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A64611 The summe of Christian religion, delivered by Zacharias Ursinus first, by way of catechism, and then afterwards more enlarged by a sound and judicious exposition, and application of the same : wherein also are debated and resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are controversed in divinitie / first Englished by D. Henry Parry, and now again conferred with the best and last Latine edition of D. David Pareus, sometimes Professour of Divinity in Heidelberge ; whereunto is added a large and full alphabeticall table of such matters as are therein contained ; together with all the Scriptures that are occasionally handled, by way either of controversie, exposition, or reconciliation, neither of which was done before, but now is performed for the readers delight and benefit ; to this work of Ursinus are now at last annexed the Theologicall miscellanies of D. David Pareus in which the orthodoxall tenets are briefly and solidly confirmed, and the contrary errours of the Papists, Ubiquitaries, Antitrinitaries, Eutychians, Socinians, and Arminians fully refuted ; and now translated into English out of the originall Latine copie by A.R. Ursinus, Zacharias, 1534-1583.; Parry, Henry, 1561-1616.; Pareus, David, 1548-1622. Theologicall miscellanies.; A. R. 1645 (1645) Wing U142; ESTC R5982 1,344,322 1,128

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they know and beleeve what a one Christ is and what he hath done for each of them as it is said Iohn 17.3 This is life eternall that they know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent And Iohn 3.36 He that beleeveth in the Son hath eternall life By these and the like sayings we perceive that to be a truth which Dionysius which is falsly named the Areopagite but is thought rather to be a Corinthian ascribes to Bartholomew the Apostle That the Gospel is brief and large The Gospel it a briefe largenesse Briefe It s brevity is apparently more curt than the Law of Moses ought to be and is fixed in the minds and hearts of men and therfore is the summe of the Gospel so oft delivered and repeated in the Scriptures of the Prophets and Apostles and comprised in the Creed But much lesse can ever the wisdome of the Gospel be exhausted than that of the Law But forasmuch as its certain Large that in this mortall life that which is eternall is but begun 2 Cor. 5 2 3 4. For we shall be cloathed upon with that if so be we are not found naked This is the nature of true conversion A true godly man growes in godlinesse that it suffers not those that are converted unto God to stay in their race but kindles in them a perpetuall study and desire of further profiting Therefore is it commanded 2 Pet. 3.18 Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ And Eph. 2.19 20 21. it is said Yo are no more strangers and forrainers but fellow-Citizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God And are built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner-stone In whom all the building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord. And Marke 9.24 The man prayed Lord I beleeve help mine unbeliefe And Luke 17.5 The Disciples cried Lord increase our faith Saints then are commanded and commended and are petitioners to be such as goe forward Therefore they are not of the number of them that have no minde of proceeding onward Comforts and promises for a tender heart and wounded conscience Yet let none be out of heart because they finding in themselves lesse life and vigour and acknowledging their weaknesse and corruptions doe with a true sorrow of minde bewail the same For thus saith the everlasting Father concerning his Son Esay 42.3 A bruised reed shall he not breake and the smoaking flax shall he not quench Againe the Son saith of the Father Mat. 18.14 It is not the will of your Father which is in heaven that one of these little ones should perish And the Son saith of himself Iohn 6.37 All that the Father giveth me shall come unto me And him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out Wheresoever piety is not dissembled it is and is cherished of God and together with it Beneficia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all the everlasting and unchangeable benefits of the Gospel are tyed with the indissoluble bond of divine truth For unlesse the certainty of our faith and salvation did depend upon the alone free mercy of God whereby he receiveth all that beleeve and not upon the degrees of our renovation there would be no stability at all in our comfort Hence therefore may be drawn three things which may be as grounds to judge of a Christian 1. The laying hold of the foundation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. the criticall markes to discerne a true godly man 2. An earnest endeavour of increasing which two include each godly man within the general promise of eternal salvation and 3. Acomfort that notwithstanding our inequality of gifts and degrees to some others we shall not perish which consolation is to be opposed against the cogitation of our owne unworthinesse These three as inseparables hath Saint Paul comprised in those words 1 Cor. 3.11 Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid which is Jesus Christ Now if any one build upon this foundation gold silver precious stones wood hay stuble every ones worke shall be made manifest for the day shall declare c. but hee himselfe shall be saved so as by fire By that therefore which hitherto hath been said it 's apparent that both the Lords injunction and our own salvation doe exhort and bind all men and among these the youth being to wit a great part and also the Nursery of the Church to learne as soone as by age they are capable the grounds of Christian Religion Therefore doth this most earnestly and seriously admonish them to whom the charge of nurturing the younger in yeares doth belong to be carefull of this their dutie 3. Motive the preservation and propagation of the Gospel For we that are teachers and learners ought to have a diligent and earnest care of godlines not only for our own sakes but for their sakes also that are ours and our succeeding posterity For we finde by experience how easily in processe of time an oblivion and manifold depravation of that doctrine creeps in the summe whereof is not concisely and perspicuously couched together and known repeated inculcated and divulged abroad Besides we know Horat. Quo semel est imbuta recens servabit odorem Testa di● that of what liquor a new vessell is first seasoned with be it good or bad it longest savours There is none in his right minde but will confesse seeing the evill that we learn doth so constantly stick by us that when the youth is not instructed in and inured to religion it doth threaten the leaving to the ensuing times an age of monsters contemning God and all religion and that being we are hardly by the greatest endeavours and longest care made pliable to that which is good the ground-work of the most difficult businesse should be laid in the first age 4. Motive the weake capacity of youth the more ignorant Catecheticall instruction therefore is necessary not only for the preservation of the purity and soundness of religion to us and our posterity but also for the capacities of younger age to whom we have shewed this doctrine must be taught For if it be said of the teaching youth the other arts Quicquid praecipies esto brevis ut cito dicta Percipiant animi dociles teneantque fideles Short precepts shalt thou give which being briefly told Apt wits may soon conceive and faithfull long may hold how much more in this heavenly wisdome which is a stranger to humane wit should we seek out for and apply our selves to breifness and plainness especially seeing divine testimony approves our experience in this as Heb. 5.13 Every one that useth milk is unskilfull in the word of righteousnesse for he is a babe but strong meat is of those that are of full age And therefore when Saint Paul speaketh of his manner of
is proclaim and declare him to be no member of the Church Therefore To account one for a publican is not only to think in mind but also to pronounce him an aliant from the Church and to excommunicate him Objections against the example of the Apostles excommunicating alledged 1 Cor. 5. 2 Cor. 8.5 2 Thess 3. 1 Tim. 1. c. THey who at this day disallow the Discipline of the Church elude the example of S. Paul two wayes Some simply deny that the Apostle speaketh of Excommunication when he saith He that hath thus done let him be delivered unto Sathan For say they to deliver unto Sathan is not to excommunicate but by some miraculous punishment through Sathans means to cut off or at least curse and banne him and deliver him to Sathan to be tortured yet so that hee continue a member of the Church notwithstanding Others grant that Paul speaketh of Excommunication but they deny that the example pertaineth to us because now there are Christian Magistrates maintainers of discipline of which Magistrates the Church was destitute in the Apostles time Ans But against the former of these make the Apostles words To deliver up to Sathan To put from the Church is to excommunicate 1 Cor. 5.2 Put away from your selves that wicked man and With such a one eat not These cannot be understood of a miraculous punishment by death such as Ananias and Sapphira suffered but they signifie the ordinary authority and judgement of the Church 1. Because he saith Put ye away and reprehendeth them because they have not yet abandoned him And Yee are puffed up and have not rather sorrowed that he which hath done this deed might be put from among you Now all these had not the gift which Peter had Therefore hee should wrongfully reprove them for not shewing some miracle 2. Because he requireth the consent of the Church When ye are gathered together 1 Cor. 5.4 and my spirit But there was no need of such a concourse or an assembly for manifestation of a miracle 3. Because hee will that the incestuous person be delivered unto Sathan for the destruction of the flesh 1 Cor. 5.5 that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus that is he will have him so dealt withall that notwithstanding he might live and repent that his flesh might be tamed with true contrition that the old man might be mortified and the new man quickned Wherefore the Apostle would not that he should be slain 4. He speaketh of the separating and exiling him from the Church when he saith Purge out the old leaven Company not together with fornicators With such a one eat not All these speeches intimate a separation not any mortall punishment 5. The conference of places of Scripture teacheth that they who either in word or in life deny the Christian faith are not to be reputed Christians Ambrose saith that this incestuous person when his offence was once known was to be banished from the company of the brotherhood that is from the Church Now they who are cast out of the Church are worthily said to be delivered up to Sathan because they are conversant and resident in his kingdome as long as they repent not Three causes why Paul commanded the incestuous person to be excommunicated They who maintaine the later opinion alledge a false cause when they say that Paul therefore would have the incestuous person excommunicated because then there was no Christian Magistrate For Paul rendreth farre different reasons hereof which continue in force unto this day 1. The Commandement of Christ When yee are gathered together and my spirit in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ that is by that authority and warrant of Christ Tell it unto the Church Let him be unto thee as an Heathen or a Publican 2. That the excommunicated person might repent and be saved Let him be delivered unto Sathan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit may be saved in the day of our Lord Jesus 3. Lest others should be tainted and infected with the same fore Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lumpe For Christ our Passeover is sacrificed for us that we should live with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth and become a new sprinkling and cast out the old leaven of maliciousnesse and wickednesse or at least if we cannot cast it all out yet that we professe not the toleration thereof These are the causes why Paul commanded that the incestuous person should be excommunicated out of the Church but we no where reade that the Church did therefore excommunicate wicked persons because it wanted a Christian Magistrate For the duties of the Church and of the Magistrate alwayes were and yet remaine distinct It is certaine then that the Apostle speaketh of Excommunication when he saith Deliver him unto Sathan Put away the wicked man from among you and that he treateth of the ordinary power of the Church against malefactors whether any miracle then betide or no. Object 1. Nathan excommunicated not David an adulterer Therefore Paul excommunicated not the incestuous person Answ David repented after the first warning therefore he ought not to be excommunicated Paul also speaketh with condition of repentance Put him away to wit if he repent not or hath not already repented on which repentance he commandeth that he be received againe This condition we must necessarily understand because that Christ would that certaine degrees of admonition should first be practised and God at any time receiveth the penitent into favour The Theefe on the Crosse is not excommunicated but upon his repentance received of Christ Mat. 18.28 If thy brother shall sin against thee untill seventy times seven times thou shalt forgive him Wherefore not offenders but obstinate persons of which sort David was none are to be excommunicated Object 2. Christ excommunicated none Therefore Paul did it not neither ought the Church to excommunicate any Ans The consequence is not good to argue from the deniall of the fact to the deniall of the right and lawfulnesse of the fact The argument is no better than this Christ baptised none Therefore Paul might not and the Church may not baptise any For Christ indeed baptised none but he commanded his Apostles to baptise all Nations So likewise he excommunicated none but he commanded the Church to excommunicate the rebellious and obstinate Mat. 18.17 5.24 Acts 8.36 Let him be unto thee as an Heathen Leave thy gift at the Altar c. Philip said to the Eunuch Thou maist be baptised if thou beleevest with all thine heart Therefore he had not baptised him if he had not beleeved Object 3 Paul saith Ye have not * * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sorrowed that he which hath done this deed 1 Cor. 5.25 might be put from among you Therefore they should have prayed that God would miraculously take him away by the Devill Answ Yee
to sanctifie the Sabbath in shewing our obedience which we yeeld unto the doctrine Hither appertaineth the Sermon of Christ concerning the Sabbath wherein he declareth against the Jews Whether it be lawfull to do no good on the Sabbath day And whereas God will have his Sabbath to be kept all our life time yet will he have examples and testimonies thereof to be shewed especially on the externall or ceremoniall Sabbath day that is at those times which are allotted to the teaching and learning of Gods word For if at that time any man shew not his desire of obeying God when Gods doctrine soundeth in his eares and when God willeth us surceasing and omitting all other cares to meditate on godlinesse and amendment of life he giveth a token that he will far lesse doe it at another time Therefore hath it beene alwaies the custome of the Church to bestow almes on the Sabbath day and to performe the works of charity towards those that are in want nehem 8.10 Send part unto them for whom none is prepared for this day is holy unto our Lord. The contrary vices To the bestowing of almes is repugnant 1. A neglect or contempt of the poore and of the workes of charity towards them as when we doe not according to our power succour the poore that stand in need of our help 2. Ostentation and vaine-glory in giving our almes Mat. 6.2 which Christ condemneth 7. The honour of the Ministery of the Church VII Vertue or our obedience towards the whole Ministery in life and manners and this is the Morall Sabbath Five parts of the honour of the Ministery Now that obedience towards the Ministery comprehendeth many things Reverence 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. 4.1 Let a man so thinke of us as of the Ministers of Christ and the disposers of the secrets of God 2 Cor. 5.20 We are Embassadours for Christ as if God did beseech you through us Love Love whereby we gladly frequent divine assemblies and heare and learne the doctrine of the Church and wish well unto the faithfull Ministers of the Church not onely in respect of that duty of charity which we owe but also of the Ministery which they discharge How amiable are thy Tabernacles My soule longeth Psal 84.1 2. yea and fainteth for the courts of the Lord. Psal 122.1 I was glad when they said unto me We will goe into the house of the Lord. Obedience Heb. 13.17 Obedience in those things which are belonging unto the Ministery Obey them that have the over-sight of you Hither belong the works of love towards God and our neighbour even the whole life of a Christian which is that spirituall or morall Sabbath For to hold and celebrate that spirituall Sabbath is in the direction and ordering of our life to obey the voice of God speaking by the Ministery of the Church For God will therefore have the true doctrine to be learned of us that we may obey it James 1.22 Be ye doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiving your owne selves Thankfulnesse Thankefulnesse that is such duties as tend to the preservation and maintenance of the Ministery Ministers and Schooles For if God will have Ministers to be in his Church he will also that every one according to his ability help forward and further the maintenance of the Ministery and Schooles of learning and doe his endeavour that the Ministers Teachers and Schoole-masters be honestly provided for For without the study and learning of Arts and Sciences neither can men be made fit to teach nor the purity and sincerity of doctrine be upheld and maintained against Hereticks Hither appertaine Moses Laws of the first-borne of first-fruits of tithes and such like offerings which were allotted to the Priests and Levites by way of stipend whereby they might sustaine their owne life and their houshold that so they might wholly be imployed in the Ministery And albeit the circumstances of these Laws are abolished yet the generall remaineth for ever because God will have his Ministery to be maintained to the end of the world Deut. 12.19 1 Cor 9.7 Gal. 6.6 1 Tim 5.17 Mat. 10.14 Beware that thou forsake not the Levite as long as thou livest upon the earth Who goeth a warfare any time at his owne cost Who planteth a vineyard and eateth not of the fruit thereof Or who feedeth a flocke and eateth not of the milke of the flocke Lenity Lenity and moderation in bearing with such infirmities of the Ministers as do not enormously or manifestly corrupt or hinder the Ministery 1 Tim. 5.19 and hurt the Church by offence Against an Elder receive none accusation but under two or three witnesses To the honour of the Ministery of the Church is opposed the contempt of the Ministery as when either the Ministery of the Church is abolished or committed to men unworthy or unable or is denied to be the meanes and instrument which God will use for the gathering of his Church likewise when the Ministers are reproached when their doctrine is heard and not obeyed in the ordering of our life when the works of charity are neglected when necessary maintenance is not allowed the Ministers when the defence and protection of them and other duties of thankfulnesse are not performed towards them when the maintenance of Schooles and Studies and learning is neglected when the tolerable defects of the Ministers are not borne with and when for such the Ministery suffereth reproach and contumely In like manner also it is against the use of the whole Ministery not onely when some one privately neglecteth or omitteth the use of the Ministery but also when one by his commandement and perswasion or example or by some other hinderance calleth away his children family or any other from the use of the Ministery OF THE ECCLESIASTICALL MINISTERIE WHereas the publique externall worship of God and consequently the Ministery it selfe of the Church and the use and honour thereof is in this Commandement authorised as appeareth by that which hath beene already handled the doctrine concerning the Ministery of the Church is here to be examined The chiefe questions thereof are 1. What the Ministery of the Church is 2. For what end and purpose it was instituted 3. What are the degrees of Ministers 4. What are the duties and functions of Ministers 5. Vnto whom the Ministery is to be committed 1. What the Ministery of the Church is THe Ministery of the Church is a function by God ordained of teaching Gods word and administring his Sacraments according to his divine ordinance The parts then of the Ministery of the Church are two 1. To preach Gods word 2. Rightly to
Old He is minister of God to thee for good Rom. 13.4 IX In that saying of Luke 22.25 Christ doth not debarre such kings from the Church but he onely forbids the Apostles and Ministers of the Church to meddle with riotousnesse preheminence and civill dominion But Paul Gal. 6.15 doth not speak of the externall habit of Christians of whom some were circumcised as the faithfull Jewes and some were uncircumcised as the Christians who had been Gentiles To which saying answereth that Galat. 3.28 There is neither Jew nor Greeke there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female Which words if they understand literally surely they must also be separated from Christ seeing they are either servants or free either males or females The sense then of the Apostle is this That the outward differences of men doe nothing hinder or promote eternall salvation and that onely the new creature in Christ Jesus is necessary to salvation X. Lastly by that saying of Mat. 5.39 Christ doth not take away punishments due to the wicked but only private revenge for otherwise no Christian neither father nor mother nor school-masters nor any minister of the Church could be suffered the dutie of all which is to resist evill and wicked men and to maintain discipline every one in his place without which an horrible ataxie and confusion would ensue too much libertie would be brought in and at length would follow the subversion both of humane societie and of the Church it selfe Surely Christ and his Apostles did very often resist evill Neither doe wee reade any where in the Scripture that they who were appointed for politicall functions did after their conversion to Christianitie desert their province or calling or that ever they were commanded to forsake it So that Ruler in the fourth of John ver 33. beleeved himselfe and all his house Sergius Paulus the Deputie Act. 13.12 beleeved So the Keeper of the prison Act. 16.33 was baptised he and all his houshold XI Concerning the divers formes of Common-wealths which of them is best let Politicians dispute In the Scripture we reade of Cesars Kings Princes Governours Presidents Pretors Consuls Captaines Dukes and in a word both of inferiour and superiour Magistrates Of whom is this generall saying of Paul the Apostle There is no power but of God Rom. 13.1 1 Pet. 2.13 14 17. The powers that be are ordained of God And of S. Peter Submit your selves to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether it be to the King as supreme or unto Governours as being sent by him Also Feare God Honour the King Where we may note that when the Magistrates office by Peter is called an humane ordinance this is not repugnant to Paul who calls it a divine ordinance For God only ordained the Magistrate but as for the forms of Common-weathls and their distinct degrees to wit that in them should be Emperours Kings Princes superiours inferiours this depends from humane ordination and politicall sanction yet all are alike governed by God therefore wee must be subject to humane ordinance for the Lords sake saith S. Peter XII Of the right of Magistrates thus saith Paul For this cause pay you tribute also for they are Gods ministers Rom. 13.6 7. attending continually upon this very thing Render therefore to all their dues tribute to whom tribute is due custome to whom custome feare to whom feare honour to whom honour Againe Give to Cesar what is Cesars Whence we gather that the right of Magistrates consisteth of three things First that hee may be knowne as the minister of God to whom therefore honour and reverence is due because hee is in stead of God for this cause as it said Magistrates are called gods Secondly that for the authoritie of so great a function they should be reverenced honoured and feared by their subjects no lesse then parents are by their children for Magistrates should be to subjects in stead of parents Thirdly that customes and tributes due to Magistrates should be paid them that out of them they may be able to sustaine the heavie burthen of their function preserve their lives and dignitie and exercise their bountie towards others Yet the Magistrate must be as far from riotousnesse as the subjects themselves as it is in Jer. 22.14 15. and every-where else in Scripture XIII God hath furnished the Magistrate with chiefe power that hee may command some and may governe others and use the sword also if need require against the disobedient and maintaine and defend his owne authoritie For so it is written Dan. 4.22 The most High ruleth in the kingdome of men and giveth it to whomsoever hee will Againe The princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them Mat. 20.25 and they that are great exercise authority upon them Againe Rom. 13.4 He beareth not the sword in vaine XIV God also for this cause laid upon the magistrate this carefull and troublesome burthen that he might urge promote and preserve among men the obedience due to Gods Law chiefly among Christians For first hee ought entirely to maintaine the honour and worship of God according to the prescript of the first Table and to propagate pietie with the true worship of God amongst his subjects according to Gods will and word For so God commanded Josuah Jos 1.8 This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night that thou mayest observe to doe according to all that is written therein So Paul Rom. 13.4 He is the minister of God to thee for good Now the chiefe happinesse of subjects consisteth in true religion and the true worship of God XV. Againe the office of the Magistrate is to maintaine right and justice and to preserve honestie peace and concord to love the good to afright and punish the wicked to maintaine and defend their subjects and territories even with the sword against domestick and forraigne enemies As it is written Jer. 22.3 Psal 82.3 Thus saith the Lord Execute ye judgement and righteousnesse and deliver the spoiled out of the hand of the oppressour and doe no wrong doe no violence to the stranger the fatherlesse nor the widow neither shed innocent bloud in this place Againe Magistrates are not a terrour to good workes but to the evill Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power doe that which is good but if thou doe that which is evill be afraid for he beareth not the sword in vaine for he is the minister of God a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doth evill XVI Both offices of the Magistrate are usually impugned by Pontificians Anabaptists and other fanaticall persons XVII In Popery the Pontificians confesse Bellarm l. 4. de Laicis c. 17 18. that the Magistrate ought not only to have a care of the civill government and to promote the publick peace but also by all meanes to defend Gods worship as it
wheresoever he dwelleth is effectuall in working the Word and Sacraments are not so Quest 66. What are the Sacraments Ans They are sacred signes and seales set before our eyes and ordained of God for his cause that he may declare and seale by them the promise of his Gospel unto us to wit that he giveth freely remission of sinnes and life everlasting not onely to all in generall but to every one in particular that beleeveth for that onely sacrifice of Christ which he accomplished upon the Crosse a Gen. 17.11 Rom 4.11 Deut. 30.6 Levit. 6.25 Heb. 9.7 8 9 24. Ezek. 20.22 1 Sam 17.36 Esay 6.6 7. Esay 54.9 The Explication THe right and direct method of interpreting this doctrine of the Sacraments requireth that first we speak of the Sacraments in generall And this way may we not unfitly intreat in special of the Supper and Baptisme to wit if we take in declaring each Sacrament in speciall the same questions and that course and order of the same questions which we must observe and follow concerning the Sacraments in generall and lastly if we apply those testimonies which speak of the Sacraments in generall to the handling and declaring of the Sacraments in speciall The chiefe Questions concerning the Sacraments 1. What Sacraments are 2. What are the ends of Sacraments 3. In what Sacraments differ from Sacrifices 4. In what they agree with the word and in what they differ from it 5. How the Sacraments of the Old and New Testament agree 6. What are signes and what the things in the Sacraments and in what the things differ from their signes 7. What sacramentall union is 8. What formes of speaking of the Sacraments are usuall to the Church and Scripture 9. What is the lawfull use of the Sacraments 10. What the wicked receive in the use thereof 11. How many Sacraments there are of the New Testament 1. What Sacraments are The originall of the word Sacrament THat we may know what Sacraments properly are the name it selfe of Sacrament is first to be considered Among the ancient Romans this word Sacrament signifieth a peece of money which two parties putting one the other in suite laid down in some sacred place or left in custody of the High-Pontife or Priest with this condition that he who gained the suite should have his part entire againe and he who was cast in the cause should lose his part to the common Treasury in lieu of his wrongfull molesting the other party This signification nothing pertaineth to this place It also signified a solemne forme of an oath taken in warre which they called a military Sacrament so called of Sacrando that is of sacring or consecrating them because by that oath every one was consecrated or destined to his Captaine and not to any other to serve him Hereof it is that some will have these ceremonies instituted by God therefore to be so called for that as Souddiers did oblige and binde themselves by that military Sacrament unto their Captaine so we binde our selves unto our Captaine Christ by a solemne oath in the presence of God Angels and Men. This truly is no unapt or unmeet Metaphor but yet I think rather that the originall of this name came from the old Latine Translations in which wheresoever the word Mystery is used in the New Testament for the same they commonly in Latine put the word Sacramentum Now Mystery cometh from the Greek verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth to institute instruct or initiate one in the holy matters or matters of Religion But that Greek verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is derived from another which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth to shut because as Eustathius saith they who are initiated or entered in holy rites were to shut their mouth and not to utter those things which were secret Now a mystery is said to be either a secret thing it selfe or the signe of a secret thing or that which hath a secret signification which none understand but they who are initiated in holy rites By a signe we understand an externall and corporeall thing and action or a ceremony instituted and ordained by God which betokeneth a certaine internall thing and spirituall Which the Grecians call a Mystery and is otherwise called of the Latine Divines a Sacrament And some such signes God alwayes would have to be extant in his Church whereby both the good will of God towards men might be recorded and made known and that men of the other side might declare and shew their faith towards God and other duties of piety and godlinesse Sacraments therefore are so called Mysteries because they have a secret signification which none understand but they who are initiated and instructed concerning the substance of sacred matters or the points of Christian Religion Neverthelesse the word Sacrament is used in divers significations in the writings of famous Divines of which these are chiefe 1. For a rite or externall ceremony which sense is proper and naturall to the word 2. For the signes themselves 3. For the thing signified by the signes 4. For the signes and thing signified both together Having seen now what the name of Sacrament signifieth it resteth that we consider the thing it selfe and define what Sacraments are The definition whereof is this Sacraments are rites or ceremonies instituted by God to this use The definition of Sacraments That they might be signes of the Covenant to wit of Gods good will towards us and of the bond of the Church whereby it covenanteth faith and repentance and that they may be marks and cognizances whereby to distinguish Gods Church from Gentiles and Sectaries The definition of Sacraments In the Catechisme they are thus defined Sacraments are sacred signes and feales object to our eyes ordained and instituted by God that by them he might the more declare and seale the promise of his Gospel unto us The parts of this definition are in number three The first part appertaineth to the kinde of Sacraments the latter two to their difference To the kinde whereof they are it appertaineth The Sacraments are sacred seales that they are sacred and ocular signes and seales that is divine and signifying or betokening sacred things such as belong to Gods worship and the salvation of men A signe and a seale differ one from the other as a generall thing from a thing more speciall For every seale is a signe but not every signe a seale A seale certifieth and confirmeth a thing What a signe is A signe onely sheweth it A signe is a thing signifying somewhat else then that which it sheweth to the senses and inducing something else into the cogitation as Augustine defineth it or a signe is that whereby the understanding understandeth some things else besides the signe it selfe apprehended by the sense So words are the signes of things Moreover signes are of two sorts some are onely signifying others are confirming also Two
God and trust in the goods of fortune is not content with such things as God giveth by lawfull meanes but desireth still more and more and laboureth to pull and hale unto it by right and wrong whatsoever it affecteth and giveth not where God will that we should give In the excesse Over-lashing Prodigality which giveth beyond reason and without need with a rejoycing in such excessive larges Of this vice it is said Sick art thou Arist Eth. lib. 4. cap. 1. V. Hospitality who takest delight in lavishing V Hospitality Hospitality which is one kinde of liberality namely liberality and bountifulnesse towards travellers and strangers especially towards those that are exiles for the profession of the Gospel entertaining them with all duties of hospitality and Christian charity or bountifulnesse towards strangers especially Christians who either suffer exile for Religion or are forced to travell for the confession of the truth The extremes are Inhospitality and Prodigality towards strangers The contrary vices so soaking and drawing dry as it were the fountaine of our bounty that wee have not sufficient necessaries for those who are under our owne charge VI Parsimony Parsimony which is a vertue eschewing and shunning riot and all unnecessary expences of gifts keeping those things which are his own and well gotten and profitably imploying them to his own use and theirs that belong unto him neither spending more than he seeth to be needfull The affinity between Liberality and Parsimony Liberality hath Parsimony accompanying it and they both are two means between the same extremes that is between Covetousnesse and Prodigality because Liberality without Parsimony degenerateth into Prodigality and Parsimony without Liberality degenerateth into Covetousnes and Basenesse And therefore he is not liberall who is not sparing neither is hee sparing who is not liberall Liberality enlargeth our giving according to ruled reason Parsimony restraineth the same according to ruled reason and spareth so much as is requisite for necessary uses So then these two vertues are exercised in the same matter and between the same extremes and therefore the same vices which are contrary to Liberality are repugnant also to Parsimony VII Frugality Frugality which is an oeconomicall or houshold vertue disposing of things well gotten honestly wisely and profitably for matters profitable and necessary or defraying charges upon such things ever as are necessary and fruitfull The difference between Parsimony and Frugality This vertue is of neer affinity with Parsimony Parsimony consisteth in giving moderately Frugality or Thriftinesse consisteth and dependeth on a right bestowing of that which is ours with discretion Both are placed under this Commandement because Prodigality or Over-lashing the contrary unto both is here forbidden The extremes are the same both of Frugality and of Parsimony to wit Prodigality and Covetousnesse or Niggardlinesse Certaine Objections against the former distinction of Rights and Possessions OBject 1. In the Apostles time all things were common Therefore now also all goods ought to be common Answ 1. There is a dissimilitude and a farre different reason in these examples For the community of goods was then both easie to be compassed and necessary to be contrived It was easie because they were few It was necessary because they were in danger lest if they sold them not they should be taken from them by force Now there is neither that easinesse nor necessity Wherefore the Apostles were induced upon good causes why they should then bring in community of goods which causes have long since ceased and now are not 2. They did it not being enforced thereto by any law but freely For their parting with their goods in common was voluntary none was compelled unto it And therefore Peter saith to Ananias Whiles it remained appertained it not to thee Acts 5.4 And after it was sold was it not in thine owne power 3. This custome was of force onely at that time for afterwards upon change of these causes this custome also ceased 4. This community of goods was not in all Churches because in Macedony and in Achaia collection was made of almes which were sent to Jerusalem Object 2. Naturall things are unchangeable Community of goods is naturall Therefore Community of goods is unchangeable and therefore is now also to be observed Answ Naturall things are unchangeable in respect of the Morall Law but not in respect of naturall profit and utility Object 3. Christ saith unto the young man If thou wilt be perfect sell all and give it to the poore Answ 1. The examples have a diverse reason Because this was a speciall calling of a Disciple belonging to an Apostle-ship 2. Christ would thereby signifie how far off hee was from the perfection of the law whereof he gloried 3. Hee saith not Give it in common or put it in the common treasurie but Give it to the poor Object 4. All things are Christs therefore all things are Christians Answ All things are Christians or ours as concerning the right to the thing but not as concerning the right in the thing All things are due unto us but we may not lay hands of any thing before the time Object 5. All things between freinds are common Answ All things between friends are common as touching the use of them and as touching the duties and parts of honesty and commodity or as touching necessary use being levelled by the rule of Reason For wee are to aske things of our friends which wee would have them aske of us But all things among friends are not common as concerning the possession and right because unto every one belongeth a distinct possession and right of his owne goods This possession of goods or distinction of rights is enacted as wee have said by this commandement because if we may not steale we must then possesse our owne and that for these causes 1. To maintaine our selves and ours honestly 2. To yield something for the maintenance of the Ministery 3. For the maintenance of the common-wealth 4. For the maintenance of our friends and reliefe of the poore according to our ability ON THE 43. SABBATH Quest 112. What doth the ninth Commandement exact Answ That I beare no false witnesse against any man a Prov. 19.5 9. and 2● 28 neither falsifie any mans words b Psalm 15.3 and 50.19 20. neither back-bite or reproach any man c Rom. 1.29 30. nor condemn any man rashly or unheard d Mat. 7.1 Luke 6.37 but avoid and shun with all carefulnesse all kind of lies and deceit as the proper works of the divell e John 8.44 except I meane to stir up against mee the most grievous wrath of God f Prov. 12.22 and 13.5 And that in judgements and other affaires I follow the truth and freely and constantly professe the matter as it indeed is g 1 Cor. 13.6 Ephes 4.25 And moreover defend and encrease as much as in mee lieth the good name and