Selected quad for the lemma: hand_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
hand_n good_a king_n lord_n 7,040 5 3.9036 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

There are 26 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

ordained Elders and left them in Churches which they had planted And sure to the end there shall be as much need of o●dained Priests or Elders for they are one as then men will be perverse wicked sinfull Impenitent unruly ignorant despisers of dignityes ununregenerate unholy and still there will be some ignorant of the Misteries of God therefore care must be taken to plant and leave Elders in every City and in every country for the cure of those evills It is easie to behold how soon a parish or a village will grow loose disorderly and indeed loose the very face of religion if they want a setled Minister but a few moneths the like we may judge what would befall the world should it want Church officers Though people were wicked yet an orderly keeping of the Sabbath c. conscience in some sort will bring them to it but in unsetlement they have arguments to stop consciences mouth which by degrees brings them quickly to be Heathens the Principles of religion not taught them that are young makes them regardlesse of God or his word either when they come to years of maturity and so their profession comes to be prophane and their conversation to be Ungodly which in a great measure is prevented by a setled Minister though but of weak parts or abilities Quest. 4. Whether it be lawfull to hear an unordained man Preach We must stand at the doore of this question avoid errour and distinguish of Unordained Preachers before we go forward 1. There is a preaching by way of tryall to ordination their gifts their knowledge their uprightnesse their utterance cannot be known but by preaching the Church generally will have a tryall of their parts before she separate any for that worke thus Paul preached before his ordination 2 There is a preaching by way of opposition to ordination so there are some that will presumptuously execute all the offices of a minister and slight ordination desiring possibly not to be bound nor tyed to that calling that though their errours might be detected yet their irregularity might passe unpunished of these latter sort the Question is to be understood and that it is unlawful appeares 1 Because to hear such is to goe out of Gods way and practise the Pharises that taught sound doctrin in some points yet were but theeves and robbers coming not in at the door but climbing up some other way these the sheep hear not Never did God give a power to any to ordain themselves Stewards in his house and therefore we are not to go to them for bread left we be thought strivers against him he never intrusted them with his broad seale and therefore we are not to receive the seales from them Christs knows Paul and Stephen and Timothy but these he knows not therefore his people are bound to esteem them not as Ministers of God 2 It encourages them in their irregular proceedings when they behold giddy heads ignorant persons curious spirits flocking after them imboldens them and hardens them in their errour whereas to withdraw from them might in time make them ashamed of their doings 3 It gives an evill example when the weake Christian seeth one that is strong going to those upstart teachers the weak may follow him he may go out of wantonnesse or curiosity and the other may go out of conscience and frailty 4 Errour is ever sooner believed then truth It is experimentally known that an Heretick may broach that doctrine in a day which truth cannot overcome in a year there is a certain connaturality between the nature of man and falsehood It is best therefore to withdraw from them the very foundation of whose teaching is erroneous in as a much as the authority they pretend to have goes contrary to that authority that ever God invested his Church withall 5 Experience shews that God is offended with mans hearing or following of them for we shall seldome see men giving eares to their doctrines but what through ignorance of justice they are brought to believe a lye which mkes them hop from one opinion to another untill faith and religion be lost and conscience it self be baffled or stifled that they sit down in the seat of the scornful and mock at laws established by either God or man Quest. 5. Whether an ordained person may have an office in the Common wealth There are that maintaine this Popish tenet and yet would be thought no Papists that the Church hath nothing to do with the state or that the government of the Church is a distinct thing from that of the state a distinction framed upon his holinesse anvil at Rome and received here by them that are no good willers to the Catholick clergy to be short an ordained person that is a man separate for spirituall offices may exercise judiciall offices in the Common-wealth and state 1 From the practises of those that were of old separate for the Lord Melchizedek was both a Priest and a King Gen. 14.18 a great part of the government of Israel was in the hands of the Levits we find them judges In all the businesse of the Lord and in the service of the King 1 Chron. 26.29 and ver 19. Zecharia is a wise counsellour They are also appointed together with the Princes For judgement of the Lord and for controversies in Jerusalem between blood and blood c. 2 Chron. 18.8 9. so also Samuel a Levit was both judge and priest in Israel 1 Sam 7.15 and if ignorance make any boast of Samuels being a prophet It may be answered that his sonnes were Levits set a part by God for the service of the Tabernacle Yet their Father made them judges in Israel 1 Sam 8.1 his own circuit was yearly while he had strength and failing he allotted circuits to his three sonnes throughout Israel Who by reason of perverting judgement through bribes are complained of by the people ver 5. by the same rule it will follow that those that are separate now for the work of the gospel may be in businesse of the Lord and also of the King 2 From the abilityes of some persons that are ordained It may be known that in all matters of controvesie in both kindes of the Law the Clergy may have more understanding then many Gentlemen that are justices in the Country and the presence of the Clergy may be helpful in that respect to the most judicious judge 3 From that apparent necessity that there seems to be of it the ordained person is not free from trouble from Law-suits from warrants taxations in which he may receive much wrong if there be none but Lay-persons there who usually may look over the inferiour sort of the Clergy with an unregardfull aspect nay possibly the gentleman may be both judge and harry of himselfe A minister may have stronger presumptions to be redressed of his wrongs which are seldome of the smallest magnitude when he hath some of his own function upon the bench 4.
lately that by a most prophane and Impious Catachresis brought the Church to be compared to horses in Pharaohs Chariot as Cant. 1 9. to her glory and dignity it is spoken they wickedly made her only to serve to draw them into High-places which opinion hath so far infected this age that the gray hairs of our holy Mother the Church is scorned mocked and derided by the basest of the people which evill we hope to see removed by good Laws from the Magistrates and the Church to receive her due devoir by penal statutes 5. Because the Magistrate himself is appointed of God to be a Minister for the peoples good Rom. 13.4 To be al●ogether for the good of the State is but a partial good to command that none steal my goods and yet another kill me with false Doctrine will not profit me much Is he a Minister of God for good then by all ways and means he is to do good and what greater good conducing thereunto then to see the Ordinances of the Church maintained in purity number and nature to see that sound reaching be in the Pulpit as well upright judgeing upon the Bench he is to see so far as possibly his Subjects prosper both soul and body and when he doth so then is he a Minister to them for their good and indeed if he be no● for the spiritual good in the right managing of the Church he cannot be for their good in the ordering of the State for people seldome change Religion only but as often as this sacred Anchor is weighed so often the Ship of the Common-Wealth is tossed and no wonder for Heresie being the School of Pride by little and little while it shakes the mind from Gods Yoke it shows us in like manner how to defame and shake off humane Government It is plain that the wisdom of Hereticks aims at this point and taking away or preaching down such things as put an outward Majesty upon the face of Religion it brings them to be hail fellows with God to be of no Religion and he that is once so perswaded will easily expel all thoughts of reverence to him whom God hath made his Lord and revolt from their King with as little reluctation as they turned from God and what may be the issue of these things is not much to be questioned even every man to do that that is right in his own eyes And what good that will bring the Common-wealth I cannot understand But 6. Kings Magistrates and Princes have a particular charge given them to kiss the Son Psal. 2.12 Kissing was anciently an act of homage one King that acknowledged himself Tributary or promised Fidelity to another performed it by kissing him whom they promised it unto so far as I remember they generally performed it kneeling For this reason the hands of Kings are at this day kissed by which their Subjects declare their subjection that they shall be ready to wait upon him at the putting out of his hand and by it they tacitely promise to be as faithfull to him as his own right arm To kiss the Son therefore is to acknowledge subjection to him that they owe and hold their Crowns of him and withall to be faithfull to his Crown and Service and that in their publick as well as private capacity not onely as he is a Christian but as he is a King that as a Master in his House and as a Father over his Children by his Authority to keep his Subjects in subjection to the King of Kings Now what more immediate way can the Son be honoured than by taking care of his Spouse for to preserve her in Honor and maintain her in the full enjoyment and free possession of those things which her Husband left her until the second coming for the Church is the Lambs Wife Let us not imagine that a King is onely to regard his owu soul or to look after nothing but his S●bjects bodies both Scripture Reason and Conscience and all good Christians would have the fear of God taught in a Regal way not Ministerial by him to all that are about him with him and under him It is not for a show onely that Kings wear Crosses upon the top of their Crowns but signifies that the Honour of him that died upon the Cross is to be maintained by him that wears it In a word let 's abhor and excommunicate the thoughts even deliver them over unto Sathan that would make a distinction between a Kings publick and private capacity when it is done to smite him with the tongue and divest him of that power which as King is given him of God especially since we know what cursed acts and blasphemous words were the consequences of them in late years 7. God hath in a peculiar and special way promised to bless his Church even as a Church with Kings and Queens Isa. 40.23 And Kings shall be thy nursing Fathers and Queens thy nursing Mothers c. Whatever Peace and Plenty the Church enjoys by the Civil Laws and Statutes of that place wherein she lives yet if she be not blessed and fed as she is a Church and in that capacity this promise is not fulfilled for all those outward things she may enjoy under a professed Turk but to suck and grow and be fat and nursed and swadled and that in the nature of a Church is the nature of this promise There is a distinction made by some that Kings have nothing to do to meddle with things Spiritual or Ecclesiastical but with things Temporal or Politick and that under the Law Magistrates might have power but they have none under the Gospel I woold have those that suppose ●o to reade this one Text they will find it a Gospel-promise it being made touching the access of the Isles and Nations of the Gentiles in a National way to the Church of God as is clear in the following words And the ground both of this and the other distinction considering the Arguments before given is onely ignorance of the Scripture and the malice of the opponent both to the Magistrate and Church the one would rob him of half his Dominion and the other under God of her greatest protection that they might reign with the one and trample upon the other under a pretence of serving God And yet now I remember it hath another ground the very same that the Popes Chair stands upon viz. That Magistrates have no power over Churches nor Church-men by which Principle the Popes Supremacy stands firm and Indeed there are two opposite parties of Popery and P. who though they have no agreement with each other yet they meet in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Draconis to darken the Authority of Gods Anointed 8. Kings and Magistrates as they are Church-members have a power to act for the good of the Church and to exercise whatever power they have for the good of the whole body and whatever Talent God gives them they are to lay it
for us this is proper to the Christian and for this is this Supper designed and after this manner the true communicant remembers Christs deah both in its causes and benefits 1. In its causes which was sin mans pride of life made him humble to the death his looseness made him be bound his surfeiting made him fast his prodigality made him poor and his eating of the forbidden fruit made him dye upon the tree 2. In its benefits by his death man is freed 1. From paying the debt he owed to eternal justice 1 Thes. 1.10 2. From the bondage of the Ceremonial Law Gal. 5.1 3. From the power of sin and Sathan 1 Iohn 3.5 All which excite him to thanksgiving 2. Another end was to stir up and quicken all true and saving graces to cherish faith to work repentance to enflame love to excire hope and to make the Christians affections heavenly 3. To assist our dull natures these outward pledges shew of what necessity Christ is to us by them Christ is evidently though mystically crucified before us that we may admire love him and mourn over him 4. That we might declare our Communion with him They are only his friends whom he invites to this banquet of wine Iews Pagans are secluded from this feast and have no portion of it while he calls to the Christian to drink and eat abundantly he being onely his beloved SECT III. THis age amongst other crimes for which one day it shall be judged hath become guilty in an eminent and high measure of the neglect of this Sacrament of the S●pper there are many in her pretending to holiness yet not demonstrating obdience we may suspect their sincerity however they suppose to escape without receiving of this Ordinance let the sober Christian know that it is his duty to approach the table of the Lord and it ought not of him to be neglected For 1. It s an easie duty It heightened Adams offence that the precept might have been so easily observed the same case is here Not that I maintain this is rashly to be approached unto but that that Christian that gives God his knees in prayer and eye in reading his tongue in singing his ear in hearing his hand in well doing and will not give God his mouth in eating shall not be holden guiltless 2 Kings 5.13 2. It is by the Lord enjoyned Luke 22.19 until there be found out a Text wherein the abstaining from this Ordinance is dispensed withal Christ may not admit them to his glory because they remembred not his precept in the doing of this in memorial of him and when they are secluded Heaven it may be they shall hear that it is for their not eating and drinking in his presence though in his name they may pretend to have done mighty works 3. It is a renewing of the cop y of the pardon of sin Matth. 26.28 to be dayly calling upon God through Christ for a pardon of sin and in the mean time neglect that Ordinance which is pecularly designed for that very end and purpose as it increases sin in all so it is a high degree of folly and strange impudence in men to expect that God shall say thy sins are forgiven 4. From the practice of the primitive Church Acts 2.46 Acts 20.7 did they think it their duty to take it often and is it no sin in us to neglect ●t alwaies Are we less beholding to the death of Christ then they or is God more beholding to us that he can dispense with a breach of his own Ordinance more then with them or did he require more at their hinds then at ours or are we more indulged in our sin then they were if not we have cause to approach with fear and in this Ordinance serve him with trembling 5. We have need to confirm spiritual Communion each with other 1 Cor. 10.17 such bonds and tyes as Sacraments are very necessary in such a contending generation as this is this is an act or duty that dasheth contention strife pride vain glory with all their attendance against the stones This were a way to Follow peace with all men and holiness without which no man shall see the Lord. 6. The profession of the Christian saith binds men to it shall they profess that Christ is their Saviour to save them from sin and will not touch that Ordinance that above all others visibly holds that out The Iew might from this infer a contradiction betwixt the believers hope and his practice● 7. It is a● Ordinance as well as others shall prayer have its place and preaching its place and reading its place and shall the Sacrament of the Supper onely stand without shall they injoy quietly their possessions which from the beginning they were endowed withal and this be forced be go to Law for its right What God hath joyned together dare some men presume to put asunder 8. It gives an occasion unto Schismaricks and Hereticks to scandal the Catholick faith how shall they joyn with such who so publickly are breakers of so positive a precept and how shall they be reproved for their not coming to praying and preaching since they can so really report Why do not you your selves approach that Ordinance of bread-breaking by which justly they may put us from taking a more out of their eyes until we have pulled a beam out of our own In a word there are none that be of years and discretion able to examine themselves and try their own faith in God but so far they are bound to be receivers of this Ordinance which makes the Church of England appoint that To every Parish Church or Chappel where Sacraments are to be Administred within this Realm the Holy Communion shall be Ministred by the Parson Vicar or Minister so often and at such times as every Parishioner may ●immunicate at the least thrice in the year c. We say so far as they are of years and discretion they are bound to receive this for there are some cases wherein even such may be kept from this Ordinance and by the Laws of the Church of England not to be admitted as shall be discovered in its own time SEcT IV. CHrist was pleased to represent himself to the believers eye in the swadling cloathes of bread wine in this Sacrament of the Supper which bread he called his body that is a sign of his body and the wine he called his blood that is a sign of it Now between his body and blood the thing signified with the application of it to the soul and the bread and wine which is the sign with the receiving it by the Communicant typified of old by Melchizedeck Gen. 14.18 who met Abraham returning from the slaughter of the Kings with bread and wine and blessed him as Christ here doth the believer when he returns from the slaughter of his sins we say between these two stands this holy Analogy and proportion similitude or likeness 1.
as appeareth by the second argument 5. It would give a fair opportunity for taking away the wh●●● I desire no● to reflect upon the actions of some men whose gravity is venerable and piety exemplar yet it is worth our consideration that when his Majesty out of free grace did indulge his subjects with their own liberty touching the Crosse in baptisme and wearing of the Surplice except in Collegiat and Cathedral Churches and Colledges what effect did it produce but embolden some to petition his Majesty that the Surplice might not be enjoyned there also expede Herculem by this we may judge what an alteration may do to cancell such or such a phrase out of such or such a service would but open their mouths to beg a blotting out of the whole prayer and therefore it were fittest ●o let the prayer stand or to prorouge the alteration and in the mean time to command these men to instruct the people touching the nature of the Common-prayer and then if the people will not be satisfied to proceed to alteration as it shall seeme Good to them in authority For truly notwithstanding what hath been said I may truly say of altering the Common-prayer as St. Paul said of a single life 1 Cor. 7.26 It is good for the present distresse so to be 1. That many able men that are now dissenters might read it with courage and confidence which it might be presumed they would do if it were altered The reason is because in the days of their errour they roved and rayled at the same and cannot now yea dare not touch it with one of their fingers for shame and blushing but when it is in the least altered they will bow and and confess we have done these things which we ought not to have done 2. The book itself as it stands is not of absolute necessity and therefore for the peace of the present age or at least of this year and for to have some quietnesse in the Church by stopping the mouths of men in that particular the book of Common-prayer might in some few things be altered 3. The same ends for which the book was composed at first and for which it is still preserved might be obtained by an alteration how ever it were fit that the deprovers of that book and the dispisers of them that use it were looked after CHAP. 2. Of an Oath SWearing being an ordinance of God and by many being made a part of prayer we shall speak of it by way of appendix to the foregoing ordinance and that breifly There is a vow and there is an oath A vow is properly that kind of oath that is made by man Immediatly to God whether publick as is probable that of Abraham was Gen. 14.22 or private as that of Iacobs was Gen. 28.20 An oath is properly that kind of vow made directly to man sometimes made by God unto him who swears by his great name Jer. 44.26 by his right hand Isa. 62.8 by his life Isa. 49.18 and somtimes it is made by one man to another In or by the name of God Thus David did swear unto Bath●heba by the Lord God of Israel 1 King 1.30 and Gideon As the Lord lives Judg. 8.19 To let passe many distinctions we shall speak of an oath betwixt man and man in matter of judgment and shall see 1. It s nature 2. Its ends 3. It s forme 4. Resolve some questions SECT I. The nature of an oath from reason and Scripture may be thus discovered It is an ordinance of God wherein he is called to bear witnesse to the truth asserted for the ratifying of Covenants or deciding of controversies between man and man It is true that we find swearing used by the Saints before God did appoint and institute it as a law in Deut. 6.13 and 10. and 20. God in those places only rectifying or giving caution that oaths should not be made to any God but himself wicked and heathenish men doing it in the name of Idols When the truth of a thing spoken of is doubted and the covenant that is made cannot be firmly ratified by a ye and nay to prevent further strife and take away the cause of suspition an oath may and doth and did alwayes take place for these and the like causes did Abraham say to King● Abimelech I will swear Gen. 21.24 and Isack did swear Gen. 26.21 and Iacob did swear Gen. 31.53 and David did swear to that Egyptian once 1 Sam. 30.15 and to Ionathan often SECT VII The ends why God did institute this part of worship are these cheifly 1. For the glory of his own name he looks upon it as an affront to his Majesty to swear by any God but himself Ier. 12.16 he being only able to search the heart punish the offender protect the innocent and also being every where present and therefore alone sees the contract and hears the promise which are necessary conditions in witnesse bearing 2. For the greater confirmation of the thing promised or attested to take a way all cause of doubt in the least degree thus God did swear in his holynesse to David Psal. 89.35 and the Angel by him that created heaven Revel 10.6 and St. Paul to vow that before God he lyed not Gal. 20.1 Yea this made God swear to Abraham that he would blesse him Heb. 6 13. That no ground might be left of desponding or calling in question the thing promised or affirmed 3. For the putting to an end all striffe and contention among men there would be but affirming and denying now an oath puts a stop to that Heb. 6.16 It s true a man may falsly swear an oath and if it can be known or proved there is a punishment for him that so doth yet this is an ordinance for that purpose designed and therefore not to be thrown off though by some Misused SECT 3. In swearing men verily ought to swear by the greater Heb. 6.17 and therefore an oath is to be made 1. By no creature Mat. 34.35.36 Iames 5.12 2. By God only Ier. 12.16 and to him after this manner 1. Reverendly with fear Eccles. 9.2 2. Cautelously with care Gen. 24 5. 3. Lawfully when Authority requi●es it Exod. 22.10 11. we shall find that Besides the magistrates c●ll or authori●y there are three things that makes an oath lawfull Ier. 4.2 these are when the oath is made 1. In truth from a certaine assurance of the thing promised or reality of thoughts of him that promiseth or from a kn●wledge of the truth of that which is attested 2. In judgment out of prudence or deliberation not rasl●n●●s ignorance or passion 3. In righteousnesse for the ●lory of God the finding 〈◊〉 truth composing of differences not out of f●aud 〈◊〉 or cousenage SECT 4. Questions Resolved Quest. 1. Whether swearing be an ordinance of or under the Gospel Quest. 2. Whether the oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy required by the King of England c. May lawfully
Fides Catholica OR THE DOCTRINE OF THE Catholick Church In Eighteen Grand Ordinances Referring to the Word Sacraments and Prayer In Purity Number and Nature Catholically maintained and publickly taught against HERETICKS of all Sorts With the Solutions of many proper and profitable Questions sutable to to the Nature of each Ordinance treated of By WIL. ANNAND M. A. late of University Col. Oxon. Now Minister of the Gospel in Leighton Beaudezart in the County of Bedford Thus saith the Lord stand ye in the ways and see and ask for the old paths where is the good old way and walke therein Jer. 6.16 State cum eo stabitis Requiescite in eo quieti eritis Aug. Con. l. 4. c. 12. LONDON Printed by T. R. for Edward Brewster at the sign of the Crane in St. Paul's Church-yard Anno Dom. 1661. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE Sir Francis Norreys Knight c of Weston upon the Green in the Coun. of Oxon. Right Honourable WHen first the wise Disposer of all States and Persons called me into his Vineyard he apointed me my splace and task during my residence in the university by your honours Patronage and meanes There were two noysome weeds with which the Garden of the Lord which is his Church was then overspread men being as if the last times had been come lovers of themselves and having to colour that a form of Godlinesse which to pluck up so far as I was able was my purpose and resolution at my entry What was done in order to the form●r is yet in the closet but what was done in reference to the latter is now brought to the house ●op my affections leading me still for the good of that people whose teacher in those days of errour and darknesse ● by Gods designment was and whose attention to the truth of what was then taught did generally appear unto my comfort and I hope their own good by their conforming thereunto though contrary to the practise of that age wherein these following Doctrines were delivered men generally giving up themselves to be shaken to and fro by every wind of doctrine speaking evil of devising devises against those that either stood to or taught the truth of the good old way Which last made your honor once merrily shew me that if I continued so preaching I should get the whole country about my eares but Sir you know I did and still do continue so preaching that is preaching down the sins of the times and my eares though sometimes they have glowed are yet untouched for I never feared nor valued the tongues of men and against their violence the Kings laws protected me Sir My design was to maintain the power dignity and purity of these three grand ordinances the Word Sacraments and Prayer which were trod underfoot by the unreasonable men of that age who like swine rooted up all things though establish'd of God that were but tending to order decency or uniformity that their own opinions though contrary to all Scripture and their own practises though contrary to all Saints might alone be nourished and followed so highly did they love themselves The doctrine of the word was throughly handled and also that of the Sacraments though here it be impres'd with some addition Prayer was not at all touched upon God casting me providentially upon subjects of another nature untill I gave a farewell to your honour and that people Knowing with what the inhabitants of that place was most affected I was zealous after three years divertisment to fall upon that ordinance of prayer and more largely in some particulars go through the nature of the Sacraments and to publish all unto the world And since Epistles Dedicatory in this kind are usual unto whose patronage can I better come then unto your Worships being assured already of your good will both to the Doctrine taught and to the Teacher of it as appeared by those many noble favours which your bounty was pleased to throw upon him Accept then Right Honourable into your hand what for the most part you heard by the ear for should I say all I am perswaded your Honor would not believe me here are only the main pillars upon which the doctrine stood with some small addition in the questions the rest are enlargments as they dropped from my pen in my Christmas and Lent meditations Hoping for your Honours acceptance I close this Epistle assuring your Honor that he is not unmindful when he is before God of your self and family who once was and still desires to be From my study at Leighton July 23. 1661. Right Hourable Yours to serve you in the Lord Iesus WIL. ANNAND TO THE READER IT being my lot to be called and separated unto the work of the Gospel when Hereticks had covered the Land as once the Frogs did Egypt no greater service could be done to the Church then to hold up the old truth in its splendour purity that men might not be drawn from it in the darknesse of heresie and novelty and comparing the old with the new lights they might straightway say that the old was better At that time I stood with these following truths to keep my people from defection and Apostacy delivering tha● doctrin that was anciently given to the Saints that upon knowing principles they might the more earnestly contend for the same and now the same is published amongst other cogent reasons for Buttresses confirming them in that faith wherein they were taught in those days of error especially in regard that they may live to see the ordinances advanced according to what is here asserted since our late reformation from Atheisme If we say that we have no sin we deceive ourselves and by consequence we are subject to f●ailty If I had for my own particular no error I were not a man and if I did not confesse them I were no Christian yet I trust thou shalt find in this book no errour so great for which I should deserve stoneing and if there be let him that is without errour cast the first stone and the Author shall have time to rectifie his mistakes particularly for trusting too much to his memory in the matter of the Emperor Charles his motto pag. 37. which should have been decem praeceptorum decalogi custos est Carolus the Printer to repent of his over sights and omitting some marginal citations necessary to have been inserted However it be if thou read these lines with approbation thou shalt be respected if otherwise no less honoured but if thou raile a● them or their composer thy words shall be slighted William Annand IN DIGNISSIMUM elaborati hujusce operis Authorem summum suum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ITe ite erroris Tenebrae Ad Stygias merito umbras descendite Ubi nox aeterna habitat Jam satis umbrarum diraeque caliginis Vester ●b Orco terris emisit Pater Christi laborat Sponsa Eclipsin patitur Ecclesia Ite malum Solitis incumbite
the doctrine of Christ and appointed a way for the publishing of that viz. by Ordination were known not to be Catholical As the Church grew by her continued succession of Teachers she found Heresies to grow by her side and by casting her eye back by succession she found them to be no Teachers and finding by Tradition no such Doctrine taught by the Apostles as those men held out still as they appeared condemned them as heretical having no Disciple for the Author of their Doctrine taught nor no Apostolick man whom they did succeed as Teachers The Church usually spoke to those upstarts in appearing in this or the like language Quando unde venistis quid in meo agitis non mei shew when and whence you came what make you here since you are none of my Sons none of my Teachers knows you no such Doctrine hath been taught them by the Apostles who put them in their places and Offices Polycarpus was placed Bishop in the Church of Smyrna by S. Iohn unto whom no such Doctrine was taught as is by you Valentinians and Anabaptists Linus was made Bishop by Peter of the City of Rome who was taught no such Doctrine as you Novatians Arrians and Quakers do teach and from them downward in a right moral succession they were found but starcups by the way side God suffering in every Age some Heresie to grow whereby the faith and stedfastness of the Saints might be known and tried This Succession was one thing amongst many that kept S. Augustine in the bosome of the Catholick Church Multa saith he in Ecclesiae gremio me justissime tenent The succession of Priests from S. Peter's Chair keeps me of right in the Church Tenet Catholic ae nomen For whereas all Hereticks would be called Catholicks yet if they be demanded by a stranger where the Catholick Church is at which they meet that is where is that Catholick Church that teacheth as you do and where had it beginning they having neither Doctrine nor Teacher of hers all being upstarts there is none that dare undertake to do that In a word Catholick Ministers in all Ages could shew the very Places Chairs wherein there was not onely a moral succession in purity of Faith and Doctrine but a local Succession of Priests or Ministers from the Apostles themselves who were immediately called by Christ as the Church was in constituting and by him directed to be given to others by them as they did and enjoyned those to give it to others as in the Epistles of Timothy and Titus and so to keep it in the Church constituted until the end of the World He himself not once offering to alter that est●blished Rule as in the case of Saul though he was furnished with all inward Graces and natur●l Abilities for the Work yet he must have an external Call by Ordination and those seven men that were of good report full of the holy Ghost and of wisdom Acts 7.3 could not or did not exercise the Offices of Deacons the lowest Offices of the Church and therefore by our upstart-Preachers never medled withal without Ordination or Imposition of Hands Now Reader weigh but with indifferent judgement the above-named Succession and let me ask thee if any Mechanick Tradesman or every L●y-person ought or should assume to themselves the Power of exercising in an authoritative way any Office in the Church in the least degree of it without this external Call of Ordination now the Church is constituted that way Or ought they to receive that power from the People For from the beginning the Church had never such power given to her Ordination is an act of Authority and the power of ruling was never in the People but in her Officers Every one or any two or three gathered had no power to constitute Elders but Timothy onely and such as were deputed by him Ought then according to the Scriptures any of our Hereticks to be looked upon as Gospel-Minist●rs not having this Gospel-call Or ought he so to look upon himself because of his Holiness Parts Abilities Graces Gifts doth he finde the Spirit prompt him call him furnish him with whatever belongs to that Office in an inward way and the Spirit to assist him at all times in an eminent way so had Saul so had the seven Deacons yet they must be ordained and by those that had the power given unto them from Church-Officers of an Apostolical nature viz. by Ordination And though some few Members of the Church should out of their over-much zeal choose one to be a Teacher to them to be r●led guided taught and instructed yet this can never give them authority to dispense the Sacraments or exercise the Keys or make him to be owned as a constituted Minister no more than when two or three give up themselves to be advised ruled commanded by another man which their so doing makes him not a Constable Judge or Justice in respect the power of making such Officers was not given at all to them So here though their rash zeal will have a Lay-person to teach them yet they ought not to own him nor he to esteem himself as a Church-officer since Ordination makes onely that which the People had never in their power and therefore cannot give that Office unto any When Christ was taking his leave of his Apostles and going to the Father Matth. 28.20 he promised to be with them to the end of the world Now Peter and Thomas and the rest being dead it cannot be personally understood of the Apostles but successively in their followers and they were to teach whatever Christ commanded But the Apostles never taught such Doctrine to their immediate Successors as our Hereticks teach now particularly this That people might ordain or that men by reason of their Gifts or Graces might assume to themselves the authoritative Act of reaching binding and loosing nay of exercising a Deacons Office which is the lowest which I cannot remember any of our Hereticks to go about once to touch though it be the passage to the o●her Offices of the Church by Apostolical Constitution but jumps immediately from the Shop into the Pulpit by his Gifts judging himself sufficiently qualified and because of the peoples call sufficiently ordained for such an Office unto whom that power was never given Neither do I envie any mans gifts would all the Lords People were Prophets let these men shew me their Succe●sion and let me perish if I give them not the right hand of fellowship And seeing they give out themselves for lawfull constituted Teachers in the Church as Paul as Timothy as Titus or as the seven Deacons give me leave to ask them how they came in and how they got th●t power if they came not in by this door they must pass for thieves and robbers and therefore no Teachers and those people that ordain them for rebels and traytors for setting up Governors and appointing Officers in another way than he
Church of England is a true Church as it is now constituted her Doctrine being pure she holds nothing nor injoyns nothing upon her members in matters of salvation by way of precept neither doth she add to nor take any thing from the nature of the Sacraments that the Lord Christ hath left behinde him in the Church by way of practice she doth and may injoyn and she hath power to ordain several Ceremonies to be performed in the receiving of them which in themselves being not contrary to the Scriptures nor taught by her as necessary for salvation urged only as edifying for their meaning and decent for the service performing her Members may and they do give her all due obedience and their obedience is justifiable You need not here be put in minde of that caution formerly given viz. not to take manners for doctrine it is a high errour to conceit the vertue power efficacy of an Ordinance to consist in or depend upon the goodness of him that doth administer the same A prophane person a known Swearer may purely dispense the Sacraments for that lies not as God forbid it did in the purity of any mans conversation but in the pure adhering to our Lords Institution The pure preaching of the word hangeth not upon the purity of him that speaketh but in the purity of the word spoken of The purity of Doctrine lies in the agreement of it unto Scripture and not in the agreement of a mans life unto the word if so how many had Christ converted what multitudes of people had Paul brought to the knowledge of the truth more then he did The same Doctrine teacheth the Reformed Churches and the Church of England Art 26. To conclude this Chapter in all Instituted Ordinances it is neither Pauls goodness nor Apollo's graces nor Iudas's wickednesse that is the cause of the plants fruitfulness or barrenness from the grace of God must we look to receive the promised reward 1 Cor. 3.7 In natural as in prayer sometimes it may be otherwise Iames 5.16 CHAP. II. Of the Scriptures COL 3.16 Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. HAving viewed this beautifull heavenly and holy building for it is Gods 1 Cor. 3.9 which is as Ierusalem a City compact together we shall now behold the foundation upon which it stands The Builder of it was skilfull in all kind of cunning Work and a Fabrick of this height or altitude required a foundation suitable deep strong and sure he therefore founded it upon a Rock Matth. 16.18 by which the several parts of it stand firm the carved and polished work thereof knows no shaking the least vessell therein though earthen yet being chosen for the Masters honour knoweth no falling down by tottering The foundation of this glorious Metropolis Royal Edifice or House of God is in truth and nature but one yet since Scripture speaks of it as two we shall speak in that Language and shew you that the Church hath 1. An increated essential foundation which is that holy thing whose name is Jesus Christ the Lord Matth. 16.18 begotten before the beginning of the world it is the Lamb of God the Rock of Ages it is he that is holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners the only begotten Son of the Father who taking upon himself to deliver man did not abhor the Virgins womb it is he whose name is wonderfull Counsellor the mighty God the Prince of Peace the everlasting Son of the Father the Man who is Gods Fellow Zach. 13.17 2. A Created Doctrinal foundation this is the Law and the Prophets Ephes. 2.20 It is the word written which is profitable for Doctrine and reproof for correction and instruction in righteousness that the man or Church of God might be perfect throughly furnished unto all good works In summ it is that word that was spoken by the Fathers by the Saints by the Prophets and Apostles who were the servants of God Phil. 1.1 Of these two we may say as Ioseph said of Phara●hs doubled dream Gen. 41.26 They are but one yet not one so but that the preheminence is given to the first under the notion of a Corner stone Isa. 28.16 that giving both strength to the building and directions to the Builder And indeed the Prophets and Apostles laid no new Foundation but added to that corner stone laid to their hands daily such firme Christians as they had fitted for this holy superstructure taking directions in their building from its pos●ture for unto it all the building fuly framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord Ephes. 2. ult No foundation being laid therefore but what is united to this strengthened by this supported by this and directed by this shews that properly there is none but this Saint Paul who was a wise and excellent Master builder himself 1 Cor. 3.10 understanding there was a Church builded at Colos. a City of Phrygia the greater in the continent of Asia the lesse so called from one Phryxus a King thereof had no desire it should stand empty left the evill spirit which hath been cast out should take possession again as at this time he was like to do whether by their falling back to Paganisme and Heathnish customes again or by being taught the necessity of imbracing the doctrine or Ceremonies of Jewisme would have the Word of Christ dwell richly in them This Country of Phrygia had once in it a King named Gordius who of a Plow-man being chosen King tyed or hampered his Plow-Tacklings in such a knot that he predicted that none should untye them but he that was to be Conquerour of the World it was called Nodus Gordianus this Prophesie was fulfilled in Alexander who because he could not untye it by Art cut it asunder with his Sword and for afterward conquering the World was sirnamed the Great At this time there was among these Phrygian Colossians some that hampered their understandings by a counterfeited humility who with their dark Axiomes would have intruded upon them worshipping of Angels which knots to untye that they might be great the Apostle sends them or recommends unto them the Sword of the Spirit Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly In this Country also was the City of Midaium where Midas the son of this Gordius lived and dwelt he as the Poets fain asked of Bacchus who was his Guest that what ever he touched might become gold his great riches was the ground of the Fable his ●ute was granted by which he turned Mountains into gold but finding that he could neither eat nor drink but Goblets and Viands of Gold he recalled his wish and by washing himselfe in the River Pa●t●lus communicated that virtue to the River which afterward brought up golden sand The River that comes from the Mount Tmolus brings with it abundance of gold and
they sinned that word that might have been purely and unsported given to the Father through negligence forgetfulness wilfulness might not have been delivered intirely and perfectly to the son but now in writing none of these can alter the age that now is can know if others do corrupt and those that come after may judge of this each having copies by them they are able to discover or iudge of the integrity of another neither can any one corrupt it in the least but it may easily be discryed by his neighbour through the copies or writings of it 3 That helpe might be afforded men against those imperfections that attend the best for through fraile nature cares and troubles of the world sutable comforts confirming truths might not suddenly be thought on now by writing this malady hath a proper cure the word being open and before our eyes we may take up and read such truths as may stay the Soul in her greatest shakeings and comfort her in her languishing distempers 4 That mens faith might be the more confirmed in the truth of it when men see the prophecies that were foretold in the book of Daniel and in the Revelation the fulfillings of the threatnings is against the Jews c. To know that these things are done and to see them foretold so many hundred years before induceth a man more firmely to beleeve them then if it were told him barely from another that his Father or Grandfather said it should be so of which he also might have cause to doubt and the truth of the Speaker even in that particular suspect Quest. 10. Whether men be bound to believe all that is in the Scripture For the dispatching this Question we must distinguish 1. Between the Scripture it self and the persons who writ it is not necessary to salvation to believe that Matthew writ that Gospell that goes under his Name nor that Peter writ his to believe what is spoken or written is one thing and to believe that David writ it is another thing 2. Between the writing it self and the time when or the place whence it was written It is one thing to believe the truth of those Epistles of Paul and another thing to believe that they were written from Corinthus as that to the Romans or that from Athens as that to the Thessalonians or from Rome when Paul was brought the second time before Nero as that last Epistle to Timothy 3. Between the Words written and the meaning or sence of the thing writ It is one thing to believe that Paul writ the words of his Epistles in that order method place as we have them in our Bibles ordered and placed and another thing to believe the sence and the meaning of the thing so written we shall find the writers of the Scriptures in citing of places deviate from the naturall order of the Words given them by the first Author which shews that we are not bound to believe that For instance David declares Psal. 16.8 I have set the Lord always before me because he is at my right hand I shall not be moved which Text Peter having occasion to use Act. 2.25 reads it thus viz. I foresaw the Lord always before my face he is on my right hand that I should not be moved The words being clearly varied but the sence and meaning being the same we are tyed to the one and not to the other which alteration is evident in many places particularly the very next verse both of that Psalm and this Chapter 4. Between an Historical and a saving faith we are to believe all that the Scripture contains and set down that is the sence and meaning of it to be no other then the very will purpose mind and Law of God which we must believe if we would be saved And that it was written by David and sent to the chief Musitian by Matthew by Paul and sent to them from Corinthus that the Epistle to Timothy Ordained the first Bishop of the Church of Ephesus was written from Rome when Paul was brought the Second time before Nero as his second Epistle at the close declares ought to be believed by an Historical faith that not being written by the infallible spirit of God but by the Churches Tradition of whose authority in an Historical way it is but presumption in any man to doubt CHAP. IV. Of Reading We are now come to the prosecuting and enforcing of those directions above named as necessary Antecedents for the Words indwaking The first was to read the Scriptures In the handling of which we shall 1. Prove it is a duty to read 2. Direct how to read 3. Resolve some Questions Sect. 1. THat all are to read the Scriptures is a truth that the Religious Christian will not doubt of and the Hypocriticall dare not deny yet that all might be left without excuse we shall prove that all must do it According to the usuall division of Magistrates Ministers and people or of Old and young which comprehendeth al sorts of persons whatsoever 1. Magistrates are to read it God giving Laws concerning the Ruling of his People to him that should be King ●ver them Commandeth Deut 17 18. that when he sitteth upon the Throne of his Kingdom that he shall write him a Copy of this Law in a book out of that which is before the Priests the Levites and it shal be with him and he shal READ therein all the days of his life The King therefore it not exempted from this duty though he be Lord of all notwithstanding all affairs he must READ therein all the days of his life And the truth is he will be the best Ruler that is best acquainted with this word he will know sin the better which he is to punish Rom. 13.13 the better he be acquainted with the Scripture Rom. 7.7 It is the abundance of the sincere milk of the Word that maketh Kings Queens nursing Fathers and nursing Mothers unto the Church Isai. 49.23 that all that live under them may by their knowledge and discipline grow in all godlinesse and wax strong to every good work sucking from their breasts wholesome doctrine springing from good government and Laws and enjoying the fruit of all in every Act of Justice What God doth in this place require of a King who is Supream 1 Pet. 2.13 he requires the same of all Magistrates and Officers under him that are as Kings in their proper places and Domininions and by the Subjects ought so to be beheld 1. That they be not puffed up by conceit of Earthly greatness Psal. 131 1 2. 2. That they may be impartiall in their Sentences Proverbs 31.5 3. That they may uphold and defend the truth of his worship 2 Kings 23.1 2 3 4. 4. That they may know whom to encourage and whom to punish Rom. 13.3 5. That every thing may be done by them as those that must give an account to the King of Kings and Lord of Lord for
Son Iesus Christ whom to know is life Eternall Joh. 17.3 3. Resolve to practise the Word what vice thou findest the word to reprove charge thy own heart not to act strive not against the Spirit in the Word but says speak Lord for thy servant hears What Act or duty it exhorts unto stay not but make hast to perform all Righteous Judgements Make haste least hell and damnation overtake thee left hardness of heart and willfullesse of soul creep upon thee and God and his grace forsake thee and thou become like those that go down into the pit What thou ara commanded to do do it withall thy might resolve to conf●ss● sin and forsake Transgression thou shalt have mercy for sin and for iniquity 4. Resolve to believe the Word and that stedfastly What God hath declared and purposed in his Word touching Saints or sinners in reference to a Tempor●ll or Eternall condition must be believed if we would be saved 1 Cor. 15.1 2. God says that he comes quickly and his Reward is with him Rev. 22.12 Do not mock saying Where is the promise of his coming 2 Pet. 2.3 4. What h●th passed from the mouth of God is by man to be believed if Judgement it is to be feared if promises to be loved The wicked may presume of his present security and cry peace peace The Righteous may doubt of his present safety and say One day or other I shall perish yet say to the Righteous it shall go well with him and wo ●nto the wicked it shall be ill with him Isai. 3.10 11. this if thou believe thou shalt do wel 5. Resolve to receive the Word and that wholly It is not the duty nor suits it with the profession of a Christian to pick out of Scripture and separate one part of the Gospell from another Even in this sence these are days of separation c. Let not a tittle of the Law or Gospell be by thee slighted the Word of the Lord is for ever settled in Heaven his faithfulnesse to all Generations Psal. 119.89 90. though now the Spirit of this World can set the Son against the Father and the New against the Old Testament and the Servant against his Master the Epistles against the Gospell yet from the beginning it was not so The Christian being thus prepared for reading what David said to his Son when he had instructed him cocerning his building of the Temple shall be said for him Now my Son the Lord be with thee and prosper thee 1 Chron. 22.11 2. In Reading 1. Read it Reverendly It must be read as the Laws of the great mighty and Eternall God upon the performing of which depends the Eternall happiness or misery of thet soul that is at this present within thee it must not be read as a story It remains for ever to acquit us or sentence us this man will I look that trembles at my Word Isaiah 66. 2. The Laws was delivered with Thunderings Lightnings and smoak Exod. 20.18 to create a Reverential fear in the souls of men left that fire come down and that smoak break out into a flame to consume that spirit that shall contemn the least of those Commandements 2. Read it heedfully What thou readest let thy Judgement be employed about it not a word thou readest but there is something of an everlasting concernment to thy self Some studie the Scripture and observe things without themselves but these men are not wise O thou man of God flye these things and follow after Righteousness Godliness Faith Love Patience Meeknesse 2 Tim. 6.11 this will profit thee more then to enquire after the State of this or that man or that will profit thee nothing here and the other will both here and hereafter 3. Read it distinctly It must not be read as if we were in haste or could not tarry as Saul for answer from the mouth of the Lord we ought to ponder every line as did Ezraes and his ●ff●ciats when they read the Book of the law of God they read it saith the Holy Ghost Distinctly Nehe. 8.8 he that huddles up this duty but looses his labour and if it be not done again his own happiness if it be hastened by the tongue it is to be feared it will not tarry long at the heart we ought to say to every verse in Scripture as Iacob to the Angel Gen. 30.26 I wil not let thee go except thou blesse me 4. Read it affectionately Arr thou hungry thou would'st eat thy meat with gladness and joy of heart It is the word when thou hast done all that thou must live by be saved by it s called Bread Ames 8.11 And that is the staffe of mans life It s the word of eternall life Iohn 6.68 It s thd water of life that enlightens the Eyes and rejoyceth the heart Psal. 19.8 It feedeth and strengthneth the Soul Deut. 8.3 It maketh a man to be born again 1 Pet. 1.23 It purifyeth and cleanseth men Iohn 15.3 purifies them from tueir iniquity and cleanseth tham from sin Psal 51.2 116 9. And therefore with joy draw thou water out of that well of Salvation Isa. 12.3 5. Read it dayly O how some have loved the Law and made it their meditation all the day Psal. 119.97 There ought not a day to passe without inspection into this word the soule of man is in continual reparation for it is subject unto loss and damages there is no day wherein Satan assaulteth not no day but may be our last day no day wherein man may not see evill or fall into evill and therefore no day ought to passe without our guard against evill and an antidote to cure the evill the word hath a soveraign quality to cure all our running sores we ought therefore to have our meditations there upon night and day but in this two things must be avoided 1. Wearinesse when thou findest thy self growing weary of reading O how fraile is man O bon Jesu lye close the Book and goe about thy lawfull and ordinary occasions for in that thou must also serve God as the Scripture commands the. Yet in this let me charge thee by God not to nourish sluggishness drousiness or idelness 2 Confidence it is the blessing of God that must make thy dayly reading profitable unto thy soul depend not and trust not therefore upon thy doing without him thou canst do nothing In this also it s not onely the hand of the diligent but the blessing of the Lord maketh rich Prov. 10.4 22. that is in the word of Christ. 3. After reading 1. Meditate upon the word it is meditation that gives a soule to reading and breaths in it the breath of life it makes the word to be lively and o stir in the soul. It wat Davids meditation all the day Psal. 119.97 Nay all the night too Psal. 16.7 So must every one th● would frame his heart according to Gods heart and have the Scripture thereupon God would
no Kingdom so Atheistical no Nation so Ignorant no part of the Halitable world so Barbarous but acknowledged a Diety and ownud a ●od some superior power they had to call to in distress something though it were but an Onyon did they bow to the Knee to and adore Those barbarous inhabitants of Matta of Melita seeing a Viper come upon Pauls hand conclude Acts 28.9 that he was a murtherer whom though he had escaped the Seat yet VENGEANCE suffereth him not to live He had escaped drowning yet he will not scape dying some God or other Nemesis po●sibily will not have him live this was a darke acknowledgment of a God 5. From the Testimony of the consciences of men Who is he that can put to silence that tell-tale called Conscience which makes men affraid and tremble even when for all the world they might spend their dayes in mirch what made these Barbarians to think murther a sin a sin that deserved death even this testimony of conscience which though they know not the cause did so sharply reprove them fright them when evill committed that never could they fully nor freely act according to their own desire Suppose one of those in a wilderness meets a passenger loaded with treasure that may be profitable for him he dare not take his goods he dare not take his life why he is affraid of VENGANCE where doth that dwell when did you see it is it not a great way of yet for all this he is affraid that if he do so some time in some place some way VENGEANCE will not suffer him to live this is a dark yet a conscionable demonstration of the being of a God 6. From that restraint that is put upon wicked men in the world If their were but a Bridle in the jawes of the wicked such as they could not shake off how long should the world endure what face of Religion what beauty of Holinesse what acts of Righteousnesse what deeds of Justice nay what naturall maintenance would be either for good or bad if the wicked of the world could have there full swing in iniquity their are stops put to them by conscience they are affraid of VENGEANCE they are held in by Providence God beats out the Teeth of these Lyons and the cheeh Teeth of those young Lyons and oft times brings their wickednesse and their wicked lives to an end together They roare sometimes but as to the Sea he hath made them Bancks and though they lift up themselves yet can they not passe over 7. From the Testimony of the Scriptures in this the being natures properties works of God are so fully held out and in all points necessary so clearly that h● that runs may read it of whose authority if any doubt see Quest. 1. and 6. of the third Chapter Quest. 2. Whether God be a Spirit In reading of the Scripturee we read of the hands of God the Eares the Eyes the Nose the Back the Face the Mouth the Feet of God his Heart his Breath his Throne his Age which gave formerly and at this day doth give occasion to some to conceit God a corporall and bodily substance A Spirit therefore we defend him to be excepting the body of Christ which in fulness of time he took upon him 1. From the Scripture Ioh. 4.24 God is a Spirit saith he who was well acquainted with his nature and Paul who was wrapped up into the third Heavens charges the Heathen for changeing the glory of the incorruptible God into an Image like unto corruptible man Rom. 1.23 If God had a bodily shape there was no ground for this reproof 2. From his nature as 1. From his Infinity were he in the shape of man that is of a bodily substance he could not be infinite every body is confined to its own proper place but God is in all places at once filleth all yet confined to none of old did he declare of himself that he filled both Heaven and Earth Ier. 23 24. It was long before that that it was the ground of Solomns admiration that God would dwell on Earth when behold the Heaven and the Heaven of Heavens could not contain him 1. Kings 8.2 And before that it was the subject of Davids praise that he could not flee upon Earth from his presence and if he went up to Heaven he was there and if he went to Hell he was there Psal. 139.7 All which could not have been true had he been circumscribed with a body Christ himself as man is not infinite but sits at the right hand of God according to the 6. Art of our Creed 2. From his invisibility Were the Son of God again upon the Earth he would be seen because of his body now whoever saw him he is an invisible King 1 Cor. 1.17 A Spirit hath not flesh and bones as you see me have says Christ to his timerous Apostles Luke 24.39 Now God is a spirit Ioh. 4 24. 3. From his Eternity He was for ever and to everlasting shall remain with him is no variablenesse no shadow of changing Now all flesh is grasse and all the goodlinesse thereof as the flower of the field that is naturall of itself which shews if God were a fleshly substance he must in a great measure have a shadow of imperfection 3. Another Argument against that grosse conceit may be drawn from those prohibitions so often urged by Moses against the Israelites making any Image of God Deut. 1.12 Ye heard the voyce of the Words but saw no similitude only ye heard a voyce And again v. 15. Take ye therefore good heed unto your selves for ye saw no manner of similitude on the day that the Lord spake to you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire lest you corrupt your selves and make you a graven Image the liknesse of Male or Female If our Authropomorphites had heard this Law the Argument had not been strong enough to keep away Images they themselves being made after Gods Image and by their Logick the Picture of a man might have been a sufficient representation of God Since in outward appearance he is all one with them and they with him We must note that those Scriptures that hold out God to have a heart or hand c. are but spoken to our capacity that knowing the use of those parts we may be bro●ght to know the better what he is The Holy Ghost speaking to us as Nurses to their Children in that childish Language best understood by them By the eyes of God therefore we must understand his watchfull care and providence over men By his ears his infinite knowledg by his mouth the Word he hath revealed by his Nose his fury kindled by his heart his Eternall decree or his his good liking by his arm the greatnesse of his Power by his hand his effectuall purpose to bring all things to passe by his right hand his honour glory and Majesty by his finger the holy Spirit by his love the
to the Prophets and he is God And again I will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son v. 5. Who says these words he that begot him Who begot him He whose Son he is Who is that Son Christ that purged our sins and sate down on the Right hand of the Majesty on high v. 3. Whose Son is he He that spoke unto our Fathers by the Prophets and he was God v. 1. Moreover Prov. 8.22 The Son himself says The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way c. when there was no depths I was brought forth before the Hills was I brought forth Who brought him forth he that made the Earth and who made the Earth God Geu 1.9 10. Many other places might be brought for this truth as Ioh. 17.3 Ioh. 20.17 Rom. 1.7 but we forbear in regard that those against whom the question is raised denye not the divinity of the Father but of the other person 2. By reason drawn from Scripture or scripture reason it appears that the Father is God for 1. Prayer must be made to him Pray to the Father which is in secret Matth. 6.6 Pray Our Father which art in Heaven now we are to pray to none but to God Isa. 42. ● 2. It is he that revealeth hidden mysteries Luke 10.8 This none can do but God Isa. 41.8.22 23. 3. It is he that maketh the Sun to shine and the Stars to give light to the Earth Matth. 5.15 The Sun is his for he made it he made the Stars also Gen 1.16 This showes that he is God Isa. 40.26 4. It is he that maketh the Raine to fall Matth. 5.45 This none can do that but God Jerei 14.22 2. That the Son is God appears by Scripture and Scripture reason 1. By scripture John 5.20 And we know that the son of God is come c. And we are in him that is true even in his Son Iesus Christ this is the true God and Eternal life Heb. 1. ● But to the Son he sayeth Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever Rom. 9.5 whose are the Fathers and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came who is over all God blessed for ever Isa. 9.6 Vnto us a child is born unto us a Son is given c. his name shall be called wonderfull Counsellour the mighty God so John 1.1 The word was God John 20.28 Psal. 68.18 with Ephe. 8.8 Psal. 95.6 compared with 1 Cor. 10.9 Isa. 41.4 with Revela 8 6. Isa. 25.9 Zacha. 2 9. Isa. 7.14 Phil. 16. Phil 2.6 Acts 7.59 Tit. 2.13 1 Tim. 3.16 What ●e●d we oppose those blasphemous Arians any longer h●ve we not heard himself say I and the Father are one John 10. ●0 Reader these things are written that thou mightest believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God and that believing thou mightest have life through his Name Ioh. 20.31 And this is eternal life to know him to be the only true God and Iesus Christ whom he hath sent viz to be the true God also Iohn 17.3 2. By Scripture reason or reason drawn from Scripture t is clear that the Son is God 1. He made and created the world Iohn 13 this none did but God Gen. 1.1 or could do Isa. 44.24 2. He can and doth forgive sins Luke 7.48 this none can do but God Luke 5.8 3. He gives the holy Ghost Ioh. 20.22 this none can do but God Isai. 44.3 4. He preserveth his Church Matth. 16.18 this none can do but God 5. His Name is preached up Phil. 1.18 this ought not to be done were he not God 6. He is Omnipresent he is in Heaven and Earth at once Iohn 3.13 this could not be were he not God 7. He knows the thoughts of man Matt. 9.4 this he could not do where he not God 8. He is Eternall Revel 1.8 this he could not be were he not God 9. He is Almighty Revel 1.8 this he could not be were he not God 10. Men are baptzed in his Name Mat. 28 19. this ought not to be done were he not God 3. That the holy Spirit is God appears by Scripture and Scripture Reason 1. From Scripture Act. 5.3 Why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye against the Holy ghost c. Thou hast not lyed unto man but unto God Isaiah 6.9 The Prophet heard the Lord say Go and tell this people hear ye indeed but understand not c. The Holy ghost is said to speak the Words Acts 28.25 26. By which two places it appears the Holy ghost is God And so 1 Cor. 12.6 there are diversities of Operations but it is the same God which worketh all in all c. To one is given by the Spirit the word of Wisdome to another the gift of knowledge by the same Spirit to another the gift of Faith by the same Spirit Quest. What Spirit is it that giveth these diversities of gilts Answ. It is the same God that worketh all in all and the same Lord v. 5 6. Also we read Deut. 12.6 If there be a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my self known in a vision unto him and will speak to him in a dream now Prophets spake as they were moved by the Holy ghost 1 Pet. 1 21. 2. By Scripture Reason or Reason from Scripture It appears that the Holy ghost is God 1. He is Eternall Heb 9.14 this he could not be were he not God 2. He is Omnipresent Rom. 8.9 He is in all the faithfull whereever they be therefore he must be God Psal. 139.7 3. He is Omniscient 1 Cor 2 10. therefore he must be God 4. He created the World Psal 23.6 this he could not do were he not God Gen. 1.2 Job 26.13 5. He gives the gifts of miracles c. 1 Cor. 12.10 therefore he must be God 6. He calls men to be Apostles Acts 13.2 therefore he must be God 7. Because the sin against him is unpardonable Matth. 12 31 therefore he must be God 8. He knows the souls and consciences of men Rom. 9.1 therefore he must be God 9. He hath a Temple 1 Cor. 6.19 therefore he is the living God 2 Cor 6.16 10. Men are baptized in his Name Matth 28.19 therefore he must be God Thus it appears that the Father the Son and the Spirit are one essentially that is one in Deity The other two parts in which they are one a viz. in Operating and in willing may be dispatched in Word 1. For Operation they work all one and the self same thing together Joh. 5.17 Gen. 1 26 And 2. For willing they will all one and the self thing without opposing crossing or contradicting each other Joh. 8.29 I do always those things that please him viz. the Father saith the Son by consequence the Spirit of the Son must please him which is the holy Ghost Rom. 8.9 and the spirit of the Father must please the Son which ●sthe Holy Ghost Isaiah 48.16 The Church of Christ hath in
the Church is founded on a rock and neither Iew nor Greek T●ik nor Infidel shall be able to prevaile against her c. 5. For the greater honour fo the Lord Iesus Christ the Iews kept the Law that was given by Moses but behold one greater then Moses is here who hath altered the day by which there is more inquiry made of him his power his person who thus alters the Law who thus changeth the sabbath had the Gentiles come in to the Iewis sabbath Christ had not been so much magnified by it as he is when both Iew and Gentile come into a sabbath never known before and that upon the authority of Christ it tends to his honour much and respect among the people of both sorts It follows therefore that we in this age are to keep that sabbath kept by the Apostles inspired thereunto by the Spirit of God and approved of by the Prophets and people of GOd that then were and blessed by God in all ages of the Church that hath been since what ever ignornant factious Spirits say to the contrary c. SECT V. Questions resolved Quest. 1. Whether the keeping of a sabbath be a Ceremony and so abolished by Christ Quest. 2. Whether it be lawful to make feasts on the sabbath Quest. 3. Whether sporting or gaming are to be done upon the sabbath Quest. 4. Why did God give charge concerning the resting of beasts upon the sabbath Quest. 5. Why did not God give charge concerning a wifes resting upon the sabbath Quest. 6. Why is not the change of the sabbath mentioned in Scripture Quest. 7. Whether the Church may command any other day to be rested on beside the sabbath Quest. 8. Why doth God put a Remember before the commandement of the sabbath Quest. 9. Whether the first day of the week may be termed ●●●bath or sunday Quest. 10. Why is the sabbath called Holy Quest. 1. Whether the keeping of a Sabbath be a Ceremony and so abolished by Christ. This age fruitful in nothing more then in false doctrine hath brought forth them that affirm it is purely Iewish to keep a sabbath at all it being a pure Ceremony abolished by Christ since whose death every day is Holy and to be kept alike but we have no such custome neither the Churches of God the keeping of a sabbath being moral and for ever binding and therefore not ceremonial For 1. It was instituted and appointed before sin●it came not upon neither was it imposed to man by reason of transgression therefore was no bondage that he should be freed from it by Christ fin never brought it on for which he wanted no Redeemer to take it off 2. It is one of the ten Commandements written in Tables of stone it is equally moral with the Law against Idolatry with the Law against Adultery they were equally pronounced from the mouth of God Deut. 4.13 14. Now Ceremonies were all of them instituted by Moses as sent of God 3. It is not a Ceremony for it was established or ratified by Christ which no Ceremony was for Matth. 24.20 speaking of Ierusalems visitation he bids them Pray that their flight be not on the sabbath day so that there must needs be a sabbath that is a day of rest after Christs death 4. Ceremonies were as a partition wall between Iews and Gentile to difference the one from the other but now in this there is no difference but equally binding all as is manifest in the Particle Thou in all the Commandements 5. Ceremonies were abrogated not changed but now this Law of the sabbath is changed only nor abrogated for what we finde the people of God under the Law doing or what they ought to have done by vertue of that Law given upon the Mount upon the seventh day we finde the people of God doing under the Gospel by vertue of that Law given either by Christ or by his Apostles through the Spirit upon the first day of the week so there is no abrogation but a change which is to be seen in no pure Ceremony Quest. 2. Whether it be Lawful to make feasts on the sabbath The Disciples going through corn fields upon the sabbath day being hungry rubbed some of the corn and did eat Matth. 12.2 if they could have dined better they would and it is hard to say that a man is onely to supply the necessities of nature since the day is Holy to the Lord he may eat of the fat and drink of the sweet he may refresh himself 1. With the society of good and godly people he may be in that multitude at the Table as well as go with that multitude that keeps Holy day Psal. 42.4 2. With a more enlarged receiving of the creature comforts God gave man wine which makes glad his heart oyl to make his face shine and bread to strengthen his heart Psal. 104.15 He may therefore dayly drink that wine eat that bread that new kinde of religion that holds the necessity fasting upon the sabbath in our days hath no ground in Scripture in spite yea rather in sight of these may the Christian spread his Table he is this day to meditate upon the works of God chearfully to praise him the comforts of the choicest food may be therefore used of him if he see his cup run over let him abound in thankfulness the 92 Psalm is a Psalm or song for the sabbath and in a natural way it is no heresie to say Thou Lord hast made me glad through thy work I will triumph in the work of thy hands vers 4. yet never use the creature so As 1. To be hindered from any part of worship set not the length of thy feast keep thy seat empty in the house of God 2. To be indisposed in any act of devotion wine was made to make the heart of man'glad but not to make him lumpish beware then of drouziness through immoderate feasting Remember that of Solomon hast thou found honey eat so much as is sufficient 3. To forget any act of charity when thou ar● fareing well remember poor Lazarus at thy door when he calls know thou hast good things which he wants eat not therefore thy morsel alone It is a day wherein God hath blessed thee by thy charity bless thou him it is good husbandry and not impiety this day to cast thy seed upon the furrows of the faces of the poor that with the fields of the earth they may clap their hands shout yea also sing Quest. 3. Whether sporting or gameing is to be followed upon the sabbath The sabbath is appointed for the service of God and not for the pleasuring of men by denying sports is not here meant that men should be sour sullen or peevish but whether or no plays wrestling bowling fouling or fishing and the like be to be used this day or any thing in the like nature it is denyed it is unlawfull so to do For. 1. The Scripture forbids all manner of works in regard
against their sins like men ready to drown or desperate they are strong to wrestle even with God himself 8 When there is any great undertaking that it may prosper Ezra 3.10 11. It is a good thing to ask direction of God in the way wherein we purpose to walk All things are in his hand and according to his power and will so cometh things to pass to fast therefore that God would bless us and prosper the work of our hands is acceptable sacrifice SECT IV. 4 The manner of it This Fast as a Sabbath is two wayes to be performed outwardly and inwardly 1 Outwardly as hath been before declared in abstaining from bodily labor for a fast day is a Sabbath day Lev. 23. 33. food c. and that the whole day for it must be no shorte● then other dayes alwayes provided that nothing be done to the prejudice of health In that case as in the Sabbath God will have mercy and not sacrifice yet as bodily labor profiteth but little 1 Tim. 4.8 so outward resting in it self is not of great value except unto it there be joyned fasting or resting 2 Inwardly he that worketh and he whose soul is not afflicted upon a fast are both in danger Levit. 23.29 30. This inward fast consists 1 In a diligent examination of the soul to find out sin this is a day wherein the soul is specially invited to be reconciled to God the heart must now be searched and the beloved sins must be found that as Samuel slew Agag we may h●w them in pieces before the Lord 1 Sam. 15.33 2 In an unfeigned humiliation before the Lord for sin it is not sufficient to acknowledge that we have offended if we would be accepted we must be penitent Zac. 12.10 3 In an undoubted faith in Christ for a pardon of sin this is a time of prayer and repentance that our sins might be blotted whether private to our selves or common to the kingdome wherein we live Now he that prays Let him ask in faith Iames 1.6 4. In a stedfast resolution through the spirit to oppose sin In this repentance must we continue it must appear in the fruit of practise to be real in the root Dayes of fasting are dayes of attonement therefore sin must be parted withall they are days of Physick therefore we are to abstain from delighting in that which would offend us 5 In a serious meditation of the good word of God if the Fast be private and a diligent attention to it if the Fast be publick It is the word that discovers Gods judgement of this or that kind as famine pestilence sickness unseasonable weather to this or that sin as perjury Sabbath-breaking prophane or common swearing stealing c. which enlightens the soul much in the holy and orderly performance of this duty SECT 5. Questions Resolved Quest. 1. Whether the Fasts of the Church of Rome differ from those of the Church Catholick Quest. 2. Whether Fasting be not a Iewish Ceremoniall or Jewish rite Quest. 3. Why is the Fast of Lent observed by the Christian Church Quest. 4. Why are the Fasts of the Weeks of Ember observed by the Church Quest. 5. Whether it would bring advantage to the Church now to have those dayes again observed Quest. 6. Whether it might not be an acceptable service to have an annuall Fast for the crimes lately acted in England Quest. 1. Whether the Fasts of the Church of Rome differ from those of the Church Catholick The Church Catholick differs not from that of Rome either in the act or ends of Fasting yet toto coelo differ in these following respects 1 The Church of Rome makes fasting to be meritorious they suppose they merit something at the hand of God for their abstinence that is deserve somthing at his hands not so the Catholick Church she teacheth that when we have done all we are to acknowledge our selves unprofitable servants 2 They prescribe certain times as necessary to be keept upon the account of salvation what ever dayes the Church appoints for annuall Fasts it is necessary if they would be save to observe them accordingly hence it is that the neglectd of it as a breach of the third though according to God of the fourth commandement must of necessity be confessed to the priest that such penance may be injoyned as is sutable to that high offence for the expiation of its guilt Now the Church Catholick appoints neither knows she any time to be observed as necessary but what God and his Son appointed in his word 3. They abstain from meals of this or that fort as being for the time prescribed for the fast altogether uncleane their consciences will be defiled if they should eat them that is without authority Now the Catholick Church though she injoyne a fast yet by the Lord Jesus she knows no meat unclean of it self and he that teacheth otherwise is not of God but of Sathan 1 Tim. 43. 4 The Church of Rome looks upon her fasting as a part of Gods worship her very abstaining from meat or from this or that meat is taught to be points of worship the Church Catholick teacheth that Fasting in it self is of no use nor no part of worship But as a fit meanes and as it serves to the uses aforesaid so she requires it not otherwise 5. That some fast particularly lent is of Apostlical institution and out of religion and conscience to be observed the Catholick Church knowes no such law and therefore she keeps not lent upon that account but for other ends and other causes as shall by and by be shown 6. That outward Fasting is of it selfe sufficient without the inward and indeed if fasting that is abstaining from meats or meals be of it selfe a point or part of worship it may be so but the Catholick Church pleads for an Inward fasting or abstaining from sin and for a soul to afflict it selfe for transgression without which the outward fasting is not regarded 7. They are foully belyed by many Authors if good Christians would not take the Fasts of the Church of Rome to be great feasts through the variety of dainties and plenty of wines therein fed upon by which it is not to be called a fast which makes us that for the present we need not show the difference between this and the Fast of the Church Catholick Quest. 2. Whether Fasting be not a Ceremoniall or Iewish rite Who are those among us and about us who teach that fasting in its own nature is not a Gospel but a legal exercise and not to be observed in the Church of Christ but fasely for 1 The ground or end or cause of our religious fasting is moral for the subduing of corruption and exercising our selves in the dutyes of repentance and mortification unto which by experience fasting is known to be an apt meanes and sutable help 2 Christ prophesied or rather commanded Fasting after his own death Luke 5.53 But the dayes will come
She fasts to procure them and gives thanks at the receiving of them hence it is called a Feast-day It is a time wherein the Church invites her Nobles to a Banquet of Wine puts on her royal apparrel and shows what God hath done for her and her people SECT II. 2. The ends of it This solemn Assembly being gathered and met is not to be thought like that Acts 19.30 for which there could be no cause given it is for these ends instituted and appointed viz. 1. To praise the Lord to give unto the Lord that glory due unto his name are all these his people flocking to the temple Now he is worshipped in the beauty of holiness Hark 1. In his Temple doth every one speak of his glory Psalm 29.9 Now Miriam the Prophetesse takes a Timbrel in her hand and charges the daughters of Israel to sing for he hath triumphed gloriously Exod. 15.21 Barake the son of Abinoam awakes and speaks to all true Israelites Praise ye the Lord Iudges 5.2 Res. The Lords name be praised 2. To shew that the Churches dependance is upon the Lord should she not have such times as these to celebrate praises to the God of Armies she might be thought to purchase renown as Iacob did that portion which he gave to Ioseph by her sword and with her bow by this therefore she declares her subsistance to be of him and by ascribing the kingdom power and glory to him she demonstrates her upholding to be by him 3. For the keeping in remembrance the favour of the Lord The Church declares her deliverances to the present generation that they may tell their children and their children another generation they will shew them the praises of the Lord and his strength that they may set their hope in God and not forget the works of God Psalm 78.6 7. which to do she appoints these solemn meetings SECT III. 3. The time of it Though religion be not tyed to time yet it is not prophane to allot some time for it and we in this age may learn to see that when the usual time of devotion is spoken against it is but to take away the ve●y being of that service in that time performed Thanksgiving hath been made of Gods people of old 1. When they have received victory over their foes Ester 9.15 Wherein they joy not so much for the destruction of their enemies as for that peace which God by that victory is pleased to give them 2. At the inauguration of good Kings 1 Kings 1.40 when God is pleased to give the Church one that is faithfull to be her Ruler and her Keeper to go in and out before her and to fight her battles then the people is glad and shouts and says God save the King There is mention made in the Chronicles of A May day which is called Ill May day there being upon that day A. C. 1517. in the City of London a great insurrection of Prentices and young persons against strangers for which several of them were put to death the residue came to Westminster to King Hen. 8. and there received their pardon Let May day be hereafter accounted A good May day for on that day 1660. King Charles the second whom God Almighty bless intimated to his Parliament his resolution touching the publishing an Act of Oblivion c. and let the 29. of May of the same year be never forgotten as is appointed by Law wherein his Majesty rod through his City of London triumphing in his peoples affections and slaying without blood shed his enemies in the gates At which time as after Salomon All the people rejoyced with joy so that the earth rent with the sound of them 1 Kings 1.40 One there was with him of whom we might more truly have said this day then Adoniah unto Ionathan that day Come in for thou art a valiant man and bringest good tidings ver 42. 3. When some gracious suit or favour is obtained 1 Kings 3.15 The Church is not unmindfull of that love that God hath shewn her in the day of her distress in hearing her prayer and granting the request of her lips but will withall offer up the calves of her lips the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving which is her peace-offering 4. When the true worship of God is established and confirmed 2 Sam. 6.13 14. When the glory is departed from Israel then her children are called Ichabods but when it s returned again and God owned in the land then by Isaack are her sons called because God causeth her then to laugh which she is not afraid to confess Psalm 126.2 SECT IV. 4. The manner of it This duty of thanksgiving is two wayes performed either inwardly or outwardly 1. Inwardly and that consists 1. In a cheerfull mentioning of the mercy 1 Chron. 29. It is a good thing to make mention of the name of the Lord that men may know the Lord to be near by the declaration of his wonderfull works 2. In a hearty thanksgiving for the mercy 1 Chron. 16.17 he that hath received much ought to love much and it is not love but flattery if it be not cordial In the heart chiefly God delights he that giveth thanks with a closed heart doth provoke God to hear him with a bended fist yea his soul abhors such heartless performances Offer unto God in the peace-offering the fat of the inwards or offer nothing Levit. 9.19 3. In renewing thy Covenant upon the account of that mercy 2 Chron. 15.11 12 13 14 15. to lay some engagmtent upon the soul of walking sutable to the deliverance given is a high degree of thankfulness to take such notice of this present favour as to assure the soul that God will give more and to observe this special act of providence as to oppose all future acts of sin is acceptable sacrifice 4. In a studying of the word how to improve that mercy Neh. 8.3 It is the Law of God that sanctifies and cleanseth the soul by working out those corruptions that defile it and softning the heart to receive the will and law of God which is that time given or spoken to it which alone makes a mercy to be a mercy that is frames the soul to a right using of it without which it may prove a heavy judgement 5. In receiving the blessed Sacraments the visible tokens of all mercy they are the Christian solemnities fitted for days of thanksgiving one of them is milk for Babes and the other meat for strong men this fast upon a day of returning praise is most proper it makes the Christian go away rejoycing yea shouting by reason of wine Whatever mercy God promised Christ procured is instantly held forth in them and Christ the Author of all mercy is by them put on and received 2. Outwardly and that consists 1. In a resting from our ordinary imployment Neh. 8.10 It is a day set apart unto the Lord and therefore unto him is to be given to call
but vastly differ in the manner of keeping these days as also in other points touching those days For 1 The Catholick Church performes worship or makes prayer even in those days to God alone whereas that of Rome offers supplications petitions intercessions to those Saints in whose days they are performeing that or any other holy service 2 The Catholick Church keeps feasts for no Saint but what she is sure had a being and once were and keeps no day but upon good and real grounds now that of Rome hath days observed and prayers made to those whose very being not without just cause are called in question It is very much to be doubted if ever there were such a man as Saint Christopher or Saint George or such a lady as Saint K●therin or how can they know that Ios●ph the supposed Father of our Lord was a pious confessour or that Lady Anne was mother of the virgin Mary Who was he that told them that the virgin Mary never dyed but was taken up to heaven alive Aug. 15. and therefore that day must be in red letters in the Roman Almanack and on that day prayers must be made to her This is not to serve the Lord Christ the days that the Catholick Church keep are such as have in them a real truth and not legendary vanities 3 The Catholick Church keeps no days in memorial of Saints but those whom she knows to be good they were not only men but good men whom she honours with a day now in this the Church of Rome also fails she hath not only days in remembrance of them that never were but dayes in memoriall of them that never were good Thomas Becket must be Sainted and given to the Christmas holy days by way of augmentation and yet his religion purely consisted in rebellion and being an arch traytor deserved to be preferred in another sort and as we pray to Saint Feriol for geese to Saint Agatha for sore breasts to Saint Giles for Children to Saint Hubert for dogs to Saint Iab for them that have the pox to Saint Kathern for knowledge to Saint Orilia for the head arch to Saint Russin for madnesse to Valentine for the falling sicknese so we must pray to B●cket for sinners when if stubornesse be as iniquity were he in a capacity to be bettered by prayers supplications ought to be made for him yet poor souls are taught to pray Tu per Thomae sanguinem quem pro te Impendit ●ac nos Christe scandere quo Thomas ascendit The like might be sayd of many others 4 The Catholick Church she loves useth and enjoyneth those days to be observed as meanes conduceing to the good of men and no further no what ever day be enjoyned by Rome were it Beckets or Leola's they must be observed as part of divine worship binding the consciences of men to the observation of them though but of humane constitution in themselves and often times fictitious in their nature Quest 2. Whether the Festivalls appointed by the Church of England may lawfully be observed Those solemnities established by law in the Church of England ought not by any that is compos mentis well in his wits to be spoken against for they appear in many respects to be lawfull and usefull 1 From that countenance God gave to those feasts Instituted by the Church of the Jewes under the Law the the days of Purim was never spoken against and that seven days feast of Iudas Maccabeus his institution was graced by our Saviours observance shall they and may they appoint days to worship God in for temporall mercy and not be blamed what hinders then but that the Church of England may appoint days to return thanks for spiritual mercy shown to her in common with the whole Church of Christ on Earth 2. From the nature of that worship she in those days performes though the day may be denominated from a Saint or kept in remembrance of one yet the prayers she offers up are purely to Christ the Gospel she reads is the Gospel of Christ the b●ead she breaks is the communion of the body of Christ and nothing is done in way of worship but what is agreeable to the rule of Christ and will of Christ. 3. From that opportunity that they put into the hands of such as hunger after spirituall food they may by these often hear the word of the Lord receive the Sacrament instituted by the Lord as a memoriall of his death untill his second coming and what ever ordinance they take most delight in or receive most refreshment by of that they have abundance in the using of those dayes instituted by the Church 4. From that profit that would accrew to the poorer and weaker sort of people to them those days would be a Catechisme upon the feasts of the nativity to hear of the birth of Christ and afterward of his circumsion and then of his passion and then at Easter of his resurrection and then of his ascension and then of the spirits descension and so forward this might being taught upon those dayes be of very great consequence to all Christians especially to those whose understandings are not ripe enough for high contemplations in subjects of this nature 5 From that power that the Church hath to ordain fasts and dayes of humiliation which is granted we may draw her power to ordain feasts and dayes of thanksgiving which is the thing doubted but of the power of the Church in such cases we have spoken in another place 6. From the doctrine of reformed Churches Confess of Helva Art 24. of Bohem. Art 17. which Churches deliver their minds thus that of Helvatia says Every Church doth choose unto it self a certain time for publick prayers c. it is not lawful for every one to overthrow this appointment of the Church at his own pleasure and if the Churches do religiously celebrate the memory of the Lords Nativity Circumcision Passion c. according to Christian liberty we do very well allow of it The Church of Bohemia says thus Many of the ancient Ceremonies are retained among us at this day of this sort be many appointed for feasts and holy days c. such as Christs nativity such as be dedicated to the Apostles c. chiefely of those Saints of whom there is mention made in holy Scripture all these things are done of us that the word of God may be taught and that he may be glorified among us c. the same teacheth the Church of Ans. Art 4. The ignorant must or may learn that the observation of those dayes is no superstitious observation of days condemned in Gal. 4.10 for with the Atheist there is neither good luck nor bad luck supposed to be in them neither with the Papists are the consciences of men tyed to them It is no more a sin to observe such times as the Church teacheth then it is will-worship to observe noon for dinner time or to open a shop
and other exercises spent their time The very mentioning of this should make these things not so much as to be named among Saints c. yea what height of impiety was con●eived as when a Mayd out of most parishes was culled out personally to represent this Flora under the notion of a May-Lady who oftentimes by relation proved a May-where c. 3. From the circumstances that do accompany them appear they to be sinfull and the day of those glorious Saints prophaned as 1 Stealing this is so frequent and so known a custome that it needs no proof and so odious that it needs no confutation 2 Prophanation of the Lords day Once in seven years the day set apart for the Lords resurrection must be abused by those May-games and the day of the Lords Apostles is 〈◊〉 prophaned by these sports it is held unlawfull to prophane the places set apart for the Lords worship by any thing that is not comly sure this therefore upon this day ought not to be esteemed decent 3 Great loosenesse as quarrels fightings drunkenesse which so certainly are known to attend it that good honest moral men have no hand in them but the loose wicked and deboyst If it were good holy men would own it if not bad wicked men would not incourage it 4. Eventualy there is no good in them What Christians do ought to be for the glory of God either originaly or eventualy now these sports originaly tend to his dishonour casualy prophanes his day really and sensibly breaks his laws abuseth his creaturs and in the close brings no honour to Christ and therefore are not to be suffered where God or Christ is owned If this day be set apart in pious memoriall of Christs disciples for the doctrine of the Gospel to be publickly taught Flora who in these May-games is remembred ought not to be commemorated which so suits to the doctrine of Devils left prophannesse in the streets hinder our prayers from heaven I would have insisted on this longer but since the delivery of this there came forth a tract in particular against May-games called Funebria Flora to which I referre the Reader CHAP. 8. Of a Church or Temple WE are now to speak of the place of publike teaching cryed down in these days of Schisme there being some that speak of them as the Edomites in the day of Ierusalem Psal. 137.7 Rase them Rase them even to the foundation Not that teaching is confined to a place for with our Saviour men may preach upon a mountaine Mat. 5.2 or in a ship Mat. 13.2 but that a place gives a lustre to teaching and a place being an ordinance of God comes within the compasse of our intentions and those places that are set apart for Gods worship in a publick and orderly manner being in our days slighted it is not unprofitable to speake something of them In the handleing of which we shall see 1 That there were such places 2 The names of those places 3 The necessity of such places 4 Resolve some questions SECT 1. That there were some cert●●● places wherein men did worship● the Lord in times of peace and settlement is clear in Scripture both before and after the law 1 Before the law Gen. 4.3 4. Cain brought of the fruit of the ground and Abel brought of the Firstlings of his flock and offering unto 〈◊〉 Lord. Now bringing suppo●●● a place which they both brought their offerings unto even that place which by their Father Adam who shall be the priest that offered his sons sacrifice had been as it were consecrated for Gods house wherein he and his family might publickly worship for Cain when he had slain his Brother is said to flee from the presence of the Lord which must in this sence be only understood This is the first congregation we read of and represents all other to the end of the world It is a mixed one consisting of good and bad members sincere and Hypocritical offerers As bringing supposes a place so a sacrifice supposes an altar in which or at which the Lord is said to dwell and an altar and a sacrifice suppose a priest which in regard of dignity must be Adam Who as a priest unto his family as Iob for his offers up sacrifices for their sins and offences Lo here at the very beginning of the world do we implicitly see a place set apart for publick worship For God to dwell in for God to be praised in for God to be consulted withall and for God to be offered to which not only used for that time of Cains offering but constantly dureing Adams aboad in that place Gen. 4.16 In this sence generaly Divines take that place Gen. 4.26 Then viz. In the days of Seth began men to call up●n the name of the Lord. Not that he was forgot before but in more publick places or Churches for men at that time building citys and houses for their own security and ease it is not to be supposed that places for Gods worship to be celebrated in with safety and honour was forgotten since nature taught the very heathen to set apart places for the worshiping of their false Gods Especialy since the distinction of clean and unclean beasts which was chiefly in respect of Sacrifice was known before the flood Gen. 7.2 That God that taught them to offer sacrifice taught them also which to offer and how to offer without doubt taught them also where to offer for the more honouring of his name in the eyes of the sonnes of Cain To let passe that place of Mount Ararat where Noa that preacher of righteousnesse builded an altar and sacrificed Gen. 9.20 and come to Abraham for by him God intends and from among his sons purposes to get himself a name and establish to him self a Church he near Bethel builds an altar and there he worshipped God not for a day only but as long as he and his family lived there Gen. 12.8 by reason of a famine Abraham is forced to dwell in Egypt who comeing thence when God had visited Canaan with bread came to the place of the altar which he had made there at the first and called upon the name of the Lord Gen. 13.3 4. that is at Bethel whose name of old was Beersheba Gen. 20.10 19. At this selfe same place did Isacck build an altar and worship God Gen. 26.23 24. In the same place did God appear to Iacob Gen. 28.10 Surely saith he the Lord is in this place the house of God vowes that it shall be Gods house and that he will give his tithe thereto or offer them thereon ver 17. And when after twenty years he returned he is called upon to go to Bethel and offer sacrifice which he did Gen. 35 1. At the same place he offered when he went down into Egypt Gen. 46.1 For to sojourn with his son Ioseph Thus we see Bethel was as it were the Mother Church to these three glorious patriarcks their other
prayer and therefore prayer is a proper act for the place and no time more sitting then at the first entry 2 Prayer obtains a blessing in other dutyes he is possibly to hear the word read preached or sung to crave a blessing that all these may do the soul good cannot be a branch of superstition 3. It gives a good example unto others when thou seest one performing any act of worship in that sort whether out of formality or otherwise yet by that thou mayst learn that in the Church thou oughtest to worship God heed him not therefore so much as thy self if he give hypocritical service the judge shall judge him fear thou God 4. It is but spoken to draw a contempt upon the house of the Lord those actions with many others are inveighed at that the house of the living God may be had in no more reverence then Barnes Stables not to say Halls or Parlours every thing is Popery in this age wich either tends to decency or comeliness in outwards worship as if we must be papists except we be slovens 5. The reasons brought against this justifiable practise are poor and weak they are these chiefly That they by this would hold forth the Church to be more holy then other places It may be answered it is that they will perhaps not pray at other times It may be aniwered Blame them and reprove them for that by themselves blame them not at all for this to any other Quest. 5. Whether is it lawfull to have Musick in our Churches This is of it self nothing yet since the rulers of the Church are pleased to introduce such a ceremony and others take occasion to barke against them for it it may be seasonable to speake a few things as to the lawfullnesse of its use it appears therefore to be lawfull and that in our days for 1 From the practise of the Saints in the Iewish Church what variety of musicall instruments were introduced by David and Solomon is clear in sacred writ When the ends that these holy Saints proposed to themselves are found out they shall make it appear that it is as Lawfull to have musick now as it was then 2 From the helps men may naturally receive from musick in the time of worship God loves a chearful giver and this may make a drooping soule to give him acceptable service 3 It was never a part of the Ceremoniall law and therefore not abolished by Christ that Law that Christ put an end to was that that belonged to the tabernacle musick being no part of that is no more abolished by Christ then standing Churches or Temples 4 From that vision that was seen in heaven Rev. 5.8 Four beasts and four and twenty Elders worshipped the Lord with harps these are generally taken for Ministers and the congregation and again Rev. 14.2 there is heard the voice of harpers harping and singing from heaven though in the mystery that signifies there joy yet in the Church it is not absurdity to expresse or help their Spiritual joy by the naturall use of musick 5 They who are against this are generally against matters of greater concernment and their opposing of this is the lesse to be admired or noted CHAP. IX Of Ministeriall ordination THe party or person that teacheth which is the priest or Minister comes now to be considered unto whom in the title we have given ordination both are ordinances appoint-by God to go together and both of them for that very thing cryed down in this generation for this time we shall put them together and distinctly handle 1 The nature of ordination 2 The person to be ordained 3 The parties who are to ordaine 4 The duty of them that are ordained 5 Resolve some questions SECT I. The nature of ordination may be expressed in these words viz. It is a solemn setting of one apart and ordaining of a person 2. By Fasting and prayer 3. For the preaching of the Word 4. Dispencing of the Sacraments And 5. Exercising the power of the Keyes 6. With laying on of hands 1. It is a solemn setting of one apart and ordaining of a person It is not to be rashly or inconsiderably done 1 Tim. 5.22 but in most solemn decent manner ought to be performed Acts 5.6 2. It must be done by prayer and fasting these two at this ordinance go usually together Acts 13.3 For by prayer much may be obtained and by fasting a strong Devil may be cast out 3. For the preaching of the word Acts 13.5 for the opening of the word by way of Doctrine Reason and Use is the proper work for which one is separate to the work of the Ministry 4. Dispencing of the Sacraments 1 Cor. 4.1 as that of Baptism Mat. 28.19 and of the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11.23 these are the seals and evidencies of our reconciliation with God 5. Exercising the power of the keyes whom they bind on earth they are bound in heaven Mat. 18.18 Now they bind by excommunication which is a delivery over unto Sathan a casting them out of the Church making them to have no interest in the ordinances of the Church more then heathens or Publicans 1 Cor. 5.5 1 Tim. 1.20 Whom they loose on earth shall be loosed in heav●n Mat. 18.18 Now they loose by Absolution opening as it were the gate of the Church to him that for his offences was thrust out and receiveing him again upon his repentance to the communion and fellowship of the faithfull 2 Cor. 6.10 6. With laying on of hands this is a grave and ancient ceremony in the Church of God Iacob used it in blessing his grand children Gen. 48.14 By it the Levites were given by the Is●aelites ' o the Lord instead of their first-born Numb 8.10 By it the beasts under the Law were to be set apart by sacrifice Num. 8 12. By it Ioshua was set apart to be Governour of Israel ●ter Moses Numb 27.23 By it did our Saviour bless those children that were brought unto him Mark 10.16 By it was St●phen and his brethren made Deacons Act ● 6. By it Paul and Barnabas Apostles Acts 13.3 And Timot●● made a Priest Minister or Elder 1 Tim. 4.14 for which cause in holy imitation of so ancient and divine a practise the Bishop and his Presbyters lay their hands upon the head of them ●hom they separate for the work of the Ministry 2 Tim. 1.6 being asign of celestial grace which God with an open hand will give to all those who conscionably serve him in that holy imployment SECT II. Let us now see unto whom this ordination is to be given and who it is that ought to be thus separated in a solemn way for the service of God what persons they be that Timothy and Titus the Bishops of Ephesus and Creet must ordain is told us in their Epistles some notes of them are essential and some of them are accidental some are for their being some for their well-being some shew their
the first sight to the carnal Christian but a low and poor device to gather some men together and pray and lay their hands upon anothers head to make a man an Ambassador of Jesus Christ to make him a steward of the Mysteries of God a Planter a Waterer a Builder and a Watchman to the Church by the same kind of Logick the other ordinances of God might be abused What force may the same Creature say hath a Morsel of bread and draught of wine in the Sacramnnt of the Lords Supper to assure men of heaven to foagive their sins to confirm faith to qucken hope to preserve love and so contemn that We ought in those cases to look to the institution and approbation of God and practise of the Apostles and to keep and hold up Gods ordinances in purity is a means of being ever happy This therefore of ordination being one to receive it to come to it may procure much profit to the party that hath it and to the Church for whom it is given him 2. It imboldens him in that imployment by this he may shew both his gifts and commission which two may make his face as brass against the Irony faces of perverse wicked men There may be some whose imprudence may carry them out to preach without this commission yet when they read the Scripture and see this ordinance practised so constantly both in Law and Gospel their conscience if they have one must needs accuse of that of which the Pharisees were by ou● Saviour even for Thieves and Robbers Iohn 10. by entring th● Church not by the door of ordination for of the Pharisee preaching God gave no commission 3. The solemn prayers of the Church with which that exercise is attended may bring the holy spirit to him that is ordained The gift of utterance Gal. 4.3 The gift of Wisdom 2 Tim. 1.7 being asked God may send them down Prayes availeth much and in an act of so high concernment both to Christ and to his Church it is not Christian like to suppose those prayers to be barred from the ears of God he that is ordained may be a prophane sinner yet as men will give the Nurse good things for love of the Children God may give him gi●ts for the good of his Church Iudas bore the Bag by which Christ relieved the poor 4. It binds him to that function he that is once brought to the plow of the Scriptures and hath put his hand to it to till the ground of the hearts of men is not through the unevenness of the path or hardness of the soil to forsake that imployment knowing that what ever happen however the world go this must be his work it may and without question doth make him set himself to his work and study how to go through bad report and good report c. but this leads us to the Quest. 2. Whether a Minister may renounce his Ordination It hath been the practise of some persons for the pleasing of a factions generation of late years to contemn quit deny or renounce their ordination but it savoured not of godliness 1. The nature of Ordination is against it That is a setting a man apart by the Church for that peculiar exercise and office he is separate from othe● imployments to follow this and therefore it is not in his own power to renounce it at his pleasure or for any cause whatsoever 2. That Assertion of our Saviour ● Luke 9.62 condemns it He is not fit for the kingdome of God that puts his hand to the plough and looketh back he that makes an entry either upon the preaching of Christ or professing of him must never come back to the world for the renouncing of either 3. The Ministerial office should fail if this were granted It is unknow what the thoughts of a Minister are in his troublesome going through the parts of his office and allow him power to forsake his calling in a few years we might see Pulpits empty the least cross affront persecution might be arguments strong enough to induce him for the forsaking of his people study calling and betake himself to some other honourable profession or whatever seemed good in their own eyes 4. The Laws of the Church will not suffer it to go unpunished if it be done Those that are Church-officers themselves know what strong reasons may induce men to forsake and quit their callings to put a chain to them that are otherwise without conscience the Church of England orders No man being admitted a Deacon or Minister shall from henceforth voluntarily relinquish the same nor afterward use himself in the course of his life as a Lay-man upon pain of excommunication c. Quest. 3. Whether the Ministerial Office be to continue alwayes in the World There are spirits gone out amongst us crying down the Ministry as Antichristian affirming th light within or the witness within is only now to be heard but these spirits when tryed are not of God for that office must and shall continue 1. For Christ hath promised to be with it unto the end of the world Mat. 28.20 Unto that time therefore it must endure It is spoken to the Apostles the first Teachers who are dead it must therefore be understood with them that are their successors in that office which are now in being and those that shall come after us who are not yet born 2 From the imperfection of the Church Eph. 4 11 12. Untill all the members of the Church come in the unity of the Faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a p●rfect man unto the measure of the s●ature of the fulnesse of Christ God will give Pastours and Teachers admit that many were now perfect that were of age yet for them that are young the ministry is necessary there is dayly a young generation coming up belonging to the Election of grace and therefore the Church is not pe●fect and therefore the Ministery must abide that this Scripture might be fulfilled 3 God hath appointed this office to be the ordinary meanes of salvation so long as their soules on Earth this office must remain there being no way shown by God since the fall but this that can bring a man to glory repentance faith and good workes must be tau●ht by them and while ●he world stands this d●ctrine will be necessary 4 The Sacraments must be received by the members of the Church untill Christs second coming Mat. 28.19 1 Cor. 11.26 It is these men that have this power derived from the Apostles to administer the seales of the word which seales untill the end of all things and un●ill the coming of the Lord by the whole body of the Church must be received by consequence therefore there must be Church-officers to deliver the same untill the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. 5 From the practise of the holy Apostles and disciples of the Lord They constantly
yet converted but to places wherein the Gospel is by law established and the ordinances by law defended In such places constantly to preach without authority from the Church or charge of the soules he preaches to seemes not at all convenient for 1 Preaching is not only necessary for the Churches good the Administration of Sacraments is also to be observed and many things may occurre by providence necessary to be done for the Churches edification which such a one is not able to performe 2 It may breed an occasion of difference between the setled Minister and his people he that hath both authority from the Church and Charge of the peoples soules may by this person secretly be brought out the affections of the people there may be diversity of gifts one of them in speech may be bold the other in doctrin more found one eminent in prayer the other more powerfull in preaching this may open a door of division and be a fire-ball of contention between them 3 It gives too much liberty to passion no face so fair but there may be found some blemish no heart so holy but may have some lust no man so upright but sometimes may halt no preacher so sound but may preach errours Now to suffer one constantly to exercise his faculty of preaching among a people if he have erroneous tenets he may freely utter them having no engagement against them though he by the law of the Church should be made to recant or leave off preaching yet those whom he corupted might never be reduced to order Mr. Brown of Northhamptonshire who was the Father of the Brownists though he renounced his errour and took orders from the Church of England yet those whom he had subverted would never reform It is good therefore to prevent the worst that men oblige themselves to that form of doctrin by law established which will make them rather study to defend it then for the pleasure of any to pick a quarrel with it 4. It is none of those ways that God hath ordained for the building up of his Church such a constant Preacher can never be designed for the work of the Ministry for they are Apostles Prophets Evangelists which had extraordinary calls for that purpose and are now gone or Pastors or Teachers which have ordinary calls and to this day remain Ephes. 4.11 These men therefore having no call that is ordinary and the extraordinary themselves confess they want we may conclude to be none of those that God hath appointed for the carrying on of the work of the Gospel in a publick way 5. By the experience and relation of the aged such tolleration made faction and gave shelter to untained spirits when men would not through wilfulness and peevishness conform themselvs to the Laws of the Church by good and found advice established they were then protected under the notion of Lecturers who to please unsetled heads and some fond persons could inveigh at liberty against the Government ecclesiastical and when Law did lay hold upon them then call out persecution persecution In a word we say he that hath an unchast wife is to keep fast his back-door so those that would have the house of the Church freed from the doctrine of Incendiaries had best keep a bolt upon this Postern gate and suffer none to reach without either of the two things before mentioned Quest. 5. Whether he that is a Gospel-Teacher may lawfully own civil Titles of Honour There are spirits and they would be thought holy that are offended if a Preacher be called Lord and there are others they are near of kin that are angry if he be called Master however both may lawfully be done and owned by a Church-Officer 1. From the dignity of their office they are Masters in Israel and Doctors of the Law they are in high places and to them is committed such great power that Whom they bind on earth are bound in heaven an● whom they loose on earth are loosed in heaven Mat. 18.18 Unto whom God hath committed such great power they may have honourable titles given them conformable to that power 2. From the acceptance of it by former Prophets and practise of it under the Gospel Elijah was a Prophet yet he could hear Obadiah say unto him Art thou that my Lord Elijah 1 Kings 18.7 and not be angry Obadiah feared the Lord greatly verse 3. and his religion taught him to give honourable titles to Gods Messengers and the Messenger takes them without a check yea that these or such were the common Titles of Teachers by those that feared God may appear by these instances The Sunamite coming and falling down at the feet of Elisha Did I desire a son of my Lord and yet she is not reproved 2 Kings 4.28 neither is Elisha to be thought proud in receiving it Nichodemus came to our Saviour with the title of Rabbi and our Saviour owned him for a Master of Israel Iohn the Baptist is called Rabbi Iohn 3.2 10.26 and his Disciples call Christ by the name of Rabbi which is to say Master 1 Iohn 38. These titles being mutually given and taken by such makes it not unlawfull to receive the same titles of respect and honour now 3. From the Laws of the land if the King who is the fountain of honour put such a peece of Honour whether by Patent or otherwise upon any Church-officer there is there is nothing in the Scripture that contradicts the lawfulness of its receiving Ministers will sometimes own upon the same account the title of an Esquire why may not another own the title of Lord 4. Them that are against that sinless practise they are such as would be very well pleased if there were no Church-officer to be called a Lord that they might lord it over their lands and tenements yea would never be angry at the title if they could obtain it themselves and they who would not have them to be called Masters are such as would have them trod under foot and be Masters of their Pulpits considering this denial of theirs or anger of theirs against these titles is the less with wise men to be regarded Touching that place of Scripture against exercising Lordship Mark 10.42 As it takes not away authority out of the King of the Gentiles hands so neither doth it make it unlawfull for a Church-Officer to be called Lord so he lords it not in a tyrannical and oppressive way that Text purely teaching humility and love and yet we know of late dayes none was more tyrannical none more exercised unlawfull authority nor lorded it over the Clergy then those meek Lambs yet wild foxes that refused to be called Lords As for that place urged against a Ministers being called Master Mat. 23.8 9 10. where our Saviour condemns the Scribes and Pharisees for using of it who were not worthy of it in regard it blew them up with pride when they understand those words going before Call no man Father they
death unto the soul. It is not sufficient for the nature of a Sacrament to affirm there is ground for it in Scripture so a fa● may be a Sacrament Matth. 3.12 but that the sign be appointed to signifie such a thing and to that appointment a blessing annexed ye● though we finde most of these in Scripture and appointed to be done yet never as Sacraments but as discipline proper for the Church Heb 6.2 and order to avoid confusion in the Church Acts 13.3 and that fornication might be avoided by the Members of the Church 1 Cor. 7.2 and as an extraordinary sign of an extraordinary cure by the Elders in the Church Iames 5.14 As touching pennance there is nothing of that in the least as it is used by Rome spoken of to the Church 2. They are not proper nor peculiar to the flock of Christ. Sacraments of old and now were given onely to the people of God and by receiving of them are men known to have a relation to him but Marriage one of the five is common to the Christians with Turks Iews and Heathens marriage we ●●n as honourable in all but since there is neither sign of it nor form of it instituted by Christ the Catholick Church dare not make a Sacrament of it 3. Sacraments are common to the people of Christ we shall alwayes see those Heavenly ordinances enjoyned to all that are Members of the Church but now this Sacrament of Ordination they confine it to the priesthood onoly of this the people of God and Saints under the Gospel cannot all be partakers particularly women Ordination indeed is an ordinance of God and so is Confirmation but neither of them Sacraments It is worth observation that this Sacrament of order hath seven degrees in it the lowest of which is to be a Porter in the house of God and the Highest is to be a Priest between whom there is the Exorcist the Lector the Ao●l●te the Subdeacon and the Deacon all which degrees are made visible signs by which grace is conferred on the partaker so that in truth they have in all fourteen Sacraments nay by some of them they are owned as Sacraments Et dicuntar hi ordines Sacramenta quia in eorum percep●iene res sacra id est gratia consertur egregiè dicis Domine Lombard quam figuran● qua ibi geruntur so that if they want real or inward grace it is not for want of visible or outward signs but twelve of their Sacraments having neither outward Element prescribed nor form nor blessing nor promise made to them as such they are rejected and the Church that teacheth them is condemned Touching the Sacrament of Extreame Unction the very rehearsing of its form and manner which are not at all instituted by Christ is sufficient confutation it is this When the sick party is just upon depar●ing the Priest usually or in case of necessity any other Person for it is dangerous to dye without it takes Oyle hallowed by a Bishop and annoints the sick Person upon the eyes ears mouth nose hands and feet using this form of words Indulgent tibi Deut per istam sanctam unctionem which possibly the sick man may not understand suam pi●ssimam misericordiam quicquid pecca●um permissum c. God out of great mercy and by this Holy Oyle forgive thee thy sins committed by thy eyes ears mouth nose hands and feet All the Angels Archangles Patriarcks Prophets Apostles Evangelists Martyrs Confessors Vitgins Widdows Infants heal thee He that finds that text of Iames who was but a servant in the Lords house Iam. 5.14 upon which this practice is grounded shall not onely see a vast difference between the anointings but may easiely perceive than a Sacrament as they would make it is not there intended 4. They are generally condemned by the reformed Churches of Christ in the Articles above mentioned and of the Church of England Art 25. the Article it self is this Art 25. of the Church of England Sacraments ordained of Christ be not onely badges c. as before There are two Sacraments ordained of Christ our Lord in the Gospel that is to say baptism and the supper of the Lord. Those five commonly called Sacraments that is to say Confirmation Pennance Orders Matrimony Extream● Vnction are not ●● be counted for Sacraments of the Gospel being such as have grow● partly of the corrupt following of the Apostles partly are states of life allowed in the Scripture b●● yet have not like nature of Sacraments with baptisme and the Lords supper for that they have not any visible sign or Ceremony ordained of God Quest. 6. Whether the effect of the Sacraments depend upon the worthiness of the Minister The Church of Rome makes the being of the Sacrament depend upon the Priests good meaning and his true Latine and some among us would have the effect or fruit of the Sacrament hang upon the Ministers holy living concluding that baptisme either wholly null or in part void that is ●administred by an evil or scandalous person but both are besides the truth For 1. Sacraments are administred onely in the name of Christ from him they have their power by his authority according to his word in his name are they they dispensed and therefore their efficacy depends not upon the power of any created being 2. Sacraments under the Law depended not upon the merits of the Minister Circumcision was a token of the Covenant and was equally in that respect a visible sign powerful in it self to declare the circumcised to be one of Gods people and give him an interest to the priviledges of the Sons of God who ever it was a good or bad Officer that cut off the foreskin therefore baptisme now is of force for the same use howbeit a scandalous Person apply it 3. By this we should never have certainty of a Sacrament there is no man but hath sin more or less in him and so according to his sin the Sacraments would be more or less ineffectual however in all there would be some hinderance and since the heart of man is deceitful we might call in Question our baptisme for he might be an hypocrite that is a notorious sinner that baptized us Without Question this doctrine was never so much sown without assistance from Rome whose doctrine in this particular is near to this in regard that she makes the Sacraments to depend upon the intention of the giver the people must either doubt at all times or act implicite faith for ever according to her tenents And he that is of the judgement that Sacraments depends upon the merit of man as it derogates from Christs honour so it takes from the conscience all peace and settlement why sho●ld I prepare for the Lords supper since all will not availe me if the Minister be not Holy and we can never be perswaded of the great benefit of that ordinance nor receive comfort from it sin being in the best 4. The
part of the substance of that Sacrament for when the Minister dipping the infant in water or laying of water upon the face of it hath pronounced these words I baptize thee in the name of the Father c. the infant is fully and perfectly baptized so as the sign of the Cross being afterwards used doth neither adde any thing to the vertue or perfection of baptisme nor being omitted doth detract any thing from the effect and substance of it 2. It is apparent in the Common Prayer book that the infant babtized is by vertue of baptisme before it be signed with the sign of the Cross received into the Congregation of Christs stock as a perfect member thereof and not by any power ascribed unto the sign of the Cross. So that for the very remembrance of the Cross which is very precious to all them that rightly believe in Jesus Christ and in the other respects mentioned the Church of England hath retained still the sign of it in baptisme following herein the primitive and Apostolical Churches and accounting it a lawful outward Ceremony and honourable badge whereby the infant is dedicated to the service of him who dyed upon the Cross as by words used in the book of Common Prayer it may appear Lastly The use of the sign of the Cross in baptisme being thus purged from all Popish superstition and errour and reduced in the Church of England to the primary institution of it upon those true rules of doctrine concerning things indifferent which are consonant to the word of God and the judgements of all the Ancient Fathers we hold it the part of every private man both Minister and others reverently to retain the true use of it prescribed by publick authority considering that things of themselves indifferent do in some sort alter their nature when they are either commanded or forbidden by a lawfull Magistrate and may not be omitted at every mans pleasure contrary to the Law when they be commanded nor used when they are prohibited The usual Objection against this harmless Ceremony is this Viz. what need is there of it but if Magistrates should not establish Lawes until every one of their Subjects were rationally convinced of their necessity when should there be Lawes made and many that makes this a sufficient Argument against the Crosse in Baptisme may remember that when they had power and fate at the Helm there were many things commanded of which we might have said What need they To conclude what ever is established by lawful Magistrates we are not to inquire the Reason of it Reason and Religion commanding us to obey without all Dispute for the Lords sake There being many things in the Church of Christ of themselves low and poor yet in regard of others so necessarie that she may say of them as our Saviour said of the Asse The Lord hath need of them Courteous Reader THis following Chapter was not so fully Preached as here handled in regard that the Iniquitie of the Times wherein these things were taught would from this chiefly have concluded the Preachers Malignancy whereby he should have been Crucified by an Ordinance By vertue of that Rule estote prudentes Matthew 10.16 it was passed over in a few words and they so clouded that it might have appeared the Preacher was not willing to be throughly understood CHAP. III. Of Confirmation THis is not here handled as a Sacrament but is placed as the space between the Font and the Table it being a most solemn Ordinance that the Baptized as in the ancient Churches was to be partaker of before he might be admitted to the Sacracrament of the Lords Supper Before we go any further it is necessary to speak something touching the rise of this word Confirmation in the Church which was briefly this In the Primitive Church when there were any persons wiling to imbrace the Christian Faith whether Iewes or Infidels they were not by and by admitted into the Priviledges of the Church but by certain ●teps or degrees set their foot therein 1. By hearing they were admitted to the hearing of the Word taught Catechized or Expounded which was common to them with men of all kinds whether Christians or not yet these were more particularly regarded by the Church and were called Audientes 2. By Catechizing having heard in common with others some grounds of the true faith and liked it they were after admitted in ● peculiar way and performing some Ceremony were admitted both to hear and see more in the Church then the Audientes were had the Principles of Religion taught them by eminent men purposely thereunto appointed who were called Catechista and their Disciples Catechum●ni Hence it is said that Theophilus is said to be instructed or as the word Originally is Catechized in the things of Christ 1 Luke 4. 3. By requesting that is having been Catechized and making good progress in the Christian principles and desireing to be owned as professors of the same they desired and required the Sacrament of baptisme which they did by giving in their names to the officers of the Church forty dayes before Easter that and Whitsunday being the publick dayes appointed by the Church for baptizing the Catechumeni and in regard of their number these two dayes being insufficient they set the two days following each of the former for that service apart from this giveing in their names they were called competentes quia nomina dederunt ad baptismum eum simul petebant 4. By baptizing after this upon the aforesaid dayes they were brought to the font or Baptistery and publickly and severally asked Credis in D●um Patrem Believest thou in God the Father c. the party said Credo c. So was baptized and called hence baptizati and looked upon as Members of the body of Christ yet incompleate and imperfect that is weak Christians being newly born 5. By confirming that is having been baptized and so owned as visible Members of the Church they were brought before the Bishop or chief Officer of the place and before him openly making a declaration of his faith and resolution to walk in the same was confirmed by a solemn calling upon God in prayer unto which was annexed the outward sign of imposition of hands by the Bishop that God would strengthen and confirm the baptized in that faith wherein he was baptized and whereof he had made profession after which prayer and imposition of hands he was declared a perfect Church Member that is fitted for the receiving of all Church priviledges particularly the Sacrament of the supper unto which the Church in this had a peculiar respect which is a great confirmer of the faith of the Saints Hence they were called Fideles and were of full age men in Christ Iesus and received Imposition of hands signifying that the Lord blessed them ut pleni Christiani inveniantur This is confirmation and laid down by the Apostle as a Christian Principle
H●b 6 2. after baptisme which in all ages of the Church it followed We must note that though we have mention onely of the Ad●lt or those that were converted to the Christi●n faith when they came to years of discretion yet the children o● believing Parents were baptized in their Infancy and 〈◊〉 and confirmed ●s the other were before they were owned as compleate Members fit to receive all the Ordinances of the Church particularly the Lords supper As no Ordinance in itself though never so pure necessary and holy but hath been corrupted through the vanity and sinfulness of men this Ordinance among others hath groaned under great abuses 1. By Remanists Rome hath made it a Sacrament preferred it before and above baptisme vel quia à dignioribus datur in digniore parte corp●ris seilicet in fronte vel forte quia majus augmentum virtutum praestet licet baptismus plus ad remissionem valeat And besides prayer and laying on of hands there m●st be anointing with Oyle during the pronouncing of these words Consigno te signo crucis Confirme te Chrismate salusis in nomine patris c. Without all this there is no confirmation contrary and besides the Primitive institution of this Ordinance 2. By male contents there are ever some that will be against rule and order except they be the only men to rule themselves this was in several places of this Land called down as Popish and Antichristian and that imposition of hands did cease with the Apostles themselves whereby the governours of his Church though commanded by Law to their duty in reverence to this Ordinance the Bishop being every third year required in this visitation to confirm all that were trained up in the faith and the Ministers of every Parish to take care to prepare all of years and understanding for confirmation against the visitation yet some Ministers neglecting their duty in this particular and others calumniating it there wanted heads whereon to lay on hands in many places and since our late grannd defection from all order it hath been quite laid aside in all places and not so much as thought on among believers though it be a principle of our belief Yet the deadness of this age hath done so much good as to give the Alarum and cause three great Champions to arm themselves for the reviving of this ordinance and defend the purity and necessity of the same in three excellent treatises and laying it down as a sin expedient to remove our distempers learnedly and largely Whatever Rome doth to exalt this Ordinance in a superstitious manner or discontented persons to debase it in a prophane manner yet being of God let us in a few words see 1. It s Nature 2. It s End 3. Resolve some Questions SECT I OF its Nature we have spoken already yet for clearer illustration take this Description It is a holy Ordinance whereby the baptized after a publick profession of his Faith is declared a perfect Member of the Church and blessed by solemn Prayer and laying on of hands This Description needs no particular Explication to them that have read what before hath been written therefore we shall wave that for the present and consider 1. That the Church of England will have none confirmed but such as can rehearse the Creed the Lords Prayer the ten Commandements and answer to such Questions of the Church Catechisme as shall be put to him and none if possible to be unconfirmed that can do it 2. That the Baptized have witnesses of this his Confirmation it is not inexpedient if they be the same that were at his Baptisme 3. That at the laying on of hands this Prayer is to be made by the Bishop Defend O Lord this Childe with thy heavenly Grace that he may continue thine for ever and daily increase in thy holy Spirit more and more untill he come to thy everlasting Kingdome Amen Whether his Ordinance belongs to the Bishop in particular to perform or whether it is common to him with other Presbyters is too high a question for us to discuss Yet by Antiquity it seems to be the Bishops Right and learned men h●ve defended it what ever the Guisell say to the contrary Calvin himself being witness 4. Imposition or laying of hands is of great Antiquity in the Church of Christ as hath been above ●roved in the Chapter of Ordination and is an essential outward Rite at this Ordinance also Heb. 6.2 Acts 8.17 It is a usual Ceremony bo●h in the Old and New Testament and to the case in hand by it or with it did our Saviour bless the children that were bro●ght unto him Marke 10.16 SECT II. The Ends for whi●h his Ordinance is appointed are briefly these 1. For the f●rther st●●ngthning of the baptized in the Faith of Christ ●he Holy G●●st wa● given by the l●y●ng on of the hands Acts 8.17 and ●ho●gh ●hat visible w●y and miraculous long since ceased yet th●t invi●●ble w●y of sanctifying the ●oul and streng●hing of the faith of ●he ba●tized is no● ceased b●t may an● d●th accompany this Ordin●nce as Prayer Reading Hearing and o●her Ordinances do 2 To Capacitate the baptized for the Lords Supper this is t●● top-stone of Christian Perfection in a visible way to approach that Table unto which Confirmation gives a real right and more proximate then Baptisme 3. It dischargeth the witnesses at Baptisme of that Engagement they then made for the baptized He now engageth himself personally to walk in the Faith and promises for himself before the Church to live accordingly they have brought him up in the Faith and by his Declaration there is declared that they have done what they promised and he himself now q●itt●th ●hem For which cause as we said before it is not inconvenient if the Baptismal witnesses be the confirming that they may see themselves discharged and be witnesses to ●i● of it 4. To remove or prevent the coming of the ignorant and scandalous to the Lord Supper i.e. aliquo modo some manner of way It is ordered by the Church and rightly That none communicate at the Supper but such as h●ve been confirmed which would make Parents more careful of their Childrens Education an they themselves if they have any discretion to be more heedful of their wayes Great a doe was made by some pretending purity concerning the celebration of the Ordinance of the Supper though they never went about to give it Admit the Aged was as they set them forth yet the younger sort might have been looked after and by this Ordinance of Confirmation might not onely have brought them to be worthy Receivers but the Aged to have become knowing and Penitents But now I remember this Ordinance of Confirmation favoured of the Common-Prayer and they were very tender-nosed though very hard-handed and hard-mouthed too they were not able once in seven year to say the Lords Prayer and yet the Common-Prayer at least
general 1 Cor. 14.40 and kneel accordingly 2. It is an humble gesture The ancients worshipped God often by prostration signifying how unworthy they were to stand in his presence who was the God of the whole Earth that is now out of use yet the signification of the same excellently held up by genuflexion by bowing we signifie our apprehension of his great and infinite Majesty 3. It is a sitting gesture This Sacrament is given by the Church with a charge to pray and if the Communicant have a conscience he will pray now let the Scripture be searched the Saints practice be inquired after and what gesture is fitter for prayer then kneeling It is true that usually we sit when we pray at meat yet to reason from a prayer in private business to one that is annexed to Gods solemn worship will not in all things hold and if it should we are not pleading the necessity of kneeling but its lawfulness 4. It is of all gestures the most suitable to behold a sinner where God is and he in Christ where Christ is and he by the spirit sealing to a poor soul and holding forth a pardon what is more agreeable to the nature of the thing then the sinner to receive that pardon upon his knees If it here be said that sitting signifies familiarity with God we can easily Answer that many are more bold with God then welcome and this familiarity is a figure of their own election the true Christian had rather shew his humility And when they have searched they will find that in Gods house sitting is not very often used in the time of prayer with which that Ordinance is to be received The Church of Rome useth it also though Originally she never begot it it being a gesture almost as old if not altogether as Christianity yet we must dispise it no more then throw away a Communion cloth which is decent and harmless though the Papist have it and even so is this though at Rome it be practised These things considered let iniquity stop her mouth and bring no rayling accusation against the piety dignity of the Church of England for ordaining her members to kneel at that Ordinance that gesture being by law established No Minister when he celebrateth the Communion shall willingly Administer the same to any but such as kneel under pain of suspension nor under the like pain to any that refuse to be present at publick prayers c. Quest. 4. Whether it be expedient to keep prefixed times for Administration of the Communion and if offerings be lawfull When the Church appoints this Sacrament to be received at such a day of the moneth or at such a time of the year it is not because those times or dayes are more holy then others but for other reasons the Communion in it self being often to be taken the Church may prefix a time as the first day of every moneth and it is expedient that it be so 1. For Orders sake to keep decency and to prevent confusion it is and may be ordained that the Communion be thrice in the year received and Easter to be one of the times which tends to the Churches Order as much as families dineing together at or about noon an ancient and old practice Gen. 43.16 2. For travellers sake when men are upon ●heir lawful occasions distanant from home and knowing a time before them wherein the Communion will be delivered in all places his devotion may stir him up to preparation and that to a conscionable conversation which could not be done if it were left to the pleasure of every Minister for so thousands might go long without receiving that holy thing whose zeal and piety might carry them forth to a reverent and frequent breaking of that bread and drinking of that cup. 3. For the ignorants sake The Minister may be more suddain in his warnings then some peoples preparation will permit and again more slow then their zeal will allow which inconvenience is preventented by a prefixed time in regard of which the ignorant may be before hand prepareing and at the time be fully prepared 4. For the Churches sake Subjects will keep the days of their Princes inauguration and people the times wherein they obtained some notable victory or great deliverance the Iew will keep in memory the days of Purim may not the Church in memorial of her Saviours resurrection from the dead as at Easter appoint her Members to partake of that Ordinance without being railed at If it be said she hath no Commindement from the Lord for so doing let them know she hath no Commandement from the Lord against it in time and the thing commanded is the very mind of the Lord in nature moreover she doth not do it through necessity but for decency 5. For the Lords sake we may see by woful experience that since these prefixed times were not thought suitable there hath in most places been no time wherein this Sacrament was thought seasonable Our Saviour joyned to it a Remember yet of all Ordinances it was most forgot by Ministers in their Pulpits and by people in closets It was very observable that in the most populous places and Parishes the drunkards complained most of the want of this Ordinance I always took it to be of God good ministers said nothing nor good people that is such as were so accounted God would have it spoke on and therefore opened the mouths of these Asses to reprove the madness of these Prophets hoping for better things we leave them to speak something touching Offerings or Oblations given to the Minister by the people at the times of Communion These are both ancient and laudable and a high part of Gods service and worship whom we are bound to honour with our substance commanded in the Law Ex. 25.2 confirmed by our Savior Math. 5.23 And all the precepts of that Sermon must be kept under the Gospel Math. 5.19 and the wise men shewed their respect to Christ by their offerings Though they be acceptable at any time for they were free-will offerings yet at some time they have been more necessary As 1. When the Church was in want when there was no stock nor treasure in the hands of the Church Officers to furnish the Church with those things it wanted Ex. 35.4 2. When we have received some signal and eminent blessing from God Psal. 76.11 3. When holy and solemn Festivals are to be kept when the three high feasts of the Lord were to be performed of which the Paschal or Easter was one None must appear before him empty-handed Deut. 16.16 but must bring gifts or offerings partly for the Sacrificia and partly for provision for the Levites from which rule the Churches of Christ of old came not to the Sacrament of the Supper empty-handed but brought an offering to the Lords servant filling or putting into his hand a temporal blessing who had filled their hand with spiritual food Quest. 5.
or Superiours 1. Tim. 2.1 There are five sorts of persons cheifely need our prayers and we sin if they want our charity when we aproach the throne of God they are Magistrates or Princes Ministers or Evangelists Apostates or backsliders Heathens or Idolaters Saints or Religious 1. For Kings Magistrates or Princes whether we be under good or bad governours that God that hath set them over us commands prayer for them from us 1 Tim. 2.1 good men have done it for wicked cruel and Idolatrous Princes Gen. 20.17 Dan. 4.19 Dan. 6.21 also for good kings 1 King 1.29 and thy are the sonnes of Belial that do it not For 1. Their frailties and Imper●ections stand in need of it kings are but men in nature and have their failings witnesse Davids Ambition Hezekias forgetfullnesse Iosias rashnesse and Solomons wantonnesse Non tutum est semper bonum dare consilium Regibus was an old saying 2. Their dangers and their labours to procure our good deserves it they are higher then others so their care is greater then others no crown but hath its crosse if not visibly to their subjects yet sensibly to themselves Bonus Rex servus est publicus It was a true speech and had much under it that was uttered by the Emperour Trajan that the Sea and the Empire were pleasant to look upon but troublesome and dangerous to be upon 3. Our Christian profession binds us to it If we would not be thought to be infringers of the laws and examples Ch●ist and his Saints have layd before us we are not to forget our Soveraign when we minde our selves and justly may God shut that part of our prayer from him that is not attended with this piece of loyalty We may think it a slight matter to oppose magistracy but God is strong and mighty to uphold his own ordinance and through justice seldome can we see Traitors go in peace to their graves Scripture shews us that Zimry had no peace who slew his master 2 Kings 9.31 and though they should scape on earth first or last they shall receive damnation Rom. 13.2 This is a scripture truth and a secure or deluded conscience shall never be able to ward its blows Let a prince be a hunter after Innocent blood Let him be a known Hypocrite Let it be known that God hath forsaken him let it be known that an evil and wicked spirit possesses him let it be known that God hath designed another to succeed hi● all which we know to be true of Saul yet who can put forth his hand against him and be guiltlesse seeing he is the Lords annointed 1 Sam. 26.9 Every true Christian will pray with David the Lord forbid that I should v. 11. The Macedonians had a law that condemned and put to death five of their nearest kinred that were once convicted of treason In a word our goods our bodys our lives and our pray●rs are to be laid out in the service of our Prince or else we are traitors to the King of Kings and may be punished by his deputy here on earth 4. The good or the evil that they may be the cause of may force us to i● An oversight in the general may ruine a whole army a single errour in the pilot may sinke a rich ship Kings and princes like great oaks if they fall will spoyle thousands of the lower shrubs that are about them they are the eyes of the nations to prevent dangers and perceive conveni●nces It went ill with him in scripture that cryed out My head My head 2 King 4 19. Regis ad exemplum totus componit●r orbis It is observable in sacred writing that Israel after their rebellion from the house of David never had good Kings all of them being successively wicked which made the people desperatly prophane untill God swept all away for ever but in the house of Iudah which did cleave to the house of David we find good Princes making their people good and sometimes wicked Princes makeing their people sinners such influence hath the lives of Princes upon the practises of their subjects which consideration will make the Christian pray for his soveraigns happinesse 5. Their true title and lawfull succession calls for it since in their persons they must dye like men to avoyd future danger we are to pray for their successours that God would out of their loyns raise up seed to sit upon the throne the first Saint we find praying for a King is Abraham and his prayers are for the Kings seed Gen. 20.17 a local alleigance we owe to every Prince in whose country we are ●nd a natural to that Soveraign under whom we are born ' a great part of which consists in this doing for Abraham was a stranger and a sojourner in Gerar when he prayed for posterity to King Abimelech 6. The best of Saints both to the good and wicked Kings have done it 1 King 1.34 1 Sam. 10.24 2 King 11.12 Act. 28.29 Vivat Rex or regnes in aeternum was a usuall complement the Pinces of Persia gave their Heathen kings D●● 5. 10. Dan. 6 6. the same is used by Daniel A man greatly beloved then to the same kings and by all true subjects to this day throughout the world whether Christian or Heathen Dij te serv●nt was the Romans prayer at the Installment of their Emperours D●j te servent Feliciter Imperator es cumfilio im peres was the prayer of the inhabitants of Tysdrum when Gordianus was proclaimed Emperor Antonie Pie Dij te servent Antonie Cl●ments Dij te servent Antonie Clemens Dij te servent vincis Inimicos hostes exuperas Dij te tuentur did the Roman Senators cry out having read some letters from Antonius their Emperour and God save the K●ng was the usual petiton of the Hebrews at the anoynting of their Kings and the same is the acclamation of the Ch●istian at the Co●onation of their Princes What shall we say since the days of Gambrivins who according to Authors was the first that ever ware a crown or royall Diademe never had people mor● reason to pray Give the King thy judgments O God then the people of these nations and for such as do is not let them know that the subjects of the South shall rise up in judgment against them and condemne them at the last 2. Ministers pastors or Evangelists must be partakers of our prayers and ought to be remembered of us when we appea● before God When those Cedars as Sylvarus and Timotheus men of the highest rank seeme to be pilla●s in the ca●t●h of God want the prayers of the people and call for it 1 Thes. 5.25 Rom. 15.30 Ephes. 6.18 19. Heb. 13.18 P●il 1.19 shall others that are but as shrubs and in comparison of them seem to be but smal pins in the temple of the Lord go without our prayers These things ought not so 〈◊〉 b● For 1 Of all men they have the greatest discouragements in the works of their
because the most fresh colour is soonest apt to fade we must pray that they may be alwayes plump and wel-favoured For 1 They pray for us to be sure they make supplication and prayer for all men knowing that it is acceptable in the sight of God our Father 1 Tim. 2.1 3. And if there be anything pure lovely or of good report as this is they think on these things Let us therefore shew so much kindnesse to our friends as to Pray for them again and love them in some degree at least that loveth us so much left the Publicans come and take our reward from us 2 They are the very pillars of the world Psal. 753. In some sence the earth is not hanged upon nothing and in another heaven moves not by intelligences the Saint keeps all up take them out of the world then it is like Lot out of Sodome remove them from the earth then it is like Moses separate from the congregation of Cora when these are gathered together then comes the end let prayers therfore be made that that they may be strong in the faith strengthened with all might That they may be stedfast unmoveable alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord 1 Cor. 15.58 That they may be filled with the fulnesse of God Eph. 3.19 And that they may be perfect and compleat in all the will of God Gal. 4.12 3 They are the Teachers and Doctors of the world It is they that teach their Children what the Lord hath done for them they are Schoolmasters leading the age wherein they are to Christ by the word of his grace and washing with water It is they that speakes of the Law when they rise up and when they lye down and are ever mindfull of his Covenant we are therefore to pray That as strangers and Pilgrims they would abstaine from fleshly lusts 1 Pet. 2.11 That the manifestation of the spirit might be given to every man to profit withall 1 Cor. 12.7 And that they might seek to excell to the edifying of the Church 1 Cor. 14.12 And grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ. 4 They are not without their faillings they see but in part and known but in part and their unbelief would be helped The time is not yet come wherein they shall know as they are known feares passions troubles sometimes interposeth themselves between them and ●aven and their graces suffers an Ecclipse and this ●● to be observed and prayer offered up that they might have life more abundantly Iohn 10.10 That they might be enriched by him in all utterance and in all knowledge and that they might come behind in no gift 1 Cor 1.5 7. And that their faith might grow exceedingly and that the Charity of everyone towards each other might abound 2 Thes. 1.3 For these several kind of persons ought prayers to be put up whether they be our friends or foes whether good or bad whether tyrants or scandelous their office their danger their condition requires it Yet in supplication against evil we must not forget to justifie God in sending that evil but must confesse that we have sinned and have committed iniquty and have done wickedly and have rebelled Dan. 9.5 And in postulation to obtain mercy alwayes remember with Josephs Brethren to bring double money in our hands thanks to pay for the last mercy we did receive and faith to obtaine that me cy that for the present we come to crave For know in every thing therefore in prayer We are to give thanks 1 Thes. 5.18 SECT VI. When God brought his people out of Egypt he gave them a cloudy pillar to be their guide to prevent their wandering Neb. 9.19 In our passing unto heaven we are to observe a rule or we shall easily loose our way It is not our own good meaning that will defend or justifie evill practises though a string much harped upon in our dayes for the case in hand we are not only to pray but to pray ●fter this manner John 6.9 For as good intentions never justifie bad actions so unsavory or uncharitable petitions will never be tollerated or allowed through a good meaning The rule o● prayer is twofold 1 More generall that is the whole Scriptures of God 2 More particular the prayer composed by the Son of God commonly called the Lords prayer and commonly refused by the ungodly Saints of this generation and not without reason as by and by shall be seen 1. We shall first speake of the generall rule which is the scriptures and in them we have seven things which may be our rule in prayer 1. The precepts that are enjoyned therein what ever duty we find God obliging his people to performe whether moral or ceremonial we may make either of them rules for our prayers and what ever grace tends to the right performing of it or quickening up the he●rts of men to do it may be lawfully called for if morall for the thing it self directly as for knowledge that we may love him or if Ceremonial for the thing signified as circumcised eares and hearts that we may be his people 2. The promises that are made therein what ever God promised to give his people or his Church in generall or whatever concerned the soul in particular or the body in things necessary for his promising David a Kingdome in special is no rule to us we may pray for the same thing as for raine in its season Zac. 10.1 and for a new heart and new spirit Ezek. 36.26 3. The threatenings that are denounced therein what ever judgment God threatens for sin in general or for any sin in particular it is lawfull for us to pray against that punishment in the commission of that particular sin It is therefore agreeable to the Scriptures to beg that God would not dispise our feast dayes not our solemn assemblies though we have sinned against him Amos 5.21 4. The providence observed therein when we see God in out-goings giving to this or that Saint such a particular grace sutable to the place wherein he put him or drawing him out of that misery this or that way wherein he was pleased to cast him this may be a rule for us to pray accordingly so Magistrates may pray for wisdome 1 King 3.9 and subjects to be delivered from all that oppresse them 5. The protestations that are declared therein what ever it be that God for the vindication of his honour or exaltation of his grace hath declared to the sonnes of men in reference to their sins or soules to there temporall or eternall estate may be eyed by us in our prayers and therefore boldly may we aske that we dye not the death though we be sinners Ezek. 33.11 6. The expostulations that are found therein We find the Almighty chiding and checking men for their wilfulnesse lazinesse idlenesse and prophannesse which humbly we may make use of in our pleadings with God thus Ierusalem may pray that suddenly
she may be made clean Ierem. 13.27 7. The Saints practises that are recorded therein What ever we find the Saints prayed for and were answered ether ad voluntatem or ad utilitatem whether to their will or to their well may be a rule for us to pray by and therefore we may pray to be delivered from unreasonable men 2 Thes. 3.2 or the buffetings of Satan 2 Cor. 12.8 2. We come now to the particular rule Which is that prayer composed by Christ and recommended to his Apostles as a prayer Luk. 11.2 and to be a rule and standard of all other prayers Mat. 6.9 Unto which rule scale or ballance should we bring most of their prayers and petitions who refused this form and rule especialy those that had reference to things lately acted upon the stage of these Kingdomes and the reason why they did so pray we might write over them and upon them MENE TEKEL Dan. 5.25 26. In this rule or pattern of prayer their are four things to be observed 1. The Preface or Introduction to the whole prayer In these words Our Father which art in heaven 2. The substance or the petitions themselves which are asked in that prayer In these words Hallowed be thy name c. 3. the greatnesse or excellency of the person unto whom that prayer is directed In these words For thine is the kingdome c. 4. The confidence of the petitioner to be heard in the things prayed for In this word Amen All which in generall shews 1. That we are to make a holy decent and honourable entrance or preface unto our prayers It is but blunt to hear men bolt forth thir petitions without giving God some holy title as Almighty God or holy and gracious Lord or Eternal God A Centurion beseeched him saying Lord I have a servant lieth at home sick of the palsie c. Math. 8.6 2. That when we come and appear before God we are not alwayes to be swelling in titles but have some enlargement by way of request contrary to the practise of some in our days that pretend they do appeare before God and speake of high things yet as if it were below them they will aske nothing of him but let us do otherwise for we have not been so learned by Christ. 3. That when we come to God to receive from him we are not to go from his presence except something be given to him from us we are at least to be thankfull unto him which is done when we divest our selves of all power worth and merit ascribing all the glory unto him 4. He that prays ought not to waver or be regardlesse but full of faith and desire to obtaine the things he openeth his mouth unto the Lord for and faithfully as well as heartily say Amen But to be more particular In the preface there are two things by which our prayers are to be ruled 1. What God is Our Father 2. Where God is which art in heaven He that comes to God must not only know that God is that is that there is a God of himself but also what God is to him as that he is his Father which is by Christ and neither can he so call him but by the spirit So that the three persons in the Trinity must be all believed by him that would pray as he ought Again God being our Father teacheth us 1. To love him 2. To fear him 3. To obey him 4. To honour him 5. To depend upon him 6. To love and pray for each other 2. Though it be said he is in heaven we are no to suppose he is confined there as if he were not upon the Earth for as a King though he be in all parts of all dominions by vertue of his laws and officers yet chiefly and in a more eminent and majestick way he is at the Court. So is God our Father said to be in heaven being there in his greatest glory Majesty and Dignity From this we learn 1. That we pray to none but to them whom we are assured to be in heaven It is foolish to pray to them of whom we have no certainty that ever they were and dangerous to pray to them of whom we have no great hopes that they are in heaven In both these respects therefore the Church of Rome had better reforme her self that her prayers may be answered 2. That we pray to none in heaven but to them that begat us to our Father only are we to pray now all others that are therein both Angels and men acknowledged themselves to be our fellow servants and therefore though in heaven not to be prayed unto 3. To have no earthly Imagination or thought in our heart in the time of prayer whether in respect of the glorious Trinity whom we pray to or of our selves or others whom we pray for As heaven is in our mouth so it ought to be in our affections 4. To have raised desires lifted up hearts all the time of prayer Heaven is high above us and we must lift up the voyce of our soul to be heard by our Father there and truly men ought so to compose their prayers in the length of them as not to destroy their own or their peoples fervency a thing not much noted and observed in our days 5. To be ever disposed and and fitted for prayer where ever we are in what place or dungeon we be God is above and heaven is above our fathers mansion house so that no time shall we misse of him nor no time shall he be from home 6. To have ever a strong confidence and faith to be heard in prayer Men may hinder much good doing upon the earth and may encompasse the Saint like bees then his hope is this that their hands are but short they cannot keep his prayers from ascending and therefore with confidence he may send them up 2 The next considerable thing in this prayer are the petitions that are in it In number they are six as Hallowed be thy name c. From them in generall we learn 1. To pray for things of moment and of weight All the petitions are of great concernment and indeed necessary to come to God begging trifles is below his Majesty and Grandour a D●is nihil pretendum nisi bona simpliciter 2. To pray for nothing but what is good There is nothing in the petitions that is hurtfull either for the soul or body of man this should learn us to be farre from cursing or wishing evill to any person and indeed the curse may fall upon them that makes it he whom thou art so cursing may be praying Let him curse O Lord but blesse thou If this part of prayer had been eyed by many there had not been so many uncharitable petitions put up as there was These six petitions divide themselves into two parts Three of them concerns God Hallowed be thy name c. Three of them concerns man Give us this day our