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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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Churches constituted for they have no Sacraments this follows upon the former and rises morally from it where there is no Minister or authoritative Officer there can be no Sacraments they being the Seals of the Covenant of grace which is made unto believers either when they are incorporated or confirmed in the body of Christ which is the Church Ephes. 1.23 Thy are also called broad seals of heaven that of the spirit being the private by which the receiver is assured of the pardon of his sins Now to the private Christian did Christ never give the keeping of or the power of delivering those seals The People were never Lord-chancellours of these things whether singly or collectively taken therefore they cannot give nor dispence them to another Iohn the Baptist was called from God immediately to baptize so were the Apostles by Christ who Ordained none nor Baptized none but them while the Church of Christ was constituting God was pleased so to do but after the Baptists death and the Apostles call no such extraordinary acts but all must receive now that power from the hands of the Apostles by Ordination The Church may say to those men when they come to dispence the Seals Peter I know Paul I know Stephen I know Nicanor I know Timothy I know Titus I know but who are you if you say you were or are Ordained by Christ he Ordained none but his Disciples if you were Ordained by his Disciples show it by your Commission wee shal know whether Baptisme be from Heaven that we may believe or from men that we may not be mistaken in it Possibly the peoples Election and deputation is produced for this authority which is to be equally regarded as he who should come with a Commission from a mans own son for the Father to execute the power or Office of Justice of the peace which is to be scorned his Son having no power to grant such Orders or give such Offices The power of Ordination search the Scriptures was never granted to the people neither in the Old nor New testament We find indeed Micha Iudg. 17. having a House of Gods and an Ephath and a Teraphim consecrating one of his sons for a Priest though of the tribe of Ephraim of which tribe Mos●s spoke nothing touching the Priesthood He afterwards Consecrated a Levite to be his Priest verse 12. which was an Office peculiar to the Sons of Aaron not to the Levites in common but who gave Micha the power of consecration how can he consecrate any Priest at all this moved him vers 6. In those days there was no King in Israel but every man did what was right in his own eyes there being no Magistrate or Governour to keep the people in awe An Ephraimite may consecrate and offer Sacrifice and the Worship of God being contemned through the disorder of the times a Levite is forced to wander for a place and assume the Priesthood The want of Government was the cause of this and other evils that followed upon it The self-same cause is the reason of the irregularity that hath lately been in England touching Micha's even Peoples ordination of Priests which power was never given to him nor them In one thing Micha is to have his due applause he would have none to offer Sacrifice in his House a priestly Office before he were consecrated i.e. before he were ordained Priest he had read in the Law what Sacrifices Duties were appointed in the designation of men into that Office his Son nor the Levites not being of that line unto whom by a natural succession the Office belonged he saw a necessity of making them Priests for he must worship God and if they be Priests they must be consecrated he knows nor how or where to procure another ●● therefore takes the Authority to himself of Consecration And truly such Priests as he made and himself that made them and the Worship they gave by him and the gods they worshipped too were suitable to each other Even such are they though in this particular worse who will offer to design or depute any to be their Priest or Minister who are not of that line to whom by a moral Succession that Office onely belongeth by their being deputed and set apart for that Office by the Sacrifice of Prayer and Supplication and with the ceremony of Imposition of Hands by those who have received that power by Apostolical Tradition Possibly he may produce his own Gifts of Holiness Utterance Aptness to teach Courage Zeal with all other Gifts that are possible to qualifie men inwardly for that Office and indeed may shew a Call from God which he supposes ought to be sufficient to testifie that his Baptism is not of men or to demonstrate that he is a man sent from God authoritatively to teach and administer the Sacraments to his Church But the Church values not those in this nature for so Paul was qualified also and Barnabas qualified and called of God for that Office yet God will have them to be constituted authoritative teachers in the sight of the Church by the Laws that were by him appointed for the Church viz. by Ordination or Imposition of hands Act. 13.3 So Stephen Nicanor Philip c. Acts 6. were men of honest report full of the Holy ghost and wisedome yet the lowest Office in the Church cannot they neither do they offer to perform in that Ordination from the Apostles Upon this ground the Church hath reason to deny their Authority and we deny that they have power to administer Sacraments the bread that they brake is not the body of Christ the cup they offer is not the Communion of the blood of Christ shed for the remission of sins they have not received this power of the Lord because not from his Apostles of causing Bread to be by faith beheld as the body of Christ nor Wine to represent the blood of Christ. In a word let us see how or when they received power from the Apostles otherwise they must passe for counterfeits and cheats and the offence so much the more hainous as it 's a counterfeiting the Great Seal of Heaven to bring Christs Spouse and her children in an errour in matters of so g●●at concernment as the Seal of the Remission of their sins but she knows his hand and though they should come with never so much show of humility nay confirm their calling by miracles she is not she will not believe it Christ her Husband hath forewarned her that such should come and charged her not to heed them not follow them but shun them and avoid them 3. Should we Church those segregated Congregations as now constituted we must and are to un-Church all the Churches that now are or that ever have been in the Christian World They taught and teached the contrary they maintained and dyed for the contrary they walk Autipodos to one another there is a great diversity in their walking thus constituted as
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
God himself calls a Sabbath wherever therefore one day in seven is kept Holy it may from the morality of the Law be named a Sabbath providing it to be the Sabbath of the Lord God that is a day set apar● by him for his own service by which we conclude that the seventh day kept by the Iew or the seventh day kept by the Turk though they work not are not morally Sabbaths the Lord never chusing the one and rejecting the other constituting the first day of the week to be since Christs Resurrection a perpetual Sabbath to himself B●t what is all this to Sunday this being a prophane name drawn from the Heathens It is to be wondred at to see what canting language is in the mouthes of men and how mystically they will speak to avoid ordinary expressions in time our dip pers may new dip doublets gloves and give them new names and by consequence set us all to schoole again that we may learn to forget our selves to be men and with authority pronounce all our Ancestors fools being they could not tell how to speak The Heathens it is true named the days of the week according to some feigned Gods real planets one among the rest was called Dies Solis the day of the Sun the self same day that is our Christian Sabbath naming or dedicating that day to that planet if the day had been dipped in the fountain of the Sun all had been well enough tamen non ●bstante we may call the first day of the week Sunday any thing in this argument to the contrary notwithstanding 1. From the practice of an Holy Evangelist he that was in labours more abundantly for the Gospel then any now can pretend to be that is not past shame was not so scrupulous as these men would seem to be for it is but a seeming be in his History of the Acts Acts 28. giving us an account of Pauls dangerous voyage to Rome shews us vers 11. That they viz. Paul and his company whereof Luke who wrot this History was one after three moneths departed in a Ship of Alexandria which had wintered in the Isle whose sign was CASTOR and POLLUX the Spirit of God made no scruple at these heathenish names but writ them and they stand in the Scripture and no reproof is given to the users of them and yet in their own natures they are to be more stumbled at then D●s Solis or Sunday either We shall interpret and open this story that these mens folly may appear you must know that the great Heathen God who ruled all was called Iupiter he was born at Crete and when he came to be of age he threw his Father Saturn out of his kingdom having three Brothers he gave the government of Hell to Pluto the government of the Sea to Neptune and kept the government of Heaven and Earth to himself This Iupiter according to Heathen Poets and Fables would come oftentimes out of Heaven and play pretty pranks upon Earth one of which was this One Tyndarus had a handsome wife called L●da she being with childe to her own husband Iupiter in a merry pin turned her into a milk white Swan and in that shape he being a God a pretty one got her with childe likewise she grew mighty big her hour of travel comes she is delivered of two Sons well shaped boyes they were One of them is named CASTOR the other POLLVX the lads grew and when they came to be of age their coasts being pestred with Pirats they got Ships and destroyed the Pirats in a short time they rid the Sea of them for this they are worshipped as Gods of the Sea and where they are together it is a sign of a fortunate voyage this is the reason that that Ship wherein Luke and Paul was had the sign of Castor and Pollux upon Their stern as some English Ships have Saint George this Ship therefore being at her outrigging named by Castor and Pollux foolish and heathenish Gods which had such a filthyoriginals this name being used by the Spirit of God and that without a check we may use the name Sunday though used by the Heathens by a more ra●ional cause then the other and not to be reproved by any whimsical sawcy or Hypocritical rebel whatsoever whose conscences in matter of sin we have no cause to suppose tender 2. From the innocency and harmlesness that is in the using of it there are some customes originally heathenish used too often that are attended with sin and whose being ought to be removed because of transgression as may-games particularly which always is accompanied with sinful and by relation shameful Acts and once in seven year a great occasion of the polluting of that day of which we are now speaking But this word Sunday hath nothing in it that savours of evil or that can be said to border upon that which is not right 3. From the happy event that God hath been pleased to give this name The Heathens gave one day to Mercury another to Venus one thought a thief and the other a whore the first day of the week to Apollo or the Sun Apollo they thought a God well skilled in Physick Excellent in Musick good to open Prophesies always young to such a one was this day dedicated and after him named he carrying about the Sun it was called Sunday now this hath fallen out so well as it deserves to be remembred Christ is Sol Iustisiae the Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4.2 this day did the Sun of our souls break through the clouds of his winding sheet and triumphed over darkness this day did he come out of the Chamber of his sepulchre and rejoyced as a bridegroom to run his race he came with healing under his wings to cure our souls he brought the sweet Musick of the Gospel of reconciliation I ascend said he Iohn 20.27 Vnto my Father and your Father to my God and your God he is the true explainer of the Prophets by this Sun● rising we see what was meant by Ienas lying in the Whales belly he comes out of his grave like a R●e or a young heart Cant. 8.14 In a word he is the light that inlightens every one that comes into the world our Sun the Son of God is risen by him we see Heaven by him we receive the fruits of the Earth this is his day dedicated to him by the Spirit set apart by himself never be bafled therefore but if thou so please call it Sunday it hath fallen out well that this day was by them that knew not God dedicated to the Sun and not to any other since in many points it can quadrate with our Sun of righteousness which with others it could not so well have done Quest. 10. Why is the Sabbath called Holy We shall have occasion to speak to this more at large hereafter for the present the Sabbath may be called Holy 1. In regard of the author of it
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
and sole prerogative shewing that having come to God with some honourable and glorious tittle at our entry we are to give an honorable respect unto him at our close both in private and publick addresses The body of our prayers are not to be without some gratulatory expressions but thanks to be returned to his name 1 For his spirit that teacheth us to pray 2 For his patience in the time of our prayer 3 For his mercy in answering our prayer 4 For his Son in whom he hath accepted our prayer 5 For all his favours given without our prayer And as this glory is his due for ever so must we ascribe it unto him for ever that is 1 When ever we pray 2 Where ever we are 3 What ever we suffer 4 When we shall be for ever with him For though the Kingdome may be ours by gift and donation yet we must ever acknowledge it to be his and his Christs 1 By nature 2 By inheritance 3 By dominion This form of thanksgiving being ushered in by an illative practice For shews that we must in prayer reason with the almighty and give arguments to move him to mercy the Kingdome is craved of him for all power is his his name is to be hallowed for the glory is his We shall frequently see the Saints pressing God with argument and reason sometimes drawn from the Topick of his own glory as Help us O God of our salvation why should God help them Deliver us for thy name sake 79.9 and sometimes from the common place of their own misery as turn thee unto me and have mercy upon me Why for I am desolate and afflicted Psal. 25.16 And againe O keep my soul and deliver me and let me not be ashamed for I put my trust in thee Psal. 25.20 From this clause the Church of Rome may perceive her errour in making prayers to St. Peter Paul Mary Ioseph or B●cket in regard that neither the Kingdome nor the power nor the glory is theirs for ever nor only as the word ever eyes the eternity past if we may so speak which she will grant but as it eyes that which is to come Peter and Paul yea all the holy Apostles evergiving to the only wise God even our Father and the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ the Kingdome the power and the glory Yea admit that prayers might be made unto them as Fathers of the Church now glorified in heaven yet is it not a strange solecisme to call upon the Virgin Mary or any other female Saint Our Father c. Ave Maria may and doth suit better with her being a woman then Pater noster except it can be proved than since her assumption she hath altered her sex as well as her condition 4 The last considerable in this prayer is confidence of the petitioner to be heard in things prayed for in this word Amen This word is a mother word in all languages and as Jesus a Greek word is understood by all hearers so this though Hebrew is used by all people and in Scripture notes two things 1. A wish that it may be so 1 King 13.6 2. A confidence that it shall be so Rev. 22.20 He that says Amen consents to the Petition offered up in affection saying Amen or so be it as Benajah or Amen so shall it be as the Church in those places above cited what care therefore ought men to have of the nature of those petitions they put up especially in publick nonsence blasphemy heresie fury might have been written upon the prayers of many in these late yeares unto which no true Christian could say and we know God did not lay Amen that ever requiring a full assent and consent to the prayer made Let this inform● Rome and other Hereticks of their error in making the people say Amen 1 To those prayers they understand not in regard they are made in an unknown tongue a language of which the people hath no understanding 2 To those prayers which people apprehend not through the confusion disodrer discontinuing and rawnesse of the prayer made arising from the ignorance presumption and wilfulness of the prayer-maker that they who hears can no more remember what they have sayd Amen unto then Nebuchadnezer remembered his dream This is not written against any that hath parts and abilities fluently as the modern phrase is extempore to express themselves unto God for the people in prayer but to check some presumptuous pretenders to the same gift who are usually so much in the spirit to speak in their own language that they are without understanding Yet these were the men by whom this prayer of our Lord was undervalued in every respect for which it was composed they using it neither as a form of prayer nor for a rule of prayer and not being content with that blasted their verdure with the breath of malignancy who used it to any of these ends but some there were to glory be it spoken that were neither ashamed to use it in their closets nor affraid to carry it to their Pulpits both as a rule and as a form Blessed be the Lord who hath not given us as a prey to their teeth our soul is escaped as a bird out of the snare of the Fowlers the snare is broken and we are escaped Amen and Amen Psalm 124.6 7. SECT 5. We are now to proceed in discovering what must be shuned and avoided in prayer in which we shall not barely shew the things but the causes and the cures of them We are chiefly to beware of these particulars as great hinderances of Prayer 1 Sinfull distractions Math. 6.6 which are of two sorts 1 Brought upon us by others whether Satan or wicked men these are our affections 2 Brought upon us by ourselves these are our sins and of them chiefly we are to take care They proceed from these grounds primarily 1 By thinking too little of heaven or of God they are so seldome in the thoughts of men that it is a hard matter in prayer to keep our hearts upon them but a few minutes 2 By thinking too much on the earth or world The picture of the world is so lively upon some mens spirits that when they go to pray it fares with them as he that goes to bed who dreams usually of those things that most possesse his mind so they when before God are distracted with those thoughts they are more conversant withal c. To cure which disease or remove this kind of distraction consider 1 That nothing is more against the goodnesse of God he is hearty and real and serious in all his dealings and carriages towards us therefore we ought to be upright in our speeches towards him c. 2 That nothing is more against that reverence we owe God he knows the wanderings and aberrations of the heart and seeth the contradiction between our lips and affections which knowing we are to come before him with sutable carriage least we
charged with contempt to his Maiesty our blood be mingled with our sacrifices 3. Nothing is more contrary to the signs we make to God bended knees lifted up eyes would require humble hearts and devout desires for the eyes to be beholding heaven and in the same time the heart to be hugging the earth is but before God to be known a perfect hypocrite 4 Nothing is more able to hinder benefits from God his eares are not at all open to such a prayer and if he stretch forth his hand it may be to strike the offence is so much the greater that it is in an ordinance in which God is so nearly approached unto c. 2 We are to avoid in prayer causelesse hesitation we will not say in this case he that doubts is damned but he that doubts is doomed he shall receive nothing from God Jam. 1.7 qui timide rogat docet negare This ariseth 1 From a partiall apprehension of God they consider him as just great powerfull but see him not good kind mercifull c. 2 From a total apprehension of themselves they behold and that truly that sin wickednesse wrath c. are wholly and universally in them by which they doubt that God will not hear them nor regard them c. To cure which disease or to remove which doubting Consider 1 Nothing more can provoke God to call in question his mercy his long sufferring his goodnesse and to imagine he will not hear a sinner though he cry is in a great measure to doubt if he be God c. 2 Nothing is more against the word of God that calling upon men to draw near with full assurance of faith and to come boldly to the throne of grace Heb. 4.16 3. Nothing by this is to be had from God he hath declared his mind touching that man that prays doubtingly in plaine letters that who so runs may read it Iam. 1.6 7. 4 Nothing more dishonorable to be Son of God to doubt that he will not hear us because we are sinners calls in question all the sufferings of Christ or at least the perfection of his sufferings together with the goodnesse of his nature and fellow-steeling of our infirmities Heb. 4.15 3 We are to avoid direful imprecation above all things we are some do it to shun cursing or wishing evill or destruction unto any yet 1 Through passion 2 Through hatred The cure of this distemper may be wrought by these means considering 1 Nothing more is against the Law of God We are to speak evil of no man to be no brawlers Tit. 3.2 in our ordinary language sure therefore to wish no evill in our ordinary devotions 2 Nothing more against the rule given us of God every petition in that form of prayer composed by our Lord is for good and he that prays after that manner as all men ought he is to wish no evill upon any 3 Nothing more contrary to the mind of God he would have all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of his truth 1 Tim. 2.4 4 Nothing more contrary to the practise of the Churches if any man will be furious or contentious the Churches of God know no such practise when they are reviled they pray when they are cursed they blesse if any of them as Stephan be stoned to death they dye not before they ask forgivnesse for their persecutors Acts 7.60 5 We must avoyd damnable objurgations To chide reprove or rebuke God when our former petitions are not answered is a greater sin then some that pretended to pray by the spirit make it who would most unmannerly to say no more rail at him 1 By pride Thinking that their intimacy and familiarily with him was slighted 2 By fear that their stratagems and designes by his long silence would be frustrated and disappointed This ought to be cur'd for its a deadly distemper for which end consider 1 Nothing is more against the practise of the Saints of God they say if we shall find favour in the eyes of the Lord he will grant us this or that but if he say I have no delight in you they will let him do what seemeth good unto him 2 Sam. 15.25 26. They will indeed complain unto him but never of him 2 Nothing more unbefitting him that calls upon God doth he think God is worthy to be prayed unto and at the same time deserves to be chidden there is no Syntax ● between a bended knee and a reproving tongue a bendded fist is much more sutable and beats a better proportion 3 Nothing is more rejected of God he can bear with any thing better then with chidding and hear any thing with farre more patience the● a reprose 4 Nothing favours more of that Spirit that is directly against God the first that ever we find accuse him was the Devill Gen. 3.5 yet not to God himself but to Ezra those men that in prayer can chide or accuse God to his face may goe to Satan and he will learn them not to blaspheme 5 We must avoid vain repetitions Mat. 7.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 use no heartlesse idle vain trifling repetitions This ariseth 1 From inadvertency when men fit not themselves before hand by setling and composing their thoughts 2 From stupidity when their shallownesse emptinesse or ignorance makes them for want of new matter to bring over the same trifling vain or heartlesse petitions again and again not being able to supply themselves with new matter To remedy these consider 1 It is against the rule of the Son of God his prayers is excellent for brevity order and perfection there is nothing in it that is overmuch nor any thing that is two little such ought our prayers to be rather short with pertinent proper and significant expressions then long with vaine trifling and frothy repetitions 2 It is contrary to the honour of God even before men it were ridiculous to be running over impertinently unto great men the same petitions we had formerly asked It were a a disrespect to earthly majesty to hear confused repetitions and sure it tends not to Gods honour to hear vain battologies 3 It is contrary to the nature of God as he is serious cordiall in all his workers and sayings he deserves to be heartily spoken to in all our addresses and reverently in all our prayers 4 It is contrary to the practise of the Saints of God search the Scriptures and never a vain word nor a trifling word is uttered by them who are most familiar with God but more of this by and by SECT 6. It is not the body alone that constitutes a man but the form that is the soul must-go with it and by that soul the body lives moves and hath its being the forme of prayer by which it receives its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and by which it moves from earth to heaven and by which it is seen to live by man and known to be healthy by God comes now
of Church did the Apostle Paul write most of his Epistles to the Romans to the Corinthians to the Galathians and as in the text to the Thessalonians that is to the company of believers that lived in and about those Cities and Countries called to be Saints 1. Cor. 1.2 This National Church as the case now stands with us and for the better understanding of some things hereafter to be handled must be divided into the Romish Church and Reformed First The Romish Church by this we understand all those Christians that hold the new invented Doctrine of the Church of Rome that believe as that Church believes and in all points conform thereunto either in point of practice or in point of doctrine Secondly The reformed Church by this we understand those believers whether Nationall or Provinciall that have forsaken the Church of Rome so far as she hath forsaken the truth of the Gospel and cleave to the Ancient Doctrin taught in the Catholick Church whether by the Lord or by his Apostles or by Ministers sent from them whether taught at Jerusalem Antioch Athens or at Rome it selfe disowning the Doctrine of Purgatory praying for the dead worshiping of Saints or what ever as is contrary to true Doctrine such are the reformed Churches of France Helvetia Basil Bohemia Belgie Auspurge Wittemburge Saxony Scotland or England whose Doctrine in these and such other points opposing Rome as may be seen in their publick confessions Now know that all these together are but one and the same Church diversly considered for as the great Se● which is but one sends out her Branches and Rivers which receive names according to the Countries they pass through and become as it were distinst Seas as the British Sea the Germane Sea the Atlantick Sea Even so the Church sending her Doctrine through the Kingdome and Nations of the Earth receives a denomination from the place where she is received and from them whom she washes with water in the name of the Lord and so of old were the Churches of the Corinthians or Thessalonians and so now the Churches of France or England which yet made not severall Churches for as there is but one head one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one Bridegroom one God and one way to ●eaven so there can be but one Church but severall considerations of that one Church which we believe to be holy and Catholick and is the whole society and company of Believees Elected and appointed c. And now we have seen her whom the Lord loves This is the Spouse of Christ only and besides her we know no other this is she whom Men and Devils Hereticks and Infidels for the present labour to destroy and alwayes did desire to root out but all in vain Mathew 16.18 This is she whom Iohn saw as a Bride come down from Heaven adorned for her Husband Revelations 21.2 who is jealous over her and rejoyceth over her as a Bridegroome rejoyceth over his Bride Isa 62.5 He rejoyceth over her with singing Zepha 3.17 This is the body of Christ Ephesians 1.8 which from Christ as from the Head receiveth Life and Spirit by his Spirit she is governed in all things and of whom also she receiveth increase that she growes up Ephe. 4.16 This is she that for her justification by faith in Christ and her mystical union with him is in name and nature a Queen Christs Spouse for her Nobility the new Jerusalem the Brother Sister and Mother of our Lord the first born of God for her illumination perfection defence of Evangelical truth is called the light of the world a Golden Candlestick a Pillar of truth and for her Sanctification of life a peculiar People a vessel of Honour a Garden inclosed the Temple of the holy Ghost Sancta Dei Ecclesia est mater virgo Spousa This is she who from her fruitfulnesse in bringing forth many Children unto God is called a Mother and that is by keeping her Ch●stity pure from the embracements of the world and Sathan is known and esteemed a Virgin and from those engagements that she hath given to the Lord of constant fidelity to him she is honoured as the Lambs wife This is the Vineyard of the Lord which he hath planted in this world warred with his Blood fenced it about with holy Angels builded the winepress of his passion in the midst of her and is dayly gathering out the stones that do offend her This is she whose property it is to vanquish when she is hurt to understand when she is reproved to be in safety when she is forsaken to obtain victory when she is almost over-thrown to be strongest when she is weakest to grow highest when she is most crushed to be most glorious when she is most reproached to be honourably acquitted when she is scornfully condemned to be crowned when she is dishonoured to be rich when she is impoverished to be illustrous when she is despised then she is ne●rest life when death is nearest to her He that is a member of this Church ought not to be calle● a Lutheran nor a Calvinist nor a Protestant no more then to be called a Petrir or a Paulis or a Nicean for following the doctrin of Paul or Peter or for adhearing to the positions of the Councels of Nice or Paphnutians for approving the opposition of Paphnutius in reference to the coelibat life motioned in that Councell since it is the doctrine of no private Person he believes in but of that that hath taught by the Spirit of God to the Saints in all ages therefore he is to be called a Catholick laying the ground of his Salvation on the foundation already and long agoe laid by the Prophets Apostles or Evangelists the opinion and invention of men being no part of his Religion or Articles of his Creed It is true the members of the Church of Rome subscribe themselves Catholicks but falsely many points of the Doctrin of that Church which they have made necessary to Salvation were not known by the Fathers and Teachers of the old Churches Unknown to the Apostles and to their Successors for severall ages when the fire of Purgatory first kindled We know and what Spirit or whose Breath first blew as it hath been demonstrated by Catholick Champions of this Nation and other reformed Churches Their own Histories discover that it hath neither the Spirit nor the word of God for its entry but the Bishop of Romes pollicy the peoples simplicity the Emperours inadvertency and Phochas's treachery for unto these causes may we reduce his Holinesses Supromacy and infallibility the foundation and Basis of all their other errors the Doctrin of Purgatory of Pardons of Auricular confession of Venial sin of Merit of Transubstantiation of Adoration of Saints Communicating under one kind of private Masse of the Pax of the Agnus Dei of Hostly or Ghostly processions we know to be but yesterday so that whosoever takes hold of this Doctrin deserves
in and run in It is dangerous to have or to suffer any to stand at the head of that way to call in Passengers from that road which leadeth unto life since men of themselves are apt and prone enough to turn from it and go in the contrary path 5. Religion is the foundation of States and Kingdoms and diversity of foundations will never keep up long a building herein we find those States in Scripture to stand surest whose Kings feared God and they that feared put down all false worship 6. Religion is the band and cord by which the unity of the State is preserved if there be heard diversities of Doctrine and the unity of Faith broken either the people are divided in their affections or among themselves and against their Princes or their Governours Hence proceed burnings emulations strifes envy malice sedition faction Rebellion Innovation treachery and disobedience and infinite more mischiefs Let me add two more 7. Let all diligence be used to keep out or subdue false Religions Satan will keep them in we know by the Proverb Where God hath his Church the Devil will whatever man do to the contrary have his Chappel A toleration seems to bring stones and timber for the enlarging of it and making it a Synagogue 8. The Angels of the Churches of Pergamos and Thyatira Rev. 2. are blamed for tolerating false Religions taking it for granted that there is but one true ziz the Catholick one of them had them tolerated possibly not by Law but by connivance and indulgence who taught the Doctrine of Balaam to eat things sacrificed to Idols and to commit fornication whether natural or spiritual and the Doctrine of the Nicholaitans which God did hate then and yet in this Age it passes for true Divinity with many The other suffered Iez●bel who called her self a Prophetess first to teach and then as a proper consequence to seduce our Praedicantiffs do the same and yet plead for a toleration since Paul gave out a Law concerning womens teaching I Tim. 2.12 we finde none but this Iezabel undertaking such an Office It is observable that the Angels of the Church are reproved for bearing with or suffering them so to do and they were the Church Officers Ministers or Bishops by which it seems they had power and authority to restrain and controul them to pull them out of their pulpits and to stop their mouths Whether they were Lords or no let their power and authority speak to do this was Lord-like in my apprehension and not to do it was a ground of Gods accusation Rev. 2.19 20. This Authority was it from heaven or of men If from Heaven then Church Officers have power to controul and put down both Balaam and Iezabel and to stop their mouths and yet not to be accused for Factious If of men then Church-Officers ought to put their power in execution and resist and stop the proceedings of lawless persons command that none hear Iezabel and stop the mouths of all irregular and presumptuous Teachers and not to be accused as busie-bodies and though they be yet let rather men accuse them for performing then God should accuse them for not doing their duty Yet if the Religions be such as do not overthrow the fundamentals of Truth or such as disturb not the Government established in that State Church or Kingdom wherein they be and that the Professor of those Religions be not factious ambitious or pertinarious having no other end in holding their opinions but Gods glory and the satisfaction of their own consciences and willing to be taught and be convinced of their errors diversities of Religions may be tolerated but in private only time may produce a reno●ncing of them when violence might harden them God hath his own times of Calling men and let the humble good honest Christian have his time Wise States Kings and Princes for this cause have granted a private toleration The very Turk who is zealous in his Religion grants this it is especially to be granted in times of great infection then indeed a total suppression in private of different opinions might prove and end in a great disturbance both to Church and State but Philosophandum est sed paucis Quest. 8. Wherein consists the Individuality or singleness the Vnity or Oneness of the true Church That the Catholick Church is but one is both asserted in Scripture and believed in our Creed and though it be scattered up and down through the world in every Kingdom Nation People Province Common-wealth Countreys and Dominions that are known in the earth from La Mairs Straits to Greenland from Sancta Creek to S. Ians yet differs no more then one member of the body differs from another the question then is this what is it that like Arteries and Ligatures Sinews and Nerves holds such a vast body together that the Church of God in this place is not a distinct Church of it self from that that is in another but only a part of it differing as a bone in the neck from that in the foot of the self same body one may be preaching or hearing the word in the Country of the Great Mogul another in Iapan and another in Pauls at London and yet he in one and the self same body And as the Sea receives divers names according to the Countreys she runs through though all but one Sea so the members of the Church Triumphant above in heaven and those of the Church Militant beneath make but one body differing only as a mans upper from his lower parts this Unity consists 1. In a consenting of all of them to the truth and doctrine of the Gospel for we know no Church but the Christian what ever is written by the holy Ghost through the Ministery of the Apostles and Disciples the best expositors of the prophets Psalms and Moses whether made in it and to be done or said to be fulfilled in it and done the whole society of the Church whereever they be scattered believes it and readily consents to it as a Canon of faith and manners 2. It consists in the consenting and unity in reference to the Sacraments of the Gospel the same Sacraments for number for nature that one part holds to be profitable for the Souls of men the same doth the other it is true there are many Churches that differ from another in more externall and Ceremoniall points it is the current doctrine of all reformed Churches and of England Art 34. that it is not necessary that ceremonies be alike in all places but may be altered as the People or Officers may teach and think meet but as touching the essentiall and necessary truths as the ends the uses the Author the profit of them all Christians of the Catholick Church hold one and the same thing 3. I consists in the consenting to and unity in holding the util●●y and necessity of hearing and obeying a Gospell ministery where it is to be had it is a Catholick
truth to hear the word of God preached and to obey those that have the rule over them is a Catholicks practice even in their reproofs Suspentious Excommunications c. they know their preaching is the power of God unto Salvation I Rom 16. and the ●other is necessary for the saving of the Spirit in the day of the Lord Jesus I Corinthians 5.5 There are some among us that imagine themselves distinct Ch●rches from us in this particular viz for the separating themselves from the ministery as now constituted upbraiding their Minister perhaps his receiving his dues which he is no more to lose upon that account then a man is to lose the milk or the wooll of his beast at night upon the account that it wandered at Noon Untill they be cast out of the Church by Church censures and by those to whom that power is design'd their separation hi●der no more their union with us in the body of the Church then a Boyl scab or a sore hinders the continuity of the parts of a man or no more then a Malignant Fever takes away the being of a person so that in some sence we look upon them as Members of our Church but itchy ones scabby ones as members in our Israel but as troublesome ones untill they be cast out and then for me they sh●ll be looked upon as Publicans and Heathens and so by all the members of the Catholick Church for being cast out of her who is the only Church they must so be and so long as they are in her they are of her their own separation availing us no more then a mans willing confinement of himselfe to his house makes him a Prisoner in Law when he is commanded forth to action 4. It consists in that Communion that they have each member and each part with another they have the benefit of each others prayers they are all walking in one way by one Rule working all one work expecting all one reward acted by the same spirit carried forth upon the same Motive and armed with the same weapons fighting against the same Enemies building each other in their most holy Faith Iude 20. 5. It consists in that union and communion that they have with Christ he is their head and whereever they are as members of him they have life sence and strength from him in him they all live move and have their being The Church hath also communion with Christ and that both in his Person and in his Offices and Sufferings 1. In his person every part of her is a Member of his body they are bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh Ep. 5.30 and he that is joyned to the Lord is but one As the Holy Ghost did unite in the Blessed Virgins Womb the Divine and humane nature of Christ and made them one person by reason of his formation of the body whereby C●ist is of our flesh and of our bones so the spirit unites us to the person of Christ by the gift of faith that we are of his flesh and of his bones and members of his body For suppose a man to be so many Cubits high that his head should reach the stars and his hands stretch to either side of heaven and one foot stood upon the Sea and another upon the Land yet these members being knit together by natural Arteries informed by the same specifick soul they might truly be said to have comunion each with other even so though Christ be in Heaven and part of the Church with him and we on earth and so should seem to be a great distance from each other yet the distance is not so great as to make a distinction of the parts or separation of the head from the body by that fore-mentioned supposition we may be said to be united to him and therefore are hereby to have union each with another 2. In his Offices What Offices Christ executes as Redeemer of the World in order to the great end of bringing his Church together the same Offices doth he make his people to receive through the unction of his spirit untill and at their coming home he hath made them Kings Revel 1.6 makes them reign over all lusts and have dominion over all the powers of Hell and Earth and hath both Thrones and Crowns for them in Heaven and he hath made them Priests Rev● 1.6 in as much as they are dayly offering up the Sacrifice of burnt Offerings whole burnt Offerings of Praise prayer and thanksgiving he hath made them Prophets Io. 15.15 in as much as they know the Will of God and the mind of God is made known to them for what ever he had received of the Father he made known unto her 3. In his sufferings She must drink of that Cup that he drunk of and the Church must be baptized with the Baptism he was baptized withall Matth. 20.23 He drank of the Brook by the way and they must taste after him it 's their priviledge that are his Members to suffer for him Phil. 1.29 He drank of the Cup of affliction in the Garden and all his followers must pledge him Christ ought to suffer Luke 24.26 nay did it not become him to suffer Heb. 2.10 And it is decreed that all must suffer before they enter into glory for this suffering with Christ is a dying with him which must precede rising with him which must go before being glorified with him in all these do the Members of Christ which is the Church hold Communion and have Union with him Quest. 9. Why is the true Church called holy We believe the Catholick Church to be holy yet not that we hold all to be holy that are in it In a great mans House there be Vessels of honour and of dishonour some in the Church have a form of holinesse but denie the power of it there are Tares in the field as wel as Wheat there are bad as well as good fishes took with the Net of the Gospel Mat. 13.28 Would all the people were holy yet we believe that the Church is holy 1. For holinesse she aims at for this she prays fasts reads receives the Sacraments all the acts that she and her children do is upon the acco●nt of holinesse the Scripture cals upon her to be holy as God is holy and she calls upon God to sanctifie her thorowly by the washing of water and the Word to be presented as holy before him Eph. 5.26 2. It 's a holy Rule she walks by It is a holy pure and undefiled Law as silver purified seven times it hath no Impurity in it Psal. 19.8 3. It is a holy profession she maintains she hath places to worship in she hath holy Ordinances to live by she hath a holy calling for she is called to be holy all other Congregations live by sence but she by faith 4. It is a holy Lord whom she serves she serves the Lord Christ she worships through him that God that is so holy
be attributed to the Scripture This Question arises from the doctrine of the Church of Rome who teacheth her Members that the Scriptures are not perfect that is that the Word of God contained in the Scriptures is not of it self sufficient for salvation and therefore they help it out with their Traditions yet the Catholick Church in all Ages reputed the word in it self absolutely perfect For 1. The Scripture it self acknowledges perfection to be in it 2 Tim. 3.16 All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for Doctrine for Reproof for Correction for instruction in Righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished unto all good workes Now what Spiritual occasion can there be devised or what Act of Religion can a soul intend but what in one of these ways the Scripture is profitable and able to make him perfect of it self without any addition to it It s profitable for Doctrine that is for all truths necessary for salvation For Reproof that is for confutations of all errors For Correction that is a reprehension of all Vice For Instruction that is for exhortation to all ver●ues And all this is that the Man of God may be perfect or that he might be a perfect man of God throughly furnished unto all good works This discovers the Scriptures largenesse The Scripture is written that the Soul may be full of joy The water of tradition need not be mixed with the Wine of the Scripture it can give fulnesse of joy without them 1 Ioh. 1.4 2. They are the Rules whereby the perfection of all other doctrine must be tryed we must bring all other to this Touch-stone we must weigh all weights in this ballance all Rules must be ruled by this and therefore it ought to be straight it self Acts 17.11 the truth of Pauls Doctrine appears by it's conformity to this Nay Christ himself in whom was no errour appeals to it Iohn 5.39 3. The whole and full will of God touching his Church to the end of the World is contained in it Ioh. 14.26 There is no new thing to be done nor no new truth now to be taught The Acts of the Spirit are but remembrancers of that Doctrine formerly taught by Christ. He shall bring to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you so that no new thing nor any other thing is to be expected but what he did speak unto them even all things that he had heard of his Father John 15.15 so that the will of God being by the Scriptures fully known they are to be acknowledged perfect Put nothing therefore unto his Words lest he reprove thee and thou be found a Lya● Prov. 30.6 4. There is no truth doctrine or Act which is necessary for salvation but is in the Scripture either by express Text or may be drawn from it by good rationall and holy consequence yea all necessary truths are plain open and manifest in Scripture 5. The Scriptures are called and owned by the Name of Gods Testament Heb. 9. the Old is the first Testament and the New is the last v. 15. c 18. Now the last Will and Testament of a man will not admit of any Addition nor suffer a diminution shal Gods Will and Testament not be sufficient to bring his Sons and Children to heaven without something put to it by man It is not therefore his but their Testament if they must perfect that which blasphemy let our souls abhor 6. The Arguments that the Church of Rome brings are in themselves frivilous and indeed prove the perfection of the Scriptures To this agree the Reformed Churches of Helv. Art 1. Bohem. Art 1. of Fr. Art 5. of Belg. Art 7. of Wirtem Art 31. of S●ev Art 1. of England Art 6. The Article it selfe was mentioned before Quest. 5. Whether Salvation may be hold by single knowledge of the Scriptures By the single knowledge of the Scriptures we understand the bare knowledge of the History precepts counsels and promises of the Bible abstracted from the spirit of God which knowledge will never bring a man to Heaven nor happinesse For 1. Not by grace but by nature might many be saved contrary to Ephes. 2.8 much reading and a good memory or once a week to look upon the Bible might be sufficient to make a man holy and denominate one a Saint 2. Such a knowledge might and doth consist with all wickedness and uncleannesse there are some Matth. 7.22 that did prophesie in the Name of Christ which shews that they knew his Law and yet they knew not his glory for he never knew them being workers of iniquity v. 23. 3. It is not a knowing only but a doing also that God requires as a means to obtain Eternal life Iames 1.22 But be ye doers of the Word and not hearers only we are not altogether to know but likewise to walk by the same rule Phil. 3.16 4. A clear full and true knowledge of the Scriptures can never be had without the spirit ●f God Man is naturally blind and cannot see spirituall things because they are spiritually discerned 1 Cor. 2. 14. the plainest thing in the Scripture is a mystery to him he knows not wat sin is he knows no what Christ is he cannot see sin to be deadly poyson the vomit of a Dog Neither beholds he the Lord Jesus as the chiefest of ten thousand It is the unction of the Spirit by which the Believer knoweth all things 1 Iohn 2.20 that is savingly and as he ought to know 5. God threatens severely suth as barely know his Law Psalm 50.16 Hs says to the wicked What hast thou to do to declare my statutes or that thou shouldest take my Covenant in my mouth c. God puts no regard to a sinner that only knows his will on Earth and shall never Crown him that barely knew his Masters will in Heaven 6. If the bare knowledge of the Scriptures were sufficient for salvation I question whether the Devils should remain in everlasting chains under darknesse This is not spoken to put away the use of the Scripture but that abuse of trusting barely to it we ought to call for the Spirit and beg for the Holy ghost to open our eyes and sanctifie our hearts and renew our natures that the Word of God might be inwardly taught us as well as outwardly preached unto us Quest. 6. What may perswade one that doubts to believe the truth of the Scriptures By doubting of the Scriptures here is understood a calling in question out of pure ignorance the very truth of the History of the Bible he doubts if David King of Israel did compose Psalms and doubts that the Lord is not round about them that fear him as the Mountains are about Ierusalem He doubts that the Apostles being ignorant men and by Trade Fisher-men most could convert Nations not a few In a word he questions the Books of Moses of the Psalms Prophets Evangelists and Apostles not all out
Son Iesus Christ whom to know is life Eternall Joh. 17.3 3. Resolve to practise the Word what vice thou findest the word to reprove charge thy own heart not to act strive not against the Spirit in the Word but says speak Lord for thy servant hears What Act or duty it exhorts unto stay not but make hast to perform all Righteous Judgements Make haste least hell and damnation overtake thee left hardness of heart and willfullesse of soul creep upon thee and God and his grace forsake thee and thou become like those that go down into the pit What thou ara commanded to do do it withall thy might resolve to conf●ss● sin and forsake Transgression thou shalt have mercy for sin and for iniquity 4. Resolve to believe the Word and that stedfastly What God hath declared and purposed in his Word touching Saints or sinners in reference to a Tempor●ll or Eternall condition must be believed if we would be saved 1 Cor. 15.1 2. God says that he comes quickly and his Reward is with him Rev. 22.12 Do not mock saying Where is the promise of his coming 2 Pet. 2.3 4. What h●th passed from the mouth of God is by man to be believed if Judgement it is to be feared if promises to be loved The wicked may presume of his present security and cry peace peace The Righteous may doubt of his present safety and say One day or other I shall perish yet say to the Righteous it shall go well with him and wo ●nto the wicked it shall be ill with him Isai. 3.10 11. this if thou believe thou shalt do wel 5. Resolve to receive the Word and that wholly It is not the duty nor suits it with the profession of a Christian to pick out of Scripture and separate one part of the Gospell from another Even in this sence these are days of separation c. Let not a tittle of the Law or Gospell be by thee slighted the Word of the Lord is for ever settled in Heaven his faithfulnesse to all Generations Psal. 119.89 90. though now the Spirit of this World can set the Son against the Father and the New against the Old Testament and the Servant against his Master the Epistles against the Gospell yet from the beginning it was not so The Christian being thus prepared for reading what David said to his Son when he had instructed him cocerning his building of the Temple shall be said for him Now my Son the Lord be with thee and prosper thee 1 Chron. 22.11 2. In Reading 1. Read it Reverendly It must be read as the Laws of the great mighty and Eternall God upon the performing of which depends the Eternall happiness or misery of thet soul that is at this present within thee it must not be read as a story It remains for ever to acquit us or sentence us this man will I look that trembles at my Word Isaiah 66. 2. The Laws was delivered with Thunderings Lightnings and smoak Exod. 20.18 to create a Reverential fear in the souls of men left that fire come down and that smoak break out into a flame to consume that spirit that shall contemn the least of those Commandements 2. Read it heedfully What thou readest let thy Judgement be employed about it not a word thou readest but there is something of an everlasting concernment to thy self Some studie the Scripture and observe things without themselves but these men are not wise O thou man of God flye these things and follow after Righteousness Godliness Faith Love Patience Meeknesse 2 Tim. 6.11 this will profit thee more then to enquire after the State of this or that man or that will profit thee nothing here and the other will both here and hereafter 3. Read it distinctly It must not be read as if we were in haste or could not tarry as Saul for answer from the mouth of the Lord we ought to ponder every line as did Ezraes and his ●ff●ciats when they read the Book of the law of God they read it saith the Holy Ghost Distinctly Nehe. 8.8 he that huddles up this duty but looses his labour and if it be not done again his own happiness if it be hastened by the tongue it is to be feared it will not tarry long at the heart we ought to say to every verse in Scripture as Iacob to the Angel Gen. 30.26 I wil not let thee go except thou blesse me 4. Read it affectionately Arr thou hungry thou would'st eat thy meat with gladness and joy of heart It is the word when thou hast done all that thou must live by be saved by it s called Bread Ames 8.11 And that is the staffe of mans life It s the word of eternall life Iohn 6.68 It s thd water of life that enlightens the Eyes and rejoyceth the heart Psal. 19.8 It feedeth and strengthneth the Soul Deut. 8.3 It maketh a man to be born again 1 Pet. 1.23 It purifyeth and cleanseth men Iohn 15.3 purifies them from tueir iniquity and cleanseth tham from sin Psal 51.2 116 9. And therefore with joy draw thou water out of that well of Salvation Isa. 12.3 5. Read it dayly O how some have loved the Law and made it their meditation all the day Psal. 119.97 There ought not a day to passe without inspection into this word the soule of man is in continual reparation for it is subject unto loss and damages there is no day wherein Satan assaulteth not no day but may be our last day no day wherein man may not see evill or fall into evill and therefore no day ought to passe without our guard against evill and an antidote to cure the evill the word hath a soveraign quality to cure all our running sores we ought therefore to have our meditations there upon night and day but in this two things must be avoided 1. Wearinesse when thou findest thy self growing weary of reading O how fraile is man O bon Jesu lye close the Book and goe about thy lawfull and ordinary occasions for in that thou must also serve God as the Scripture commands the. Yet in this let me charge thee by God not to nourish sluggishness drousiness or idelness 2 Confidence it is the blessing of God that must make thy dayly reading profitable unto thy soul depend not and trust not therefore upon thy doing without him thou canst do nothing In this also it s not onely the hand of the diligent but the blessing of the Lord maketh rich Prov. 10.4 22. that is in the word of Christ. 3. After reading 1. Meditate upon the word it is meditation that gives a soule to reading and breaths in it the breath of life it makes the word to be lively and o stir in the soul. It wat Davids meditation all the day Psal. 119.97 Nay all the night too Psal. 16.7 So must every one th● would frame his heart according to Gods heart and have the Scripture thereupon God would
content he takes in men by his hatred a detesta●●on of things done by his feet is signified the power strength speed or presence of God by his back parts an imperfect Image of his glory c. these things being in Scripture in a Metaphorical way to help our infirmities Quest. 3. Whether there be but one God 1. That there is but one God the Scripture in no point is more clear For instance Thus saith the Lord the King of Israel and his Redeemer the Lord of Hosts I am the first and I am the last and besides me there is no God Isai. 44.6 And I am the Lord and oheré is none else there is no God besides me Isai. 45.5 so Deut. 32.39 1 Cor. 8.4 5 6. Deut. 6.4 2. There can be but one Omnipotent Omnipotency is to have all power might and strength there is power and there is Omnipotency Power may do much but Omnipotency can do all power may be suppressed by a greater power but Omnipotency knows no opposition It hath no difficulties nor Lets it works freely and perfectly without co-workers or Materialls if at any time it uses any it at no time needs either Gen. 17.1 I am God Almighty therefore there can be no other God but he For suppose another there must follow a Contest who should be most worshipped most feared most magnified one must yield to the other which denotes impotency which is a denying of a deity 3. There can be but one Infinite To be Infinite is to be fully constantly in all places It is to be without bounds to be unmeasurable to exceed reason or capacity it hath respect to time place power wisdome Justice mercy God is infinite in time being Eternall Infinite in place filling Heaven and Earth in power he do all things in wisdome he knows all things past present and to come In Justice who can dwell with everlasting burnings in mercy for the Righteous go into life Eternal Do not I fill Heaven and Earth saith the Lord. Jer. 23.24 There is therefore no place no time left for another God Suppose one you must at the same instant give him a Vacuum to Reign in which to affirm would but argue emptinesse of Wisdome and shallowness of understanding 4. There can be but one recipient We are commanded to love God with all our strength soul and mind Deut. 6.4 5. there is no part of our love service fear worship to be given to any other then one therefore there is but one 5. Therre can be but one Efficient There are many things in the World depending upon each other as the lincks of a chains which if we measure and count we shal come to the first which is the preserver of all the greatest number hath it's Original from a Unite Trace every Creature in it's steps upward and we shall fall upon one that is the Original of all He is before all things and by him all things consist Col. 1.17 To suppose another God were to suppose a being without acting which is an irrati●nall conceit Yet thre are in Scripture that are called Gods besides the Lord of which afterwards Quest. 4. Whether there be three Persons in the God head and how these persons do agree These things are by many of this age denyed and therefore must be proved and though they may be thought to be needlesse in regard that by many they are believed yet this may give to many an enlightning into the truths that possibly upon trust only are received Before we come to prove the question its proper to premise 1. We must know that this mystery is a great mystery and is indeed above Reason It is to be rather the subject of our admiration then inquisition it 's to be feared that many reason themselves out of Heaven by endeavouring to apprehend the depth and rationality of this 2. That though it be above reason yet it 's necessary for salvation i. e. to such as are of years of discretion Upon this Principle stands the Fabrick of all Religion to quit this is to quit with Christianity 3. That though the word Trinity be not found to be in Scripture yet the thing that we would expresse by that word is in it 1 Iohn 5.7 which holds out that one is three and that three is one which is expressed significantly enough by the Church under the word Trinity 4. That the three Persons in the God-head are distinguished by these Names The first person is called the Father the second is called the Son or the Word the third is called the Holy ghost or the Spirit yet they make not three but one God There are three that hear Record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy ghost and these three are one the other three that follow viz. the Spirit Water and blood are said to agree in one but these three are said to be one 1 John 5.7 that is essentially and naturally These three differs three ways 1. The Father begets Psal. 2.7 Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee He begets Christ by Eternal generation and believers by spiritual adoption in reference to both thes● is he called Father Ioh. 20.17 2. The Son is begotten he is called a Son Prov. 30.4 Iesus is the Christ and is born of God 1 John 5.1 3. The Holy ghost proceedeth from these two Ioh. 15.26 As a man when he looks in a glasse if he smile his image smileth also and if he take delight in it it taketh delight in him the face is one being suppose that the Father the Image of the face in the glasse is another being suppose this the Son begotten of the Father and the smiling of them both is a third thing proceeding from the two former suppose this that the spirit that procoeds from the Father and the Son All these a man knowing to be but one face and of one face may know that these three are but of one ●od That they are personally distinct from each other appears by many Texts chiefly these Prov. 8.25 The Son speaking of himself shews us that when there was no depths I were brought forth when there were no Fountaine abounding with water before the Mountains were setled before the Hils was I brought forth c. When he prepared the Heavens I was there when he established the clouds above when he gave to the Sea his decree then was I by him as one brought up with him c. In which speech it appears that he that was begotten by the Father was a distinct person from him that established the clouds which was the Lord Gen. 1. Again Psal. 33.6 we read that by the word of the Lord were the Heavens made and all the Hoasts of them by the breath of his Mouth Here are the three persons differenced Christ the word the Lord God the Breath of his mouth the Spirit which appears by comparing this Text with Iohn 1.1 and Gen. 1.2 Also Gen. 1.26 One says
answer was Christianus sum intermittere non possum I am a Christian I must keep it and that day being commonly so called Saint John calls it so likewise as either set apart for him or instituted of him which brings us to the next thing to be considered vi● 2. The Authors of that change The keeping of the Christian sabbath or the observing of the first day of the week for the day of rest in the Church of Christ whence was it from heaven or of men it is answered from heaven by Heavens great Trumpeter we are freed from any duty to the Jewish feasts or sabbaths from Heaven therefore doth our liberty come but whether first appointed by Gods Son or by Christs Apostles the Scripture is silent but that it was done by the spirit of God in one of them is certain We read that Christ carried forty dayes with his Disciples after his resurrection speaking of the things pertaining to the Kingdom of God What things conduced to the honour and glory of God how the Church should be ruled ordered and guided did our Saviour without question speak of there is written enough for us to believe but all that he spoke is not written Iohn 20.30 Now among those things this circumstance of time for publick worship might be treated on and spoken off Christ is Lord of the sabbath and he might remove it from the last unto the first day of the week If not changed by him then without doubt by his Apostles who were in points of such high concernment guided by the infallible spirit of God they durst not of their own accord teach any thing to any nation but what he gave them a commandement for Math. 28.18 And in this case what he spoke to them in the closet they might reveale on the house top and by their preaching administring the sacraments Laws touching gathering of collections upon the first day we are to conclude that that spirit that led them into all truth led them also to this practice and according to them in this hath the Church of Christ directly constantly holily set apart the first day of the week for the worship not by its own authority it being not in the power of the Church Men or Angels to alter the day but in him only who is Lord of it or them who are immediately and infallibly guided by the spirit sent from him but by example from the practise of the Holy Apostles this day viz. the first of the week is kept for the Lords service and because of that not unfitly called now as it was of old the Lords day as instituted by him or by his Disciples It is time to see the third thing viz. 3. The reason of the change Go● n●ver changes his will but he of●en wills a change darkly it seems to be his will that a change be made in some time of the world of the circumstance of time required for his own worship in giving the Law but to come to the reason of that change from the last to the first day of the week it might be made 1. From the indifferency of the Law at the Creation God blessed the seventh day and hallowed it now while the people were in bondage it may be questioned whether the Aegyptians would suffer them to rest since they were denied three days to sacrifice God at the establishing of his Law upon the Mount Exo. 20.2453 years after the Creation before which time the doctrine of the sabbath was never written God in the Law makes it moral that men shall for ever work six dayes and the seventh day they shall rest says not precisely the seventh from the Creation but in general one day in seventh now by this the time might be changed and the Law not at all altered since m●n even under the Gospel gives God one in seven which is that onely the Law requires 2. From the proportion of the Law the Law of the sabbath is because God rested from his work of Creation the change might be because God the Son rested from his work of redemption God the Father sanctified the beginning of the seventh day because he then ceased working God the Son might have the d●wning of the first day sanctified because he then ceased suffering This is by some tho●ght to be darkly mean by that Text H●b 47.8.9 The work of redemption was greater then that of Creation being done by the blood of God and the sabbath day being not precisely commanded on the seventh from the Creaation he that is Lord of the sabbath might command it to be kept in memorial of his resurrection which is ● new Creation unto Holiness and good works whence it might be called the Lords day 3. From the power that the Lord hath over the 〈◊〉 This might be done that we might know the Son of Man is Lord also of the sabsath Mark 2.28 He hath power over and he can say to the seventh day from the Creation Go and it goes and he can say to the first day of the week Come and it comes if the sabbath hasten to come abroad the seventh day shewing it self to be a day to be rested in he hath power to forbid its out going until to morrow he spake to his Disciples of things pertaining to the kingdom of God which are not written and the change of this might be one however the Spirit that guided the Church by the Apostles did not erre Christ having all power given unto him he gave them a power to change the day none durst presume to have altered a sabbath that had been instituted of God Laws made by him can onely be altered by him a change there was we know It must be by some that had power given them and that was the Apostles who had not the power of themselves but it was given them by one that had all power and was Lord particularly of the sabbath who bound it up in the Napkin that was about his head with the sacrifices that did attend it and left them both in a place by themselves in his sepulchre Col. 2.16 17. 4. From the change of that outward worship enjoyned by the Law the old sabbath had oblations circumcisions sacrifices washings c. All which were now to be abolished as to their outward act no circumcision now but that of the heart no sacrifice but that of prayer and praise these things being these things being removed God would also have the day removed they might dote upon those things still and to wean them from it another day is appointed and a new time set for that worship now to be per formed for though some of those parts of worship were continued after Christs death yet they were languishing dying and giving up the Ghost and in a few dayes were quite buried which though some amongst us would breath life into again and make them rise and appear in the Holy City shall never be seen to live more since
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
she may be made clean Ierem. 13.27 7. The Saints practises that are recorded therein What ever we find the Saints prayed for and were answered ether ad voluntatem or ad utilitatem whether to their will or to their well may be a rule for us to pray by and therefore we may pray to be delivered from unreasonable men 2 Thes. 3.2 or the buffetings of Satan 2 Cor. 12.8 2. We come now to the particular rule Which is that prayer composed by Christ and recommended to his Apostles as a prayer Luk. 11.2 and to be a rule and standard of all other prayers Mat. 6.9 Unto which rule scale or ballance should we bring most of their prayers and petitions who refused this form and rule especialy those that had reference to things lately acted upon the stage of these Kingdomes and the reason why they did so pray we might write over them and upon them MENE TEKEL Dan. 5.25 26. In this rule or pattern of prayer their are four things to be observed 1. The Preface or Introduction to the whole prayer In these words Our Father which art in heaven 2. The substance or the petitions themselves which are asked in that prayer In these words Hallowed be thy name c. 3. the greatnesse or excellency of the person unto whom that prayer is directed In these words For thine is the kingdome c. 4. The confidence of the petitioner to be heard in the things prayed for In this word Amen All which in generall shews 1. That we are to make a holy decent and honourable entrance or preface unto our prayers It is but blunt to hear men bolt forth thir petitions without giving God some holy title as Almighty God or holy and gracious Lord or Eternal God A Centurion beseeched him saying Lord I have a servant lieth at home sick of the palsie c. Math. 8.6 2. That when we come and appear before God we are not alwayes to be swelling in titles but have some enlargement by way of request contrary to the practise of some in our days that pretend they do appeare before God and speake of high things yet as if it were below them they will aske nothing of him but let us do otherwise for we have not been so learned by Christ. 3. That when we come to God to receive from him we are not to go from his presence except something be given to him from us we are at least to be thankfull unto him which is done when we divest our selves of all power worth and merit ascribing all the glory unto him 4. He that prays ought not to waver or be regardlesse but full of faith and desire to obtaine the things he openeth his mouth unto the Lord for and faithfully as well as heartily say Amen But to be more particular In the preface there are two things by which our prayers are to be ruled 1. What God is Our Father 2. Where God is which art in heaven He that comes to God must not only know that God is that is that there is a God of himself but also what God is to him as that he is his Father which is by Christ and neither can he so call him but by the spirit So that the three persons in the Trinity must be all believed by him that would pray as he ought Again God being our Father teacheth us 1. To love him 2. To fear him 3. To obey him 4. To honour him 5. To depend upon him 6. To love and pray for each other 2. Though it be said he is in heaven we are no to suppose he is confined there as if he were not upon the Earth for as a King though he be in all parts of all dominions by vertue of his laws and officers yet chiefly and in a more eminent and majestick way he is at the Court. So is God our Father said to be in heaven being there in his greatest glory Majesty and Dignity From this we learn 1. That we pray to none but to them whom we are assured to be in heaven It is foolish to pray to them of whom we have no certainty that ever they were and dangerous to pray to them of whom we have no great hopes that they are in heaven In both these respects therefore the Church of Rome had better reforme her self that her prayers may be answered 2. That we pray to none in heaven but to them that begat us to our Father only are we to pray now all others that are therein both Angels and men acknowledged themselves to be our fellow servants and therefore though in heaven not to be prayed unto 3. To have no earthly Imagination or thought in our heart in the time of prayer whether in respect of the glorious Trinity whom we pray to or of our selves or others whom we pray for As heaven is in our mouth so it ought to be in our affections 4. To have raised desires lifted up hearts all the time of prayer Heaven is high above us and we must lift up the voyce of our soul to be heard by our Father there and truly men ought so to compose their prayers in the length of them as not to destroy their own or their peoples fervency a thing not much noted and observed in our days 5. To be ever disposed and and fitted for prayer where ever we are in what place or dungeon we be God is above and heaven is above our fathers mansion house so that no time shall we misse of him nor no time shall he be from home 6. To have ever a strong confidence and faith to be heard in prayer Men may hinder much good doing upon the earth and may encompasse the Saint like bees then his hope is this that their hands are but short they cannot keep his prayers from ascending and therefore with confidence he may send them up 2 The next considerable thing in this prayer are the petitions that are in it In number they are six as Hallowed be thy name c. From them in generall we learn 1. To pray for things of moment and of weight All the petitions are of great concernment and indeed necessary to come to God begging trifles is below his Majesty and Grandour a D●is nihil pretendum nisi bona simpliciter 2. To pray for nothing but what is good There is nothing in the petitions that is hurtfull either for the soul or body of man this should learn us to be farre from cursing or wishing evill to any person and indeed the curse may fall upon them that makes it he whom thou art so cursing may be praying Let him curse O Lord but blesse thou If this part of prayer had been eyed by many there had not been so many uncharitable petitions put up as there was These six petitions divide themselves into two parts Three of them concerns God Hallowed be thy name c. Three of them concerns man Give us this day our
to be considered It is twofold 1 Internall consisting in the affections of the soul. 2 Externall in the gestures of the body of these in order There are severall quallities God requires in every true prayer and conditions he makes with every one that calls upon him we shall set down some that are chief with reasons enforceing their practice 1 Prayer must be made incessantly that is without ceasing 1 Thes. 5. 17. Not that we are to be alwayes in that act of duty that being impossible for our frailty and for that engagement God layes upon us for performing other dutyes both to himself and toward each other To pray without ceasing Notes 1 That we be much and of● in this duty It is not to be a strange peece of worship to us but through frequency to make it our familiar exercise to be often calling and often knocking at heaven gates Luke 18. 1. Ephe. 6. 18. 2 That we be ever disposed to this duty to keep our selves ever in such a frame of Spirit that we may be sit to pray a liberate man is not alwayes giving to the poor yet he is alwayes disposed a Christian though not alwayes upon his knees yet ought to be ever fitted for it 3 That we give not over untill we be blessed in this duty to pray for such a blessing and leave off at first is contrary to the practise of that importunate widow Luk. 18. 1. Who is said by her daily comming to pray 4 That we do not weary in this duty that we droop not that we may not saint That we may pray alwayes with all prayer and supplication in the spirit Eph. 6. 18. For this that above mentioned widow is said alwayes to pray 5 That we lay hold on all fit oppertunityes to pray in times of leisure retirement to pray is always to pray thus Cornelius a Captain is said to pray alwayes Act. 10. 3. This unwearied diligence ought to be in men For 1 Satan is incessantly seeking to devoure them 2 Sin is incessantly working in them 3 Death is incessantly creeping upon them 4 God is incessantly requiring it of them 5 Wicked men are incessantly seeking to subvert 6 Christ is incessantly praying for them 7 The Church is incessantly in need of them 2 Prayer must be made reverently we ought to have awfull respect and speciall apprehension of the Majesty of him prayed to Psal. 2. 11. We are not to come to him as to our companion or our equall as some bold pretenders to the spirit lately did whose boldnesse was but rudenesse and whose familiarity was but fawciness To brings us to a reverent frame of spirit we may consider our selves and our God 1 Ourselves and that severall ways 1 Originally but dost at best and ashes 2 Naturally but enemies and rebels 3 Contractedly seven times more the Children of Satan then we were born having in our lives and actions been 1 Heedlesse of his Law 2 Carelesse of his Honour 3. Despisers of his Majesty 4. Stiflers of his Spirit 5. Dishonourers of his name 6. Abusers of his creatures 7. Haters of his being all which considered will bring us before him with awfull thoughts and reverential gestures 2. Our God and that also several ways as 1. His Justice 2. His Holinesse 3. His Power 4. His Omnipresence 5. His Majesty Which when thought upon with the Angels we may cover our faces as affrayd and ashamed of so great a majesty as he is and of so much guilt as we have 3. Prayer must be made faithfully we ought to pray in faith nothing doubting without this grace prayer wants one wing to fly a lost and be heard in Gods holy temple Iam. 1.5 There are severall things we must necessarily believe in this duty of prayer relating to God and to our selves In relation to God we are bound to and must believe 1. His good will to hear our prayer 2. His power to give that for which we pray 3. His readinesse to grant the same In relation to our selves we are bound to believe that God will hear our prayers 1. What ever Infirmities lye upon us 2. What ever Satan hath to say against us 3. How-ever for the present God deales with us And truly it may be wondered that we do not always pray with abundance of faith considering 1. The many promises God hath made to hear prayer 2. Christs continual Intercession by prayer 3. The Constant communion of the Saints is cheifly in a way of prayer 4. The wicked have been heard in the time of prayer 1 King 21 27. 4. Prayer must be made in sincerity God will have truth in the Inward part Psal. 51.6 This sincerity in prayer cheifly consists 1. In the satisfaction that the soul takes of Gods seeing and of his hearing though man do neither Matth. 6.5 9. In having a right end and design touching the thign prayed for Iames 4 3. and the ends of prayer are breifly these 1. Just. 2. Charitable religions for what ever we aske ought to respect one of these ether to our selves to others or to God 3. In a union and agreement between the tongue and heart in the time of prayer and also touching the thing prayed for 4. In a sober genuine acknowledgment of all our sins in our prayer without any degree of extenuation and an exact enumeration in some degree 5. In a diligent useing of the means to obtaine the thing desiered by prayer some in our days makes religion a support for Idlenesse but when we have prayed for our dayly bread we ought to labour for it Now men ought to be sincere in all their ways and in all their prayers For 1. God is Infinite in knowledge he knoweth all hearts and seeth all thoughts Heb. 4.13 2. Transcendent in in goodnesse he is sincer in whatever he did for man man ought therefore to be sincer unto him and not flatter him with his lips 3. In exorable in Justice He hath prepared Hell for Hypocrits Matth. 24.51 other sinners are but inmates to them Hell being their proper habitation 5. Prayer must be made zealously 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to boyle shewing that our bosomes are to be hot as fire in the time of our devotion This zeal Is a holy affection of the soul putting forth it self in all earnestnesse for the obtaining the thing desired earnest we ought to be 1. For God 2. For our selves 3. For our neighbours 4. For the things excellency This zeal in prayer consists 1. In the souls watchfullnesse in prayer now their is a two fold watchfulnesse mentioned in Scripture 1. Unto prayer 1 Pet. 4.72 In prayer Col. 4.2 1. Unto prayer that is 1. A removeing of all Impediments that may hinder prayer 2. A laying hold on all advantages that may assist prayer 2. In prayer that is 1. To avoyd all distraction dulnesse of body drouzinesse of spirit suggestions of Satan 2. A restlesnesse untill our suit be granted 3. An eye solely to the