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A37046 The law unsealed: or, A practical exposition of the Ten Commandments With a resolution of several momentous questions and cases of conscience. By the learned, laborious, faithful servant of Jesus Christ, Mr. James Durham, late minister of the Gospel at Glasgow.; Practical exposition of the X. Commandments. Durham, James, 1622-1658.; Owen, John, 1616-1683.; Jenkyn, William, 1613-1685. 1676 (1676) Wing D2817; ESTC R215306 402,791 322

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the Spiritual Holy Just and good Law the Royal Law binding u●to the Obedience of God our King the Law which Jesus Christ came not to destroy but to fulfil whereof he is the end for Righteousness to every on that believeth which doth as a School moster lead to Him by discovering the holy nature will of God and mens duty to walk conformly to it by convincing of the most sinful pollution of our nature heart and life of universal disconformity to it and innumerable transgressions of it of the obligation to the wrath and curse of God because of the same of u●●er inability to keep it and to help our selves out of this sinful and wrathful estate by humbling under the conviction and sense of both by putting on to the Renunciation of self-righteousness or righteousness according to this Law And finally by convincing of the absolute and indi●●●nsable necessity of an other righteousness and so of this imputed righteousnes● the law that is so very necessary to all men in common and to every Regenerate and unr●generate man in particular from which ●re one jote or title can pass unfulfilled Heaven and Earth must pass and which the Prince of Pastors infinitely skilful to pitch perti●●nt subjects of Preaching amongst many others made choice of to be a main subject of that solemn Sermon of his on the Mount wherein he did not as many would ●ave expect●d soar alost in abstruse contemplations but graciously stooped and condescended to our c●●●●ity for catching of us by a plain familiar and practical exposition of the Commands as indeed Religion lyeth not in high flown notions and curious speculations nor in great swellings of words but in the single and sedulous practise of these things that are generally looked on 〈◊〉 low and common as the great art of Preaching lyeth in the powerful pressing thereof infin●●ting of how much moment the right uuderstanding of them is and how much Religion ly●●● in the serious study of suitable obedience thereto not in order to justification but for glorifying God who justifieth freely by his grate through the Redemption that is in Jesus without which Obedience or holiness no man shall see the Lord. And if the Treatise bear but any tolereable proportion to such a Text and Theam it cannot but have its own excellency and that thou ma●st be induced to think it doth I shall need only to tell thee that it is though alass posthumous and for any thing I know never by him intended for the Press otherwise it had been much more full for ●e is much shorter on the commands of the second Table then on these of the first touching only on some chief heads not judging it fit belike at that time and in that exercise to wit Sabbath-day-morning Lectures before Sermon to dwell long on that subject which a particular prosecution would have necessitated him to especially since he was at that same time to the same auditory Preaching Sabbath afternoons on the third chapter of the Epistle to the Colossians a subject much of the same nature but what he saith is material and excellent great Mr. Durhams who had some excellency peculiar to himself in what he spoke or writ as appeareth by his singular and some way S●raphick comment on the Revelation wherein with Aquiline-sharp-sightedness from the top of the high mountain of fellowship with God he hath deeply pryed into and struck up a great light in several mysterious things much hid even from many wise and sagacious men before And by his most sweet and savoury yet most solid exposition of the Song of Solomon smelling strong of mor● than ordinary acquaintance with and experience of th●se several influxes of the love of Jesus Christ upon the Soul and effluxes of its love the fruit and effect of His towards Him wherewith that delightful discourse is richly as it were imbroydered The greatest realities though indeed sublime spiritualities most plainly asserted by God and most powerfully experienced by the Godly whose Souls are more livelily affected with them than their very external senses are by the rarest and most remarkable objects and no wonder since every thing the more spiritual it is hath in it t●● greater reality and worketh the more strongly and efficaciously however of late by an unparalieledly-bold black mouthed blasphemous Scribler nefariously neck named Fine Romances o● the secret Amouts betwixt the Lord Christ and the believing Soul told by the Non-conformists-preachers What are these and the like Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth for his love is better than Wine Thy name is as an Oyntment poured forth therefore the Virgins love thee We will remember thy love more than Wine the upright love thee Behold thou art fair my beloved yea pleasant also our bed is green A bundle of myrrh is my beloved unto me he shall lye all night betwixt my breasts I sat down under his shadow with great delight and his fruit was sweet to my taste He brought me to the Banqueting-house and his Banner ●ver me was love Stay me with Flagons comfort me with Apples for I am sick of love His left hand is under my head and his right hand doth imbrace me My beloved is mine and I am his I am my beloveds and his desire is towards me I found him whom my Soul loved I held him and would not let him go Set me as a seal upon thy heart and as a seal on thine arm Love is strong as death many waters cannot quench love neither can the floods drown it I charge you O Daughters of Jerusalem if ye find my beloved that ye tell him I am sick of love Come my beloved let us go up early to the Vine-yards let 〈◊〉 see if the Vines flourish there will I give the my loves make hast my beloved be thou like to a R●e or to a young Heart on the Mountains of Spices How fair and how pleasant art th●● O love for delights O my Dove let me see thy countenance let me hear thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comely thou hast ravished my ●eart my Sister my Spouse with one of thine eyes with one chain of thy neck turn away thine eyes from me for they have over come me He that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and manifest my self to him If any man love me he will keep my words and my Father will love him and we will come unto him and make our abode with him As the Father hath loved me so have I loved you continue ye in my love If ye keep my Commandements ye shall abide in my love even as I have kept my Fathers Commandements and abide in his love The love of Christ constraineth us we love him because he first loved 〈◊〉 the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost given unto us whom ●aving not seen ye love whom though now ye see him
People of God is the serious Desire of Noble Madam Your Ladyships much Obliged and Devoted Servant for Christs sake TO THE CHRISTIAN READER THE subject matter of this Treatise must without all controversie be passing excellent it being not only a portion of Divinely-inspired Scripture but such portion of it as is the Moral Law the most straight infallible perfect an perpetually binding rule of life and manners that short summary and abrid gment of all called for duties and forbidden sins whatever S●●inions with whom Anabaptists and Arminian-Remonstrants on the matter joyn hands on a woeful design to transform the Gospel into a new Law or Covenant of Works that thereby in place of the righteousness of Faith and righteousness of Works may be established by their alledged Supplements and Amendments of and Addi●aments to it to be made in the New Testament and Papists by their vainly boasted-of Works of Super-e●ogation and Counsels of Perfection whereby they would have the Law out done by doing more than it requireth audaciously averr to the contrary even these Ten-words afterward contracted by the Lord Christ into two Words or Commandments immediatly pronounced by God himself and twice written with his own finger on Tables of stone comprising a great many various matters and purposes so that it may without any the least hesitation or Hyperbole be asserted There was never so much matter and marrow with so much admirably-holy cunning compended couched and conveyed in so few words by the most Laconick concise sententious and singularly significant spokesman in the World And no wonder since it is He that gave men tongues and taught them to speak that speaketh here who hath infinitly beyond the most expert of them being all but Battologists and Bablers beside Him the art of speaking much marvellously much in few words and would even in this have us according to our measure humbly to imitate him And no doubt it is one of the many moe and more grosse evidences of the declension of this Generation from the ancient lovely and laudable simplicity that many men forgetting that God at first appointed words to be the external signs of the internal conceptions of their minds and foolishly fancing that because they love and admire to hear themselves talk others do or are obliged to do so affect to multiply words if not without knowledge yet without necessity and with vast disproportion to the matter And whereas a few of their words rightly disposed might sufficiently serve to bring us to the very outmost border and boundary of their conceptions and also to make suitable impressions of them all the end of words yet ere we can come that length we must needs wear away our time and weary our selves in wandring through the wast Wilderness of the unnecessary and superfluous remainder of them And this doth usher in or rather is ushered in by other piece of neighbour-vanity whereby men wearing of wonted and long worn words though sufficiently significant grow fond upon ●ovel new coyn'd and never before heard of ones stretching their wit if supperfluity of words though both n●w and neat be worthy to be placed amongst the productions of wit for thereby we are made never a whit the wiser nor more knowing and putting their invention on the Tenters to find out no new matter but n●w words whereby often old plain and obvious matters are intricated and ob●cured at least to more ordinary Readers and Hearers a notable perversion of the end of words for which the instituter of them will call to an account neither are they satisfied with such curi sity in coa●ser and more comm●n matters but this Alien and Fo●raign yea even Romantick and wanton stil● of language is introduced into and malepartly obtruded upon Theologick● and most sublimely spiritual purposes whether discoursed by vive voyce or committed to writing which ought I grant to be spoke as becometh the Oracles of God with a grave appositness of phrase keeping some proportion with the Majesty of the matter that they may not be exposed to cont●mpt by any unbecoming incongruity or baseness by which it cometh to pass to the inspeakable prejudice and obstruction of Edification that many in their niceness n●useating form of simple and sound words are ready to ●iss and ho●● off the Theater of the Church the most precious and profitable points of Truth though abundantly beautiful Majestick and powerful in their own native spiritual simplicity ●s unfit to act their part and as being but dull and blunt things if not altogether unworthy to be owned and received as truths if they appear not whether in the Pulpit or Press cloathed with this strange and gaudi● attire with this Comedians Coat dressed up with the Feathers of Arrogant humane Eloquence and be daubed with this Rethorick and affectedly belaboured Elegancy of speech which our truly manly and magnanimous Christian-Author did undervalue And no great wonder since even the Heathen moral Philosopher Senec● did look at it as scarce worthy of a man for writing to his Lucil●us he willeth him in stead of being busied about words to cause himself have a feeling of the substance thereof in his heart and to think those whom he seeth to have an affected and laboured kind of speech to have their spirits occupied about vain things comparing such to diverse young m●n well trimmed and frizli● who seem as they were newly come out of a box from which kind of men nothing firm nor generous is to be expected And further affirmeth that a vertuous man speaketh more remis●y but more securely and whatever he saith ●ath more confidence in it than curiosity that speech being the Image of the mind if a man disguise and polish it too curiously it is a token that the speaker is an Hypocrit and little worth And that it is no manly Ornament to speak affectedly nay this hath of late with other extravagancies risen to such a prodigious hight amongst the wisdom of words or word-wisdom Monopolizing men of this age that if the great Apostle Paul who spoke wisdom though not of this s●rt nor of this world amongst them that were perfect and did upon design not from any defect decline all wisdom of words all inticing words of mens wisdom and excellency of speech that the cross of Christ might not be made of none ●ff●ct and that the faith of his hearers might not stand in the wisdom of men but in the power of God and who loved to speak in the Demonstration of the Spirit and of power wherein the Kingdom of God consist●th and not in word●● if that great Apostle were now Preaching he would probably be looked at by such words and wi●e heads as but a weak man and of rude and contemptible speech as he was by the big talking Doctors of the Church of Corinth if not amere Bable● as he was by the Philosophers and Orators at Athens The subject matter I say of this Treatise must needs be most excellent being
subtil and dangerous Idols 5. Give some rules whereby ye may try this sin of Idolatry even when it is most subtil And 1. Idolatry may be distinguished 1. Into Idolatry against the first Commandment when worship is not directed to the right but to the wrong object and Idolatry against the second Commandment which striketh against the prescribed manner of worshipping God We are now to speak to the first 2. This Idolatry is either 1. Doctrinal or Idolatry in the Judgement when one professedly believeth such a thing beside God to have some Divinity in it as Heathens do of their Mars and Jupiter and Papists do of their Saints Or 2. It is practical when men believe no such thing and will not own any such Opinion yet on the matter they are guilty of the same thing as covetous men c. The first taketh in all Heathens Turks Hereticks that by their Doctrines and Opinions wrong the true God or his worship The second taketh in all self-seeking ambitious covetous and voluptuous persons c. who fall in with the former in their practise though not in Opinion 3. It may be distinguished into Idolatry that hath something for its object as the Egyptians worshipped Beasts and the Persians the Sun or Fire and that which has nothing but mens imaginations for its object as these who worship feigned Gods in which respect the Apostle saith an Idol is nothing 1 Cor. 8. 4. 4. We would distinguish betwixt the objects of Idolatry and they are either such as are in themselves simply sinful as Devils prophane men or they are such as are good in themselves but abused and wronged when they are made objects of Idolatry as Angels Saints Sun Moon c. 5. Distinguish betwixt Idolatry that is more gross and professed and that which is more latent subtil and denied This distinction is like that before mentioned into Opinion and practise and much coincideth with it 6. Distinguish betwixt Heart-Idolatry Ezek. 14. Exod. 14. 11. 12. and 16 2 3. and external Idolatry the former consisteth in an inward heart-respect to some Idol as this tumultuous people were inslaved to their case and bellies in the last two fore-cited places the other in some external Idolatrous gesture or action In practical Idolatry we are to distinguish betwixt the letting out of our affections upon simply sinful objects and the letting them out excessively upon lawful objects Thus men are guilty of Idolatry with sinful objects when they love and covet another mans House Wife or Goods when things unlawful and forbidden have the heart Again men are guilty of Idolatry in making lawful objects Idols as when by excess or inordinateness of love to their own Means Wife House c. they put them in Gods room as Nebuchadnezzar did with Babylon Dan. 4. 30. So then in the former sense men make their lusts or sins whatever they be their Idols Gluttons that serve their appetite Drunkards their drunkenness make their Bellies and Appetite their Idol for to whatever men yield themselves to obey they are servants unto that which they obey Rom. 6. 16. An Idol is something excessively esteemed of and Idolatry is the transferring of Gods due outwardly or inwardly to what is not God whether we esteem it God or not We shall first speak of practical Heart-Idolatry especially when lawful things are made Idols which is the most subtil kind of Idolatry and that which men most ordinarily fall into And it may be cleared these five wayes by all which men give that which is due to God unto Creatures There are five things that are incontrovertibly due to God to wit 1. Estimation and honour above all 2. Love with all the heart 3. Confidence and trust 4. Fear and reverence 5. Service and obedience First then men commit Idolatry when any thing even any lawful thing getteth too much respect from them so that their happiness is placed in it and they can less abide to want it in effect whatever they may say in words then Communion with God himself When men have such an excessive esteem of Wife Children Houses Lands great Places c. and when they are taken from them they cry as Micah Judge 18. 24. Ye have taken away my Gods from me and what have I more When all the other contentments a man hath yea all the Promises and God himself also proveth but of little value to him in respect of some particular he is deprived of by some cross Despensation it is a token it had too much of his heart Try this by two things 1. When any beloved thing is threatned to be removed it then appeareth how it is affected and stuck unto 2. What is made use of to make up that see a notable difference betwixt David and his men or most of them 1 Sam. 30. 6. when he wanted asmuch as they they know no way to make it up therefore they think of stoning him but he incourageth himself in the Lord his God they had no more left at all its like he hath his God abiding in whom he may yet be comforted The second way whereby men commit Idolatry with Creatures is in their love which is due to God with all the heart but men ordinarily give away their hearts to Creatures in being addicted to them in their desires seeking excessively after them in their doating on them or sorrowing immoderately for want of them Hence the covetous man who loveth the world 1 John 2. 15. is called an Idolater Coloss 3. 5. Ephes 5. 5. Thus it discovered it self in Achab who so loved Naboths Vineyard that he could not rest without it So Demas idolized the World when for love of it he forsook his service with the Apostle though it had been but for a time 2 Tim. 4. 10. Mens love to Creatures is excessive 1. When their contentment so dependeth upon them as they fret when they cannot come at the enjoyment of them as we may see in Achab when he cannot get Naboths Vineyard and in Rachel for want of Children 2. When it stands in competition with God and duty to him is shufled out from respect and love to the World or any thing in it as we see in Demas 2 Tim. 4. 10. 3. Though duty be not altogether thrust out yet when love to these things marreth us in that zealous way of performing duty to God as it did in Eli 1 Sam. 2. 24. who is said to honour and love his Children above God vers 29. not that he forbore them altogether but because his sharpness was not such as it should have been and as it is like it would have been had not they been his own Sons whom he too much loved whereas to the contrary it is spoken to Abrahams commendadation that he loved God because he with-held not his only Son when God called for him 3. The third is when confidence and trust is placed in any thing beside God to wit excessively as before we said of
others that polluteth it then that same known in our selves must have that same effect for a quate●●●●d 〈◊〉 valet consequentia If it ●e said 1. This Corruption is but half to say so in our selves being weakened by grace and not allowed Answ Yet it is Corruption and certainly half-corruption in our selves will weigh more then whole corruption in another especially considering that necessarily this polluteth in part all our holy things 2. If it be said We cannot be freed from Corruption while here and so we could not go about any duty if that reasoning were good Answ 1. A mixture of good and bad in the visible Church is as certain as a mixture of Grace and Corruption in a Believer 2. If our own corruption which involveth us in sin in the manner of our doing duties will not loosen us from a commanded duty much less sin in others yea we are no less prohibited to communicate with sin and corruption in our selves then in others and also we are commanded as effectually to purge our own heart as the Church This truth in Doctrine the sober of the Independents approve as to themselves whatever be their practise as to others as the onely way to eschew confusion and keep unity and order So Ho●kers Survey part 2. Amesius de consc c●p 4. lib. 1. ●orton adver Appol Resp ad ultimam qu●stionem As for other Questions as How the Sacraments Seal or what they Seal the m●jor or the minor proposition the Promise as a Covenant or as a Testament leg●●ing Christ and his benefits to us These would require a larger dispute then our intended work will admit and therefore we shall not meddle with them The last thing in which we shall instance the breath of this Command is in reference to the duty of Fasting concerning which we would take notice of two things 1. That Fasting is a solemn piece of external religious worship when rightly and religiously discharged 2. That men may be guilty of many sins as to their practise in reference thereto First That it is a piece of external worship is clear 1. From Precepts commanding it 2. From the practises and examples of the Saints in Scripture 3. From Scripture-directions given to regulate us in it yet it differeth from Prayer and Sacraments 1. That those are ordinary pieces of Worship but this is extraordinary proceeding from special occasions either of a Cross lying on or 2. Feared and imminent 3. or some great thing which we are to Suit for or such like Although it be an extraordinary piece of Worship yet the more holy we read any to have been we find they have been the more in this duty of Fasting 2. We are to consider that Fasting is not of it self a piece of immediate Worship as Prayer c. but medi●●●e only as it is made use of to be helpful to some other duty such as Praying humbling of our selves Mortification c. Again 3. Fasting may be considered in four respects 1. As it is gone about i●● secret by one single person setting himself a part for Prayer and for Fasting to that end many instances whereof are in Scripture 2. As its private or a little more publick being gone about by a Family or some few persons joyning together as Esther and her Maids 3. As it is publick being performed by a Congregation as Acts 13. 2 3. 4. As gone about by a whole national Church These four are all mentioned Zach. 12. 11. 12. where we find 1. the whole Land 2. Families together 3. Families a-part 4. Particular Persons or Wives a-part setting about this duty 4. Consider Fasting in respect of the causes that call for it and there are 1. Publick causes Dan. 9. 2. 2. Particular and personal as of David for h●● Child 2. Sam. 12. 16. 3. For others Psal 35. 13. And 4 i● is to be minded in a special way for helping us against spiritual evils casting out of Devils mortifying of Lusts as also under sad temporal Crosses and Losses Math. 17. 21. and 1. Cor. 9 ult Next as there are some times and cases in all these which call for Fasting with Prayer to be seriously gone about so we may sin in reference to this duty many ways As 1. When it is slighted and not gone about at all and thus men are guilty either 1. By contemning it or 2 Counting it not necessary or 3. By negligence so that we will not be at pains to stir up our selves to a frame for it Or 4. Will not leave our pleasures or work for it 5. In not esteeming highly of it 6. In not labouring to have fit opportunities to go about it 7. In scarring at it as a burden 8. In casting it up as Hypocrisie to others and mocking at it in them 9 In not joyning in our affection with others we know are Fasting 10. In our unfrequent use of it 11. In neglecting causes that relate to the publick or to others contenting our selves with what relateth to our own necessity 12. In not being affected with our neglect of that duty nor mourning for it and repenting of it nor being humbled under the many evils which the neglecting of it carryeth along with it 13. At least neglecting on part or other of this duty of Fasting 14. Not setting our selves seriously to be at the end designed in Fasting which maketh us either neglect it or go formally about it In going about this duty of Fasting there are two Evils to be avoyded The 1. is giving too much to it as if it did merit Isa 58. 1. or as if it self did mortifie sin or make holy or were Religious worship in it self The 2. is one the other hand when it getteth too little being looked on as not necessary or profitable for the framing of ones spirit and fitting them for Prayer self-examination or wrestling with God and not accounted a fit mean for that end more than when it is neglected In speaking of the sins we are guilty of as to this duty we are to consider more particularly how we sin before it in our preparation to it 2. In our going about it 3. When it is ended And first before our going about it we sin 1. When the right end of a Fast is mistaken and it is not considered as a mean to help us to a more spiritual frame 2. When we do not study to be clear in and to consider the special grounds that call us to it not ayming to have our heart from conviction affected sutably with them 3. When we are not put to it from the right motive but go about it selfily to be seen of men as Matth. 6. 16. or for the fashion 4. When it s not gone about in obedience to a command of God and so we Fast to our selves Zach. 7. 5. 5 When there is no secret examination of our own hearts to try what frame we are in what ●usts reign in us or prevail over us Nor 6 any particular
dealing with God before hand to be enabled for this duty and helped in it and that both for our selves and others 7. When we are not endeavouring to be in good terms with God and studying to be clear as to that before we come to put up suits to him 8. When we neglect Christ and turn legal in it 9. When we do not separate our selves from all other affairs ●●mously the night before 10. When we are lazie in rising so timely that day as should be 11. When we do not if it be secret labour to be unseen in it to any 12. Not setting our selves seriously to it Dan. 9. 3. abstracting our selves from diversions and rousing up our selves for it Secondly In the time of Fasting we sin First By Eating unnecessarily though it be little as we may sin by not eating when not eating disableth us in Duties yet the Body ought to be in such a measure affected as may uot hinder us in Prayer but many scarce suffer it to be touched or in the least measure affected or afflicted with Abstinence 2. In Lightness of Apparel or such fineness in it as they make use of on other dayes 3. In Gestures looking light like Laughing and in such a carriage as is very unsuitable for that day 4. In Hypocrisie there being a more seeming weightedness and heaviness then really there is 5. In having wrong ends before us As first To seem holy 2. To carry on some Temporal or Politick Design as Jezabel did against Naboth to get his Vineyard 3. To get advantage of some other and to make some finister Designs digest and go down the better as Isaiah 58. verse 4. To smite with the Fist of wickedness as under pretence of Long Prayers to take the more Liberty to injure others 4. For Strife and Debate and strengthening of Factions and Parties 6. We sin here by neglecting Works of Mercy 7. By taking pains in Works Lawful on others dayes Exacting all our Labour or a part of it which is unbecoming on that day 8. By taking delight in Temporal things finding our own pleasures 9. By words or thoughts of Lawful things diverting us from the Work of the day 10. By wearying of it as a burden Not calling it a Delight 11. By wishing it were over that we might be at our work or pastime again Amos 8. 5. 12. By negligence in Prayer or not being frequent and fervent in it nor pertinent to that day and the end of it for there should be in all these something on a Fast-day suitable to it and which is called for on that day more then on other dayes 13. By not joyning seriously with others when they pray especially in particulars which concern others 14. By little Mourning or Heart-melting especially in secret Duties which on that day would be more frequent more serious and affecting then on other dayes that day being set apart for it And if private we should be more abstracted even from ordinary Refreshments and Mirth then upon a Sabbath and the frame of the Heart would be then more humble mournful and denyed to otherwise-Lawful Comforts 15. By little of the Exercise of Repentance or sense of Sin that day for humbling the Heart in the sense of our own Vileness and loathing of our selves 16. By little suitable uptaking of God in his Holyness Displeasure against Sin c Which on that day is in an especial way called for 17. By not distinct Covenant with him and ingaging to him against our seen Evils and Defects a Fast-day would be a Covenanting-day as we see in Ezra and Nehemiah 18. By being defective in Reading and Meditating on what may humble us but much more when by Looks Words or Thoughts we marr the right frame and set of our Hearts 19. By Resting on Fasting or being Legal in it 20. By not minding the pro●●ting of others no● Sympathizing with their wants and case nor being careful to see those of our Family or Charge observant of it 21. By nor abstaining from the Marriage Bed 1 Cor. 7. ●erse 5. Thirdly We sin after fasting 1. Soon returning to other thoughts 2. Letting any frame we had attained slack and wear out 3. Forgetting our Confessions and Engagements and falling to former Sins and neglecting these Duties to which we have engaged 4. Being rigid with others we have to do with 5. Not insisting in Prayer for those things we aimed at in fasting 6. Not trying and observing if any thing we prayed for hath been obtained 7. Not Reflecting upon our carriage in it that we may know how it was discharged 8. Not humbled under our many short-comings and failings in it 9. Glad when it was done because that Restraint is taken off our carnal Humours 10. Sitting down and resting on that we have done as if all were done 11. Thinking our selves something better by our outward performance 12. Being vain of it if it be well to our Sense 13. Being unwatchful after it and not studying suitableness in our following carriage so that it i● but the hanging down of the Head ●or a day These Particulars applyed to our own Hearts may be useful for our Conviction and Humiliation Ah! Who can say I am clean All of us are guilty either by neglecting such Duties or by thus and thus going about them unsuitably from these Sins we may read also the contrary Duties or Qualifications that are required for the right discharge of these Duties The preventing of these Sins will bring in the Duties called for and the right manner of going about them Otherwise the going about these Duties without the manner requisite is but as it were the making of some Image for our selves in the Lords worship which he has not commanded and so he may say Is it such a Fast that I have chosen Isai 58. 5. or Is it such a Prayer I called for and Who hath required these things at your hands Isai 1. 12. These Questions which the Lord putteth to our Conscience will make many Prayers and Praises and much worship that now seemeth to be in great Bings or Heaps come down to a small bulk when they are thus fanned ●ifted and searched by this Seive and all those things casten which are found to be Breaches of this Command We come now to the manner how this Command is pressed which is First By a Reason Secondly By a Commination Thirdly By a Promise All which speak a readiness in men to fail in this Command and a special notice that God taketh of the Duties required in it and of the Sins forbidden in it Men might readily say What needeth so much Rigidity in the manner of worship and If it be to the true God though it have in it some mixture of those things which have been formerly abused it is no● much to be stood upon The Lord therefore in pressing it addeth this Reason I am a jealous God saith he that will not only have my Church and Spouse Honest and
us at all the contrary whereof we have made out It must then follow that it was not the seventh day but a seventh day which this Command respecteth which therefore belongeth to us as it did to the Jews as well as any other Command and particularly the second Command doth Arg. 2. If God hath put a difference some way betwixt the Sabbath commanded here and the day of his own rest the seventh day then it would seem its not that day which it commanded But he hath put a difference first in the mandatory part Remember what not the seventh day but the Sabbath day or day of rest 2. In the blessing it is not said he blessed the seventh day but the Sabbath therefore is that difference so palpable as being specially intended whereas if the scope of the Command were only the seventh day it had been much more clear to have set it down other wayes and no other probable reason of the difference can be given Arg. 3. Either a seventh day is commanded primarily and then the seventh but secondarily and consequentially or the seventh was commanded the Jews primarily and one of seven but consequentially for both were commanded to them and the first to wit the seventh as being in use before But it cannot be said that the seventh day was primarily commanded and one of seven consequentially only because the general is first commanded and then the particular as when God required Tithes of increase and Cattle by the Command of Tithes he first required the proportion and then what particular proportion as to order he himself should carve out to them and so consequently came in the tenth Beast which passed under the rod by a particular command Lev. 27. 32 33 because there God determined but if that tenth had not been set down the general command had but determined upon the tenth of Cattle as of Sheaves or bolls of Corn even so it is as to the day the Command requireth one of seven primarily but that it is this seventh followeth from another determination Arg. 4. If the moral grounds and reasons which press this Command do most directly respect a seventh day and not the seventh then it s not the seventh day but a seventh day which is primarily commanded in it for the reasons bear out especially what is moral in it and principally intended but the moral reasons pressing it plead more strongly and directly for a seventh day and but indirectly for the seventh day as it was then instituted Ergo c. That the reasons do directly press a seventh day and in a manner stick closely to it may thus be made out 1. If the reasons equally press on us the first day and the observation of it supposing it now to be observed according to Divine warrant then they do not primarily press the seventh but the reasons equally press on us the first day Ergo c. the major is clear for the same thing cannot press two different dayes primarily nor equally that the reasons concern us as well as them upon the supposition aforesaid may thus appear 1. They are universal and do not belong to that people more then any other for the concession of six dayes is to all and Gods example of resting concerneth all 2. If the breaking of that Command be equally sinful to us with them and strike against the equity of the Command and Gods example in us as well as in them then these reasons concern us also and us as well as them Now that they do so and agredge the sin of prophaning our Lords day as they did the sin of prophaning their Sabbath we must either grant or we must deny that they concern us at all Beside the weight of a challenge from the conscience by vertue of them will put a tender heart out of question of it seeing God giveth us six dayes to our selves as he did to them and his example proposed to us ought to be respected by us as well as by them and the same general equity is in both 3. If the reasons be a sufficient ground of allowance to us for six working dayes together even the last six of the week as they were to them for the first six then they determine not the seventh day to be the day of rest primarily but a seventh following these six of labour but they do allow us warrantably to work six dayes even the last six of the week Ergo they do not determine the seventh day primarily the connexion of the major seemeth to be very clear For first these must stand and fall together if the concession to call it so concern us in the six working dayes so must the reservation of a seventh 2. As the concession concerneth us in the six working dayes so must the prohibition of work on a seventh of rest for the one determineth the other if the concession be for six in number so must the prohibition be for a seventh in number but if the concession be of six in order then it is the seventh that is to be reserved and if the seventh be related to in the prohibition of work then the concession must look to the first six dayes which it doth not as we have shewed And therefore 3. seeing the six dayes concession looketh to six in number so many thou mayest or shalt work together and no more the prohibition must also respect the number to wit a seventh and not the seventh day the minor will be clear to the judicious considerer by a particular application of the reasons of the fourth Command Further if the concession respect not the number but the order as it must if the prohibition of work on the seventh respect the order and not the number then 1. what warrant have we for our six work dayes if it be not here where is it for sure we cannot take Gods time without his order and warrant 2. and more especially then could not we by vertue of this Command plead allowance for working six dayes different from the first six if so we would not be astricted by the Command to sanctifie one seeing the one inferreth and determineth the other and they must go together which were absurd Yet again it may be made out that the reasons press a seventh and not the seventh by considering the words and force of the consequence in both The first reason is Six dayes shalt thou labour but the seventh is the Lords 1. It sayeth not take the first six but of seven take six to labour and give the Lord the seventh for he has reserved it to himself 2. The same equity is in the inference for a seventh that is for the seventh if not more he has given thee six therefore give thou him a seventh will conclude more formally then give him the seventh a seventh is the seventh part of time as well as the seventh which is the equity the Command goeth on 3. Had the Command intended to inferr the
be within view of Heaven to make some Essay of glorified Saints exercise there and to have the Sabbath as a little preludy of that everlasting Sabbath and rest in the bosom of God The Fourth way of considering this sanctification is positively to wit as to the Duties wherein the Sabbath is to be spent which are shortly all duties of immediate worship whether they be inward as meditation self-examination heart prayer either ejaculatory or more continued heart-sorrow for sins c. or outward as vocal prayer and singing of Psalms reading the Scriptures and other pious Books hearing the word c. or whether they secret which may be both inward and outward or private in Families as reading of the word conferring on it repeating Sermons praying together c. or publick as joyning with the Congregation in prayers and praises hearing the word read and the sense given hearing of Sermons participating of the Sacraments when dispensed joyning in solemn humiliations and thanks givings when they fall necessarily or more conveniently to be on the Sabbath All which and such like are proper duties for that day to which liberal laying up and giving for the relief of the poor according to ability and as God blesseth every man would be added as a suitable dnty of it though it be no duty of immediate worship The fifth way is to consider the sanctification of the Sabbath complexly before it come when it 's come and after it's past 1. Then the night before not secluding a suitable remembrance throughout the week remember it 1. by timous leaving of worldly business it 's a great incroachment on the Sabbath thought too too usual to continue longer at work the night before then any other night of the week as if folks would gain the day of rest out of Saturnsdays night and Mondays morning 2 By not suffering this little times leaving of work to be idly spent but being taken up with endeavours 1. To abstract mind the 2. To from other works as well as the hand and to have the heart put in a lively frame mind the work of the day which is coming and to have a suitablenss to it If ye ask what suitableness we have to it Answ Endeavour 1. to be as if ye were about to meet God to tryst as if it were visibly with him and solemnly to treat and enter in marriage with him 2. To be like Heaven and in a special manner in some sort to imitate God as if ye were already entered into his rest and had rested from your own works 3. To be as if ye were to dye and to step into Eternity for this resting should mind us of that and was and is still specially appointed though yet no Ceremony to mind us of Gods separating of us from others for himself that we may rest eternally with him Then 3. for furthering of this look back on the Week past and endeavour to have things clear before the Sabbath come and all by-gone quarrels removed that theremay be no standing controversies against you to begin the Sabbath with 4. Pray with special solemn seriousness in reference to that day that ye may have peace for what is past that ye may be in a right frame for the day that the Minister may be helped to speak as it becometh that others may be fitted to heare and joyn that the Word and other Ordinances may be richly blest of God and that the mercy of having the Ordinances may be minded with praise to the gracious giver of them and suitably improved 2. When the morning of that sweet and desirable day cometh after we have fallen asleep in a special manner as it were in the Lords arms the night before and left our selves there 1. we would timely begin the work and beware that either carnal thoughts get in or the time be idly slepped over but I say we would begine the work early for it 's for that end appointed and sinful thoughts will not be kept out but by filling the room otherwayes with what is spiritualy profitably Shew forth Gods loving kindness in the morning saith the Psam for the Sabbath to wit the 92. Let therefore the Meditation of somewhat of these or such like begin with us even when we are making ready 1. somewhat of God himself whose day it is 2. of heaven and that happiness that is there 3. of the works of God who gave us and all the world a being and who only preserveth the same 4. of Christs redemption and as closed and perfected on this day which especially should be minded that so thinking of our many and great obligations and of the misery we had been in had not that work of Redemption intervened we may begin the day with a due impression of Gods greatness and goodness of our own sinfulness weakness and misery and of this blessed remedy and out-gate 2. We would address our selves to solemn prayer in secret and that at greater length then on other dayes and with persisting in inwith special petitions relating to the day with all the seriousnese may win it 3 We would take a view of our own hearts to see how and where we left the night before and endeavour to have clearness betwixt the Lord and us as to our state and otherwayes maintained and renewed if it was or attained if it was not 4. Too much time would not be spent in adorning of busking or folks bodies or in making other provisions for them but as the whole of it would be taken up in duties of worship as we have before shewed so some part of it would be set apart for secret reading yea for secret praising thanksgiving and singing an exercise not unbecoming that day as that fore-cited Psalm for the Sabbath day sheweth 5. If thou be the Head of a Family or livest in fellowship with others then the family is gravely to be brought together and every particular member is to joyn with the rest And here also prayers and other religious duties are to be doubled according to the ceremonial doubling of Sacrifices on the Seventh-day-Sabbath under the Law for in secret in families and in publick there would be more that day then in other dayes 6. Care and inspection would be taken so far as men can reach that by none in the Society neither secret nor private duties be neglected nor publick duties abstained from but that each may stir up one another and more especially those whose places lead them to it to the sutable sanctification of the day in all the duties of it and withal it would be looked to that none of the family be suffered to stay at home unnecessarily from the publick worship or to be absent from the family worship 7. Timely that ye be not by haste discomposed come to publick-modestly apparrelled it's a shame to see how gaudily some come to publick worship on the Lords day grave in your walk wary and circumspect in you words that they
house and they will please much more then if they were all in gold cloath your selves with the silk of goodness and vertue with the fine linning of holiness with the purpure of chastity and being after this fashion painted and adorned ye will have God to be your Lover Which notably agreeth with what the Apostles say 1 Tim. 2. v. 9. 10. In like manner also that women odorn themselves in modest apparel with shamefastness and sobriety not with broidered hair or gold or pearls or costly array But which becometh women professing godliness with goodworks 1 Pet 3. ● 2. especially 3. 4. 5. Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plaiting the hair and of wearing of gold or of putting on of apparrel But let it be the hidden man of the heart in that which is not corruptible even the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price For after this manner in the old time the holy women also who trusted in God adorned themselves being in subjection unto their own husbands See also Tit. 2. v 4. 5. Next to what hath been said of dressing the body somewhat may not inappositly be spoke to annent dressing and decking of houses and beds and annent houshold furniture or plenishing wherein there may be an evil concupiscence and lust and an inordinate affection our minds being often by a little thing kindled and set on fire See to this purpose Prov. 7. 17. where that woman spoken of hath first the attire of an whore then he faith her bed is dressed her ●epestry and curtains provided incense and perfumes are in the chambers So also beds of Ivory are reproved Amos 6 4. which are all used for entertaining the great lust of uncleanness which ordinarily hath these alluring extravegancies attending and waiting upon it O! what provision do some make for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof how careful Caterers are they this way for their corruptions And certainly Christians are not in their houses more then in their persons left to live at random without bounds folks no doubt may be unsutable to their stations as much in the one as in the other This excess may be also in the light and wanton manner of adorning houses and buildings with filthy and immodest paintings picturs and statues and such like which with other things is spoken of condemned Ezek. 23. 14. But withal in what we have spoken in these excesses so incident even to professours we would not have folks too rigidly to expone us for we know that there are lawful recreations nor are honesty and comliness in behaviour and apparel blameable but to be commended in their place neither would we have any think that we suppose all such who do the things above censured to be incited to them from this principle of lust but for clearing of the matter further it would be considered 1 That we speak of these things as they are abused and particularly condemned in this Church 2. We would consider the end of the things themselves as they have been at first sinfully introduced whatever may be the innocent intention of a particulare user 3. We would respect others who may be offended and provoked to lust by what an actor is not provoked with and also may be sinfully tempted to the like from that example or if not so yet may possibly be induced to judge them vain who walk so and so in apparel light who dance c. which we would prevent and guard against 4. We would not only abstain from evil but from all appearance of it now certainly all these things we have spoken of look like ill and may breed misconstructions in others even possibly beyond our own mind and intention we may also consider the mind of very Heathens in reference to these things as also of Fathers Councels and the Divines which are cited by Rivet and Martyr on this Command The Councel Lado Can. 53. apud Bals hath these words Let Christians when they goe to marriages abstain from dancing but dine or sup And another saith Nemo fre saltat sobrius nis● forte insanit no man almost danceth that is sober unless perchance he be in a fit of distraction or madness Neither doth Davids or Miriams dancing being used by them as a part of worship in the occasions of extraordinary exultations say any thing for the dancing that is now in use as their Songs of praise to God used in these their dancings abundantly shew And beside their dancings were not promiscuous men with women but men or women a part-Beside if the seeing of vain objects provoke to lust the circumstances and incitements of dancing must do it much more and what men commonly say Take away the promiscuousness of dancing and it self will fall It doth confirm this that dancing is not pleaded for or delighted in as it is a recreative motion but as promiscuous with women which beside the great provocation to lust spoken of occasioneth that both much time and expense is bestowed on learning this which is attended with no profit What we have said of these evils may also take in excess in sleeping laziness c. to be seen in David 2 Sam. 11. 2. and also vain curiosity as well as lasciviousness in singing and playing too much whereof favours of wantonness and riotousness as these words Rom. 13. 13. are in their signification extended by some Now all these excesses spoken of being opposite to sobriety and modesty shame fasteness and gravity must come in under wantonness and what followeth doth come in under intemperance The Scripture insisteth much in condemning the sin of intemperance which we conceive doth mainly consist in gluttony and drunkenness and seeing these sins must belong to some one Command although vertually and indirectly they break all we take them especially to be condemned here in this Command where temperance is commanded and therefore we shall find them in Scripture mentioned with a special respect to the sin of uncleanness expresly forbidden here Fulness of bread and gluttony is observed to have been Sodoms sin and the rise and source of their filthiness Ezek. 16. 49. Drunkenness is marked especially as leading to this Prov. 23. 31. 33. Therefore we choose to speak a word to these two evils here which are in themselves so abominable and yet alas so frequent amongst those who are called Christians It is true there is both in eating and drinking respect to be had 1. To nature which in some requireth more in some less 2. To mens stations where as to the kind or quality as we said of cloaths there is more allowed to one then another 3. To some occasions wherein more freedom and hilarity is permitted then at other times when more abstinency and a restraint upon these even in themselves lawful pleasures is extraordinarily called for so that we cannot bound all persons and at all times with the same peremptory
when we declare a thing otherwayes then we know or think it to be and as no man can lye for himself for his own safety so can he not for anothers thus to lye even for God is a fault and accounted to be talking deceitfully and wickedly for him when ●o keep off what we account dishonourable to him we will assert that he may or may not do such a thing when yet the contrary is true Job 13. 4. 7. 3. There is j●cos●m mendacium when it is for sport to make others laugh and be merry which being sinful in it self can be no matter of lawful sport to make others laugh 4. We may add one more and that is mendacium temerarium when men lye and have no end before them but through inadvertency and customary loosness speak otherwayes then the thing is this is called the way o● lying Psal 119. 29. and is certainly sinful as when they told David when A●non was killed that all the Kings sons were killed being too hasty in concluding before they had tryed 3. Consider lyes or untruths either in things doctrinal or in matters of fact In things doctrinal so false Teachers and their followers are guilty who teach and believe lies so such Teachers are said 1 Tim. 4. ● to speak lyes and so when they foretel vain events this is a high degree of lend lying on the Lord to say he meaneth or sayeth another thing then ever he thought or then ever came into his heart and to pretend a commission from him when he giveth no such commission In matters of fact men are guilty when things are said to be done when they are not done or otherwayes done then they are done indeed 4. We may consider this sin in mens practise either in reference to God so hypocrisie and unanswerableness to our profession is lying Psal ●8 36. and Isa ●9 13. or we may consider it as betwixt man and man which is more properly the scope here Again we may consider the wronging of a man three wayes 1. By false reports speaking what is indeed untruth 2. By ●ai● reports which tend to his shame so Deut. 5. 20. this Command is repeated in these words Thou shalt not take up any witness as it is in the original against thy neighbour 3. When the reports are malicious whether they be true or false and intended for that end that our neighbour may lose his good name Further consider it in reference to the person guilty either as he is 1. the raiser or carrier of a tale true or false yet tending to the prejudice of his neighbour thus he is the maker of a lye or 2. as he is a hearer or receiver of tales Prov. 17. 4. Thus he is to lying as a resetter is to theft and would not men hear tales few would carry them whereas when men will hearken to lyes especially great men all their servants ordinarily become wicked tale-bearers and whisperers or 3. as he is the sufferer albeit he be not the venter of a lying tale to pass on his neighbour so he loveth a lye as it is Revel 22. 8. or but faintly purgeth him of it but letteth it either lye on him or possibly taketh it up and repeateth it again which is condemned Psalm 15. 3. where a man that taketh up an evil report of his neighbour even when others possibly have laid it down is looked upon as a person who shall never dwell with God Thus one inventeth alye another venteth and outeth it and a third resetteth it like coyners spreaders and resetters of false money for that one said such a thing will not warrant our repeating of it again 5. We may consider wrongs done to our Neighbour by words as unjust and without all ground and so a lye is a calu●●ty as was that of Z●ba made of his Master Mephibosheth this is in Latin calumnia or when there is ground yet when they are spoken to his prejudice this is convitium if especially in this they suffer for the truths sake or if after repentance former faults be cast up to a person as if one should have called Paul a blasphemer shall even after his conversion and repentance of this was S●imei guilty by railing on David 6. Both these sorts of lyes are either spoken or received and not afterward rejected as David too hastily received that false report made of Mephibosheth by his servant Ziba and thinking it not unlikely because the reporter made it seem to be so did therefore conclude it was truth and did not reject it afterwards or when at first received yet after upon better information it is rejected 7. Again this wronging of our neighbour by words is either of him when absent and this is backbiting which often is done under pretence of much respect that the report may stick the faster in such like words as these He is one I wi●h well and should be loath ●o have him evil reported of but this is too evident this is the truth c. this is susurrare to whisper Or it is of him when present so it is a reproach and indignity or upbraiding 8. Again this backbiting and reproaching is either direct so that men may easily know we hate such persons or it is indirect granting some what to his commendation and using such prefaces as in shew bear out much love but are purposely designed to make the wound given by the tongue the deeper such persons are as butter in their words but as sharp swords in their hearts this is that dissembling love which David complaineth of 9. Sometimes this reproaching and slandering of our Neighbour is out of spleen against him and is malicious sometimes out of envy to raise and exalt ones self on the ruines of another this is grassari in famam proximi sometimes it is out of design thereby to insinuate upon them whom we speak unto as to signifie our freedom unto them to please them or praise them by crying down another that is to serve the itching humour of such who love the praise of others when it may be we know no faults of those we speak to yet never open our mouth to them of one of these nor are we free with them anent them if the things be true 10. We may break this Command by speaking truth 1. For an evil end as Doeg did Psal 52. 2. 2. by telling something that is truth out of revenge 3 When it is done without discretion so it shameth more then edifieth Christs word is Matth. 18. 15. Tell him his fault betwixt thee and him alone and we on the contrary make it an upcast to him this certainly is not right 4. When it is minced and all not told which if told might alleviate or construed and wrested to a wrong end as did the witnesses who deponed against Christ 11. We may break this Command and fall in the extremity of speaking too much good of or to our neighbour as well as by
143 Fasting in what sense a part of Gods worship 69 Se●eral grounds of fasting ibid. Twelve ordinary sins that goes before fasting 70 71 Twenty ordinary sins in fasting ennumerat●d 71 72 Thirteen Instances of ordinary failings after fasting 72 Father how to be understood in the fifth command 191 Wh●● Lo●e the Father owes to the Son and what the Son to the Father 104 Whether the Father or the Magistrate should be obeyed when commanding contrary things ib. Fornication the several sorts of it with its aggravations 217 Frugality what it is Eight Characters of it 255 G. GAin when lawful and honest 250 251 Several wayes of dishonest gain ●nnum●rated 241 G●ds Who make unto themselves other Gods beside the Lord. 26 Gluttony how against the 7 Command 226 Divers considerations tending to discover when we sin in eating 227. to 229. Diver's necessary Rules for r●gul●ting our eating and drinking 22● H. HAtred of God how a breach of the first Command 3● H●● every sin is interpreted h●●red and every ●●en●r a hatred of God 75. 76 How ●orrupting of Gods worship is reckoned hatred of God in a special manner 76 Hair how sinfully abused 223 Honour what mentioned in the fifth Commandment imports 192 193 Why Honouring our neighbour is commanded before other duti●s of the second table 197 Wh●r●in honouring our neig●bour c●nsists and what it imports ibid. H●w honour differeth from love ibid. Whether outward expressions of honour be alwayes necessary ibid. What is centrary to this ●●nour we owe to our neighbour 198. 199 Whether wicked men may be honoured 199. 200 Whether rich men f●ould be honoured 200 The place Jam ● 1 2. explained ibid. How the honour we owe in a good man differs from that we owe to others alike in outward respects ibid. Whether we may seek our own honour and how 201 How we should prefer another to our selves 201. 202 Humility required by the fifth Command a threefold Consideration of it How the Pagan moralists were strangers to it The advantages of it In what things its most necessary The opposites of it 205. to 208 I. IDleness the sinfulness of it 181 182 Idolatry 7. distinctions of it 19 20 Five wayes of more subtile heart idolatry 20 How to discover each of these 20 21 The ordinary objects of this great idolatry Instanced in 11. particulars 22 What be the most subtile Idols shewed in six particulars 24 A Twofold Idolatry especially forbidden to the Israelites and condemned in them 34 The Idolatry forbidden in the second command in six particulars 43. 44 Jealousie what it importeth and how attributed to God 72 73 Ignorance of the Law The sad effects of it 1. 2 How a breach of the first Command 28 Several distinctions of it explained ibid. How it ex●useth and how not 29 Images of any of the 3 Persons in the bl●ssed Trini●● proved to be unlawful 35 Objections answered 35 ●6 The Command forbidding Images proved to be distinct from the first 34 What Images may be ●awfully made ibid. When are Images of creatures abused 36 Images of Heathen Gods as M●rs Cupid c. prohibited 37 Impatience ●ow it appears and how a breach of the first Command 31 Imprecations whether lawful or not 83 Incest when committed and wherein the unnaturalness of it stands 216 K. KNowledge of God required in the first Command 18. See ignorance L. LAw the excellency and usefulness of it 1 How the moral Law obligeth ●s now 2 The distinction of the decalogue as a Law and as a Covenant cleared 4 How the Law was given to Adam in innocency how to Israel and how is Believers now 10 The extent of the Law shewed in seven respects 9 Several wayes of abusing the Law 11 Some directions for right using of it ibid. Like-makes and dr●gies the sinfulness of them 47 Lots or Lotting defined 106 How the use of them concerns the third Command 107 Several divisions of Lots and which of them are lawful which not 107. 108 What is necessary to lawful Lotting 1 8 Cautions for preventing abuse of them 108 109 Lusory Lots proved unlawful 109 110 111 Some objection an wered ibid. Love to God why called the first and great commandment 188 What Love may be allowed to the Creature without breath of the first Command 25 Whether we ought to Love all man alike 194 In what respects may we make a difference ibid. What are the grounds of a lawful difference in our Love 195 How Love to the Godly differeth from common Love to others ibid. How we may love wicked men ibid. What self love is lawful what not 196 Lust how early it entred into the world 214 Several degrees of unnatural Lusts 216 See Concupiscence Lye what it is and when one is guilty of it 263 Four sorts of Lyes 264 How many wayes we wrong our neighbour by Lying 264. 265 Of Lying in Court of Justice how the Judge and how the Advocate may be guilty as well ●s a false witness 267 Life the taking away of our own cleared to be forbidden in the sixth Command 209 How many wayes one may be guilty of this ibid. How we may sin against the bodily Life of others 210 How against the Life of their souls 210 211 How against their Life of contentment 211 M. MArriage how many wayes men sin in Contracting of it 218 How one may sin against the seventh Command even in a Married state ibid. How one may sin in dissolving of Marriage 218 219 Mother vvhy mentioned in the first Command 192 Moral all the precepts in the decalogue not moral in the same sense 5 See Sabbath Murther several distinctions of it 212 How its committed in the heart how i● words gestures deeds 212 213 How Magistrates may be guilty of it ibid. Self Murder how forbidden 109 See Life N. NAme what is meant by the Name of God 77 What it is to take this Name in vain 78 What is necessary to the reverent mentioning of the Name of God ibid. Why the taking of this Name in vain is so peremptorily prohibited 79 Eight ordinary wayes of taking the Lords Name in vain 102. 103 How the Name of God is taken in vain in ordinances and duties 103 How to prevent this sin in duties 104 How ●o● know vvhen guilty of it 104 106 Why the taking of God Name in vain i● so threatened and punished even beyond other sins 115. 116 How it comes that this sin is so ordinary 116 117 Directions for the prevention of it ibid. Neighbour to be honoured and loved 191 How vve should love and honour our neighbour 193. 194 See honour and love O. OAth five things to be considered in it 80 How one Oath differs from an asseveration 81 That its unlawful to swear by Angels Saints or other Creatures proved ibid. The difference between promissory and assertory Oaths and between promissory Oaths and Vows shewed 83 84 A threefold matter of an Oath and a threefold occasion of swearing ibid. Of expresse
not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable full of glory That ye may with all Saints be able to comprehend what is the breadth and length depth heighth and to know the love of Christ that passeth knowledge Are these I say Romances are th●se fancies factions and forg●ries are these fables cunningly devised and told by the Non conformists-Preachers Did the Apostle thunder the great Anathema Ma●an●●h● against men for their not h●●ing a meer Romantick end fancied love to the Lord Jesus the execution of which dreadful doom will ●e a solid proof of its reality and a sad reproof for denying it to be so Dare the most proud petulant perverse and prodigiously profane prater pretending but to the name of a Christian say it If these most real love Communications and intercourses betwixt the Lord Christ and the believing Soul be but Romances then the whole Bible whereof these make so considerable and so comfortable a part may be reckoned a Romance which be like this Romantick Divine will not so much demurr making small account therefore and audaciously alleadging the English Bible to be a Book in some places erroneous in ●ome scarce sense and of dangerous consequences loath would he be to deal so by Grand Cyrus Cleopatra and his other darling Romance● if there be no real but Romantick and fained love betwixt Christ and the Christian then no real Christianity no real Christ whom this new Doctor dreadfully de●aseth under the poorly palliated pretext of exalting him affirming that his unparalleled civility and the obliginness of his deportment seems to be almost as high an evidence of the Truth and Divinity of his Doctrine as his unparalleled miracles were otherwise he would be a base and pro●●ig●t Impostor what would this young Divine for old Divines and even great Calvin b● name amongst the rest he despiseth as a company of ●●lly Systematicks have said and thought of the Divinity of the person end Doctrine of blessed Jesus if when on earth he had more frequently as he might and probably would have done under the same circumstances spoke and deals so roughly and roundly as he did when he called Herod a Fox and scourged the buyers and sellers out of the Temple and had seemed to be as uncivil and of as little obliging a Deportment as his harbinger John Baptist he would be like have doubted of his Divinity and deemed him but ● ba●e Impostore if not peremptorily pronounced that he had a Divel No real Redemption no real Redeemer no real misery no real mercy no real Heaven no real Hell but ah the real acting of its story will easily and quickly refute this Romantick conception of it And in fine no real God All is but one intire fine Romance fable and figment The Lord against whom this mouth is opened thus wickedly wide and is by an other Rabsh●keh railed on at such a rate of rage rebuke the Spirit which prompteth to the venting this damnable and Diabolick nay Hyper diabolick Doctrine for Devils believe that there is one God and tremble and that Jesus Christ 〈◊〉 the Son of God whom even in his state of humiliation they acknowledged to be so and from the dread of him deprecated his tormenting them before the time but this Desperado would on the matter drive us into a disbelief of both yet droll us out of all dread being tormented on that or any other account either before the time or a● it because of which its Teacher of late better taught if 〈◊〉 would humble himself to receive Instruction by Famous Doctor Owen by Acute Master Marvel and by the Grave author of The Fulfilling of the Scriptures in his Second Part deeply deserves not only to be cast out of the Protestant Churches but to be hissed and chased out of the Christian World And as appears finally by that Divinely Politick and Profoundly Wise Treatise of Scandal in General and of Scandalous Divisions in Particular which both Preachers and Professors of the Gospel should read and read again in these sad Times wherein Alass there is so much Offence given and so great a readiness to take Offence Of none of which Treatises nor of any other so brief a Treatise on the Commands this piece will I humbly suppose be found to fall much if any thing at all short wherein the Light of the Glory of the Lord in the Face of Jesus Christ that shined in upon the heart of his Servant hath so brightly and radiantly darted forth it s Beams that he hath clearly shewed us the 7. Abominations of our Hearts and by digging hath discovered Great Abominations and Greater and yet Greater than these He that searcheth Jerusslem with Candles hath by putting the Candle of the True Meaning of the Law of the Lord into his Hand made him go down and search into the very Inward Par●s of the Belly and B●wels of the Corruption of our Nature and to Ransack the most Retired Corners of the Closse Cabinet of the Deep Deceitfulness and Desperate Wickedness that is lodged and locked up in our Hearts He hath given to him as it were the end of the Clew of Search whereby he hath ●ollowed and sound us out in those many Turnings and Traversings Windings and Wandrings of the Labyrinth of this great Mystery of Iniquity that worketh in us He hath therein also marvellously helped him with Exquisite Skill as it were Anatomically to diffect even to some of the very smallest C●pillar Veins a great part of the Vast Body of the many various Duties succinctly summed up in these Ten Words of this Holy Law A Transumpt and Double whereof was ●s V●vely Written and deeply ingraven upon the fleshly tables of the Author's heart and one the whole of his Visible Deportment as readily hath been on many of the Sinful Sons of Adam Not to detain thee long Let me for provoking and perswading to consider what the Blest Author being now dead yet speaketh in this Choyse Treatise and more especially to the Inhabitants of Glasgow now the Second time only say that amongst many other distempers of this declined and degenered Generation there is a great itching aster some new and more notional and a loathing of old and more solid and substantial things in Religion whereof this is a Demonstration that though there ●e very few subjects more necessary and useful than what is treated of here yet there is almost none more generally slighted as being a very common and ordinary subject and but the Ten Commands fitter to be read and gote by r●●t by Children or at best to be studied by rude and ignorant beginners by Apprentices and Christians of the lowest form in Chris● School then by Professors of greater knowledge and longer standing who suppose themselves and are it may be supposed by others to have passed their Apprentiship to be grown Deacons in the Trade of Religio● and to have commenced masters of Art therein who someway disdain and account