duty of the Husband to the Wife viz. 1. To provide for her what is meet not onely as she is his Wife but as she may be his Widow 2. To give honor to her as to the weaker vessel that is to bear with her infirmities and weakness 3. To protect and defend her to be a covering unto her head The general duty of the Wife to her Husband viz. 1. To Recompence his care over her in providing things necessary for the houshold and to do good for her Husband all the days of her life 2. To Reverence her Husband that he may be a vail and a covering before her eyes The duty of the housholder viz. 1. To provide for his Houshold the things that belong unto their Soul by a familiar Catechizing and Examination and to be the mouth of his Family in constant Prayer 2. To provide for the things belonging unto this life that is to give to every one that is meet in his place and Calling and they of the house are to submit themselves to the order of the house so it be good 3. To command such things as are just and possible to prescribe just and lawful labors not unlawful not unpossible not too burthensom and unnecessary to give them honestly their wages for their labors and to govern them by upright domestical Discipline Masters of families may transgress 1. By permitting of idle slothfulness and licentionsness 2. By unjust Commands and Exactions 3. By defrauding their Servants of their Wages 4. Through too much rigor and severity The duties of married persons 1. Spousal Faith and Troth for mutual love each to other onely continually constantly 2. Community of goods and a sympathy or fellow feeling in evils and calamities 3. The bringing forth and bringing up of children 4. A mutual bearing with infirmities with a desire to cure them Again the common mutual duties concerning Man and Wife are twofold 1. Absolutely necessary for the being and abiding of Marriage whereof there are two kindes 1. Matrimonial Amity 1 Cor. 7.10 11. 2. Matrimonial Chastity 1 Thess 4.4 2. Needful and requisite for the well-being and well-abiding of marriage which may also be reduced to these two Heads 1. Such as they are mutually to perform to each other as 1. A loving Affection of each other 2. A provident care of one for another respecting The Soul of each other The Body of each other Goodname of each other The goods of each other 2. Such as both of them are joyntly to perform to others which Duties respect either 1. Such as are in or of the family 2. Such as are out of the family Directions for preservation of Concord betwixt Man and Wife viz. 1. All Offences must be avoided as much as possible may be by both parties 2. When an Offence is given by the one party it must not be taken by the other but meekly passed by 3. If both be incensed together both must strive which shall first offer Reconciliation 4. Children Servants or any other must not be bolstered up by the one against the other 5. They must avoid making of Comparisons in any kinde whatsoever prejudicial to either 6. They must take heed of and never entertain the least rash and unjust Jealousie 7. In all things that may stand with a good Conscience they must endeavor to please each other 8. They must joyntly persevere in fervency of Prayer to God for his Blessings to be continued on them in the estate wherein they are united by his Providence For the yet better understanding of this Commandment we must know That Subjection is twofold 1. Of Reverence whereby one testifieth an eminency and superiority in them whom he reverenceth This is proper to Inferiors 2. Of Service whereby one in his place is ready to do what good he can to another This is common to all Christians Again Subjection is twofold 1. Necessary which is the Subjection of Order or that degree of Inferiority wherein God hath placed all Inferiors and whereby he hath subjected them to their Superiors that is set them in a lower degree 2. Voluntary which is the Subjection of Duty or that dutiful respect which Inferiors carry towards those whom God hath set over them whereby they manifest a willingness to yield to that order which God hath established which ought to be added to the Necessary Subjection Likewise League or Society betwixt Man and Man People and People is twofold viz. 1. The League of Concord when men binde themselves in peace one with another And this may be had with all men Believers and Unbelievers good or bad Have peace with all men Rom. 12.18 2. The League of Amity when men binde themselves one to another in special Love beside their outward Concord And this kinde of peace ought onely to be had with true Believers In a word the Duty 1. Of Magistrates is to procure
the wealth and peace of their people like Mordecai 2. Of Ministers is to make themselves Servants unto their people not seeking their own profit but the profit of many that they may be saved as Paul 1 Cor. 9.19 10.33 3. Of Fathers is to educate their Children in the Fear of God taking heed that they give them no evil Example nor provoke them to wrath Prov. 4.3 4. 4. Of Husbands is to dwell with their wives according to knowledge giving honor to the wife as to the weaker vessel like Abraham Gen. 6.16 5. Of Masters is to do that which is just and equal to their Servants as the Centurion Luk. 7.2 for they as well as their Servants are bound to duty 1. By Gods Law for it expresly enjoyneth many Duties to Masters 2. By the Law of Nature which hath tyed as well the one as the other to do as well as receive good 3. By the Law of Nations as appears by divers particular Laws established for this purpose 4. By the Law of Equity for one good deserveth another 6. Of every one is to be of like affection one towards another by serving one another in love according to the Apoliles Rule Rom. 12.16 Gal. 5.13 7. Of our selves towards our selves is 1. To honor God in all our ways 1 Sam. 2.30 2. To keep our Bodies that they be not made the instruments of sin 1 Thess 4.4 5 The common Vertues of this Fifth Commandment viz. 1. That General Justice which is Obedience according to all Laws that appertain unto all in respect of every ones Vocation and Calling 2. The Particular Distributive Justice which keepeth a proportion in distributing of Offices and Rewards or which is a vertue giving every one his own Rom. 13.7 3. Sedulity or Diligence or Fidelity which is a vertue in a man well knowing and understanding those parts which belong properly to his own duty and office examining them and doing according to Gods Commandment those things that belong unto him constantly continually studiously willingly faithfully and chearfully 4. Gravity which is a vertue that observeth that which becometh a mans person and sheweth a constancy and squareness in words deeds and gestures that thereby we may maintain our good estimation or authority that our Calling be not reproached 5. Modesty being a vertue which hath near affinity whereby a man knowing his own imbecility and considering his place and calling wherein he is placed by God keepeth a mean and conveniency of person in opinion and in speech of himself in actions and in behavior that giving no more to our selves then becometh us we may give to others what is theirs Humility and Modesty differ onely in the end for as Modesty is towards men so Humility is towards God Gal. 6.3 6. Love or Tender Affection towards our Kindred or near Allies of Blood 7. Thankfulness which is a vertue consisting of Truth and Justice acknowledging from whom what and how great benefits we have received desiring to return mutual duties honest and possible 8. Equity which is a vertue mitigating upon good cause the rigor of strict Justice in punishing and taxing others offences patiently bearing with some such errors and defects as do not enormously harm the publike safety or the private welfare of our Neighbors and covering and correcting such vices of others or endeavoring to heal and cure them God annexeth a Promise of this Commandment for these Reasons 1. To signifie how greatly he esteemeth that Obedience and how grievously he will punish those who do against this Obedience 2. To signifie how Necessary this Obedience is and so much the more to invite us to the observing and keeping thereof This Commandment hath a Promise of Outward Temporal Prosperity annexed to the performance of it which though to the wicked does by meer consequence through the Abuse of it turn to evil yet to the godly it is a Blessing and Fruit of Gods Love as appears by these Reasons 1. It is good as it was at first made and ordained of God Gen. 1.31 2. It tends to mans good if it be rightly used 3. It was bestowed on man before he had offended Gen. 2.8 4. It is a Promise of God to them that fear him and keep his Commandments Levit. 26.4 c. 5. The Saints have prayed and been thankful for it Gen. 28.20 6. The contrary was first inflicted as a punishment of sin and is often threatned as a token of Gods wrath which accordingly hath been often inflicted on Transgressors Lev. 26.15 who meritoriously have incurred it This Promise of long life includes a Blessing of all earthly things Now there is a Right to earthly things two ways or the Right unto the Earth is twofold 1. Civil which stands good before men by their Laws and Customs Thus men are called Lords of their Land and so the Turk at this day is a mighty Lord of a great part of the whole World 2. Spiritual which is warrantable and approved with God himself Such Right and Title had Adam to all the World before his Fall which he lost by his Sin both from himself and all his Posterity but yet in Christ the same is recovered to all the Elect In regard of this Right the Meek are said to inherit the Earth Mat. 5.5 So that it is most evident the Turk and all Unbelievers and ungodly persons are but Usurpers of those things which otherwise Civilly they do lawfully possess For all our Right to the Earth was lost in Adam and is onely recovered by Christ so that till we have our part in him we cannot justly with a good Conscience possess any part of the Earth for he is Prince of the Kings of the Earth Rev. 1.5 and the High Lord of all the World Though long life be here promised as a Blessing yet may the Righteous have their days shortned for their good as in these and such like respects 1. That they may be taken from the evil to come 1 Kings 14.13 2. That they might be made an example to others 1 Kings 13.24 3. That by a temporal death eternal Condemnation might be avoided 1 Cor. 11.32 4. That their chiefest and greatest Reward might be hastned Gen. 5.24 Heb. 11.5 The Promise of long life and Prosperity is not so appropriated to this kinde of Righteousness as if it appertained to no other but in these and such like particular respects 1. Because Obedience to Parents is one of the surest evidences of our conformity to the whole Law and a good foundation for the performing of all duties to man 2. Because Performance of duties to Parents is a special means under God of prospering and living long whereas rebellious children hasten their own sad ends 3. Because Parents are a special means to procure the welfare and long life of their children partly by provident care and partly by fervent and frequent Prayer 4. Because Disobedience draweth down much mischief on the heads of children and many ways doth often
thoughts words and works through the whole course of our life to the end of our days And this our Obedience must not onely be in doing this or that but also in suffering the Miserie 's laid upon us to the Death neither in keeping this or that Commandment but impartially keeping them all yea and it must be ready and chearful without any deliberation or consultation with flesh and blood True Obedience which proceedeth from true faith hath these Heads Branches viz. 1. It must be a Fruit of the Spirit in Christ 2. It must be the keeping of every Commandment of God 3. The whole man must endeavor to keep the whole Law in his Minde Will and Affections and all the Faculties of Soul and Body 4. He must deny himself and take up the Cross Luke 9.23 5. He must believe all things that are written in the Law and Prophets Acts 24.14 6. He must have and keep a good Conscience for which these means are very requisite viz. 1. In the course of his life he must practise the duties of the general Calling in his particular Calling 2. In all events that come to pass in patience and silence he must submit himself to the good will and pleasure of God 3. If at any time he fall he must humble himself before God labor to break off his Sin and recover himself by Repentance 7. He must prove what is the good will of God Rom. 12.2 8. He must restrain his life from outward offences which tend to the dishonor of God and Scandal of the Church 1 Thess 5.22 1 Pet. 2.11 12. 9. He must mortifie the inward Corruptions of his own heart 10. He must labor to conceive new motions agreeable to the Will of God and thence bring forth and practise good Duties so performing both outward and inward Obedience unto God Rules of ordering directing our Obedience viz. 1. We must be assured that we do those things that are warranted in the Word of God and that they be done according to his Will Isa 29.14 2. We must perform our Obedience heartily not for outward shew and fashion to be seen of men but as in the sight of him that looketh upon the heart Prov. 23.26 3. It must be done with all our power chearfully and willingly which dependeth upon the former but distinguished from it 2 Cor. 8.12 4. It must be done freely out of love to him that commands it and purely and simply for his sake not mercinarily for the Reward yet in hope thereof 5. We must perform tht fruits of our Obedience entirely not by halfs sincerely not parting stakes between God and the Devil and our selves Jer. 7.9 10. 6. It must be a constant Obedience not by fits for a day or a short and set time there is no promise made but to such as persevere unto the end Mat. 10.22 7. Our Obedience must not be delayed from time to time Heb. 3.7 8. Mat. 25.10 God requireth a full and entire Obedience and it is our Duty to yield Obedience to all the Commandments of God for these Reasons viz. 1. God in his own nature is perfect in himself and perfect in all goodness towards us we must therefore answer him in Duty and Obedience 2. Christ Jesus is a perfect Savior a perfect Redeemer a perfect Mediator it followeth therefore that we should follow after all Righteousness and make Conscience of all sin 3. In respect of the Commandments themselves which are so knit together that the knot cannot be loosed but all are dissolved 4. There is nothing done in this flesh but God will bring it into Judgement Eccl. 12.14 5. All things commanded of God from the greatest to the least are most just and equal and therefore to be observed diligently without all parting or partiality That our Obedience may be in some good degree towards Perfection 1. We must labor to have pure and upright hearts which giveth life to all our actions and is very much accepted of God who looks especially to the heart 2. We must be free from any purpose to live in any known sin and must be enclined to every thing that is good lest we be unawares ensnared by the contrary 3. We must all take notice of our own wants and imperfections and earnestly bewail and mourn for them striving with all our power against them 4. We must make Conscience of the least sin that we may be afraid of the greatest 5. We must still go forward from good to better evermore growing in Grace 6. It is our duty to pray unto God to give us upright hearts which in themselves are crooked and corrupt prone to nothing but what is evil This Doctrine of Obedience is useful to Reprove 1. Those that waste themselves and spend their strength chiefly about the things of this world and never labor after Regeneration and the things of the Lord. 2. Such as content themselves with a small measure of Knowledge and Obedience of Faith and Repentance 3. Those that do halt with God and yield a maimed Obedience unto him 4. Such as think it sufficient to serve God outwardly to be seen of men and worship him through Hypocrisie Obedience is most lovely in Gods eyes Obedience better is then Sacrifice It makes us welcom to the Lord when we In Faith in Love and true Humility Petitions send and our Addresses make In JESUS Name and all for JESUS sake Without this Grace all other Graces are But as a Glo-worm-light or falling Star Who knows his Masters will and not obey Shall for his knowledge smart another day CHAP. VII Of Fasting and Holy Feasting A Religious Fast is an extraordinary abstinence taken up for a Religious end it is an abstinence from all Commodities of this life so far as comeliness will allow and necessity suffer to make us the more humble and meet for Prayer Isa 1.16 17. Matth. 6.16 17 18. It is an abstinence from all Meats and Drinks 2 Sam. 3.35 Jon. 3.7 The Israelites were commanded to put away their best Raiment Exod. 33.5 6. To abstain from Mirth and Musick from Pleasures and all Recreations Joel 2.16 1 Chro. 7.5 Dan. 6.18 And in stead of these to give themselves to Weeping Mourning and Lamentation Neh. 1.4 For this case they had their Sackcloth and Ashes to signifie they were no better themselves This was to continue one whole day 2 Sam. 3.35 Judg. 20.26 1 Sam. 14.24 2 Sam. 1.12 Sometimes indeed they continued their Fast longer as occasion served and upon extraordinary causes Hest 4.16 Acts 9.9 Neh. 1.1 2. Dan. 10.1 2. And when the Evening came they did not eat either in quantity or quality to recover with advantage what they had abstained from before but fed upon the Bread of Tears and mingled their Drink with Weeping So must we take heed that we make not our Fasts Popish Fasts or rather Feasts and think if we abstain from Flesh we may feed on other Restoratives or Fast to take the more
Recreations they being all contrary to sound Humiliation 9. So far forth to abstain from Sin Meat Delights and all worldly things whatsoever that as well the Soul as the Body may be thereby afflicted 3. That the right ends of a Religious Fast be observed viz. 1. To subdue the flesh that is to bring the Body and so the bodily lusts into subjection to the Will and Word of God subduing the corruption of Nature We must not therefore think it sufficient to abstain from flesh and Popishly pamper our Bodies with restorative Conserves nor eat the day before or the day after the day of Fasting sufficient for two days 2. To stir up our Devotion and to confirm the Attention of our Mindes in hearing and in praying it prepares us unto Prayer and furthers us therein 3. To be a spur and provocation to true Humiliation and Repentance 4. To admonish us of our guiltiness before the Lord and to put us in minde of the Acknowledgement of our Sins whereby we are become unworthy of any Blessing Gift or Mercy 5. It serves for an outward Testimony and Profession of our Humiliation and Repentance to testifie the humility and the contrition of our hearts that is to say Our inward Sorrow for sin our Repentance and effectual turning The Religious Fast is twofold viz. 1. Private performed by one or more in a Family that our Prayers may be the more effectual Neh. 1.4 2 Sam. 12.16 3.35 Psal 35.13 69.10 Dan. 9.10 Acts 10.30 2. Publike performed by the whole Congregation Joel 2.12 Jonah 3.7 This ought not to be used of a few and therefore all sorts of people should come to the same and none absent themselves from the Assemblies in such publike times of Publike Humiliation The several sorts of Fasts viz. 1. Physical when for Healths sake a man forbeareth food a Fast prescribed by the Physitian to preserve and restore Health 2. Politique when certain times of abstaining from food are enjoyned for the preservation of plenty and preventing of penury 3. The Fast of Sobriety and Temperance Rom. 13.13 1 Cor 9.25 1 Thes 5.6 1 Pet. 5.7 Of this Fast Bernard saith 1. That the Eyes must fast from curious sights and all wantonness 2. The Ears must fast from Fables evil Reports and unsavory Discourse 3. The Tongue must fast from Slander Murmuring and Railing Speeches 4. The Hands must fast from evil works 5. The Soul must fast from Sin and doing our own will Luke 21.34 Ezek. 16.49 4. Enforced Necessary or Constrained Fast as in time of Famine or the poor mans Fast or in a Besieged City or Ship far from Land 5. Moral when men eat and drink sparingly not so much as their Appetite desireth but onely so much as may preserve Nature and Maintain Health and Strength 6. Spiritual when men abstain from Vice which is as food to their corrupt Nature Isa 58.6 7. Miraculous when men extraordinarily assisted by the power of God abstain from all maner of food longer then the Nature of man is able to endure which cannot be brought into imitation Such was the Fast of Christ Mat. 4.2 of Moses Exod. 34.28 and of Elijah 1 Kings 19.8 8. Hypocritical when men without respect to any occasion of Fasting appoint set times weekly monethly or quarterly to Fast Thus fasted the Pharisees Luke 18.12 whom Christ taxed of Hypocrisie Mat. 6.16 9. Idolatrous when men making difference betwixt Meats for Conscience sake abstain from one kinde and glut themselves with another and yet count this a Fast 10. Superstitious when men place Religion and Holiness in the abstaining from Meat making the very outward act of fasting to be a part of Gods Worship contrary to the Apostle 1 Tim. 4.8 11. Religious or the true Christian Fast when men seasonably abstain from refreshing their Bodies to make them the more fit for Religious Duties being an abstinence for one day commanded of the Lord from all Meats and Drinks and Delights of this Life thereby to make solemn profession of our Humiliation it being the end thereof to further and better it Lev. 23.27 c. Psal 35.13 Deut. 10.12 1 Kings 21.27 c. 2 Chron. 12.6 7. Ezra 8.21 In our Fasts we must seek to approve our selvs and our Actions onely to God for which end we must observe these 3 Rules viz. 1. With our Fasting we must joyn a Conversion of our heart from Sin unto God Joel 2.12 Now that our heart may turn to God in Fasting we must have special regard to our behavior both before in and after our Fast whether publike or private As 1. Before the Fast we must prepare our selves thereto in an holy maner by a serious consideration of the Causes and Occasions of our Fast So did Jehoshaphat 2 Chron. 20.3 2. In Fasting we must labor to have more tender Affections and deeper Humiliation then ordinary 1 Sam. 7.6 3. After the Fast we must labor for Reformation and Amendment of life that our behavior both towards God and Man may be every way better then before 2. We must be sure we propound unto our selves therein the right ends of a Religious Fast for if we fail therein and propound other ends unto our selves we corrupt the whole action unto our selves 3. With our Fasting we must joyn the Duties of the second Table in the works of Justice Mercy and Love to our Brethren for without these our Love to God is not sincere and he rejects that bodily Humiliation that is severed from them Isa 58.3 c. Popish Fasting is abominable for these Reasons which may well prevail with us to abhor it viz. 1. In their Religious Fasts they allow one Meal so it be not flesh and beside that drinking of any kinde of Wines or Drinks taking of Electuaries Strong-Waters and Conserves and such like at any time of the day which is a Mock-Fast and nothing else 2. They make distinction of Meats necessary to a Fast and that not for Civil ends as Magistrates may do or for Temperance sake as private men may do but for Conscience sake which is a Doctrine of Devils 1 Tim. 4.3 3. They binde men in Conscience to many set days of Fasting and make the omission thereof a deadly Sin wherein they take away our Christian Liberty for there was no want of care in our Savior Christ to appoint all good means for the mortifying of the flesh and yet he prescribed no set Fasts in the New-Testament 4. They make Fasting meritorious teaching That a man thereby may satisfie Gods Justice whereby they do Blasphemously derogate from the All-sufficiency of Christs Obedience and Worship 5. They make no Conscience of Fasting from Sin though it be the chief end thereof nor is their Fasting an afflicting of the Soul or Humiliation of the Inward Man but a Formal hanging down of the head wherein too many of us Protestants are of the same Religion Touching Holy Feasting the Liberty thereof is permitted for these Reasons 1.
Love Self-love twofold 213 c. Lying twofold 301 c. the Common Distinction of Lyes 302 a. the kindes and degrees of Lyes ibid. 303. Rules against Lying 302 a. Vertues opposed to it 304. M MAgistrates their Duty 268 c. 269 a b. Marriage-Duties 269 c. 270 a. Rules to maintain Concord betwixt Man and Wife ibid. c. Mass the vast difference thereof from the Lords Supper 57 c. 58 a. Meats to be Consecrated before the use thereof 373 c. 374 a. Mediator his Office 130 c. his Necessity of being true God and true Man 131 a b. The benefits of a Mediator ibid. c. Merit or Works Meritorious a meer Chymera no such thing in Rerum natura 359 a. Ministers their Duty and Properties 26 c. 31 a b. 32 a. Qualifications requisite for that Calling 30 a. 31 a. Why to be proved before Admission 30 c. The Titles given them in Scripture 30 c. the peoples Duty toward their Ministers 32 b. Ministery why instituted by God 28 b. the way to promote it 29 a. why it ought not to be despised ibid. b. The Reason of the Comparison betwixt it and Salt ibid. c. Moses how said to write of Christ 130 a. Mother of Christ why espoused to a man 134 a. Murmuring why unlawful 294 b c. Murther the kindes and degrees thereof 273 to 283. the heinousness of the sin 278. the way to avoid it ibid. c. Murther against the Soul how committed 279 a. N NAme of God what it signifies 83 b. 243 b. how said to be taken in vain 241. what that signifies 243 b. the several ways of taking Gods Name in vain 244. how it is sanctified 246. Names in Baptism to be chosen by Parents 44 b. Directions for the right choyce thereof ibid. Nativity of Christ 133 b. why born of the Virgins substance ibid. c. Nature Christs Divine Nature proved by Scripture 134 b. what the word Nature Vignifies in the Trinity 1. O OAthes the nature of an Oath 246. Oathes extorted how far binding 241 c. What is required in a lawful Oath 246 a. 247 c. 248 249. What 's to be thought on before we take an Oath ibid. c. In every lawful Oath a twofold Bond 250 a. Christians may lawfully take an Oath ibid. Why Oathes may not be used but in case of Necessity 251 a. In what cases Oathes do not binde ibid. Obedience what 367 a. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 268. The parts thereof ibid. Rules whereby to order our Obedience 367 c. 368 b. the Tryals thereof 51 c. Angelcal Obedience 97 c. Perfect Obedience possible to all men before the Fall 15 b. now not possible to the REgenerate ibid. c. Obedience to the Ministery 28 c. and the Reasons thereof 36 a. Obstinacy in sin the sinfulness of that sin 353 c. Opinion how it differs from Faith 186b P PArents their Duty 267 a. Passion of Christ 136 b c. wherein the Meditation thereon consists 137 b. Patience what 174. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 202. Signs and Properties thereof 197 a. Perfect when ibid. b c. Encouragements for and Motives to Patience 201 202. impediments thereto ibid. Perfection the several kindes thereof 20 a. 94 c. Perjury the several kindes thereof 252 b c. Persons in the Trinity proved 4 c. 5 a. what they therein signifie 1 to 4. why so called 5 a. wherein they agree 5 b. their order of working 5 c. Policy Caveats touching it 194 b. Pontius Pilate what he was 135 a. Popery why not to be tolerated 234 b. Power of God twofold 123. Prayer what 60 b. twofold 62 b. the parts of Prayer ibid. c. the kindes thereof ibid. c. 63. the qualities of true Prayer ibid. c. how we ought to pray 60 c. how he must be qualified that prayeth ibid. 61 a. the gesture time and place of Prayer 61 a. 62 a. Who alone is to be prayed unto ibid. how to conceive aright of God in prayer 64 c. how the whole Trinity works in prayer ibid. the Helps of preparation to prayer 65 a. Impediments to be removed before prayer ibid. b. Duties required in the act of prayer ibid. c. why the Creature may not be prayed unto 66 c. how God answers prayer 67 b. why God answers not some prayers ibid. why God sometimes defers answer to our prayers ibid. c. wherein Reverence in prayer consists 68 a. the necessity of the Spirit in prayer ibid. how to pray with the Spirit ibid. b. Fervency in prayer the signs thereof 71 b. the common Abuses in our prayers ibid. c. Duties required after prayer ibid. who not to be prayed for 72 b whom we ought to pray for 79 a. Motives to publike prayer ibid. c. the Necessity of Family-prayer 73 a. of Secret prayer ibid. the difference betwixt Praying and Wishing ibid. c. the Papists Error touching prayer 75 a. Prayer the Lords Prayer the use thereof 75 b c. what is comprehended therein 76. Doctrine thereof 75 to 117. Preaching what 25 c. who may preach ibid. how Humane Learning may therein be used without abuse 26 a. The order to be observed in Preaching 26 b. the whole Exercise thereof wherein it consists 27 a. Boldness in preaching how manifested 27 c. Presence of God with us 159 b. Presumption Remedies against it 111 c. Pride what 226 c. the properties of a proud man 228 a. the several kindes of Pride ibid. b. Remedies against it 110 c. Spritual Pride to be abhorred 229. Engines to pull it down ibid. b. the way to avoid inward Pride 228 c. Priests what they were under the Law 21 c. how they differed from Prophets ibid. Priest and Priesthood twofold under the Law 22 a. what things peculiar to the High Priest ibid. Promises the right way to apply them 193. Prosperity the effects thereof 200 b. Providence of God in preservation of the Scripture most admirable 6 b. Punishment for sin the degrees thereof 354 b. R REconciliation what 130 b. Recreations Rules touching the same 374 c. 375 a. Redemption what 319 c. fourfold 320 b. Doctrine thereof 319 to 322. how Christ Redeems us ibid. c. Regeneration what 334 c. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 337. how wrought 335 c. 336 b c. how it differs from Creation ibid. c. the degrees thereof 337 b. Signs thereof ibid. c. Regulation Rules thereof for all Actions 295 c. Religion what is the deepest Mystery thereof 1 a. the Pillar of Church and State 25 c. wherein the true Religion differs from all others 154 a. Repentance what 363 a. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 367. the nature kindes exercise properties effects tryals and signs of sound Repentance 364 365 51. Repentance not to be deferred 365 b. Motives to Repentance 366 b. and means to attain it ibid. c. Repetition of Sermon very requisite 28 a. Vain Repetitions what 70 c. Resurrection what 163. Doctrine of it ibid. to 166. proved 164 b. 165 b. the Duties of such as believe it ibid. c. the Types thereof 165 c. Resurrection of Christ what 139 c. how it was wrought 140 b. why
he Rose again ibid. what chiefly is therein considerable ibid. c. why our Resurrection is the Fruit of his 141 b. The Duties of Faith in the Resurrection of Christ ibid. Rest on the Sabbath the several kindes thereof 260 b. Restitution twofold 239 c. why required ibid. Revenge Gods Prerogative 275 c. Motives in man to avoid it 278 a b. Reverence due to Superiors the several kindes of it 266 b. the over-reverencing of Parents sinful ibid. Righteousness of Christ how ours 325 b. Rome an Enemy to the Royal Priestly and Prophetick Office of Christ 129 c. S SAbbath what it signifies 258 b. the nature and Doctrine thereof 254 to 262. Why it is to be kept holy 256 b. 257 a. 258 a. in what maner ibid. 260 b. wherefore must Beasts rest that day 257 b. the degrees of the Sabbath 258 c. the Sanctification of the Sabbath twofold 250 a b. why it is perpetual ibid. c. why now called the Lords-Day 260 b. what chiefly observable in the Jewish Sabbath 261 a. why the Day was changed ibid. wherefore instituted at first ibid. c. how many ways it is broken and prophaned 262. Sacraments what ●7b their Institution 38 b. how the signs therein differ from the things signified 38 c. how Sacraments differ from the Word 39. how they agree ibid. c. how the Sacraments of the Old and New Testament differ ibid. how they agree 40 a. The ends and right use of Sacraments ibid. b. Sacramental Vnion wherein it consisteth ibid. c. Sacrifices under the Law why instituted 21 b. Salvation how wrought by God 329 c. 330 a. not to be doubted by Gods children and why 189 c. Sanctification what 326 b. the Doctrine thereof ibid. to 333. its parts 327 b. the kindes thereof ibid. c. 328 a. and signs 332 c. Scripture Holy Scripture what meant by it 6 a b. why called the Word of God 7 b. Proved to be the Word of God 7 c. 8. The matter thereof 8 a. End ibid. Effects 8 b. 14 a. Properties ibid. Testimonies 8 c. Majesty 9 a. Subject 12 b c. The Division of Scripture 9 c. wherein the Old and New Testament agree ibid. wherein they differ 10 a. why all sorts of men are bound to the knowledge of the Scripture 11a in what respects it is difficult ibid. and the Raeson thereof ibid. b. Means whereby to finde out the true sense of Scripture ibid. c. the Graces required for the right use thereof 12 a. how to profit by the Scriptures 13 a. The several kindes of Neglecters thereof 13 b. Observations for the right interpreting of the Scriptures 13 b. how to decide the doubtful places ibid. c. the Graces obtained by the Scriptures 14 a. the Papists Error touching the Authority thereof 9 b. their twofold Scripture ibid. Seal twofold 205 c. Sects of Jews under the Law 22 b. Sin what 343. why called a Debt 105 a. the seat of sin in man threefold 345 c. the kindes and degrees of sin 346 347. In what sense sin may be said to be venial ibid. c. 348 a. the occasions of sin ibid. b. the sundry kindes of communication with sin ibid. the heinousness of Adams sin 353 a. God not the Author of sin 352 c. why God permitted the first sin 353 a. Two main Disswasives from all sin 350 c. 351. Rules whereby to see our sins 354 a. how God doth punish sin ibid. b. the sad Effects of sin ibid. c. An Antidote against sin 355 a b. Rules to be observed in forsaking of sin ibid. c. Means sanctified by God himself against it 356 a. Sin Original Sin what 343. the nature of it 350 352. Sin against the Holy Ghost what 345 b. ' Degrees thereof 349 a. how this sin is differenced from all other sins ibid. b. why God leaves this sin unpardonable Sincerity the signs and tryals thereof 239 c. Son the second Person in the Trinity 1 to 5. Sprinkling in Baptism what it signifies 43 c. Subjection twofold 270 b c. Sufferings the Doctrine thereof 135 to 139. Supper of the Lord what 48 a. the Doctrine thereof 48 to 58. the signs and things signified 48 b c. the Sacramental Rites of this Supper 49 b. the Properties of a true Communicant ibid. a right disposition in the act of Receiving 53 b c. a true discerning of the Lords Body what 54 a. 55 a. what it is to shew forth the Lords Death 54 a. our Duty after Receiving 54 b c. Resemblance betwixt the Passover and the Lords Supper 56 c. 57 a. why Christ at the last Passover instituted the Lords Supper ibid. why the Bread and Wine is called the Body and Blood of Christ 58 b. Rules whereby to discern the Lords Body in the Sacrament ibid. c. how the Lords Supper differs from Baptism ibid. it is not necessary to come Fasting to the Lords Supper and the Reasons 59 a. the true and right ends of the Lords Supper ib. b. Swearing the Causes of common and prophane Swearing 243 c. when and wherein a man may lawfully swear 250 b c. Why we ought to swear onely by God and not by the Creatures 251 b c.. T TEmptation twofold 108 b. the kindes thereof ibid. c. and degrees thereof 109 a. how God is said to lead a man into Temptation 108 a. Testimony of the Spirit how wrought 330 b. of our own Consciences how discerned 332 a. Thanksgiving the subject matter thereof 68 c. 69. Directions for Thanksgiving ibid. c. Theft the several kindes thereof 291 292 293 a. the degrees thereof 296 b c. 297 299 c. 300 a. Remedies against it 293 b. Thoughts threefold 308 b. Vnclean Thoughts twofold 309 c. how to discern such Thoughts as the Devil injects into the heart ibid. an Antidote against evil Thoughts 316 b. Toleration of false Worship exceeding dangerous 217 c. Transubstantiation Reasons against it 57 b. Trespasses and Sins why called Debts 103 a. 109 b. Trinity what 1. the Doctrine thereof 1 to 5. Trinity and Triplicity how they differ 3 b. Trinity of Persons in Vnity of Godhead why necessary to be believed and maintained 4 b. Truth fourfold 305 c. Truth in speech twofold 301 b. Types are visible Promises 17 c. U UNion taken three ways 157 a. how united to Christ ibid. b. the Saints Priviledges by their Vnion with Christ 158 b c. 159 a. Motives to Spiritual Vnion with Christ ibid. c. the effects thereof 160 a. Vocation what 322 b. threefold 323 a. the Doctrine thereof 322 323 324. Vows how far they are to be kept 242. What is required in every Vow to make it lawful 252 c. 253 a. Considerations touching Vows 253. Usury conditions and qual fications touching it 295 a. Reasons why a man may sometimes take above the Principal ibid. W WAr lawful in the godly without the guilt of Murther 282 b. the Qualifications to be observed therein ibid. c. Will Liberty of Will what 338 b. the nature of the Will ibid. 339. Liberty of Will how constituted 340 a. why called Free ibid. b. Degrees of Free-will ibid. 341 b. the difference betwixt the Liberty of Gods Will and ours ibid. c. What things in the Will are common to Angels and Men with God 341 a. the degrees of the malice of the Will 350 a. Will of God what 93 c. Doing of Gods Will what it signifies 95 a. Rules how to obey it ibid. b. Wishing Conditions required therein 310 a. Witness the heinousness of bearing False Witness 301 c. Wives duty to their Husbands 269 b c. Word of God what 6 a. not alway the same with the letter of the Scripture b c. Why to be warily observed in Scripture 10 c. how falsified by Hereticks ibid. Works of God twofold 123 c. Works Good Works what 356 c. the Doctrine thereof ibid. to 363. kindes 358 a. and ends thereof ibid. 359 b. why Good Works required since they do not justifie 326 b. Rules to be observed in doing Good Works 357 b. how many ways God accepts of Good Works in us ibid. b. the diversity of Opinions touching the Necessity of Good Works ibid. c. how the wicked do things seemingly good ibid. c. why we are bound to Good Works 359 c. Good Works cannot merit 360. See Merit Why they cannot justifie us 361 b. how the Works of the Regenerate and Vnregenerate differ ibid. c. the fruit of Good Works 362 c. Worship the kindes thereof 171 a. wherein it consists 216 a. Rules touching it 217 a. Required in the Second Commandment 230. Doctrine of true Worship ibid. to 240. the kindes of false Worship 231 c. Rules for right Worship 232 a. FINIS