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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

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receive the seed upon good ground thus to know is only Life eternal he that thus knoweth shall no longer be called a Servant but a Brother a Sister and a Mother to Christ Iesus Matth. 12.50 SECTION II. THe next thing to be opened is to discover what it is to be well acquainted with the holy Scriptures this appears by what hath been already spoken yet for further demonstration to be acquainted with the word of Christ is 1. To know it from all other sayings of the world we are to know the very face of Scripture in the greatest croud of the wisest Sentences and know it from all the wisdom of the gravest Fathers For 1. We cannot otherwise reverence it as we ought we are to tremble at the word of God Isa. 66.2 There is such a Majesty in the word that we are to esteem the very feet of him beautifull that brings it when the voice of God soundeth in our ears if we cannot discern the Royaltie that is in it we are not like to esteem it as we ought or as God requires 2. We cannot otherwise believe it as we ought by not knowing it we may be drawn to doubt of the truth of it in discourses while men are dehorting from this or that vice or exhorting to this or that duty and intermingling either threats or promises the truth of both may be doubted either to the hardening of men in their sin or to cool their affections to the duty 2. To bear it in our mind above all other things in the world our hearts must love it above all see that our thoughts affections our desires our meditations be busied about the nature of it precepts of it promises of it and what ever we forget let us never forget his precepts Psal. 119 93. Let us make it our Companion by meditating upon it all the day ver 97. 3. To make it the Rule of our lives above all other things some walk after the ways of Ierobuam others after the counsel of the ungodly some r●ns with a multitude to do evil others walk after their own inventions many walks after the flesh others according to the Prince of the power of the ayr the Spirit that now worke●h in the children of disobedience But we have a more sure word whereunto they do well that take heed as unto a light in a dark place until the day dawn and the day-star arise in your hearts 2 Pet. 1.19 And as many as walk according to this rule peace be on them and mercy Gal. 6.16 make the word therefore a Lamp unto thy feet and a light unto thy paths and then thou art acquainted with it SECTION III. WE are now to confirm the Doctrine by other places of Scripture in the doing we might muster up Legions of Arguments we shall content our selves with a few such as these viz. Among other warnings given the people of Israel there is one Deut. 11.18 to take heed that they served not other Gods Therefore ye shall lay up these words in your heart saith the Lord and in your soul ●ind them for a sign upon your hand that they may be as Frontle●s between your eyes and ye shall teach them your children speaking of them when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the way when thou liest down and when thou risest up and thou shalt write them upon the door posts of thine house and upon thy gates c. All which put together as laying the word up in their heart and soul teaching it their children always speaking of them it will amount to as much and hold forth the same thing the Doctrine doth We read again Deut. 31.11 12. that men women and children and the stranger that is in Israel must be gathered together That they may bear and that they may learn and fear the Lord God and observe to do all the words of the Law All sorts of persons must hear the Law learn it and observe it Also Iosh. 8.35 There was not a word of all that Moses commanded which Joshua read not before all the congregation of Israel with the women and the little ones and the strangers that were conversant among them Here the above mentioned Law is put in execution and performed by Ioshua no doubt but for the same end which the Lord commanded by Moses which was that they might learn to do accordingly The same did Iosiah 2 Kings 23.1 2. Who sent and they gathered unto him all the elders of Judah and Jerusalem And the King went up into the house of the Lord and all the men of Judah and all the inhabitants of Jerusalem with him and all the Priests and Prophets and all the people both small and great and he read in their ears all the words of the book of the Covenant so did Ezra Nehem. 8.2 3. It is a great charge in the Gospel to search the Scripture Iohn 5.39 and all as new born babes are to desire the sincere milk of the word 1 Per. 2.2 We cannot be ignorant that the man that would be blessed ought to have his delight in the Law of the Lord and in his Law doth he meditate day and night Psal. 1.2 Behold I come quickly saith Christ Blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the Prophesse of this Book Rev. 22.7 These Laws and Precepts were never yet revoked and therefore they st●nd in full force and vertue signifying that it is the duty of all to have knowledge of and to be well acquainted with the word of God the Text it self seems to be Imperative Imperative praeceptionis Let nothing that is let neither Doctrine nor person whatsoever hinder the word of Christ from dwelling in you what means then the bleating of the sheep nay rather the lowing of the oxen in our ears nay rather the barking of Dogs against this Truth Beware of Digs Phil. 2. He that barks against the Scripture against the whole Scripture surely denies that Christ is come in the flesh and therefore is an Antichrist nay denies that there is a God and therefore is an Atheist For 1. It was Gods main drift purpose and intention in sending his Prophets and Ministers Rising up early and sitting up late giving precept upon precept line upon line Isa. 28.10 to have his people know his word and learn his Law 2. It was the end of Christs Incarnation and of his dwelling among men that his words might sink down into the hearts of men and possess their souls and spirits To this end was he born and for this cause he came into the world that he should bear witness to the truth Joh. 18.37 and the word of God is truth 3. It was the end of the Holy Ghost 〈◊〉 Inspiration when he inspired the Apostles in preaching and writing was it not for this that men might be saved by believing and obeying I write to you little children saith the beloved Apostle c. I write to you Fathers c. I write
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
In respect of its activity and singlenesse In cathechizing there are some called out for assistance the catechist hath not all the work but in preaching there is no second to assist that is a taske wherein none claims a share wherein none are co-workers but the preacher himself is the sole agent and efficient 3 In respect of its object and partys preaching reaches to all persons old or young knowing or not knowing high or low now catechizing is properly for the ignorant and unlearned 4 In their subjects and actions preaching is peculiar for the ministerial function catechizing proper to none but common to woman and man no sex but may have hand in this exercise of catechizing and no person is a tyed to it Quest. 2 Whether preaching be to be preferred before Catechizing There is a generation that supposes if a minister spend one half of the sabbath upon catechizing that it is through idlenesse and sloath whereas if Catechizing be soundly performed there is no labour nor study saved yea possibly more undergone Others again would make no account of preaching holding that a proper dish for a feast and not for ordinary fare conjectureing they are not blame-worthy if the ordinance of catechising go forward In humble submission it is thought they are both out of the way and besides the truth It is not safe to make the ordinances strive with each other or one to jostle out another to the purpose in hand let us distinguish of places and of persons 1 Some places are rude plaine and ignorant without much travel we may fall into country parishes whose ignorance is so grosse that it is incredible there Catechizing may be of much use and though they love it not it may do them most good 2 Some places are more orderly civil and knowing there may be populous places and parishes in which generally the people may be knowing and by reason of schooles and other advantages Catechizeing may go forward without much troubling the Minister In which places there is no losse if it yeild to preaching especially on the sabbath day lest the genrality of the people make no account of their assemb●ing together And as touching persons there are men whose parts and genius are not fit for Catechizing their excellency may ly in preaching others there are whose excellency may ly in Catechizing the fewnesse of ministers craves that that be done by which their genius and parts may do most good in the Church of Christ yet by experience I know shortnesse of dayes infirmity of body c. must and will cut one short the preheminence therefore is to be given to preaching for 1 That is the most powerfull way for the convincing of sinners the strength of rea●on and the force of application in a Sermon are powerfull meanes for the opening of the heart of man and causing him to see his errour which would from a Catechist be Improper 2 That was cheifely the practise of Christ and his Apostles he and they both went into the Synagogues and taught the people expounding Scriptures and setting them home to the eares and consciences of their people 3 Preaching is of most general concernment there are sins of the age and times wherein the Catechist may faile but preaching disclaiming these detecting those is most profitable there are providences sometime sad and sometimes cheerfull which is to be observed and noted and people taught accordingly these oftentimes may not fall under the cognisance of a Catechist and if they should he would put a block in his own way and give occasion of stumbling to them for whose sake Catechizing is most u●ed Moreover preaching extending it self largely meets with the tempers sinnes dispositions of most whereas a Catechisme t ys up and limits the Spirits of him that teacheth by it that he can reach but a few if any his office being only to lay down the truth touching some head of divinity to convince the understanding and no more 4 It puts a greater chearfullnesse in the spirits of the most knowing to come to Gods service when Christians have been in the days of their minority trained up in that way by question and answer To be kept continualy to it might flat their appetite and blunt the edge of their devotion especially in publick places where by relation in former times when Catechizing swallowed up preaching halfe the sabbath was loosly not to say prophanely kept and spent the Ministers gifts may not be for that service nor his parts though otherwise eminent for such teaching which may in time breed a slighting of him among his own people what gifts God gives to teachers by which they may most advance the end of teaching which is the edification of the Church those ought to be most exercised by them and by this rule men may know what is best to be done CHAP. II. Of Preaching WE come now to that ordinance which is the power of God unto Salvation though some in this age account it foolishness and vanity In this ordinance we shall see 1 The nature of it 2 The manner of it 3 The necessity of it 4 The ends of it 5 Resolve some Questions SECT I. This ordinance of preaching by which men are saved if they keep it in memory 1 Cor. 15.1 2. may be thus described 1. It is an opening expounding or unfolding the meaning of the Holy Ghost in Scripture 2. According to Scripture 3. And applying it for the edification of the Church or perfecting of the Saints 1. It is an openning expounding c. of the meaning of the holy Ghost in Scripture That the Scripture is the mind or meaning of the Holy Ghost is blasphemy once to be doubted Heb. 3.7 Acts 1.16 2 Pet. 1.21 and his expressions are sometimes so lofty and at other times so dark that the understanding of man is naturally ignorant of his purpose yea when highest not able throughly to apprehend his meaning Man may read all day at night lye down upon the restless bed of uncertainty not understanding the nature of the thing read Now preaching unfolds it expounds and interprets it gives the sence and meaning of the Spirit of God in it by which the hearts of the Elect are turned from the world unto God Acts 19.19 and made to burn towards God Luke 29.27 32. and go towards heaven with rejoycing Acts 8.35 39. 2. According to Scripture There are those that will expound the Scripture by their own fancies and make the Holy Ghost by an irreverent compulsion speak that which he never thought but what they would have others to believe such were the Pharisees of old Mat. 5. and such are our upstart Preachers now who assoon as they find some portion of Scripture that they can coulourably wrest for the defence of their own fancies immediately cry to their Proselites Rejoyce with us for we have found c. and where any appears that is not so easie to be drawn by the wier of their
Bread grows in and rises out of the Earth so did the body of Christ he brought it not with him from Heaven for it had its Original in the womb of the blessed virgin 2. Bread undergoe● much labour sown dyes quickens reaped threshed winnowed grinded kneaded baked Christ body under-went the like things It was sown in the womb of the Virgin by Devils and wicked men was he continually threshed and winowed he was grinded in the high priests hall knead in his Cross and Passion baked in the Oven of his Sepulchre and then presented upon this table as bread for his people 3. Bread is broken before it can be food for man men cannot eat whole loaves nor whole joynts it must therefore be broken into parts even so must he be broken upon the Cross in satisfying his Fathers justice before he can be compleat or perfectly made the Captain of our salvation 1 Cor. 11.24 not that properly he was broken on the Cross for that the Scripture should be fulfilled a bone of him shall not be broken Iohn 18.36 Ex. 12.46 Breaking is renting one part of a thing from another so was Christ soul rent from his body his blood rent from his flesh he was poured out like water all his bones were out of joynt his heart was like wax melted in the midst of his bowels without question then broken his bones might have been told they looked and stared upon him Psal. 22.14.17 4 ●read is common to all that are about a table none hath a propriety in it every one cuts sufficient for himself unto whom is the merits of the Lord limited have not all Saints since the Creation been feeding upon them and all that now are and all that shall be every one saying My Lord and my God and yet no scarcity nor absolute propriety but a holy Communion this was darkly represented ●y our Saviours birth what house in a City more common then an Inn and what place of an Inn more common then a stable shewing that the fowlest sinner he is ready to embrace cleanse and entertain 5. Bread naturally strengthens mans heart Psal. 104.15 hence it is called the staff of bread Isa 3.2 the main upholder of natural strength without which man would fall unto his first nothing Nothing more strengthens a drooping soul a doubting Christian then the application of the merits of Christ unto its heart by the holy Ghost with a morsel of this bread men may walk many dayes unto the mount of God 6. Bread is necessary for life so necessary that all things conducing to mans life are subordinate to it as the Reader may know by the Lords prayer if he have not forgot it or slights ●t because common Christ in us Our hope of glory is most necessary and as we know without food or bread we cannot live a natural life we ought to know without receiving of this Ordinance we have no ground to imagine that we shall live a spiritual We dayly hear men chiefly ministers complaining of their peoples Apostacy and yet since this Sacrament in its season was not presented to their faith which might be a strong means of confirming it is not to be wondered to see their people faint stagger and all for want of bread Further between the wine the outward sign and the blood of Christ the thing signified stands this proportion 1. Wine is the juice of ●he grape pressed out by the wine press so was Christ blood pressed out by the weights of his Fathers infinite justice Isa. 63.3 2. Wine comforteth the heart of man Psal. 104.15 the blood of Christ drank in faith in large spiritual draughts out of the vessel or chalice of this Ordinance with the mouth of the affections and received into the stomach of meditation will produce holy purposes and give good spirits to the languishing Christian. 3. Wine encourageth and emboldens It raiseth the spirits that are otherwise cast down and makes the Gyant himself to shout at the flight of his enemy it makes a man to forget trouble and sorrow Prov. 31.6 Ecles 19. Christs blood applied to the soul makes it exceeding bold to fight against principalities and powers it makes them that are of a fearful heart be strong saying fea● not Isa. 35.4 and emboldens it to come to the throne of grace Heb. 4.16 It makes the people to clap their hands and shout unto God with the voice of triumph Psal 47.1 4. Wine is of a healing nature Luke 10.34 the Samaritan poured in Wine with Oyle into the wounds of the bleeding traveller the bleeding wounds of an afflicted conscience know that the blood of Christ is of a Soveraign nature to preserve it from dying and yielding up the Ghost Rev. 22.2 From this Doctrine we may draw these inferences 1. When we see bread and wine and feel the comforts of the one and know the necessity of the other to think of Christ and the comforts to be had in his death and the necessity that lyeth upon believers to receive this Ordinance 2. To strive for a spiritual hunger in our approaching to the table of the Lord for otherwise there is no refreshment will be found at the receiving of this spiritual banquet 3. That the Church of Rome by her doctrine of transubstantiation takes away the beauty of this holy Ordinance robbing the people of the cup of the New Testament and by making or teaching that the Accidents of the Elements that is the whitness or roundness of the bread and the colour of the wine to be the sign of the body and blood of the Lord for which cause she is justly condemned by the reformed Churches SECT V THis Ordinance of the Supper is instituted to assure the penitent receiver of the remission of his sins yet all that receive it are not pardoned in regard that some receive it unworthily and their sins are not forgiven justly in as much as the condition upon which the Lord promiseth absolution for his part is not performed upon their part and because of that they are so far from having their soul eased that it is more burthened They being guilty of the body and blood of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.27 by reciving unworthily Now there are three wayes by which men receive unworthily First by not giving due reverence to the mystery in that Sacrament contained Secondly to the ends for which it was appoint●d Thirdly to the Author by whom it was instituted 1. The Ministery in that Sacrament contained As 1. To the crucified body of Christ this presents unto us Christ and him crucifed and the same reverence or respect that we would give to Chr●●● were he visibly present with us we must give unto him represented before us by bread and wine Not that we should give it to the bread and wine but to the Person who is represented to us by them 2. All that God ever did do or that ever he promised to do for the best and dearest of his Saints is
remis Saxaque Sisyphi Juditer delabentia Frustra revolvite En Phoebus oritur cujus matutinum vel jubar Ad fugandas valet Fanatici erroris nebulas En Phoebus oritur acutis armatus radiis Ad extirpandam foseresin deleudamque funditus Hercules strenuus qui clava Biblica Hydram a fronte adorieris Tantum ab est ut ad strepitum Hujus Draconis horridum expavescas Plaudite Togatae Gentes plaudite Invictus in arenam jam nunc descendit Agonista Nec de frivolis quibusdam nugis Sed pro Aris focis dimicatur Veritatis causa agitur Fideque Catholica ab infandis Erronum contumeliis vindicatur Aspiret studiis divina caelitus gratia Favonius Ut in sui nominis gloriam Ecclesiae imolumentum Reipub. tutelam Tendant omnia E D. H. A. M. e Col. in Oxon. THE AUTHOR TO HIS BOOK SHake off this panick fit there is no fear poor heart to cause a fear Englan●'s not what it was its Holy Ground since CHARLES was crown'd The Bores the Wolfs the Foxes and wild men are chain'd or watch'd in den The Crown the Mitre Cassock and the ✚ Hath purifi'd the land remov'd the dross Of Schisms Factions Errors Heresie Truth 's got her palace Church her Armoury Then shake off dull Del●y and now at leng●h With man-like s●reng●h Go thou the rounds of Albions soyl and view Phanatique Crew And with thy plainer Rh●tro●ck cause them say This Old is the best way That they may learn an● love both fear and serve Gods Laws Christs Church and from them never swerve Yea leaving Satans Sy●agog●es may turn Into our Temples there the●● incense burn So with thy faithfull Optick digitate and shew The way that 's new Make known that Via Lactea Heavenly path Cal'd Catholick Faith In which our Fathers walk'd and walking were Secur d by Angels care Fear nor the Frowns nor surly looks of those Who Truth and Order's Popery doth oppose Inform the Quaking sinner to his face There 's Rev●rence due to Person Time and Place Hold out thy Lamp present thy spiced Wine They 'r both Divine And thy Baptismal water make appear As Jordan's clear A ✚ is there 't is true declare its loss Was to the Church a ✚ Salute each house with Peace and to each eye Of all thy Treasure make discovery If any sume bite lip or wag their head Abide not there the Son of Peace is fled Put on this Pilgrimes weed poor Baby mine And Heavens shine Upon thy weak endeavours by success much Add daily to the Church Thy Fathers Blessing thou hast also got and now Go forth and prosper thou AN INDEX Directing to the ORDINANCES AND QUESTIONS Contained and discussed in this TREATISE Of the Church page 1. Questions I. WHether the single Testimony of the Church be to be received in matters of faith pag. 19 II. Whether the Church hath power to ordain Ceremonies not ordained of God p. 18 III. Whether the Church hath power to compel any irregular person to her Ordinances p. 24 IV. Whether the Civil Magistrate hath power over or in the Church of Christ And if he have whether his Law be binding to the Consciences of men p. 30. V. Whether the Segregated Churches now in England be true Churches p. 40. VI. What may justifie a mans separation from a true Church p. 75. VII Whether more religions then one are to be tollerated where the true Church is established p. 84. VIII Wherein consists the individuality or singlenesse unity or onenesse of the true Church p. 87. IX Why is the true Church called holy p. 90. X. Why is the true and holy Church called Catholick p. 91. XI Whether the Elect only be true members of the Church p. 93 XII What are the markes of a true Church p. 95. Of the Scripture p. 99. Questions I. Whether the Scripture be the word of God p. 143. II. Whether the Scripture ought to be mans only rule p. 148. III. Whether men may come to a saving knowledge of God without the Scripture p. 150. IV. Whether pefection may be attibuted to the Scripture p. 152. V. Whether salvation may be had by single knowledge of the Scripture p. 154. VI. What may perswade one that doubts to believe the truth of the Scriptures p. 156. VII How f●r the Saints may be our rule besides the Scripture p. 158. VIII Whether the bookes called Apocrypha be not Scripture p. 160. IX Why would God co●municate his to his Church by writting of the Scrip●ure p. 162. X. Whether men be bound to believe all that is in the Scripture p. 164. Of Reading the Scripture p. 165. Questions I. Whether there be a God as is declared in Scripture p. 175. II. Whether God be a spirit p. 178. III. Whether there be but one God p. 180. IV. Whether there be three persons in the Godh●ad and how these persons do agree p. 181. V. Why are Kings and Magistrates called Gods and Rebellion to be like witc●craft in Scripture p. 191. VI. What was that Image wherein God made man and why was man created naked p. 194. VII Whether the reading of the ceremonial law be profitable to a b●liever or whether any part of that law be established under the Gospel p. 196. VIII Why would God suffer his dearest Saints to lye under such sad ●fflicti●●s as are mentioned in Scripture and whether the book of Jo● be a reall hict●●y p. 211. IX Whether there be any diffe●●●ce betwixt the old and new ●●●tament and why the Scriptures are called a Testament p. 215. X. W●● are there some things in Scripture hard to be understood and whether the Scripture can dwel richly in ●●ose that cannot reade p. 218. Of the Sabbath p. 221. Questions I. Whether the keeping of a sabbath be a ceremony and abolished by Christ. p. 235. II. Whether it be lawfull to make feasts on the sabbath p. 236. III. Whether sporting or gaming is to be followed upon the sabbath p. 273. IV. Why did God give charge concerning the resting of beasts upon the sabbath p. 239. V. Why did not God give Charge concerning a wifes resting upon the sabbath p. 240. VI. Why is not the change of the sabbath in Scripture mentioned p. 241. VII Whether the Church may command any other day to be rested on beside the sabbath p. 243. VIII Why doth God put a Remember before the Commandment of the sabbath only p. 245. IX Whether the first day of the week may be termed sabbath or sunday p. 247. X. Why is the sabbath called Holy p. 251. Of a Fast. p. 252. Questions I. Whether the fasts of the Church of Rome differ from those of the Church Catholick p. 249. II. Whether fasting be not a ceremoniall or Iewish Rite p. 251. III. Why is the fast of Lent observed by the Christian Church p. 252. IV. Why are the fast of the weekes of Ember observed by the Church p. 255. V. Whether it would bring advantage to the Church to have those
that he beholds no iniquity with approbation that holy thing that is called and known to be the son of God she only owns and worships Luk. 1.35 5. In regard of her promise and engagement to be holy though the whole World lye in wickednesse yet she promises to be holy and unblameable before him in love 6. God and Christ account her holy though there be failings and Hypocrits in the Church yet God is pleased to give the denomination from the more worthy part 2. Pet. 2.5 9. and all the members of the invisible Church are re●lly holy and because we cannot know them the Church is accounted holy wherein they are so that even the wicked have this benefit of the godly Quest. 10. Why is the true and holy Church called Catholick The Catholick Church in plainer English is no other then the Universall Church and rightly● so called being universal 1. In regard of place she is not tyed to a corner nor limited within certain bounds Earth it self a is not sufficient for her she is both in Heaven and earth 2. In Regard of persons for no age no condition is exempted from her jurisdiction high and low rich ond poor great and small from him that sits in the Throne to her that grindeth at the Mill is the doctrine of the Catholick Church open 3. In Regard of time there was no time since the Creation that wanted this Church that Doctrine of it begun at the Creation and fall of man and hath not failed hath not been altered since but explained and confirmed since the Creation of all things this Church was and untill the restitution of all things this Church shall be and Eternity it self shal never impair nor diminish this Churches dignity 4. In Regard of parts all the particular Churches or Congregations in the World that ever were and all that for the present are all that for the future shal be are parts of her by unity of Doctrine consent in Sacraments through faith are compacted together for the compleating of that Catholick body named the Catholick Church Let me dye if I would not be ashamed to be but supposed to be a Member of any Church on Earth but this or to own that Religion that is not at least sixteen hundred year standing The Church of Rome as she is now constituted is not Catholick wee know when the fire of Purgatory was first kindled it was but yesterday i'ts not Catholick the Rise and Originall of many of their doctrinal points known and those upstart Opinions now in England those Phanatick Principles and Heretical Tenets taught by Ioan the Spinster Dick the Weaver and Robin the Taylour are not Catholick The Well of Knowledge is deep and they have nothing to draw how can they get living waters they are ever learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth But let them alone they be blind leaders of the blind and if the blind lead the blind both shall fall into the ditch Matth. 15.14 Quest. 11. Whether the Elect only be the true Members of the Church Before this question be directly answered it is expedient to premise these three distinctions 1. of the Church 2. of the persons 3. of judgement 1. Of the Church here we must call to mind that division above made of the Church visible and invisible That wicked men Hypocrites c. are members of the visible Church in common with the Elect is not to be denied The invisible Church is here meant a distinction the Church of Rome cannot well digest called the Church of the first born Heb 12.23 2. Of Persons there are some that are in the Church by outward Profession and because they hear the word own Christ receive the Sacraments may and must pass for Members Others are in it by inward resignation in giving up their hearts to God called a reasonable service Rom. 12.1 3. Of Judgement there is a judgement of Gods decree by which he knows who are his and there is a judgement of humane charity By the former we know none so as to point him out and he that holds one or more of fundamental truths untill he be cast out must be judged a Member of the Church Yet those only that are by the decree elected and called are only members of the Church For 1. The Elect draw only life and nourishment from Christ they commonly act faith the other are barren branches and though upon yet not properly of his body It is the heart alone of the Elected and Called that will open and entertain Christ Ioh. 15. 2. It is they alone that are established and builded upon him he is the Rock they stand by while the other chooseth a sandy foundation sticks possibly at his profession imagining that will save him their house shall stand when the others are falling and they under them Christ shall laugh at the one and mock when their fear cometh but rejoyce over the other with singing to behold them cloathed upon 3. The Elect only are to their power obedient to him they are his sheep only that hear his voice and by this it appears that they follow him they will go with him from a feast to the garden from that to the Crosse from that to the Grave They will contend earnestly for the Faith once given them were it unto blood the other will forsake him and love their lives better then to die 4. They only truly and cordially honour him O how pretious is Christ to such as believe they that name his name in this society depart from all iniquity others draw but nigh him with their lips they draw out their souls to him for his goodness sake their sheaves to the hungry for his mercies sake they bow the knee and their tongues confess him the other bows and with their lips mocks him the o●e puts his soul in his hand to rule it the other puts a reed in his hand to bear it he says Lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon me and the other covers him with a vail strikes him saying Prophesie who smites thee 5. They are the only persons that are called justified and glorified by him one that is truly a Member of Christs body must not be supposed to be eternally separated from his glory it s the dead branches only that are cut down and burned such as draw sap and bring forth fruit these shall not be fuel for that everlasting fire the Hypocrites may Prophesie in his name and cast out devils and the devils know them yet Christ shall acknowledge he nere knew them the devils may come out of the possessed and depart at their call and they shall go with the devils and depart at his command I would not have it here thought that the perfection of the Saints is intended or that before the Elect are effectually called this is demonstrated or that it is sufficient for a Christian to say he is of this invisible
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
him but such doth the spirit that in this Age is pretended It calls down prayer it will not be guided by Scripture not live of the Gospel nor according to Law they will have no ordained Ministers they will not own Magistrates thrust Sacraments out of the Church make Ordinances in their power depend upon the merits of men take singing out of our Christian Temples preaching up new revelations and that they only are the Saints that heed least the Scriptures that it is only formal or Antichristian to crave a blessing before meat that none are baptized but such as are dipped to curse revile slander those that are set apart by Apostolical Tradition for the preaching of the Gospel c. This is that that Christ never taught and therefore it is not his Spirit that brings them to our remembrance 2. The Holy Spirit of God was to glorifie Christ Iohn 16.14 that Christ that was then with his Discsples that was born of the Virgin Mary that Christ that was to suffer at Ierusalem was he to make glorious that Spirit now amongst us casts contumelies and scornfully speaks of that Christ under the notion of a Christ without us Its seeks its own glory and bears witness of it self its whole aym is to invert the Divine dispensations by slighting that Christ crucified upon the account of being without 3. He was to shed abroad the love of God in the hearts of Believers Rom. 5.5 that is the apprehension of the love of God a sense of it a feeling of it from whence comes love joy and peace Now the spirit that some pretenders have is a contradistinct spirit from this for by their trembling quaking foaming it appears that the sense of the love of God is not shed abroad in their hearts but of his wrath those strange and monstrous actings proceed rather from wrath indignation and anguish and indeed if gnashing of teeth be a picture or fruit of Hell we may know whence that spirit comes that carries men forth into those distempers 2. The Spirit of God is a Spirit of Union and of Agreement that ever speaks and agrees with it self In no place doth it really oppose or contradict it self it leads all men into one kind and way of truth how distant soever they be from one another but this spirit that goes abroad in our Age never appears in one shape it speaks this in this mans mouth and contradicts is again next day In this mans mouth it threatens hell in that mans mouth it says there is no hell it says that it is a decent thing for a woman to preach the same spirit calls down all preaching in another here it throws aside the Law there it throws away the Gospel there it throws away both here it is for a Christ within there it affirms there is no Christ at all by its cloven foot you may discern whence it came 3. The Spirit of God teacheth honourable and glorious Doctrine such Doctrine as made the highest in the earth bow their necks to receive the same the whole Army of the Philist●ms even of those Heathens that persecuted the Doctrine of the Spirit of God was overcome by the noble Army of the Martyrs the more it was afflicted the more it grew and went over the world like a Sea overflowing the banks of all Penal Laws Kings became its nursing Fathers and Queens its nursing mothers The Doctrine that this Spirit teacheth is a Doctrine of Reprobation Reprobated silver hath God called it his providence and power hath crushed it always suppressed it and hath only given Satan a little power for the Tryall of his Church but never gave him all his chain to destroy Their Doctrine was never on a Candlestick their house was never on a mountain to bring all Nations in into it God kept it under that it never yet said So would I have it How hath the same Gospel we teach run over the world and that without garments rolled in blood and hath been beautifull and glorious But this spirit hath attempted indeed but stopped tryed condemned cast out Never was there a Kingdom Country Parish nay scarce a house that this spirits Doctrine or Doctrines rather was ever received in These things considered let not the Professors of Christ depend upon those seducing revelations but to the Scriptures the foundation of the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles But 2. If the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament be the word of Christ let none of the people sleight it it is that which Christ hath spoken to be the Rule of their lives tryers of their thoughts and measure of their actions if thou be of the houshold of faith thou art upon that foundation whereof Jesus Christ is the chief Corner-stone Eph. 2.20 All you that build must be squared fitted and proportionated to this Corner stone which can only be done by this Word of Christ and therefore it is not to be slighted Now the Scripture may be slighted divers ways 1. When it is regardlessely heard when Gods message is delivering for the good of a mans soul by Gods servant thereunto appointed to have an irreverend or unseemly carriage shows they put no high valuation upon it to be drowzy or sleepy when God is holding forth our duty or his own greatnesse our sins and his Justice is a great sign of irreverence and may provoke him to thrust us out of his presence for it is not a slighting or contemning of man who reads it or speaks it but of God who made it and enjoyned it 2. When it is scoffingly used when men make Scripture to be the bottome of Jests and Jears the Subject of their profanenesse or Object of their mirth When the Prophet called the Burthen of the Lord the people answered him in scorn the Burthen of the Lord the Burthen of the Lord. Ier. 23.33 34 35. or as Iulian that would smite a Christian on the one cheek und then bid him turn the other as his Lord and Master directed The Scriptures were not written to make men laugh but to make men wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 they were sent into the word by God to instruct men how to demean themselvs without offence towards God man Act. 24.16 it ought only to be imployed to that end It is not safe jesting with edged Tools so neither is it safe to sport with the two edged sword of the word of God This is holy ground let us be afraid to sin upon it least the owner of it Mock when eur fear cometh and laught at our calamity Prov. 1.26 It is in it self a high provocation of his Majesty contempt of his honour and a diminishing of his greatnesse in the sight of men 3. When it is heedlessely forgot if a mans servant should not do the thing commanded und excuse himself from his forgetfulness it would not reprieve him from his masters anger How shall God be patient when his precepts and word are
closely suffered to go out of our minds nay how shall they be saved if they keep not in memory which it preached unto them I Cor. 15.2 or what is read by them not that all is read can be remembred but to sufferit to go from our hearts for want of meditation application communication and esteem it no losse to find our selves ignorant or forgetful of those grand truths upon which hangeth all the Law and Prophets viz. to love God and our Neighbour as our selves Matth. 22.40 Every Chapter Men read or Sermon men hear makes them fitter for heaven or fuell for hell Take heed to this all you that forget God lest be tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver How many are there that after hearing or reading remember no more the thing read and heard no more then Nebuchadnezar did his dream Dan. 2.3 his spirit was troubled their perhaps are affected yet for what neither can discover Caduca est memoria fragilis Let us ask this gift of rememberance with earnestnesse that the spirit may help this infirmity but let not carelessenesse be our bane lest damnation be our portion 4. When it is partially received some there are that will part stakes with God receive and embrace some part of his word and reject another they will fear an Oath yet love a lye They will seem in all their actions to intend to do nothing more then the advancement of Gods glory yet calumniate and back-bite their Brother and privally slander their own Mothers Son Psal. 50.20 They will reprove as the Scripture exhorts but forget to do it in meeknesse and love as it commands They will abhor an Idol yet commit Sacriledge Aut muta ●omen aut animum said Alexander to a Souldier of that name and a Coward either deny thou art a Christian or live like one How many in these days do cut and mince the Scripture to make it speak what they have sophistically thought upon though contrary to that Idiom that naturally God hath given it à principto It is all the word of Christ and therefore none of it to be refused to walk according to half the Scripture will never altogether bring thee to heaven dimidium in this sense nihil est that half which thou conceitest thou keepest shall condemn thee at the latter day for thy injustice in robbing it of its holy companion and associate Iam. 2.9 Truth himself hath told us that whosoever shall break one of those least Commandments and shall teach men so he shall be called least in the kingdom of Heaven Matth. 5.19 There is no minutila legie all are magnalia untill men find out a little God and a little Hell there is no little sin Let the word of Christ all the words of Christ therefore be entertained in your hearts and suffered to dwell SECTION II. Let the word of Christ dwell c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cohabitare inhabitare let it dwell frequenter habitare let it constantly abide in you and have its abode with you this word dwell Imports 1. A willing entertainment of the word of Christ A man will not suffer that person to dwell in his house whom he will not entertain or bid welcom dwel● supposes entertainment Many will not bid the word of 〈◊〉 speed there was in our Saviours time some that hated the light Iohn 3.20 It was as unwelcom to them as a Candle is to a Sluggard wken he is newly awaked nay when he is awakened and a candle held to him they strugle against it would have it puffed out and turne from it but those Colossians must give it entertainment in their hearts and consciences in their souls and their affections when the light comes they must rejoyce at it rise and work by the light of it Nay every Christian must be that wise woman whose candle goeth not forth by night Prov. 31.18 this light of the Word must always be entertained that by it we may see the state of our soul and how to work the work of God Christ stands at the door of mens hearts and knocks Revel 3.20 he knocks one way by his Word if you will let him come in that way he will sup with you and you shall sup with him he will give you better and choicer cares then you have to present to him give him but hearing he wil give you good councel give him your love you shall enter into his joy give him your service he will give you his Sonship give him what you can though it be little and you shall have of his abundance give him your heart he will give you of his glory nay have you nothing to present this heavenly guest withal then ask him for the Kingdome of Heaven you shall have it of him 2 Familiarity and acquaintance dwelling in ones house or with him supposes acquaintance and knowledge of him The Word of Christ ought not to be a stranger in a Christians breast he should Commune with it as a friend with a friend in his own heart whatever man be doing let the Scriptures be at his right hand Amicus est alter ego Let the Word of Christ be ever with him as a faithfull Companion it is the most reall friend that a Christian soul can keep company withall it is a sound and unfeigned Councellor an upright and impartial reprover it wil neither flatter nor dissemble but declare it self to all persons at all times in all companies fairly plainly and savingly It will approve of every thing that is just and no more reprove whatever is amisse and no lesse 3. Abiding or residence He that comes to lodge in an Inne for a night or that comes to a place for a Week is not said to dwel but where his home is The W●●● of Christ must not be lodged as a stranger or entertained as a fr●●● on the Sabbath day How many are affected with it and for a time with joy receive it but fall back to their old sins again and remember it no more then a tale that is told yea possibly not so much It is to such as a stranger with whom they make merry for a night and rejoyce in its company afterwards shake hands and fall to their work again Men must resolve never to let the Word go if they purpose to be happy when this departs love grace strength Counsell joy peace comfort light food health happinesse nay our God and Saviour take their leaves of us and follow it When some comfortable holy resolutions are wrought in the soul by the application of some precious promises or strong convictions by the means of some terrible threatning they are not to be suffered to depart till by the one or by the other the heart be brought to a holy and through reforma●ion 4. Consent or agreement Dwelling supposes usually Identity of affection as wel as of place and situation we cannot well dwell with that man with whom there is contention or
spiritual conflicts which in their own nature are so unpleasing and so bitter that were it only their own Laws we should see them live more merrily in the world And what makes after Ages imbrace those Scriptures though good men should make them since they are contrary to flesh and blood and might therefore be rejected In a word a good man could not have said O earth earth earth hear the word of the Lord Jer. 22 29. if it had been his own Invention 2. Bad men did not do it the lyar the drunkard the thief the swearer would never have made Laws against lying Drunkenness stealing swearing nor have counselled men to have shunned their company nor damned themselves eternally for their so doing Since therefore neither in heaven nor in earth can there be found ●ut a Creature to be but probably supposed the Author of the Scriptures it remains therefore that the Creator must who is God blessed for ever 2. From the testimony of the Scripture it self it is apparent that God is the Author of it He that gave the Law was the same that brought Israel out of Egypt viz. the Lord God ●xod 20.2 He that commanded Iohn to write to the Churches of Asia was the first and the last Rev. 17. Thus saith the Lord Hear the word of the Lord is a usual phrase in Scripture which co●ld not have been said by Men or Angels had it been their own It was he that gave Moses the Law the Statutes and the Judgements for all Israel Mal. 4.4 It was God that spake by the mouth of his Holy Prophets which have been since the world began Luke 1.70 All the words that are written in that Book are his words Ier. ●0 2 What Isaiah uttered it was the Lord that spake it Isa. 1.2 what Ieremiah spake the Lord commanded Ier. 1.7 Nay what ever the holy men of God spake it was as they were moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 3. From the excellency of the matter contained in the Scripture it appears to be of God where it promiseth it goes above the power reason or invention of man as Those that do well shall shine as the stars and as the firmament nay as the Sun for ever and ever Dan. 12.3 and Matth. 13.43 The Incarnation of God a Virgin bearing a Son the resurrection of the dead all without the reach of man making Laws for the hearts of men of Kings and Princes poor and rich high and low shews that it is not of man threatening eternal death and promising eternal life both which are without the power of men and that to soul and body both which by man nor the powers of man cannot be reached unto It perswades to nothing but what is in it self good were it not commanded and disswades from nothing but what is in it self hurtfull were it not forbidden and that oftentimes without giving any reason but the will and authority of the Law-giver why must not men swear steal c. The Lord hath forbidden it The Proem to the Law is I am the Lord thy God Exod. 20.2 I am the Lord is often given as the only reason of the Law Lev. 18. 4. From the effects thereby wrought the Scripture hath wrought that upon the hearts souls and consciences of men that the writings of men and Angels could never have accomplished it fills sometimes the very souls of men so full of terrour and other times so full of comfort that were not God the Author thereof could not be effected he that is in love with sin and dark through sin it makes him to hate sin and to be in love with righteousness it hath brought the hearts and spirits of men to so much certainty that all the tortures torments and pains that men or devils could invent was not once able to make them doubt of it 5. From the scope and final end of the Scriptures it declares that God is the Author of them if any creature had been the composer of them he would in one verse or other have sought something to himself but the scope of the Scripture is purely for the glory of God the honour of God the praise of God to make men admire God to have them praise God to have them pray to God and to depend upon God and in their ways to acknowledge God It debaseth every creature in comparison of God and puts all things under the feet of God by which it is demonstrable it is from God 6. From the constant consent and declaration of the holy Catholick Church that in all Ages under and after Moses before and afte● the Judges before and under the Kings before and after the Captivity before Christ and in his time before the coming of the Holy Ghost and af●er the Apostles untill this very time hath in all Ages been consented to and looked upon as the word of God the very word of God the only word of God the holy word of God and besides this the Church hath owned no other The same Teacheth the Reformed Churches of Helvetia Article 1. of Bohem. Art 1. of Fra●ce Art 2. of Belg. Art 3. of Wirt Art 31. of Scot. Art 17. Quest. 2. Whether the Scripture ought to be mens only Rule There are many that pretend to new Revelations new lights walking according to and going a whoring after their own Inventions but that the Scriptures are to be our only rule these following Arguments may declare 1. It is the only infallible and unalterable Rule Many Rules and Laws have there been in the world which time hath altered and experience hath made to appear not good but the Scriptures of God remain the same no addition to them no dimunition of them to Kings and people they are now what they ever were and they shall be what for the present they are to all generations For ever O Lord thy word is setled in heaven Psal. 119.89 All other Rules have and may still deceive but this hath never deceived nor failed and is the same for ever and ever 2. The Churches of Christ had never any other Rule the word of God the Scriptures of God was ever the Rule of their Doctrine in matters of Faith The Rule of their lives in matters of fact Malachy that ends the Old Testament commands them to Remember the Law of Moses and Iohn that concludes the new pronounceth him Blessed that keepeth the Prophesie of the sayings of this Book Rev. 22.17 And whoever speaks not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Christ himself appeals to the Scriptures to be the Tryers of his Doctrine Iohn 5.39 3. They are written that they might be our Rule These things are written that we might believe that Iesus is the Christ and that believing we might have life John 20.31 We are to take heed unto this doctrine 1 Tim. 4.16 We have a more sure word of prophesie unto which we shall do well if we take heed
God and Prayer and by the Lord Jesus we know now that nothing is ●nclean of it self And that the Kingdome of God consists in no part of it in meat that God hath accepted us whether we eat or not And he that teacheth so is a Minister of Christ and he that teacheth otherwise a messenger of the Devil 1 Tim. 4.1 and 6. Quest. 8 Why would God suffer his dearest Saints to lie under such sad afflictions as are mentioned in Scripture and whether the book of Job be a real History That Gods people groaned under National grievances and under personal troubles is known to all that can but read the causes possibly are not so well known we shall for their information discover some 1 To punish them for their sin Thus were the Israelites pressed under the Heathen Princes so often in the Book of Iudges This made Absalom rebel against David and brought Ierusalem it self to ruine 2 To prevent their sin Gods afflictions and his scourges kept them from setling on the lees it kept the rust from them he would teach them experience by suffering he would frame them according to his own heart Davids afflictions before he came to the Throne made him the holier in it 3 That the wicked might fill up the measure of their sin the godly may be crushed that the wicked may triumph that he may sport and take delight in mischief when he brings his wicked devices to pass Psal. 73.18 4 That the graces of God might be exercised in them None but hath a talent and all that have must improve it Grace if not scoured by affliction will rust in the most heavenly heart Where God hath given beauty he will have it seen and where he hath given gifts he will have them used Abrahams Faith Noahs Obedience Iosephs Fear Pauls Sincerity Iobs Patience Naomies Constancy Ruths Affection and Davids Trust God will put to the touchstone 5 That the Name of God might be glorified by them God hath brought in a great revenew of praise to the Exchequr of his own glory by casting his people into many difficulties and when they have called upon his Name by delivering them out of them all David had not sung possibly so sweetly in the Palace of Ierusalem had he not mourned in the Wilderness of Iudah God loves to hear his children pray and also to praise his Name and to attain both he uses the rod of affliction 9 To make them examples to the Saints that shall follow after them Davids afflictions doth the present age good for by them they learn to keep the law of God Iacobs hard lodging shews us that God will be with them that wait upon him in the poorest condition The troubles of Iob the patience of Iob and the issue of Iob is a soveraign remedy and antidote aginst despair in any or the greatest calamity but this brings us to a second part of the question Whether Iob be a real History There are that would have that book only what Iob says himself is viz. A shadow Job 17.7 They would have it to be no more real then the Parable of the Rich man and L●zarus They suppose that such troubles could not really fall upon a man but they must sinke him such crosses would have broke a mans heart much more his patience It is true indeed that Iobs History is ushered in by a Parable drawn from Kings and Princes courts where in matters of concernments all parties as well accusers as defendents meet together in those words Now there was a day when the Sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord and Satan came also among them denoting the readiness of Angels either to give an acount of what they had done or to receive a Commission for something to be done and to discover the malice or envie of Satan watching all opportunies for the destruction of man But of the History that is the man Iob of the Countrey he lived in of the Children and riches that he had of the troubles that befell him and of the glory that he afterward received we have no more reason to doubt of then of the history of Noah of Abraham of Moses of David or of any other of the Patriarchs For 1 Here are real names real countreys and kindreds described no such thing is ever done in Parables we have no account of the Prodigals name nor of his Fathers nor what Countrey he dwelled in as here In that Parable Luk. 16. We have the Beggar named Lazarus which might be a common name as well as a proper signifying the help of God or one helped of God but now in this History we have proper The land of Vz or Edom Lam. 4.21 Iob was a man of that Land probably the same that is called Iobab the son of Zerah that was King of Edom Gen. 36.33 differing only as Iacob and Israel or as Saul and Paul Here is Eliphaz the Temanite a son of Esaus the Fathes of the Edomites Gen. 36. 10 11. Bildad the Shuhite Abrahams son by Keturah Gen. 25.2 Zophar the Naamathite not improbably of the City of Naamab a City in Iudah towards the Coast of Edom Iosh. 15.21 41. Though in other Authors then the Scripture we read that Ninensis was the rich mans name at whose door Lazarus begged yet there is in that parable that which will not permit it to be any other then a parable and to say it was Herod and Iohn the Baptist as some do is but a declaration that they have neither studied the Parable well nor the history of the Baptist exactly but now in Iob there is no more reason to suspect the name then to suspect Davids or his friend Husha● the Archites neither is there any thing in the story that may not stand with truth they are living rational learned men and for them to speak together is no wonder There are such timely descriptions of persons of cattle of countries of kindred of places as cencurs in no parable whatsoever but in all circumstances holds out a true history 2 The Holy Ghost numbers the man Iob among such as were really and in nature existent speaking of Israel Eze. 14.14 Though these three men Noah Daniel and Iob were in it they should deliuer but their own souls Let no man say that I●b is but a shadow since God said he was a man had a soul and a righteous soul and seeing we doubt not but there were such men as Noah and Daniel why should we doubt of Iob Iob indeed wished that his birth day might not be inserted in the Kalender but these men would blot him out of the book of the Nativities to give him no Mother but a mans brain yet since God hath numbered him among reall Saints he shall pass for a man a righteous man with the Author until such time at he sees him a man as Iob knew he should see his Redeemer 3 The Holy Ghost holds forth both sides of
Church 4. Because God hath been pleased to bless his people for serving him in other dayes to let pass his approbation of that day set apart by the King of Nineveh for fasting Iona 2.10 the Israelites in captivity Zach. 8.19 set apart a fast on the fourth moneth another on the fifth another on the seventh another on the tenth All which God would turn to ●oy and gladness and chearful feasts it is known that it hath pleased God to refresh his servants with his comfortable presence in these dayes from such accidents as these did the Church of old institute those dayes that are called Rogation An. Ch. 450 wherein by prayers and tears and fasting and supplication the Church obtained great mercies c. And most of those dayes that are kept by the Church of England are owned by Reformed Churches and have been established for above a thousand years but of these afterward 5. Because of that enco●ragement and freedom that the use of those dayes gives to servants Prentices and others whereby the religious may have occasion to pour out their soul before God to read and study his word prepare themselves for his Holy Sacraments if any do abuse the use of these dayes ●●it were a pitty that those that serve God the more chearfully of them should be suppressed for the others prophaness 6. Because we see none speak against them but those that in other points are against all order and could willingly see that all Discipline were laid asleep we may behold them to be factious turbulent hypocrites stumbling at straws Apostates what not Quest. 8. Why doth God put a Remember before the Commandement of the Sabbath onely This word Remember is put in Scripture usually before nothing but what is matter of Moment as thy Creator Eccles. 12.1 From whence thou art fallen Revel 2.5 Lots wife Luke 17.32 that ye being in time passed Gentiles Ephes. 2.11 c. And the Sabbath day to keep it Holy Exod. 20.8 The reasons may be 1. Upon the Holy keeping of that depends in a great measure the observing of all the other nine Commandements how to cleave to God onely to worship him truly to use his name reverendly depends much upon this dayes observation and Holy keeping 2. There is less in nature to teach us the keeping of this precept then in any other of the Commandements nature teacheth us that there is a God to worship this God to honour the name of that God whom we worship to honour parents and though the Barbarian know no body seeth him none can accuse him none can judge him though he escape dangers by sea and perils by land yet he dare not murder for fear of VENGEANCE c. But to set aside one whole day in seven precisely one in seven and that not a part but the whole of a day and this not for thy self alone but thy cattle and thy servants must rest as much as thy selfe as long as thy self and that not at thy conveniency or times of leasure but in the thickest of thy imployments and not at thy pleasure but still one day in seven of this we say nature teacheth nothing and therefore there is a special memento put upon it 3. There is more in nature that may allure us to the breach of this precept then there is to the breaking of any other of the Commandements It is onely the Fool that will say there is no God and if he do it is but in his heart every man hath something of that natural principle to do as he would be done by but the Sabbaths being Gods property we are apt to catch hold of some part of it through the ignorance of God that is in us the day is clear and the streets are clean and such a thing is doing or may be done and profit will follow we shall gain by it c. All this might tend to the prophanation of the Sabbath and therefore God gives a strict charge particularly for that 4. They might in Aegypt have small or no regard unto the Sabbath if they had opportunity The people had been long in bondage and might forget at least in their observance that God had hallowed the seventh day or through bondage not have time to keep it which in time might blot or score the fourth Commandement out of their hearts forget to teach it to their Children which God by this remembrance brings back to their minds again and though they forgot to keep it Holy in Aegypt yet they must Remember it in Canaan It is by some probably conceived that in the latter captivity of the Iews in Babylon Akasuerus making a feast Est. 1.5 for the inhabitants of Shushan which continued seven dayes one of which must necessarily be on a Sabbath day which by reason of that feast that had been held a hundred and fourscore dayes to the Princes of Persia in which several Sabbaths had fallen and that one feast the Sabbath if not for many dayes yet for one was by the Iews neglected to punish which forget fulness God stirred up Haman to root them out and for that one dayes feast they keep a three dayes fast with their nights Est. 4.16 and by that got mercy yet by that might receive instruction the next feast that came and Remember to keep Holy the Sabboth day Quest. 9. Whether the first day of the week may be termed Sabbath or Sunday This is a Question in it self scarce deserving an Answer but by a Pharisaical generation of the sect of the Libertines being counted a piece of prophaness so to call it and a part of Religion to call it otherwise we shall spend a few drops of Ink to Answer it in brief it may be called Sabbath 1. From the sence and signification of the word it is their foolish mistake that because it was on Saturday therefore it was so called whereas if it had been upon a Wednesday so long as men rested upon it it might have been called Sabbath● that being the Hebrew word for rest A Sabbath day is no more then a day of rest Christians therefore resting from all their imployments and doing no manner of work they nor their Sons nor their Daughters nor their man-servants nor their maid-servants c. upon this day may lawfully call it a Sabbath day 2. From the equality of the Christian Churches practice with the Church of the Iews That day that was held Holy by the people of God under the Law wherein they ceased from working and therein did read upon the word of God repaired to the Temple or Synagogues and heard it taught was called the Sabbath the day therefore that is held Holy by the people of God under the Gospel and wherein they cease from working and therein read upon the word of God c. may receive the same denomination 3. From the morality of the Law the Law is moral requiring one day in seven to be kept Holy to the Lord which day
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
and Elijah Ahab and severall others but Kings being Gods immediate deputies upon earth who call them in question though rage universal as to punish him for this faults or correct him for his crimes who first even the Pope upon the one hand and Guisel upon the other These two though at odds between themselves yet ever agree and goe and in hand for the takeing away of that honour annexed by the King of Kings to his vicegerents upon this inferiour world before which be done let them goe about day by day and grudge that they be not satisfied That distinction of the moderate and rigid Presbyterians may be by this time may come into the readers mind a distinction that hides many an ugly face and treacherous heart possibly the moderate Pre● will with more gravity and deliberation pronounce the sentence of excommunication against the chief magistrate then the other and comes to it with more sorrow of heart through the greatnesse of the crime then the other but yet he will do it being a principle with the Pres. that is the factious one or the Antiepiscopal on for otherwise Pres. is an honorable title and catholical as such and touching the distinction it is as a just one and grounded on nature there being as great difference betwixt these two as there is between staring and stark mad the one drives like Iehu furiously the other like the Spaniard is more grave stayed slye and cunning Quest. 2. Whether excommunication debarres from all society of the Church In regard that we are exacted to withdraw our selves from such and not so much as to eare with them thi● 〈◊〉 on is not to be passed over It is said then that ex●o●munication hinders not 1 The practise of those dut●s that are grounded on the Laws of nature as the duties of Husbands and Wives Fathers and Children Masters and Servants Princes and People 2 Nor the practise of those dutys that are grounded on the law of nations as traffique and commerce An Excommunicated person must be to us as an Heathen and with these we may have trade 3 Nor the practise of such that are grounded upon the law of Common charity For we are bound to feed the hungry cloath the naked though they be or should be as Heathens 4 It debars not but in some cases from the hearing of the word Unlesse they be scoffers it being the meanes for converting of very heathens they are admitted to it and ought to be exorted to it but in no other ordinance do they enjoy any society with the Church and in no familiar or unnecessary dealing have we any thing to do with them but are bound to avoyd them that they may be ashamed and returne to the Church by repentance from which they were cast out through obstinacy CHAP. 15. Of Singing THis is the fourth and last direction given above for the words in dwelling and one end why the Apostle would have the word of Christ to dwell richly in the believing Colossians though some who would be thought unbl●meable before God in love blames the Church for her keeping up this holy practise of singing Psalmes This gospell ordinance being set aside with others by some of this generation we come in the last place to defend and let us see 1. The nature of it 2. Some arguments for it 3. The manner of performing it 4. Resolve some questions SECT I. The nature of this ordinance is better known by practise then it is or can be by art which might be the reason why so many have handled it and few or none define it we shall give some description of it for methods sake and because motus naturae velocior est in fine we shall be the briefer It is a calling upon God by prayer or praise with an elevavation of the voice and prolongation of the words Davi● sung unto God by prayer and emptied his mind unto him by confession of sin this way Psal. 51. and again praised and magnified his name for all his mercyes Psal. 18. The same words wee utter quickly and expresse suddenly in praying or reading by keeping them upon our tongue and pronouncing them in parts with an height●ned voice gives a being to that ordinance we call singing suppose we were to read and sing Psal. 35. Lord plead my cause a●ainst my foes confound their force and might Fight on my part against all those that seek with me to fight The same words being quickly read over and the letters joyned hastily together makes it a prayer read which deliberally uttered with a separation of the letters through the striking of the tounge and teeth makes it a prayer sung That of Saint Iames. 5. Iames. 13. contradicts not what hath been sayd the words not being preceptive but declarative showing only that in times of mirth the heart is better disposed to sing then otherwise and in times of trouble it is more apt or fit to pray then for any other duty SECT II. Were it not that there were some unreasonable men who want faith this practise need not now to have been disputed but without question used for 1 God hath shown himself eminently well pleased with it 2 Chro. 20.22 he declared his mind and pleasure touching this ordinances when in the celebration of it he sent destruction to his peoples enemys he may give us victory now over our sins as well as them over their foes then 2 Scripture commands it and calls for it Eph. 5.18 19. 〈◊〉 5.13 it is not an ordinance of humane or mans invention but is enjoyned us of God and we cannot find that ever those precepts was revealled and therefore they are now binding 3 The spirits and affections need it this ordinance by experience doth warme the blood and raises the heart in a holy quite to perform divine service men are sometimes dull in there devotion and crosses oftentimes damps their zeale which this act of singing helps and stirrs up 4 The Church of Christ had a promise of it Rom. 15.9 of the times we live in was it promised that this should by us be performed and therfore what ever fond people say against it it is not to be neglected 5 The Church of God in all age hath used it we read of it under Moses Exod. 15.1 and under the judges Iudg. 51. under the Kings under the gospell Mat. 26.30 Acts 16.25 no time can we find that ever had a Church but in and by that Church was this ordinance upheld 6 To no age did God ever limit it It was appointed practised to and in all ages when or where it was to cease was never made known or divulged by which we are as much engaged to sing Psalmes with grace in our hearts in England as ever the Collossians Phrigia 7 The Church militant above all other ordinances comes nearest to the Church triumphant by it In heaven thereis nothing but a continuall singing and praising God both by the Angels and spirits of
Our Saviour being of the Royall Trybe was born a Gentleman of this you have a part 2 Civill by riches Abraham was a mighty Prince of this you have a Competency 3 Moral by a vertuous life this made Jabez more honourable then his Brethren in this you have outstrip'd many of your companions 4 Celestial by being Crowned with glory and such honour have all Gods Saints which to obtain a firm standing unto and a worthy receiving of the Churches Sacraments are essentiall helps and furtherances In this tract you have their natures Catholically handled and purely though plainly taught unto which if you take heed you shall do well and passe for a true Son of the Church in the Register of the faithful and receive the sure reward of a Saint in the new Jerusalem the Mother of us all which is the prayer of him who is SIR Yours in all offices of love and duty Will. Annand CHAP. I. Of Sacraments THe seals of the Covenant of Grace are called Sacraments quia Sacrament● tractari debent a word though not found in Scripture as the word Trinity yet Sufficiently grounded in the same It signified of old that Oath or Engagement souldiers made to their Captain of their faithfulness and fidelity before they were listed in an army and without this military Sacramental Oath it was not lawful for any to draw his sword in a field Christ is the Captain of the Christians salvation and these Sacraments are Bonds and tyes on mans part to be the Lords and to be faithful unto him until death The doctrine of the Sacraments is the second work that we undertook in this backsliding generation to defend against the calumnies and reproaches of ignorant and unlearned men in prosecuting of which we shall in the general behold 1. Their nature 2. Their end 3. Their parts 4. Their number 5. Resolve some Questions SECT I. THe nature of the Sacraments may be thus known They are holy and visible signs ordained by God as seals of his promises representing that inward grace and goodness which he bears towards and intends to shew unto his people through the Lord Iesus 1. They are Holy and visible signs God was pleased in all ages to deal with his people in This way of Sacraments holding forth his mercy and will toward them by some visible sign presented to them Thus the trees of life and of knowledge Gen. 2.9 were Sacraments to Adam and Manna from Heaven and water out of the rock were for a time Sacraments to the Iews 1 Cor. 10.3.4 and water bread and wine are standing Sacraments or visible signs of Gods love unto Christians Therefore they are called Holy figures Marks Badges Prints Forms Patterns Representations Memorials Symbols Seals or Signs Evidently holding forth Christ and all his merits Gal. 3.1 2. Ordained by God Sacraments are in themselves not circumstantial but essential parts of Gods worship and therefore he onely is to be the giver of them none ought to inrrude that as a part of worship unto which God hath not given his consent Erroneous therefore is the Church of Rome even in this particular in binding her Members to five Sacraments more th●n ever God made or the Chatholick Church knew God must give the grace gift or mercy signified by that sign therefore it is fit he appoint the sign himself he appointed circumcision under the Law Gen. 17.10 and baptisme under the Gospel Iohn 1.33 3. As seals of his promises God hath declared in his word that he will forgive his peoples iniquity and remember their sins no more Ier. 31.34 and hath appointed the Sacraments as seals to this promise and all others of the like nature The Sacraments may be considered in a three fold manner and usually are 1. As instruments and so they awake and stir up the soul to lay hold upon Christ as God exhibites him in the Gospel 2. As signs and so they represent Christ and him crucified which is common to them with the Gospel 3. As seals and so they declare that the receiver is pardoned concerning that truth or deed written in the Gospel Mat●h 26.28 3. Representing that inward grace c. Israel was Gods peculiar people whom he had taken out from among all nations to behold his glory and the outward sign or token of that was their circumcision in the flesh Ge● 17.11 which as baptisme unto us signified and sealed their regeneration justification and sanctification through Christ Deut. 30.6 Rom. 4.11 4. Through the Lord Iesus This is the thing signified in all the Sacraments of the Church he is eat in the Manna and in the passeover drank in the water out of● the rock he is in the baptismal water to wash the soul and take away its pollution and in the Eucharistical bread and wine to strengthen and comfort the soul God intending Christ to be the way wherein he will meet the sinner and the door through which he will admit him into his presence There are who make the Rainbow a Sacrament unto Noah Gen. 9.12 13. and when they shew that Christ is signified thereby and his merits represented by it as by a sign and his mercy declared as a seal to all that are beholders of that bow or the parties to whom that covenant is made which was with every living Creature I shall be of their judgement not before SECT II. THe ends for which God appointed Sacraments in his Church are chiefly these 1. For helps against our weakness we can understand spiritual things and heavenly mysteries the rather that they are represented to us by bodily and visible signs we are the more able to apprehead the efficacy or the manner of the blood in washing or purifying the polluted when it is mystically represented to us by water Our memories are fraile and the death of Christ may more powerfully be though● on by us when it is signified by bread and wine which is one cause of that Sacraments institution Luke 22.19 2. To confirm us against our doubtings the penitent hath the promise of the forgiveness of sins made unto him but the Sacrament gives him Gods hand for it God hath written it in his word and Christ hath sealed it by his last supper Matth. 26.28 3. To quicken us against our dullness Sacraments are bonds tyes covenants engagements and visible contracts that the soul makes of new obedience they are as it were spurs in the sides of a lingering heart making him with a holy compulsion to bear up to the Lord Jesus in points of worship and of practice 1 Cor. 10. 16.21 4. To discover that we are of his inheritance by his Sacraments his own people are distingushed from such as believe not in him or call not upon him Goliahs being uncircumcised 1 Sam. 17 36. was an argument to David that he belonged not to God by baptisme we are at this day known from all such as look not for salvation through Christ that being performed in his name as
Saviour of the world Acts 2.38 c. 5. To represent our Union with him and our Communion each with other bread and wine becomes flesh in us and of us and blood of our blood Christ received by faith becomes flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone we are made spiritually and mystically one body with him Eph. 5.30 And as the Catholick Church believes the remission of sins so she holds out the Communion of Saints of which the Sacraments are lively types tokens symbols and signs 1 Cor. 10.17 In a word the Sacraments to our understandings are as it were glasses darkly to behold Christ Gal. 3.1 To our memories they are as Monuments to make us remember Christ Luke 22.19 To our assurance they are as seals confirming us of our interest in Christ Rom. 4 11. SECT III. THe parts of a Sacrament are these two viz. the sign and the thing signified 1. The sign that is the outward visible and natural Element sanctified and set apart by God the onely Lawgiver to the Church to be used in that ordinance for such an end and purpose Thus water and bread and wine are appointed and instituted to be memorials representations tokens signs and Elements in the Sacraments of the Gospel as circumcision and the Paschal Lamb were of the Law Iohn 1.33 1 Cor. 11.23 2. The thing signified that is the inward invisible and spiritual thing which is mystically reprsented to the faithful receiver by the natural Element thereunto sanctified and set apart which is Christ who in presenting of the Elements is proffered and in the receiving of them is applied by the believer for his own good and comfort How grosly doth the Church of Rome oppose the very being of a Sacrament in their transubstantiation for if the very body and blood of Christ which is the thing signified by the bread and wine in the Sacrament of the supper be received by the Communicant then where is the sign the outward and visible which must necassarily be in this Ordinance if they say as they do that the figure and colour of the Cake is the sign my faith must be pardoned in that particular until it be shewn that the whiteness or roundness of the wafer or bread was appointed to be the sign by him that hath the sole power to give the thing signified Between the sign and the thing signified in the Sacraments there is a certain harmony and sweet similitude proportion how aptly did the circumcision of the flesh represent to the Iews the circumcision of the soul heart or mind Deut. 10.6 and the Paschal Lamb that Lamb of God whose blood being upon their hearts saves them from the destroying Angel What a Holy harmony is there between a Christians being washed with water in the name of the sacred Trinity and the blood of Jesus which washeth us from all our sins 1 Iohn 1.7 and being washed with baptismal water for our natural and outward impurity we ought to cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit 2 Cor. 7.1 The like of the other Sacrament which shall be discovered in due time Now when the Church of Rome shall finde out so exact a proportion between that which they call the sign in the supper and the thing signified they may bring possibly a true Catholick one step nearer her then for the present probably he may be we ●●y but a step for admit the proportion be never so exact yet if the sign be not instituted it can never be a memorial of the thing signified SECT IV. VVE have them that would make the Sacraments fewer in number then God hath commanded and there are some that have made more● then he hath approved Two there are no more no less viz baptisme and the Lords supper which must be observed For the observation of these we have promises and precepts Mark 16.16 Matth. 3.11 Acts 2.38 Luke 22.18 The Jewish Church had ordinary but two viz Circumcision by which they were visibly entered into the Church and Sacramentally born again● to this our baptisme Answers and the Paschal by which they were nourished in that Church into which by circumcision they were admitted to this our Lords supper Answers And as a man is but once born though often fed so he is but once a receiver of that Sacrament of baptisme yet ought to be a frequent partaker of that of the supper We say Ordinary the Iews had but two for that Manna from Heaven and water out of the rock were extraordinary and but for a time during Israels abode in the wilderness We need but to be born in Christ and then continue in him which is accomplished by these two without any other By baptisme we put on Christ as a garment Gal. 3.27 and by the supper we feed upon him as meat Luke 22.19 having therefore food and raiment by these Sacraments we ought to be content To all this consent the reformed Churches of Helv. Art 19.20 of Basil Art 5. of Bohem Art 11. of France Art 34. of Belg Art 33. of Sax. Art 12. of W●r● Art 9. of the four Cities Art 16. of Irel. Art 85 86. of Scotland Art 21. 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 or tokens of Christian mens profession but rather they be certain sure witnesses and effectual signs of grace and Gods good will toward us by which he doth work invisibly in us and not onely quicken but also strengthen our Faith in him c. SECT V. Questions resolved Quest. 1. VVHether those five Sacraments added by the Church of Rome be Sacraments Quest. 2. Whether the effect of the Sacraments depend upon the worthinesse of the Minister Quest. 3. Whether the Sacraments differ from the Scriptures Quest. 4. Whether the Sacraments of the old differ from those of the New Testament Quest. 5. Whether two Sacraments be sufficient under the Gospel Quest. 1. Whether those five Sacraments added by the Church of Rome be Sacraments God unto his People under the Law gave two Sacraments as signs and tokens of his good will and favour to them the contemners or neglecters whereof were in danger of the Judgement viz. Circumcision and the Paschal he hath also given to his Saints under the Gospel Baptism and the Supper as Sacraments or means to hold forth Christ and him crucified Unto these two Rom● hath added five more which are these 1. Confirmation or Laying on of hands 2. Pennance or satisfaction for sin committed 3. Orders or ordination before the work of the Ministery be assumed 4. Matrimony 5. Extreame Unction or the anointing of the sick with oyle before he depart But none of these are Sacraments for 1. None of them was instituted by Christ for such an end Let all the Gospel be searched and we shall find non of these instituted and sanctified to be as means for the applying of the merits of Christs
Whether it be a sin to receive the Communion in a mixed congregation and if private examination be necessary By a mixed congregation the age makes us to understand 1. A congregation wherein any Communicant is not of the same judgement principle or opinion though in things circumstantial 2. A congregation wherein there are some Communicans that have sin in their mortal bodyes though it be repented 3. A congregation wherein there be drunkards or sweaters though adhearing professedly to the doctrine of the Gospel Unto which we will add this also though he was never reproved nor admonished by us The Question is then whether a man that hath prepared himself by sound hearty real and holy examination for that Ordinance may altogether forbear it and omit it upon the account of his knowing or foreseeing that such a drunkard will be at that holy banquet It is answered in the negative he ought not to forbeat upon any such pretence For 1. That Ordinance is not arbitrary It is not left to our own will and discretion that we may or may not as we will we ought to do our duty and prepare our selves to be worthy receivers if another neglect his and yet receive let him look to it the Lord is at hand 2. We might neglect other Ordinances as well as that we might refuse to read the Scriptures to pray to hear upon the same reason and indeed this doctrine as it hath kept some from the Chancel that is from receiving it hath kept others from the Church that is from hearing and this again hath kept some from the Scripture resolving to keep company with none but such as are altogether without sin and therefore the light within is their rule 3. God requires no such condition he craves faith repeatance and new obedience on my part but not that my companion should have the same or then I to be refused and my offering not to be accepted one Christian shall never be bound hand and foot and cast into utter darkness because another of the company wants the wedding garment 4. It is plainly against that Text 1 Cor. 11.29 he that ea●eth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation or judgement to HIMSELF therefore not at all to another he that prepares himself aright need not fear what the unworthiness of others can do against him 5. It would clearly take away this Sacrament out of the Church who would prepare himself to come if he should be cursed by ano●hers unworthiness or approach that table though full of faith with boldness except he knew that every heart at the table were as holy as his own and others that were as full of faith as he might hang down the head least his unworthiness procure unto them a judgement and so the devotion even of the devout should receive a bar ●nd be shut from all comfortable actings and holy duties This is not spoken to countenance prophaness but to inform the weak and tender conscience there being Laws in the Church to d●b●rth scandalous from that table and also th● ignorant which may and ought to be put in execution by the Church Officer after his admonishing the one and instructing the other for to exclude either of these without tryal save in case of necessity is arrogant and rash and without Authority but upon certain knowledge to deba● such is both religiously and lawfully done No Minister shall in any wise admit to the receiveing of the Holy Communion any of his cure or flock which be openly known to live in sin notorious without repen●ance nor any who have maliciously and openly contended with their neighbours until they shall be reconciled c. The scandalous are found out by the ear and secluded by Law the ignorant cannot be found but by discourse conference or examination which leads in the second part of the Question Whether private examination be necessary There is a twofold examination in reference to the Sacrament of the Supper 1. In respect of God 1 Cor. 11.28 men are bound and it is necessary for them to examine themselves 2. In respect of the Church that the ignorant and unlearned make not that Ordinance undervalued the Question is of this latter and amounts to this Whether the Church Officer may lawfully debar a sober pious Christian or one of whom he neither sees nor hears evil purely upon the account he will not submit to his examination a practice of late too commonly known nay several thousands have been excluded except they came under the tryal not of the Church Officers only but of his lay-Elders an office not heard of in the Church until these late years and are parts of the Church no more then those Anticks whose mouths supplie the places of spouts unto the temples but to let them pass it is denied private examination in this sence is not necessary For 1. The Scripture would have given some Item of it when the nature of the Sacrament is stated and examination required 1 Cor. 11. No word that tended in the least to this is written but every man enjoyned to examine himself 2. It cannot be shewed that ever the priests examined the fitness even legal of those that aproached the Paschal and yet the danger of unworthy receiving the one seems as great as the other 2 Chro. 30.20 1 Cor. 11.30 3. That Parable Matth. 22.9 is against this practice wherein the servants are appointed to bring in all that they could find without Order to try if they had the wedding garment the want of which condemned the party but not the servant Yet by the Law of the Church particularly of the Church of England none are to be admitted to that Ordinance until they have given sufficient testimony of their knowledge in the principles of the Christian religion Which Law though not expressed in Scripture in direct terms yet consequently it is approved In regard that the Church Officers are called Watchmen Stewards Shepherds c. which titles denote what a care they ought to have of their people or flock This even this being not taught unto the people was a firebrand of division between the Pastor and his people in these last days examination being by them required and that rigidly not declaring it as necessary in respect of the Church which would have satisfied the minds of all sober Christians but as from Scripture when the people knew that no such thing was required and they themselves not being able ●o produce the Text wherein in it was enjoyned It was pretty sport to hear men publickly and privately affirming that those who submitted not themselves to examination ought to be secluded for breach of that Order or discipline they themselves erected and yet not conforming themselves to those Orders that by Law had been established By which two things to all of understanding occurred First their arrogance to make Laws and compel the people without authority to submit under the pain of le●ser excommunication
glory of God Iohn his zeal was not zeal but ambition 4. In a found knowledge of things prayed for we must understand what we pray that our zeal may be according to knowledge and our Amen agreeable to religion 5. In a constant making conscience of the duty for Gods glory our own and our neighbours good This grace in prayer is very necessary For 1. It is a servent of zealous Prayer that will avail for any thing Iam. 5.17 2. It is a servent prayer that will only obtaine heaven Mat. 11.12 3. It is by it only that the true Christian can be distinguished from the Hypocrit Math. 23.14 These are the graces that constituts prayer and makes it move toward heaven and indeed without these prayer is no more a prayer then 2 dead coarse is a man these being the very form and inward life of it Read pag. 513. before p. 512 made by him therefore he is great honour by it 1 Cor. 6.20 2. God hath redeemed the body as well as the soul he cures the deseases of the one as well as pardons the sins of the other 3. God will glorify the body as well as the soul. 4. We can only give a good example by the body not by the soul how shall our light shine to others but through the lanthrone of our outward man and where this light appears not It is to be suposed there is no light in them For were they burneing they would also be shineing lights Iohn 5.53 SECT VII Questions Resolved Quest. 1. Whether men by Industry may obtaine a promptnesse in prayer Quest. 2. Whether the wicked be bound to pray Quest. 3. Whether the set forms of prayer used by law in the Church of England be lawfull Quest. 4. Whether there be not vaine repitions in those formes Quest. 5. Whether it would be convenient to altar any part of those formes Quest. 1. Whether men by Industry may obtaine a promptnesse in prayer This question taketh its rise from the practise of those ignorant pretenders to the spirit of prayer whose devotion in a great 2. The external forme which consists in the gestures of the body must be considered God will be worshipped with the whole man that is both soul and body We have them that pretending to inward worship will not give God outward service but we shall find the Saints both in the old and new Testament using their bodies in this duty of prayer both in the generall and some particular parts of it 1. The body in general and that in different gestures as prostration Numb 16.22 Kneeling Acts 20.36 Standing Luk 18.13 Lying Isa. 38.12 a Sitting 2 Sam. 7.18 leaping Act. 3.8 2. We have some particular parts of the body exercised in this ordinance in a particular sort as the head eyes hands mouth or tongue 1. The head and that bowed down 2 Chro. 29.30 noteing the reverence they bore to him in their hearts It is also called a bowing with the face and once was done so low as the very ground of the pavement 2 Chro. 7.3 2. The eyes and they sometimes cast down Luk. 18.13 noteing humility and sometime cast up Iohn 12.41 noteing faith 3. The hands and they spread abroad noteing fulnesse of grief Ezra 9.5 and also fulnesse of joy 1 King 8.22 holding forth anger to throw a way the thing prayed against and a desire to receave the thing prayed for Again the hands are lifted up noteing zeal of Gods glory Psal. 63.4 and sincerity of heart Lam. 3.41 In praying and noteing an appeal to God inswearing Gen. 14.22 Dan. 12.7 further they finite some parts of the body at the breast noteing sorrow Luk. 18.13 as the thigh noteing shame and guilt Iere. 31.19 3. The tongue this needs no proof it is so clear and so commonly known And was there not a cause to use the severall parts of the body in his service did the Saints do this without a reason 1. The body is Gods as well as the soul it is a creature measure consisted in hums and haws way faces and strained words not being prompt in their extemporary deliveries which to a voyd and that the weak Christian may have where with to expresse himself in a prompt and decent manner let him practise those known following rules 1. Be observant of the providences of God to themselves or others that they ether know hear or see this evil befalling now upon such and this good being given to others our own deliverance in such a danger and anothers being left in the same danger will afford abundance of matter in prayer 2. Be studious of the Scriptures of God by observing and heading the promises threatnings and passages therein a great furtherance shall they be to him that intends to go to God by prayer 3. Be often in the pactise of prayer In this use may go a great way and bares a great stroake men that have great parts may lose them by not useing of them and they that have small parts with exercise may abundantly improve them ● Be frequent in examinings the turnings and windings of the heart the vanity and folly and wickednesse that lodge therein will bring in great store of provision to that part of prayer Confession 5. Be strengthening the heart in the doctrine of faith this will make a man bold confident which will also make him prompt and fluent 6. Be studious in reading practical Divinity which treasures the soul with abundance of found knowledge and that affords matter of meditation and that again in prayer is brought forth with abundance of advantage 7. Call upon God for the Spirit of prayer not that I mean thou shouldst desire the spirit imediatly to act upon the heart and mind and then upon the tongue as some fond ones in those dayes for it may be aquestion whether that prayer would be lawfull in regard that whatever is sayd upon that ground is equall to what was delivered by the Apostles and equally binding the whole Church of God and to be a rule and canon of faith to all that hears thee so pray and Indeed some mens zeal in calling up a spirit of prayer gave breath to their Impudence who pretended a spirit of preaching which spread so farre that even womens preaching hath been taught to be as Infallible as St. Pauls and their sayings to be received under the pain of damnation as well as the sayings of our Lord. By the Spirit of prayer therefore we understand two things 1. The spirit of Justification to sprin le the soul of Christ. of sanctification to wash away all uncleannesse called the washing of regeneration Tit. 3.5 which spirit wherever it is is accompained with a desire to pray and disposeth the soul to pray though it were but in groans and wishes Rom. 8.26 and by observeing the rules before given having obtained this gift the soul may not only gro●ne but speake unto God its desires 2. The graces of the spirit or fruits of
the garden that the Cup might passe from him and upon the Crosse that God had forsaken hm men in a ditch will cry help help and in a Town fier fier and yet no vain repetition a soul may cry Lord have mercy upon us Lord have mercy upon us O Christ hear us and be singularly devout 2. Through holy affection Thus Daniel often calls Lord hear Dan. 9.17 18 19. So Solomon often repeats Then here thou in h●aven thy dwelling place and forgive or do which is above 7. times prayed for in a prayer 2 King 8. 3. Through strength of faith so the Psalmist Blessed be the Lord for evermore Amen and Amen so the Church Reve. 22.20 In a word if repetitions barely considered as such were unlawfull the Church must be blamed for singing and the Psalmist for composing the Psalm 163. and the 57 and the 42 and the 67. In all which Psalms that there are repetitions in the sence above spoken is apparent and that they are and may be used without sin is not to be questioned 2. Vaine repetitions which are to be shunned in prayer and of them we are forwarned by our Saviour Mat. 6.7 of which we have above spoken Now repetitions are vaine 1. When they are affected as strains of Eloquence and signs of wit when to show the quaintnesse of the expession that it may be observed it is brought over again and again such were those of the Gentiles and Heathens 2. When they are Impertient empty frothy unprofitable when there is no Spiritual life nor hear holy zeal nor activity and such vaine repetitions can never be in a book they being in the cold heart and dul soul of a Christian. 3. When they are Idolized when men conceit that God either will refuse to heare them if they repeat not or that he will here them the better for them that is a vaine repetition Thus the Gentiles thought they should be heard for their much babling or speaking Mat. 6.7 4. When they are pretended when men sets themselves to repeat that they may be thought to spend much time in prayer and so be accounted religious which is indeed a taking Gods name in vaine and abusing of his eare by their vain and needless repetition From which we conclude that no vain repetitions are in the book of Common-prayers they being of that nature that the soul and heart of man may zealously and holyly close withall And let me declare my thoughts in this particular since the reestablishment of the Common-prayer I have seen more ardent zeal more watery eyes more lifted up hands and reverent deportment in the publick Churches at the using of those formes then ever I saw in my life at extempore deliveryes Not that I am against those prayers whose rise is immediatly from the heart whether in the house top or in the closet but this I say if set formes were used as they ought to be by laying aside prejudice they would never be spoke against and if conceived prayer or as the phrase is extempore were more used it would not be so much undervalued as it is If he that hath utterance in prayer and promptnesse on a sudden to expresse himself be thankfull he doth well but if he think himself the better Christian because he seeth another use a forme In this he is not to be praised Men of themselves may make vaine repetitions yea vaine petitions yet the same request that to the and by the is vaine may be to another a holy ardent and affectionate request condemn not therefore the service of the Church which in all things is well ordered and sure but thy own heart for not having life enough to answer Amen and Amen to all her holy repetitions but of these things we have spoken elsewhere Quest. 5. Whether it would be convenient to alter any part of these formes This question shall not be directly answered being a matter wherein I ought not to be positive but shall lay down my thoughts concerning both the negative and affirmative part resolving to acquiesce in and submit unto lawfull Authority When those formes are considered and the nature of its adversaries marked in strength of reason it seems inconvenient to alter those formes 1. From the wisdom and opinion of King Iames of blessed and glorious memory who in his Proclamation for ratifying Common-prayer prefixed to that service after the Hampton Court conference resolved never to give way to any alteration by the frivolous suggestions of any light Spirit not being ignorant of the Inconveniences that do arise in Government by admitting Innovation in things once setled by mature deliberation the danger that followes such alterations we shall for the present leave to Statsmen to consider 2. It would incourage brain sick people to proceed further in their opposition to pleasure them in this is but to make ●hem bold in asking a reformation or alteration in higher matters let them in this be satisfied they will but boast and create fresh strength to bawl for something of another nature to let the Common-prayer stand as it doth will be a barre to keep them from approaching higher and shall be a bone for them to pick upon and busie themselves about that his Majesty and his counsell may dive and follow their designs with the lesse trouble the Kings Crown may at last come under some mens censure if every thing be altered with which they are displeased It is good therefore to prevent an evil at first and let those formes stand for the future as they do for the present 3. It will bring the Liturgy itself under contempt not only by Forriagners but natives what reverence or devotion can the generality of people have to it when at every crosse humour of malecontent persons it must be altered and reformed and again reformed and again reformed which consideration moved the glorious King Iames in that forementioned Proclamation to assert That such is the unquietnesse and unstedfastnesse of some dispositions effecting every year new formes of things as if they should be followed in their unconstancy would make all actions of State rediculous and contemptible 4. It would never please the party now offended Let their pretences be what they will it is the book in the bulk of it with which they are displeased a forme that hath in it a prayer for a Bishop will never be digested by many except they be of that society or dignity themselves if they should be quiet this s●ring yet next curow time they would be mad again and the alteration will not please them except it be altered into a Directory and that will not please the people neither so that no satisfaction peace quiet or content can be rationally hoped for therefore it were best to let Common-prayer live as it doth and and remaine as it was brought by law unto us since the alteration will never make us more quiet in matters of religion but the worse