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A00831 A very fruitfull exposition of the Commaundements by way of questions and answeres for greater plainnesse together with an application of euery one to the soule and conscience of man, profitable for all, and especially for them that (beeing not otherwise furnished) are yet desirous both to see themselues, and to deliuer to others some larger speech of euery point that is but briefly named in the shorter catechismes. By Geruase Babington. Babington, Gervase, 1550-1610. 1583 (1583) STC 1095; ESTC S108401 209,221 568

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of true Christians is to bee praied vnto since other doctrine is deliuered by the Church of Rome Ans First it is prooued by the words of the Apostle Paul Rom. 10. Howe shal they call vpon him in whome they haue not beleeued as though he should say Beléefe must néedes euer goe before prayer whereupon then thus wee may reason Wee must onely pray to him in whom we must beléeue but we may ought beléeue onely in God the Father God the Sonne and GOD the holie Ghost therefore onely to these thrée persons one onely God must our prayers be directed The first proposition we sée prooued by Paul the second by the articles of our faith all the scripture the conclusion followeth vpon thē both Secondly it is prooued by Christ himselfe who teaching his Apostles to pray and in them all other men biddeth them neither call vpon Angel nor saint no not vpon his mother Marie But when you pray saith he say Our Father which art in heauē That is what forme of words so euer you vse euer direct your praiers vnto God and to him only And Father in this place signifieth any of the thrée persons and is not to be restrained onely to the first person Thirdly wee haue no commaundement to pray to any but to God onely we haue no promise to be heard if wee doe no example in Scriptures of any godly man or woman that hath done it euer at any time or vpon any occasion we haue no punishment threatened if we doe it not but to pray to God we are commaunded Psal 50. we are promised to be helped we haue examples and we are threatened if we doe it not Therefore whether of these two is to be done who séeth not Que. What is the fourth duetie of this commaundement Ans Fourthly we are bound by this Lawe to acknowledge God alone to be the guider and gouernour of all things of whom we receiue all the benefites that we haue and therefore that wee trust and stay vpon him alone Que. Here are three seuerall thinges affirmed very worthie to be seuerallie considered and therfore first I pray you howe is it prooued that God guideth gouerneth all things Ans Besides a number of other places which might be alledged to prooue it withal a very good testimonie is that in the Psalme Whatsoeuer pleased the Lorde that did he in heauen and earth Psal 135.6 in the sea and in all the depth Where marke well the space of the Lordes dominion in heauen he rulech in earth he ruleth in the sea he ruleth and in all these whatsoeuer it pleaseth him that doeth he at all times and seasons The like spéeche againe hath the same Prophet in an other place Psal 115.3 But our God is in heauen saith he and doeth whatsoeuer he wil The eyes of all things waite vpon him Psal 145.15 and he giueth them meate in due season So then nothing without him is done at any time but his power almightie guideth and gouerneth all things Que. Howe is it prooued that all good commeth to vs from this directing prouidence of the Lorde Ans The holy ghost in plaine words affirmeth it by his Apostle Iames Iames. 1.17 Euery good giuing euery perfect gift is from aboue and commeth downe from the father of light Que. This doctrine is plaine And yet notwithstāding euer it hath had euen in these dais hath som enemies Such obiectiōs as I haue hard at times I wil propound vnto you I pray you aunswere thē The first is this if God rule all things by his prouidence direction then must he needs be author of sin also in that he hindreth it not but suffreth it to be done Ans I answere to this your first doubt thus that the argument is not good neither foloweth that béecause all thinges are doone by his prouidence therefore hée should be author of euill For one may bée author of an action yet not of the euil in the action as in this similitude wée sée If a man cut with an euill knife hee is the cause of cutting but not of euill cutting or hackling of the knife but the badnesse of the knife is the cause of that Againe if a man strike the stringes of an instrument that is out of tune he is the cause that the stringes sounde but that they sounde iarringlie and out of tune that is in themselues and the man that striketh is not to bée blamed for it Therefore séeing one maie bée the cause of an action and yet not of the euil in the action you sée it doth not folowe that if God bée the cause of the action by and by the euill in the thing must néedes also procéede of him Nay contrarilie this doctrine is a sealed truth That no euill commeth of GOD in any worke but though in euerie thing that is done the Lord bée some worker yet as he doth it it is euer good Marke but an example or two Iob. 1. Iob his great aduersitie procéeded of God and by God in some respect it procéedeth of Satan also and of the Chaldeans that robbed him Yet sée that which Satan did malitiously and the Chaldeans couetously that did the Lord well to good purpose to the glorie of his name to the instruction and comfort of vs all and to Iobs great benefite also Gen. 38. Iosephs affliction againe it came by God by his brethren by his light mistresse and ouer credulous master but yet so much as God did was well done to the great benefite of his father and friends after and what the other did was euill wrongfully done to Ioseph The like againe may be said touching the death of Christ Had not God his worke in it when his determinate counsell appointed it Act. 2.23 and deliuered him vp Had not Iudas his worke in betraying him Had not the Iewes their worke whose wicked hands crucified and slew him Yet that which they did most horriblie the Lorde himselfe did in vnspeakeable mercie to all our endelesse comfortes Therefore whatsoeuer procéedeth of GOD as it commeth from him it is most good although the same thing as it commeth of man and by man bée wicked and euill and no author of euill is he though guider and gouernour of all things Que. My seconde doubt then is this if GOD gouerne all thinges by his prouidence then looke howe hee list to haue things and so shall they be men cannot chaunge his will and therefore it skilleth not what wee doe Ans Surely the conclusion is very wicked and no way followeth vpon Gods prouidence For albeit he direct all things yet we must euer vse the meanes that God hath appointed notwithstanding for so we sée Gods children euer did and tempted not the Lord by any such wicked spéeche as this Rebecca had heard Gods owne mouth speake it Gen. 27. that hee would of her two sonnes Esau and Iacob make two
of his father and mother and they haue chastened him and hee would not hearken vnto them then shall his father and mother take him and bring him vnto the elders of the Citie and vnto the gate of that same place and say vnto the Elders of the Citie this our sonne is stubborne and disobedient and will not hearken vnto our voice he is a riotour and a drunkard and all the men of the Citie shall stone him with stones to death and thou shalt put euill away from thee and all Israell shall heare and feare Que. But howe farre must a childe obey Ans If we passe ouer the discourse of Philosophers touching this matter and come to the scriptures the Apostle Paul determineth it thus Colos 3.20 That children must obey their parentes in all thinges Que. Why but shall we thinke Paule would haue a childe in deede obey his Parentes in all thinges as the woordes sounde What if they commaund a wicked thing Ans No indéede wee may not take Paules wordes so generally but wee must expounde that place by an other place of Paule to the Ephesians Ephes 6 where he biddeth children as you hearde aboue obey their parentes in the Lorde And by the wordes of Mathewe where it is sayde Matth. 10. Hee that loueth father or mother more than me is not worthie of me Que. And howe then conclude you touching my question Ans Thus I conclude that a child is bounde to obey his parentes in all thinges in the Lorde that is so farre as his obedience may stande with the dutie which he oweth to his God and with such circumstances touching his owne person as both reason and pietie woulde shoulde bee regarded Which conclusion compriseth assuredlie their obedience as touching mariage Que. What begetteth this obedience in children Ans When parentes desire obedience they must knowe that it is their duties to commaund thinges lawfull in respect of God This excludeth forcing to marrie against all likeing and conuenient in regarde of their children Que. What is the thirde and last part of this honour Ans Maintainance of our parentes if néede be Que. What meane you by this maintenaunce Ans It is a thankfull sustayning of the want of our parents either by our riches counsell strength or any other thing which God hath blessed vs withall and they haue not Que. But how dare we interpret the commaundement thus Honor thy Parentes that is maintaine them as thou art able and they haue neede Ans Surely first very reason telleth vs that this is as due as either reuerence or obedience but to let that passe wee haue apparant scriptures where by honor is meant maintenance As namely in the Apostles spéech to Timothie Honour widowes 1. Timoth. 5. that be widowes in deede That is prouide for thē and let them be sustained Againe in the same place a litle after They that rule well are worthy of double honor 17. where by honour in part is meant maintaynance Lastlie in the gospell of S. Marke our Sauiour Christ notablie sheweth that the Scribes and Pharisies Marke 7. perswading children to giue to their vse that wherewith they shoulde haue helped their Parentes caused them to breake this commaundement in not honoring them as they should Where we euidently see Christ himselfe includeth in this honour maintaynaunce and these places as they warrant this interpretation so doe they also plainely prooue that children owe this dutie to their parentes Que. What further may be saide for the warranting of this that children ought to releeue their parentes wherein they can Ans Beside the testimonies of scripture nowe alledged to prooue it the spirite of God hath added reasons to vrge it and there are also examples to perswade it and fearefull experiences of Gods wrath vpon the contrarie to feare vs from it Que. What reasons Ans In the 6. to the Ephesians the 1. verse this reason is added because it is a iust thing or right And indéede so it is right both in respect of God that appointeth it and in respect of that which our parentes haue doone for vs before Que. What else Ans Againe in the 3. to the Colossians the 20. verse this reason is aledged because it is well pleasing to the Lorde Que. What examples Ans Valerius in his 5. booke and 4. chapter sheweth a notable example of a daughter that nourished her mother in prison with her brestes And if heathens by the lawe of nature knewe so much to be their dutie how much more christians hauing added thereunto the light of Gods worde Que. What else Ans It is also reade of the Storkes that when they are olde they kéepe continually the nest and their young birds prouide for them and feede them till they die Que. Well then yet what nowe if children refuse thus to behaue themselues to their parentes or neglect it Ans They are then to looke for the wrath of the Lorde in them sharpely with heauie hande punishing so foule a fault And to consider well that as others haue founde him so shall they vndoubtedly Cham Reuben Hophin and Phinees with a number others are before their eyes as experiences to be wise by if they haue grace And aboue all other Absolon that gracelesse man who like a disobedient childe to a good father sought greatly to dishonour him 2. Sa●● 18. and so horrible was this sinne that euen the earth was wearie of so wicked a burden and would carie him no longer The heauens also were ashamed of him and the wrath of God hanged him vp betwixt heauen and earth by the heire of his head till Ioab thrust him thorowe with thrée dartes beeing yet aliue A fearefull spectacle to all rebelles against their Prince or disobedient children against their Parentes Que. Breefely nowe whom doe you note to be comprehended heere vnder the title Parentes Ans First Parentes by nature secondly by dignitie and office thirdly by age and fourthly by benefit Generally they are all in steede of Parentes to vs by whome as by instrumentes the Lorde deriueth his mercies to vs. Que. Who be Parentes by dignitie or office Ans Magistrates ouer the people maisters ouer their seruauntes ministers ouer their charges and such like Que. For Magistrates what say you Ans I say their place and calling that portion aboue others which the Lorde hath giuen them of his authoritie maiestie and excellencie prooueth vnto vs that wee must reuerence them The increase and safetie of that which wee possesse through peace maintayned by them prooueth that we ought againe thankefullie to maintaine them their estate and gouernment by tribute taxes subsidies and such like and for obedience it is in a number of places commaunded as are also the former Therefore when as all the partes of honour are due vnto them as reuerence maintainaunce and obedience I may conclude Magistrates as Parentes are to be honored Que. There is no question of anie of these but now how
what graces God hath giuen them But it is a sealed trueth god giue vs harts to cōsider it wel Iudgmēts are prepared for the scorner Prou. 19.29 stripes for the backe of the foole Michall Dauids wife a mocking mistresse out of her gasing windowe not sparing her owne husbande the king of a frumpe and that in a good thing found the rewarde of it at the Lorde shée was cursed as barren while her life indured and neuer had children Those mocking children at the baldnesse of the Prophet felt the rewarde of such a sinne For our example the Lorde caused Beares to deuour them all presentlie Semei that scorned the estate of Dauid 2. Kings 2. went not to his graue in peace Bician that scoffer was deuoured of dogges as they write And as yet neuer scaped the vnrepenting scorner the handes of the Lorde For howe shoulde it stande with his iustice to call vs to a reckning for our idle wordes and not for our mockes and vngodlie tauntes Wherefore trueth it is and shall euer stande Blessed is that man that hath not sit in the seate of the scornefull Que. Why but may we not iest merily one with an other Ans Yes indéede for all iesting is not mocking such as nowe we haue spoken of and shewed to bee euill Merilie if you remember did the Prophet Eliah iest with the Idolaters worshippers of Baal bidding them crie lowd for their god paraduēture might be talking with some body 1. King 28. or pursuing his enimies or in some iornie some whither or paraduenture a sléepe Thus saith the text did Eliah mocke them yet this mocking being but a pleasāt iesting to haue taught them good if they had had grace displeased not the Lord. An other example also we haue in the prophet Esay laughing as it were at their follie who wold worship that as God the chippes whereof had made them such a fire that they cryed A Esay 44. ha I am well warmed And for the place to the Ephesians it condemneth not this maner of speaking and iesting Ephe. 5. but that which procéedeth either of a vaine desire to shew our selues or of an vngodly coueting to sting our brethren Que. Thus then I see the malice of the tongue to be great and euen al men by it to be made guilty of this cōmandement though their handes neuer shed bloode yet is it such a mischiefe as the godlie are much subiect to I meane to be stinged with the tongues of the wicked and therefore I pray you if you knowe anie giue me some counsell howe to thinke of this crosse Ans Truth it is that howsoeuer the sinne be great to mocke or to speake against any despitefully and especially the godly yet is it a crosse vsually incident to them that will separate the sinnes of this worlde so néere as they can from their liues to be taunted and spoken against by both open despisers of goodnesse and by open professors also of religion And that comfort which I knowe is to thinke euen often and seriously of these and such other places The mouth of the wicked Psal 109.2 the mouth full of deceit are opened vpon me saith Dauid They haue spoken to me with a lying tongue they compassed me about also with wordes of hatred and fought against mee without a cause For my friendshippe they were mine aduersaries But I gaue my selfe to prayer Sée the refuge of this saint of God in this kinde of crosse euen to heauen marke the rest of his conscience euen the Lord and if euer the like case be ours let vs powre with him our guiltlesse gréefe into the bosome of our God and there an ende till the Lorde thinke good to make our trueth appeare also to men The like spéeche and practise note againe in an other place of the same booke Princes sayth he did sit and speake against me Psal 119.23 but thy seruant did meditate in thy statutes And againe The proude haue had mee exceedingly in derision yet haue I not shrinked from thy commaundementes Ver. 51. And what a spéech is it of Paule to the Corinthians I take pleasure in infirmities 2. Cor. 12.10 in reproches c. Wherefore in God reioyce who seeth the heart that meant no harme in the Lord be chéerefull whose mercy turneth the deserued crosse of many gret greefes into the biting but of a peuish tongue and in pacience passing the time on say in faith what many haue saide in folly That time shall trie the trueth Que. Yet there are some mo branches of this murther of the tongue Ans Indéede by the tongue also no doubt they kill who by cruell counsell stirre vp the hating heartes of men to any bloudie persecution or which with their mouthes witnesse an vntruth to the ende to shedde any bloud thereby as did the iudges of Susanna and as many consciencelesse men in these daies doe being vpon an inquest of life and death to be maisters of their will Que. Now if you thinke good a litle also of the third kind of murder namely of the heart and first how it is prooued Ans The words of our sauiour Christ are plaine That there is a murther of the heart that out of the heart come euill thoughts adulteries fornications murthers Therefore there is a murder of the heart Againe S. Iohn saith Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a mansleaer But hatred is in the hart and therefore manslaughter Thirdly the minde and the wil being the beginnings or the fountains of al actions if they be infected the man must nedes be gilty before the Lord. Que. Doth this fearefull sinne step into the heart at first or it creepeth rather by degrees as other great sinnes doe Ans Sathan is more subtle than so to drawe euerie man to the extremitie of sinne at the first and therefore howsoeuer in some men he doth vpon a sodaine yet ordinarily this murther stealeth into our heartes by these steps First Satan brée●eth by his vnmarked créeping into our affections a misliking of such a man or woman and yet wee well knowe not why but we can not like them Then doeth this misliking bréede anger For we cannot beare at their handes that which wee can well suffer at others Anger bréedeth hatred hatred desire of reuenge and desire of reuenge murther Thus stealeth sinne into vs and by these steppes Therefore first euerie Christian is to take héede howe misliking of any groweth vppon him Misliking and to snubbe the course of Sathan at the first Secondly to looke the fruite thereof namely anger weying well what was saide to Caine Gen. 1.6 Caine why art thou angry And by our Sauiour Christ in the gospell Math. 5. But I say vnto you whosoeuer is angry with his brother vnaduisedly Anger shal be culpable of iudgement expounding there this commandement and including as you see anger in it And hence haue growen all those vehement
like which because it is rare fruite on such trees to some may make it seeme the better but I passe ouer these shewes and outwarde leafes to decke it with it hauing ynough in it selfe to commend it least if I should long speake of this colour and grace I should speake the lesse of him or of the thing it selfe minding not to speake much of either but litle in all And as I passe the stocke from whence this graft was taken so will I not stand to shewe you where it was ingrafted planted in what vniuersitie in what Colledge what roote he toke what sufficient time he grew howe he spred there and with what liking which would make this fruite to many not without cause to realish the better But to come to that which commeth nearer to the bringing forth and producing of this worke when hee was first planted by a fellowshippe in that famous Colledge of the holy and vndiuided Trinitie in Cambridge wholly or most especially consecrated to the studie of him and his knowledge whose name it beareth so straight he toke himselfe to that studie whereby he might be most seruiceable to gods Church and some triall first had of his guiftes as it were aduowed himselfe a man to the Lord to serue in his tabernacle Not long after that betimes he might begin to be profitable be profitable long God touching his heart he toke on him the ministerie so mercifully God dealt with him that with all he placed him in one certaine Charge not far from his Colledge that he might haue where to sowe be still at hande to sowe and knowe both what and how to sowe and to his comfort see the growing vp and fruit of it Nowe hauing there painefully laboured by the space almost of two yeares and seene the effect of that promise with what measure ye mete 4. Mark 24. shall be measured to you againe and vnto them that haue shall more bee giuen that though he cast in with full hande and euer a zelous heart to doe good in a continued course yet God so blessed that the haruest ouer-abounded his labour and exceeded his hope and that litle towne was a candle light set on a candlesticke and a tower vpon the toppe of a hill When God to his comfort had thus encouraged him in his lawe he by great meanes calleth him from this litle towne where he had no pastorall charge to a greater charge and in respect of the change and dignitie of the place whither he was called it was as it were from Tecon to Bethel from preaching in some vplandish and countery towne ●n the wildernesse of Iudea to Herods court or as ●ndeede in many respectes it well may be sayde by a Sergius Paulus vnto his house When he had there continued nowe a whole yeare and more to the good reformation and great benefitte of that most honorable familie it pleased God that his Sergius Paulus leauing as it were Nazareth went and dwelt for a time in Capernaum Math. 4.13.14 which is neare the sea in the borders of Zabulon and Nepthalin beyond Iordan in Gallilie of the Gentilles out of the borders of Palestina I hope I may without offence allude vnto that place in all pointes it so fitly answereth where a while abiding by his meanes God wrought that the people which before in comparison sate in darkenesse sawe great light and to them which sate in the region shadowe of death light was risen vp Of this place and this people he hauing yet further cōpassion they beeing as sheepe without a shepheard wandring in the mountaines and the haruest there great and the labourers fewe the Lorde moued his heart to remaine there and wrought this in the heart of his most honorable Lorde himselfe to forgoe him and leaue him there for the further increase of God his Church and for the tender loue he bare and good he would to this people where what paines hath beene taken good hath beene done it is by more witnessed than 〈◊〉 neede to make relation and this worke and some others of this authors since that time come forth giue open testimony though I hould my tongue I would not haue saide thus much of the man 〈◊〉 the places themselues of which I haue spoke● were not readie to say and set downe more tha● I haue saide and this haue I saide that God in him may be glorified they among whom he liueth fo● ●im thankefull and to admonish him what pro●eedinges these beginninges require The worke 〈◊〉 selfe might manie waies beside be commended ●he matter and principall grounde of it is the ●awe of God brought from the highest heauen giuen by God himselfe to his seruant Moses with ●hunders and lightninges 19. Exod. 16. c. 18. c. and the sounde of the ●rumpe exceeding loude on mount Sinay the mountaine all on smoke the Lorde discending vpon it in fire c. and all the mount trembling exceedingly giuen to all the Israell of God aper●ayning to all men conteining infinite blessinges ●or the hearers and doers of it and innumerable intollerable curses plagues for the breaker ●hereof either by negligence or contempt This principall not laide vpon with any borrowed col●ours to hide the grounde but the workemanship and ingrauing of it is out of the matter it selfe so that still the grounde and marble thereof may appeare and dealt with all in this manner fitlie answering to the subiect matter deliuered as it were in thunder with a spirite as hotte as fire zealous with iudgment setting an edge by receiued strength euen vpon this rasier The place also and persons where and for whome this worke was both made and vttered may adde much grace and strength vnto it In a most honourable familie and for it and with good liking and profitte there and commonly men like that the better which liketh them well and that which profiteth such profiteth manie If it wette the mountaines it will water the vallies and if it bee sweete oyntment for the heade it cannot be but acceptable to the re●● of the partes and to the borders of the garment The dewe from Hermon and the mountaines of Sion trickleth downe sweeteli● vppon the vallies about And if this make i● profitable to others because deliuered heere then must it be most profitable to this family it selfe for which it was made and first for it alone and nowe is by me especially to it commended It is fruite of your owne grounde the voice of your owne sheephearde the sounde of your proper trumpet and therefore you must both knowe it and like it the better and thereby be warned the sooner It is a lesson which alreadie you haue learned and therefore in it may and must be more readie than others It is not nowe first commended to you but againe recommended to your eyes which heeretofore hath beene sent by your eares to your mindes and to your heartes by a great vehemencie
and zeale of spirite wherewith this author aboundeth Which although so much and with such life and mouing will not nowe altogether appeare in this writing as when it was with the liuely voyce and earnest spirite deliuered because that GOD promiseth to that the more especiall blessing yet shall you easily see that it is a worke comming out of the same shoppe a streame flowing from the same fountaine a print stamped with the same seale and sparckles flying out of the same flame Which the more they shall inflame you which ought most to inflame you you hauing beene ●●readie with them set on fire the more they ●●all heate others and by your example be ●●ofitable to all which is that the author wisheth ●●d I his welwiller heartily pray for to him who 〈◊〉 the able worker of it to whose especiall grace 〈◊〉 good reader in reading this worke to direct ●●ee I commende thee Thine in the Lorde Iesu Abraham Conham Certaine profitable Questions and Answers vpon the Commaundements The first Question HAth there euer been in the world amongst men some Religion Ans Yea for to make all men inexcusable the Lorde hath ingrafted in the minde of euerie one a secrete sure perswasion that there is a God who as he made man so is he of man to bee serued and obeyed By which secrete perswasion it came to passe that there was neuer from the beginning of the worlde any Region Towne or House wherein was not some Religion Que. Then is not Religion a pollicie of man to keepe people in obedience Ans No it were horrible to thinke so for it is plaine that religion is of nature and by nature though true religion be not Que. How prooue you that Ans First verie reason teacheth it For what policie could euer haue made man the Lorde of all Creatures fall down and worship the vilest creatures vnlesse there had béen something before in his nature to leade him to it Secondly it is plainely prooued in the example of Pilate Iohn 19.8 who assoone as he heard that Christ was God euen by very nature feared and stoode in awe of him And by the example of Gamaliel with diuers others Acts. 5.39 Que. Seeing then that there hath bene euer in the worlde some Religion because it is naturall whether is there but one or many Ans There can be but one true Religion but of false there haue béene and are diuers and euer will be till Christ come againe vnto iudgement Que. What false Religion can you name Ans There hath béene and is false re●igion in the Church Hist Magdeburg and out of the Church In the Church Poperie Out of the Church the religion of the Iewes of the Gentils and of the Turkes Que. What is the Religion of the ●ewes Ans They obstinately denying that Christ is yet come worshippe God still with sacrifices burnt offerings and other ceremonies of Moses lawe Que. What the Gentiles Ans Their Religion is a confused worshipping of all things for so wee ●eade in the 14. of the Actes of the Apostles in the 17. and in the 19. And the Poet saieth of them thus Quicquid humus pelagus coelum mirabile gignit Id dixere deos colles freta flumina flammas That is What so the earth the sea the heauen doeth wonderfull beget As hils seas flouds and flames of fire for Gods that haue they set Que. What the Turkes Ans Their religion is a masse of all heresies denying Christ to be God and vainely worshipping with mans deuises Que. What is true Religion Ans True religion is the true worshipping of God and the kéeping of his commaundements Que. Whence is it to be learned Ans Onely out of the written word of God and not out of mans heade or writings Que. How is that prooued Ans Both by Scripture and reason sufficient Que. What Scripture Ans Esay 29.13 verse God threateneth to plague them because their feare or religion towardes him was taught by the precept of men Michah the 4.2 He shall teache vs and we will walke in his pathes Daniel the 9.10 Daniel confesseth that because the people obe●ed not Gods voyce therefore al their worship was sinne Que. What reason Ans By many might it bee prooued but these may suffice First whatsoeuer pleaseth God must be according to his will but his will is onely knowen in his worde and therefore if our Religion please God it must be according to his word Secondly if whatsoever bée not of faith is sinne and faith onely is out of the word then what Religion soever is not out of the worde is sinne Thirdly the practise of Gods Church hath euer béen both to reforme religion and to confute heresies out of the word and by the word and therefore the same must euer bee the grounde of our Religion Que. Howe is it to bee learned out of the word Ans By hearing it preached by reading it our selves by prayer by conference one with another by temptations and by this exercise of Catechising For the other they are vsual meanes in déede but this maner of Catechising it is a newe deuise not knowne to our olde Fathers No it is no newe deuise but an olde custome and auncient begun assoone as euer God had a Church and continued euer since Que. How may that be prooued Ans First in the fourth of Genesis i● appeareth Gen. 4. that euen Adam the first man vsed it to his Sonnes teaching them to worship God with sacrifices o● else they coulde neuer haue doone it A●gaine wee sée Abraham vsed it to his housholde Gen. 18. and God commended him fo● it For if he had not by this exercise w●● instructed his seruantes before would● they euer haue suffered him to cut a●way their foreskinnes In many place● also beside did God flatly commaund al● parentes to vse it to their children I● the 6. to the Hebrues mention is mad● of the parts of the Catechisme then vsed the ancient Fathers haue carefully tra●uailed in this exercise all well ordere● Churches haue euer had their Cate●chismes which we also haue and reade therefore no newe deuise Que. What be the partes of the Catechisme Ans The parts of the Catechisme are these two generaly doctrine discipline vnder doctrine these foure contained to wit The law of God a sum whereof is in the ten Commaundements Faith a sum whereof is in the 12. Articles Prayer a forme whereof is the Lordes Prayer The Sacraments Of these partes in order afterwarde Now to some questions in your booke And first Que. What is the cheefest thing which euery one ought to be most careful of so long as they liue An. Euerie one ought to be most carefull of these two points first and chiefely how to be saved in the day of iudgement before Gods iudgement seate and so to come to life euerlasting Secondly howe to liue according to Gods holy will during our life in which two pointes wholy standeth
the glorie of God so much as of man ought to bee sought for Que. How may the first be prooued The first reason drawen of the vanitie of all things Ans The great vanitie of all earthly things which men so hunt after doth showe that our care shoulde not bee so much of these matters as it is but rather howe to haue our soules saued when all these shall haue their end For consider euē the chiefest desires of men seuerally and sée how in the attaining of them there is no stayed comfort and yet often doe men faile after much indeuour and not attaine to them Que. What chiefe desires of men can you name vnto mee Ans Mirth and ioy a light and a chéerefull heart is greatly wished Mirth and ioy and sought for of all men by Musicke by iesters by sportes and playes by much cost and many meanes as they can and are able neither is this simplie to bee condemned in all yet heare what sentence the spirit of God hath giuen of it by the mouth of his seruaunt who tryed the same and let his experience bee our knowledge I said to my heart saith he goe to nowe Ecclesi 2.1 I will prooue thee with ioy therefore take thou pleasure in pleasant things and beholde this al●o is vanitie I said of laughter thou art mad and of ioy what is this that thou doest And in another place 7.4 Better it is to go into the house of mourning than of feasting because this is the ende of all men and the liuing shall lay it to his heart Anger is better than laughter for by a sad looke the heart is made better The heart of the wise is in the house of mourning but the heart of fooles is in the house of myrth Mille parit luctus mortalibus vna voluptas For euery ioy that man doeth here possesse A thousand woes his minde doe dayly presse Secondly to rake vp riches also in this world and to possesse great wealth Riches it is a thing endeuoured almost of all Happie is he and wise accounted who can fastest attaine vnto it yet heare and note the spéeche of Iames amongst numbers moe to the same end Iames. 5.1 Goe to nowe saith he ye riche men weepe howle for your miseries that shall come vpon you your riches are corrupt and your garments motheaten your golde and siluer is cancred the rust of them shall witnesse against you and shall eate your flesh as it were fier To builde and inhabite great and goodly houses howe many men bewitched with vanitie Buildings delight in it and with much care and cost applie themselues vnto it Yet sée they or may sée the spéeche of Salomon vpon experience saying I haue made my great workes I haue built me houses I haue planted me vineyards I haue made me gardens and orchards and planted in them trees of all fruite and so forth Yea euen whatsoeuer mine eyes desired I withhelde it not from them neyther withdrew I my heart from any ioie then I looked on all my works that my hands had wrought and on the trauell that I had laboured to doe and beholde all is vanitie and vexation of the spirite and there is no profite vnder the Sun When it shal be saide to them as it was to that purposing builder in the Gospell Thou foole this night shall they take away thy soule Luke 12.20 then may it also folow fitly be demanded whose shal these stately houses be Thus eyther may they knowe the vanitie of their dealing but yet wil not or else doe they knowe it but regarde it not Apparell againe is another of the raging desires of many Apparell Euen a worlde it is to sée howe all as dead doe tast no sinne in it but spend and spare not what possiblie may be gotten to bestowe on it yet what beginning had it Was it not then inuented when man had sinned grieuouslie offended his God and cast himselfe away both bodie and soule Séeing then in our integritie it was not vsed but after sinne bestowed on man to hide his shame withall what may it euer beate into vs but our rebellion against the Lorde our sinne and cursed disobedience Howe should the sight of it and vse of it humble vs and not puffe vs vp seeing it plainely telleth vs we are not as we were when no apparell was worne and yet no shame thereby Were it not monstrous pride if a redéemed prisoner conditionally that he should euer weare an halter should waxe prowde of his halter Mans apparell is the badge of a sinner yea of a condemned and cursed sinner therefore the pride of it and delight in it no doubt very monstrous before the Lorde and hatefull If euery silken sute and gorgeous gowne in Englande shrowded vnder it a saued soule and a sanctified bodie in the sight of God O happie then England of all the nations vnder heauē But if vnder such garded garments may and doeth lodge a body and soule abhorred of the Lorde that in the day of wrath shall finde no fauour then is it not apparell that ought to be sought after but in the day of iudgemēt how we may be saued Credite and fauour with the world What should I say of fauor credit with great estates in the worlde of countenance and authoritie O howe doe men desire it and séeke it sewe and serue for it their care both day and night is howe to attaine the fastest to it yet what more tickle than the state hereof if GOD gaue vs hearts to marke it For how soone faded the credite of Dauid with his wauer n● Master Saul 1. Kings 18. Howe sodainely and quickely chaunged the liking of that king into cruel hatred of a faithful seruaunt and sonne in Lawe Haman as it were to day Hester 7. set at the Kings table where none but the King Queene were the next day quite out of fauour and hanged vp full highe What credite had Ioseph with his master Gene. 39. when he committed all thinges to him that euer he had sauing his wife to be at his direction Yet euen in a moment without cause falsely slaundered all credite lost and he clapt close vp in prison Many such examples hath the worde and all histories and therefore truely saide he it whosoeuer saide it as the Counter so is the Courtier for that standeth euen nowe for a thousand poundes and by and by through a litle remooue but for a halfepenie and so he to day in all glorie to morowe in litle or none Yet not more the Courtier than euen euery man in his place and seruice to day trusted to morow suspected to day loued to morowe misliked to day with desire entertayned and made of to morowe as néedelesse cast off contemned Fickle therefore is the worldly fauour and greater good there is for men to séeke after Great matches in maryage for their
children Mariages another of the daily desires of worldly men This they séeke this they couet this day and night they beat their heads about Yet daily examples be before their faces of sorowe and tormēt not to be expressed growing to parentes by such proude and gréedie attempts beside the continuall griefe that sonne or daughter so bestowed often riseth and goeth to bed withall Therefore I say to goe no further since these vsuall desires of men in this worlde are often not attained vnto to their liking ●hough greatly laboured for and yet if they be attained euen in great measure haue no certaine or sure comfort in them but all the pleasure in them and ●y them quickely fadeth away strongly ●t prooueth that our chiefe care should not be of these things but rather what ●ur case shal be in another world whē al these things shall haue their end which ●s the matter I haue rehearsed thē for An other proofe of the same may this be the reuealed will of God the Lord testifieth he would haue all men saued The second reason to prooue that our chiefe care should be howe to be saued and ●ome to the knowledge of his trueth he would not thē death of a sinner c. therfore unlesse we also set our care to the ●ame ende namely howe we may be ●aued in the day of iudgement we oppose our selues not onely against our ●wne good but euen against the Lords will we striue with our God and wee shall surely reape the reward of such ●s rob him of his creatures Thirdly the horrour of hell and condemnation prooue The third that our care to be saued should be great For what meane those fearefull names of hell of prison chaines of darkenesse the lake burning with fire and brimstone the de●th pitch brimstone weeping and gnashing of teeth the worme that neuer dyeth the fier that neuer goeth out with a number such like I say what meane they or why hath the spirite of GOD set them downe but to strike a terror into vs of damnation and consequently thereupon a true care to be saued The fourth Fourthly the vnspeakeable ioyes of heauen that unmeasurable and endlesse comfort that there shall bee had with all the children o● GOD Patriar●hes Prophetes Apostles Martyrs yea with the Lorde himselfe and all his Angels with Christ our Sauiour and Lambe slaine for vs who shall wipe all teares from our eyes doeth crie vpon vs with shriking sound now while we haue time to vse our time to see mercie and séeke mercie to imbrace it and take it offered to such good vnto vs and neuer in securitie passing our oportunitie to be causes that then we shall heare these words Depart ye wicked into endlesse woe What an honor woulde I thinke it if the Prince passing by among the great multitude should spie mee out call mee to him imbrace me speake kindly to me take mee with him place me by him and so forth Howe would my heart daunce hereat and all men talke of my good hap Now is the passing of a mortall Prince on earth like the comming of Iesus Christ in the cloudes Is the honour they can giue comparable to that the Lorde of Lordes shall giue to his elect O my heart féeleth what my pen cannot write there is no comparison betwixt the persons the places the preferments and therefore if the one so ioy mée that for it I would take any paines thrise dead is my heart within me if to obtaine the other it bée not carefull Lastly The fifth the examples of care continuall and great euer in Gods children how they might serue him and please him that hereafter they might sit with him and neuer part from him ought mightily to perswade vs to be like vnto them in this indeuour their labours their watchings their sufferings all shot but at this ende the glorie of the Lorde and their owne saluation and howe great were they What spéeches of desire euen aboue all treasure to bée saued in the great day haue they vttered And shall we not followe them God forbid Thus therefore prooued vnto vs is the first point of a Christian man and womans care namely that it ought to be this howe they should be saued in the day of iudgement and so come to life euerlasting Que. Howe is the second point prooued vnto vs namely that in the meane time so long as wee liue in this world wee ought to bee carefull to liue according to Gods holy will Ans Surely it is prooued verie strongly vnto vs both by our election creation redemption iustification and vocation if we will marke them For why hath the Lord elected vs to eternal ioy in Christ Iesus That wee might conclude libertie thereon to sinne at our pleasure Our election prooueth it as many wicked spirites reason No no. But let the Apostle bee iudge and tell vs why who saieth Ephes 1.4 He hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world that we should bee holy and without blame before him in loue So saieth he of our creation also Our creation prooueth it that wee are the Lordes workemanship created in Christ Iesus to good workes Ephes 2.10 which GOD hath ordained that wee shoulde walke in them And of our redemption Luke plainely speaketh Our redemption prooueth it that we are deliuered out of the hands of our enemies Luke 1. that we should serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our life Our iustification prooueth it Our iustification hath euer ioyned with it inseparably the grace of ●anctification and they cannot bee parted For howe shall we saieth the Apostle Rom. 6.2 that are dead to sinne liue yet therein and so forth as followeth in the place Lastly of our vocation the Apostle Peter saieth thus As he that hath called is holy so be you holy in all manner of conuersation So that wee sée thereby all these meanes prooued vnto vs that we ought as long as we liue to be carefull of this that we behaue our selues according to the will of the Lord which is the seconde point whereof in your question ye demaunded some confirmation Que. But howe can we knowe we are discharged before Gods iudgement seate Ans Your booke answereth you that wee can neuer knowe howe wee be discharged before the iudgement seate of God vntill such time as we knowe our owne miserable estates by reason of the greatnesse of our sinne and the horrible punishment which we deserue for the same And the proofes your booke vseth are plaine to inferre this conclusion For doeth man séeke to the Phisition that hath no néede of health either to be procured or preserued by his meanes No our owne experience doth approue the speach of Christ to bee true when he saieth Matth. 9.12 The whole haue no neede of the Phisition but the sicke Matth. 11.13 For in déede it is the diseased that take
haires 〈◊〉 her head kissed them annointed them ●ith precious ointment and what was 〈◊〉 which that woman thought too much for such a friende True it is therefore that the lesse we sée the goodnesse of our God the lesse we loue him but great is the affection of them to whom many sinnes are forgiuen Knowing this then that remembraunce of hard estate before will stirre the heart vp to him in loue that hath made it happie and that sight of ougly sinne lodging still in mée and cleauing to my soule and flesh will make mee praise his name who yet in mercie imputeth not the same vnto mée Vse indéede often with your selfe and especially when you féele your heart most prone and fit thereunto to viewe your sinnes against euery commaundement howe many and monstrous they are in thought worde and deede sit and thinke with your selfe what is commaunded sometimes in one sometimes in another what woonderfull perfection is required in euerie one what braunches and members euerie one hath what terrible iudgements are due to the breakers therof how far from the full absolute perfourmance of any tittle of any one of them you your selfe are therefore in what case you stand for the same euen sure of eternal destruction both of bodie soule in hel fier Yet notwithstanding how you are released of mercie not of merite that with the preciousest ransom that euer was the heart bloud of Iesus Christ the sonne of God both God man so that heauen earth may perish but you cannot perish Que. The examination of the conscience touching this commaundement Ans As for example I set view this cōmandemēt wherof now we haue spokē Thou shalt haue none other gods but me Considering what things are biddē●r forbidden vnto me in the same And ●s alreadie now hath béene prooued first I sée I am commanded herein to wor●hip the Lord my God and him onely to ●erue not ioyning any fellowes to him ●t all of which worship many points ●here bee but they may bee reduced ●nto a fewe First I sée I am bound to ●oue him aboue all that is in my heart and soule to make more account of him than of all the worlde or any creature in heauen or earth to cleaue faster vnto him and his wil than to any thing to estéeme him and preferre him yea euen aboue mine owne saluation if they could come in comparison together for Hee that loueth father or mother Matth. 10.28 sister or brother wife or childe or any thing more than me is not worthie of me Secondly I am commaunded to feare him aboue all that is with a godly reuerence to stande more in awe of him and his worde than of any thing else whatsoeuer to be more loath not for feare onely but euen for loue to displease him grieue him and offende him than any or all the creatures in heauen or earth beside in respect of that which he is able to lay vpon mee if I forsake him to account nothing of any thing that any man can doe vnto me mindefull euer of this saying Feare not them that can kill the bodie and are not able to kill the soule Matth. 10. but feare him that can cast both bodie and soule into hell fire Thirdly I sée that in this commaundement I am charged to make my prayers to none but to God onely for the reasons aboue in their place alledged Fourthly I sée I am commaunded not to thinke that things goe by fortune and chaunce or that any thing is done which GOD knoweth not of or could not let but that I acknowledge him to be the guider and gouernour of all things and that what good soeuer I receiue I haue it from him and therefore that I trust and stay vpon him alone at all times and in all my matters whatsoeuer And for so much as neither I nor any can either loue him or feare him pray to him or trust in him vnlesse we knowe him therefore I sée also that I am in this commaundement straitely bound ●o long as I liue to labour and trauell by all meanes appointed to knowe the Lorde and his trueth out of his worde and looke howe much I want of knowing any thing that is reueiled in his worde so farre am I guiltie of the breache of this Lawe And if it please the Lorde to blesse me with knowledge of his trueth or any thing else whatsoeuer I sée that in this commandement I am charged to giue thankes to him for it in such full manner and measure of féeling as any way is due to that benefite For if I forget to be thankefull I forget that the Lorde in that thing is my good God And if I ascribe the praise and thankes to any thing else whatsoeuer otherwise than as to the instrument of God I make my selfe another GOD beside the Lorde euen that thing wherevnto I giue the thankes and I breake this commaundement These and many such other things I sée are laide vpon me and al men and women in this first commandement then I thinke or say with my self vnto the Lord O my good God and gratious father O my swéete Lord guide most righteous what doe I sée euen in this but one law of thine against my selfe my soule and bodie why I should neuer come in thy kingdome nor lift vp mine eyes to heauen in hope of any comfort This is but one Lawe of ten and contayneth but a fewe dueties in respect of all that I owe to thée and my brethren yet ah Lorde with wailing woe I speake it so guiltie I sée my selfe so fowle and ouglie before thy face and so full of breaches euerie way euen of this one commandement that I am ashamed and confounded to ●ift vp mine eies vnto thée my God For mine iniquities are increased ouermine ●ead my trespasses are growen vp to ●he heauen to me belongeth nothing but ●hame confusion it is thy mercie that ● am not vtterly destroied yea euē thy ●ercie maruellous that the earth as ●eary of so wicked a burden shrinketh ●ot from vnder my féete and hellish pit 〈◊〉 gulfe of endlesse woe receiueth me ●ot into it For what pleasure is ●ere in that seruaunt that being bid 〈◊〉 his master doe diuers thinges yet ●ot in any one obeyeth or perfourmeth 〈◊〉 maisters will Can hée like him ●ill hee loue him No no full soone euen I my selfe would loath and cast off such a one Ah Lorde then for my selfe what should I say Is there any seruaunt so bound vnto his master as I am bounde to thee Is there any master that can and will so quitte his seruaunts paines as thou in mercie my obedience Or can any mortall man so iustly challenge the obedience of his hireling as thou my God maist challenge the seruice of me thy creature first made of nothing by thy hande and then most dearely bought againe with precious price No no my bodie my life my heart
déede but ●ead blotted out and quite extingui●hed Sée nowe howe guiltie I am e●en of the first thing that is commaun●ed mee in this commaundement The seconde thing is that I should ●eare thée aboue all the thirde is Feare of God ●hat I should pray to none but to thée ●he fourth to acknowledge thee the ●uider and gouernour of all thinges ●f whome I receiue all the benefites ●hat I haue and therefore that I trust ●nd stay vpon thée alone Fiftly that 〈◊〉 should labour to knowe thée out of ●hy worde so fully and perfectly as ●hou hast reuealed thy selfe therein ●ecause of knowledge all these other ●●llowe And lastlie that I should for ●ll benefites giue thankes onely to ●●ee and in such full manner and ●easure of féeling as any way is due to that blessing which I receiue In which points as in other moe which might yet be named O merciful father I here before thée confesse I am no better than in the first I dare not cleare my selfe I cannot I ought not O Lord giue me eyes to sée my wants for I haue feared men and their threates more than I ought I haue feared the losse of their fauour more than I ought I haue feared the losse of worldely commodities more than I ought and haue not as thy blessed Apostle taught me by this example Philipp 3. accounted those thinges that were vantage vnto me losse very doung for the excellent knowledge sake of Iesus Christ my Lorde Sometimes Satan hath rocked this soule of mine in the chayer of securitie that I haue euen slept as it were a dead sléepe and not considered of thy iudgements against sinne as I ought neyther taken the profite by thy extraordinary works in the ayer in the earth in the bodies of men and beasts that I should but passed them ouer with a litle woonder or motion for a short time When my sinnes haue béene touched or appeared vnto me I haue flattered my ●wne soule and put vpon them honest ●ames as clokes to hide them withal The plaine pride of my heart and mere ●anitie I haue iudged clenlinesse or necessary for my estate Miserable coue●ousnesse haue I iudged lawful care for ●hings necessary and so forth a manifest token of a dead heart within and ●oide of tasting any horror in sinne By ●ll which and many more thinges that my minde may easily sée it is apparant ●o me that I haue euen broken this ●oint also of thy Lawe in not fearing ●hee so as I ought Alas Lorde what ●hall I say of the rest of the braunches ●f this commandement named euen nowe Am I any perfecter in them ●han in these No no I haue sinned against thée in them all and that most grieuously so that if there were no mo ●f thy commandements but euen this ●ne the first of al yet doth my conscience ●ell me I am before thée guiltie good Lorde most fearefully to bee touched But there are nine moe spreading out their braunches to all sinceritie and holinesse both in bodie and minde toward God and man with threatened cu●●es to all flesh that shall doe contrarie And therefore when I viewe my cou●se euen at the first to bee so crooked O deare Father what shall I thinke i● 〈◊〉 appeare when I shall bee iudged in them all Shall I boast of merites and kéepe no fyttle of thy commaundementes Shall I challenge saluation for my workes and euerie braunche of thy lawe doeth call mee cursed because I haue so fowlie and often broken the same No good Father no this little viewe of my obedience to thy hestes doeth plainely tell mee I haue no merites or good workes to come before thée withall much lesse am I able to doe workes of supererogation that is more than I neede to doe but of sinnes and euill workes alas I see a number With Dauid may I crie Psal 34. They are more than the haires of my ●eade and my heart hath failed mee I ●ay truely saye with the prodigall Sonne I haue sinned against heauen ●nd against thee and I am not worthie 〈◊〉 bee called thy childe I may say ●ith the Publican God bee mercifull 〈◊〉 mee a sinner and adde thereunto a ●reat and grieuous sinner I may say ●ith Ieremie O Lorde though mine ●●iquities testifie against mee yet deale ●hou with mee according to thy name ●or my rebellions are many And with 〈◊〉 I haue sinned Iob. 7. what shall I doe to ●●ee O thou preseruer of men Yea ●ell may I say I lye downe in my con●●sion and my shame couereth mee ●or I haue sinned against the Lorde my GOD from my youth vp tyll this ●ay and haue not obeyed his voyce ●o conclude I may looke about mee ●nd from a wounded soule crie vnto ●●ose that can giue mée counsell In re●●ect of my sinnes men brethren what ●●all I do And sée how neuer the Lord ●●rsaketh those that want his helpe aide ●oe I not euen nowe remember what he aduiseth me and all sinners in my case to doe Prou. 28. Hee that hideth his sinne saith the Lorde by Salomon shall not prosper but he that confesseth his sinne and forsaketh it shall haue mercie And sée in Dauid the proofe and tryall of it For when I helde my tongue saith hee my bones consumed Psal 32. or when I roared all the day For thy hande is heauie vpon me daie and night and my moysture is turned into the drought of sum●mer Then I acknowledged my sin vn●to thee neither hid I mine iniquitie For I said I wil confesse against my selfe and thou forgauest the punishment o● my sinne Therefore O Lorde I hearken to thy counsell and though I ha●● sinned aboue the number of the sand o● the sea as plainely I sée I haue if I 〈◊〉 charged with euery branch of thy com●maundements how I haue kept them though my transgressions be multipli●ed and are excéeding many so that I am not worthie to beholde the heigh● of heauen for the multitude of m● vnrighteousnesse yea I say thoug●● I haue prouoked thy wrath and doone euill before thee and not kept any ●ot of thy commaundementes so fully as I ought yet knowing Thou desirest ●he death of no sinner but rather that he should repent and be saued and hast ●hewed the trueth thereof in forgiuing Dauid and manie mo confessing truely ●heir sinnes before thee Therefore O good Lorde and sweete refuge full of mercie pitie and compassion I bow the ●nees of my heart with king Manasses ●nd all sorrowfull sinners and begge ●hy mercie I haue sinned O Lord I ●aue sinned and I acknowledge my ●ransgressions but I humbly beseech ●hee forgiue me O Lorde forgiue me ●nd destroy me not as I haue deserued ●e not angrie with me for euer by re●eruing to me euil neither condemne ●e into the lower partes of the earth For thou art the God euen the God of ●ll them that repent and on me thou ●●ilt shewe mercie My sorrowe good
●orde alas I knowe it is not great y●ough neither answereth it the greatnesse of my sinne but thou canst giue greater if it please thée O deare Father rent my heart and giue mée féeling cleaue it a sunder by thy pearcing spirit that from it may flowe the teares of true repentaunce strike good Lorde this harde rocke of mine that it may gushe out sorowfull water for so fowle offence and what wanteth in mée any wayes supplie in mercie with my Sauiour in whom thou art perfectly pleased Graunt O God vnto mée thy gratious spirit to kill in mée continually more and more the strength and power of sinne and to rayse mée vp in bodie and soule to more obedience towardes thée Let not my wantes stande euer swéete Lorde betwixt thy mercie and mée but giue mee will to wishe it giue me power to doe it giue mée loue to like it and euer strength to continue in it that thou hast appointed for mee to walke in before thée in this worlde Heare mee O Lorde O God O swéete and endlesse comfort of my sinnefull soule for Iesus Christ his sake that liuing heare I may euer serue thee and dooing so I may neuer loose thée Amen Amen The second Commaundement Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen image nor the likenesse of any thing that is in heauen aboue or in the earth beneath c. FIrst for the order of this Commaundement eyther wee may answere that this first Table contayning the honour and duetie of men to the Lorde as the se●ond doeth their duetie to man and the worshippe of GOD being part●y inwarde partly outwarde ha●ing in the former Commaundement laide downe the former kinde to wit of inward worship fitly now in this the two next folow the outward duties which to the same our gratious God we iustly owe. Or else thus That the Lorde in the first commaundement hauing separated himselfe from al other gods deuised and made by men and commanded all mortall men and women his creatures subiect to his Lawe to worship him onely and none but him here now in this second precept as order required he setteth downe modum rationē iuxta quam coli velit the waie and maner how he wil bee serued Forasmuch as in vaine he should haue doone the first except he had done the second also The way and maner is this euen according to his will and nature Which albeit it may séeme to flesh and bloud not so fitlie done by a negatiue lawe as by an affirmatiue it might yet besides that we are not to teache the Lorde euen in speciall wisedome hath he thus doone it For first our natures are very prone to the breache hereof which by a negatiue is stronglier beat downe than by an affirmatiue and then againe the Gentiles next neighbours to the Iewes were very much giuen to idols and images and therefore by name forbidden to the Iewes least by the Gentiles in that point they should be defiled And yet doth not the Lord here so set downe a negatiue but that he includeth an affirmatiue in it For as he saith Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen image and meaneth thereby Thou shalt not worship mee with any deuise of ●hine owne contrary to my wil and na●ure so implieth he herein the affirma●iue namely thou shalt in euery re●pect worship me according to my will ●nd nature Moreouer remember here ●gaine which hath béene touched be●re that both in this commandement 〈◊〉 in all other the Lord setteth downe 〈◊〉 name that thing the doing whereof 〈◊〉 not doing is most decent or horri●●e And therefore in this place for●●●ding all false and fonde worshippe 〈◊〉 his Maiestie hee setteth downe in name that which is most vnséemely and vile to wit Idolatrie For of all wrong worshippe to make him like a man or woman or other worse creature to prostrate our selues thereunto and to thinke wee worship him in so dooing is most horrible What expositions your Booke giueth you may looke and marke adding for more plainnesse thereunto thus much that the very meaning of this commandement in effect is thus much as if the Lorde should haue said although the corrupt nature of man bee such as naturally he desireth my presence in some visible forme and shape foolishly thinking that then he is most neare vnto mee when he hath before his eyes some visible picture of mee yet for as much as this and the worship hereby doone vnto mee is neither agréeable to my will nor nature I therefore commaund thée that thou make to thy selfe no grauen image c. That is that thou goe not about to represent me by any likenesse of any creature whatsoeuer neither to worship mée in or vnder any such showes or after any way than out of my worde thou learnest to bee agréeable both to my will and nature Easilie then may we sée what wee are occasioned here in this commandement to consider of namely 1 The making of Images 2 The worshipping of them 3 The reasons God vseth here Touching the first then vsually vppon this occasion is mooued this question whether simplie it bee vnlawfull and misliked of the Lorde to make any kinde of Image by painting car●ing ingrauing c. And it séemeth yea ●ecause the woordes are so flatte with●ut exception Thou shalt not make any grauen image c. For answere whereunto 3. seuerall ●udgements are founde amongst men ●ome thinke in déede all pictures and ●mages to be vnlawfull aswell in Ci●ill vse as in religious and such are the ●urkes by name if it bee truely writ●n of them Whose money they say hath neuer any image vpon it but certain Arabike letters their other works as carpets couerings quisshins c. vtterly also without any image of man or any liuing creature vpon them and all because they thinke it vnlawful Others thinke it lawful to make any picture at all yea euen of God himselfe so that the same be not worshipped as a bare picture image And they vnderstand this commaundement of images made to this ende to be adored These are our Papists The thirde iudgement and best is of them that thinke it lawful to make pictures of things which we haue séene to a ciuill vse but not to vse them in the Church and for religion Now for the first opinion it is out of all question false and too superstitious For howsoeuer the Turks receiue not such profe yet we that imbrace cleaue to the authoritie of Gods worde know that the Lorde hath not lefte this commaundement neither any other without large and plaine exposition in other places of the scripture and therfore we are to conferre place with place practise with precept and so to sée whether in déede all images be forbidden to be made or no. First then marke the wordes in Leuiticus Leuit. 26.1 Ye shall make you no Idols nor grauen Image neither reare you vp any pillers c. Out of which place thus I
onely shoulde attende If affection be good attention faileth and if attention stande affection dyeth And therefore séeing that euen reason teacheth mee that to call vppon the name of God not as I ought to do is plainly to abuse his name take it in vaine neither in this point can I cleare my selfe but broken herein also I haue this his commaundement What vaine vowes and promises haue passed from me néedelesse to be made Vowes and fruitlesse to be kept For sorcerie and witchcraft charming and coniuring am I able to say I haue as earnestlie abhorred them as I ought euerie way so absteyned from them as I shoulde Nay hath not rather ease béene sought in paine of mee by these meanes Charming or at least wished if I coulde haue gotten them My selfe and my friends my children and goods haue I loued obedience more than thē Or hath not euer some base creature as swine or such like béene dearer to mee than the Lord séeking by charme to saue the one and not fearing by sinne to loose the other God sift not my guilt euen nowe in this for practise or will for my selfe or for others wil surely accuse me Further and beside al these let it be wel weied of anie Christian heart that feareth God indéede and carefullie séeketh the credite of his name howe often vnreuerentlie in sporting and playing in shooting bowling in dising carding Gaming we vse his name Scripture phrase howe the phrase of scripture wil rowle out of our mouthes in iesting and light conferences howe fearefully we vse him in cursing banning our bretheren Banning and surely he shall sée no smal guilt touching this commādement in euerie one of vs if God in iustice weigh vs in the balance and rewarde vs as he findeth weight of sinne full duelie to deserue Where is that happie man or woman so waking and sléeping so sitting and going so speaking and kéeping silence so liuing and dying as for no sin of theirs for no infirmitie for no slip or fal the name of God truth hath bin euil spoken or thought of Let this man and woman appeare and boast that in great measure they haue kept this commaundement But if none such can bee found whose frailtie hath not fostred in reprobate minds a misliking of good thinges then let all fleshe fall downe before his footestoole and sewe out pardon for that liuing so looselie they haue taken his name in vaine and broken this commandement Last of all if wee cast our eyes about consider a little the manifolde meanes prouided by the Lord to do vs good in bodie and soule and euerie way Meanes not vsed are we able to say wee haue neglected none but euer vsed them as wee ought reuerentlie carefullie and with thankesgiuing Hath neuer an vnprofitable bashfulnesse made vs conceyle our bodilie griefe or refuse the meanes thought méete to doe vs good Hath not carelesse contempt robbed vs of the remedie appointed for our soules And hath not vnthriftie selfewill reiected meanes to increase our wordlie estate If these all or anie be true we haue despised the wisedome of the Lord which appeareth in these things and should be magnified by them and in them we haue polluted his name our selues greatly occasioned others to thinke lightly of good things and grieuouslie guiltie we stand before him for it of the breache of this commandement What should I say of not rebuking others according to our place whom we haue noted to offende in any of these Not rebuking which is a thing as hath béene saide required also in this Lawe and therefore a thing that resting in vs doeth crie for vengeaunce though in all the rest wee were pure and innocent For we were not borne for our selues but also for others and the bodie the soule the goods and estate of our brethrē should be déere vnto vs we not séeing and suffering them by our wils to do the thing that we knowe will hurt them What I say should I speake of this and many other braunches yet remaining Doe we not sée already shame ynough and grieuous sinne in great abundance Where were we nowe then euen for these that haue béene named if the percing eyes of the liuing GOD should prie into vs and with iust rewarde séeke to pay the wants he could espie in vs Could we escape the pit of endlesse paine Speake in the feare of God euen what you sée Are you pure and blamelesse in these all Dare you stande out and make the challenge Come iudge stay not sift me and spare not thy tryall I feare not for all these haue I kept from my youth O sinnefull fleshe espie thy case Thou canst not thou maiest not and I knowe thou darest not vnlesse the dreadfull wrath of God haue sealed vp thy sight And therefore euen in this commaundement also as in the former crie rather vp to heauen with shrillish shrike Wash me O Lord from these my sinnes and cleanse me from my wickednesse Haue mercie vpon me O gratious God and according to the multitude of thy mercies doe away mine offences O sweete Sauiour who may not see what he is without thee Full heauie laden I come vnto thee Christ my deere God as thou hast promised refresh and ease me Amen Amen The fourth Commaundement Remember that thou keepe holie the Sabaoth day Question WHat is the meaning of this commaundement Ans Your booke answereth that the hallowing of the Sabaoth day is to rest from our labours in our calling and in one place to assemble our selues together and with feare and reuerence to heare marke and lay vp in our hearts the worde of GOD preached vnto vs to pray altogether that which we vnderstande with one consent and at the times appointed to vse the Sacramentes in fayth and repentaunce and all our life long to rest from wickednesse that the Lord by his holy spirit may worke in vs his good worke and so begin in this life euerlasting rest Que. Had not the Iewes diuers feasts beside this Sabaoth Ans Yes in déede Some of God immediatly appointed and some by themselues vpon special occasion By the Lord they were tied to thrée solemne feasts in the yere at which he would haue all the males to appeare before him To wit The feast of vnleauened bread that is Easter Leuit. 23. Exod. 23.15 or the passeouer in remēbrance how the Angel passed ouer their houses when in one night he slewe all the first borne in AEgypt both of man and beast The feast of the haruest of the first fruits of their labours which they had sowen in the fields Verse 16. which was Whitsontide or Pentecost in remembrance that the lawe was giuen fiftie daies after their departure out of AEgypt And the feast of gathering fruits in the end of the yeare Verse 16. when they had cleansed the fields This was the feast of Tabernacles putting them in mind that 40.
sheweth their exercises Apollog 2. Iustinus Martyr nameth the same daye and sheweth the workes Ignatius against some that being Christians woulde retayne the Iewish Sabaoth saith in plaine tearmes Wee celebrate no longer the Iewish Sabaoth but euerie one that loueth Christ kéepeth nowe holie the Lordes day being honored with his resurrection The like witnesseth Augustine Cyrill and euen all antiquitie And therefore though wee sée not the verie time definitely named when this Sabaoth was chaunged yet we sée it was by the Apostles in their times and therefore hath credite ynough Nowe the holy Church of Rome that would by this alteration made by this primitiue and pure Church chalenge authoritie and libertie to chaunge and doe what they list surely wee must denie their consequence till such time as they bréede in vs by good proofe that credite of their spirit that wee haue and ought to haue of the Apostles that made this alteration of the Sabaoth from Saturday to Sunday Que. This satisfieth mee for my part touching the alteration of that which was but ceremoniall in this commandement namely the day and the precise rest in it neither can it bee otherwise than absurd for any false Church onely vnder a title and an vsurped name of a Church to chalenge authoritie to doe matters both contrarie to pietie and comelinesse because the true Church of God hath doone what was most agreeable to them both But now as I see the bond vnto any particular day only to such strict rest in the same as the Iewes obserued is taken away by Christ so yet see I what is morall remaineth namely a day in seuen and a certaine rest in the same Wherefore I desire aswel to know the reason of the remaining of the one as I haue the cause of the abrogation of the other and therefore first I pray you why haue wee still yet a Sabaoth and shall haue till the ende of the world and secondly what rest and exercises are therein required Ans The ends of the remaining of a Sabaoth yet still in the Church of God are chiefely thrée First that we might haue a kinde of resemblance and forme of our eternall rest from sinne in the kingdome of God Secondly that by this meanes seruants and cattle might bee prouided for against the cruell gréedinesse and vnsatiable couetousnesse of some maisters and owners And lastly that Ecclesiasticall discipline some estate of a Christian common wealth in performing to the Lorde ioyntly together demanded dueties might this way be established Que. Of euerie one of these I pray you seuerally Maister N. for more plainenesse and first what is that spirituall rest and sanctifying of the Sabaoth which layeth before vs a resemblance of eternall rest Ans That is when resting from worldly businesse and from our owne workes and studies wee yéelde our selues wholly to GODS gouernaunce that hee may doe his worke in vs when as the Scripture tearmeth it we crucifie our flesh wee bridle the froward desires and motions of the heart restraining our owne nature that we may obey the will of God For thus doing our Sabaoth day here vppon earth shall most aptly expresse a figure and likenesse of the eternall and most holie rest which wee shall for euer enioy in Heauen Yet euer must wee knowe that these thinges are not to be doone onely on the Sabaoth but euen all our life long euerie daye of euerie priuate man and this one day is appoynted chiefely aboue the rest for our negligence and weakenesse sake only without which such appointment it is greatly to bee feared some woulde neuer doe it Que. And is this spirituall resting from sinne in deede necessarie in euerie one that will as he is bounde sanctifie the Sabaoth Ans Surely it is euen so necessarie as that without this all our other resting putting on our better apparell going to the Church hearing seruice c. is nothing but euen abhorred of God and detested This is a great matter if wee had grace to consider of it yet nothing but plaine open scripture For what saith the Prophet Esay Blessed is the man that doeth this Esay 56.2 and the sonne of man which layeth holde on it he that keepeth the Sabaoth and polluteth it not and keepeth his handes from dooing any euill Sée what it is to kéepe holy the Sabaoth in the iudgement of the Prophet euen to kéepe our handes from dooing any euill that is to cease from sinne and our owne wayes Againe the same Prophet in another place Esay 58.13 If thou consecrate the Sabaoth as glorious to the Lorde and shalt honour him not dooing thine owne wayes nor seeking thine owne will c. And in his first Chapter also Esay 1.13.14 I cannot suffer your newe Moones nor Sabaothes nor solemne dayes it is iniquitie nor solemne assemblies my soule hateth thē c. And why so The reason foloweth in the next wordes For your handes are full of bloud that is you abstaine not from sinne remaine still in auarice deceite crueltie extorsion and such like which as long as you doe howsoeuer you séeme to sanctifie the Sabaoth I abhorre you and your dooings And then followeth notably a description euen of this spirituall rest Wash you make you cleane take away the euill of your workes from before mine eyes cease to doe euill learne to do well seeke iudgement releeue the oppressed iudge the fatherlesse defend the widow c. Many other such places are there Que. Now I pray you of the seconde end and vse of the Sabaoth a little also Ans That was and is as hath béene said in regard of seruants and the brute beasts who are to haue mutuall rest frō their trauel which yet some cruel vnsatiable wretched misers woulde hardly haue graunted had not God instituted this day both for man and beast to rest in This that I say is euident in the words of this law and therefore it néedeth no further proofe But let vs thus profit by it First it doth woonderfully shewe the goodnes of God who neglecteth nothing that he hath made but carefully prouideth for the welfare euen of brute beasts O faithlesse hearts if wee can doubt the goodnes of our God to vs when we here before vs sée his care for those creatures whō he hath made vs lords of Secondly it well teacheth vs what nature pietie and charitie requireth at our hands touching our seruauntes and Cattell Nature saieth Quod caret alterna requie durabile non est What wants his mutuall rest and ease still tost in paine and strife Can not continue long that course of labour or of life And therefore nature hath appointed aswell the one as the other for her creatures willeth that senselesse hearts in vs should not breake the same Pietie willeth that we should let them serue God on this day aswel as our selues yea euē sée that they doe it Ephes 6. Who are all one with vs in
heauen doth defend féede thée cōfort blesse thée is contented but in one day especially to be regarded vow with thy self in request of strength to kéepe it that to the Lord that one day shall be consecrated of thée obserued according to his will Que. These things thē thus passed ouer I pray you are these words Six days shalt thou labour c. a commaundement so that we sinne if we labour not on them al Ans No they are no commandement but a permission or a remission rather of so much right of the Lords For euer hath the Church vpon occasions separated some of the wéeke days also to the seruice of the Lord rested from their labors Which they neuer wold haue presumd to do if the Lord had commaunded to the contrary And euen now our holy daies commanded by publike order are not all to be misliked if to the glory of GOD and sanctification of his name they be bestowed as they are intended Therefore a commaundement I say they are not but a remitting of the Lords right who in déede might chalenge all Que. And for the 7. day it selfe may wee not in case doe any thing thereon because the words here are so in it thou shalt doe no maner of worke c Ans I haue said before if you remēber that the precise strict rest of the Iewes on this day was ceremoniall therfore now by Christ taken away that it bindeth not vs. And therefore touching your question and our estate in these daies vnder the Gospell very certaine it is that not euen in the seuenth day we stand so bound to rest but that in it also we may worke if either necessitie so vrgently requireth or the déede doone be greatly to the glorie of God Examples of the first are Dauid eating the shewebread 1. Kings 22. and the Disciples gathering and rubbing the eares of corne Of the second Christ himselfe healing on the sabaoth day many which yet the Iewes thought to be vnlawful The discourse of Christ touching this point in the Gospell is very woorthy noting wherein he flatly and strongly refuteth this superstitious conceit of the sabaoth in the Pharisees and all other by diuerse argumentes as first by the example of Dauid aboue named Secondly of their lawfull practise they circumcised children and slewe their sacrifices c. on the Sabaoth Thirdly by the testimonie of Osce I will rather haue mercie than sacrifice That is loue to our brethren than outward seruice Fourthly from the lesse to the greater it is lawfull on the Sabaoth day to pull out a brute beast that is fallen into a pit or is in such like danger as néeds it must be helped or else it perisheth therfore much more a man c. By all which you sée that man is not made for the Sabaoth but the Sabaoth for man And euen in the right of our Christ wee also are in some sort Lordes of the Sabaoth as in it to doe what vrgent cause constraineth in déede and may not conueniently be differred Que. Here is named in the wordes of the commandement the straunger that is within the gates I pray you therefore howe farre thinke you this bindeth vs Ans I doe willingly still tell you my opinion in euerie thing my selfe and you also I trust readie to yéeld to better aduise when we shall heare it For my part I sée not how we may aunswere it to the Lorde if being priuate men and householders we suffer within our gate to lurke and lie hid and that refuseth to obey the Lord in the sanctifying of this day as is commaunded to the glorie of his name after that such meanes haue béene vsed for the reforming of them as possiblie we can And the more I wey with my selfe that most straite law of the Lorde for execution of them that should séek to estrange any from the true God Deut. 13. the more I am confirmed by the verie end equitie and meaning of it in this opinion against al affection of kindred aliance friendship or whatsoeuer Reade the words mark the zeale which God requireth in al men towards him when as no meanes will reforme our friends but they stil peraduēture tempt vs. And then by the way let it not passe vnmarked I pray you howe straitely all masters and mistresses stand bound to sée that the Lorde be honoured not onely in themselues but by manseruaunt and maide seruant olde and young in their houses of discretion of the Sabaoth day séeing God of purpose nameth them And sée againe how this naming of the straunger doubleth the bond more vpon vs. For by comparison if we stand charged with our stranger and guest much more with our daily seruauntes children c. it must néedes be and indéede wey it well Que. I am then thus I thinke satisfied in euery point of this commaundement neither doe I remember what further to aske you herein Ans The commandements of the Lord saith Dauid are exceeding broad neyther in déede is any man able so to laie open any one of them but iudgement by the gift of God increased more may be séene and espied in them but thus much nowe shall suffice for my measure this only added that this reason drawen for the Lordes owne example who rested from his worke on this day ought greatly to mooue vs to the carefull kéeping of it as euen the very first worde also of the Lawe for if you marke it he doeth not say Kéepe holie the Sabaoth day but Remember to keepe it holie that is haue an earnest care of it and in any case forget it not but remember to kéepe it holie And thus much of this Commaundement The examination of the conscience The profitable vse and application of this commandement is to wey and duely consider that it is the Lawe of no man but of God the chiefest lawegiuer the wisest most righteous and most able to reuenge instituted of purpose by him for these and such like ends First that we should wholy consecrate as that day ourselues vnto the Lord his seruice hearing reading meditating those things which might lay before vs the goodnesse of almightie God toward vs and our great ingratitude to him againe with all other sinnes whereby we haue prouoked him to wrath stirring vp our hearts to true repentaunce for them and amendement of the same Secondly for the ease of seruants cattell which otherwise by the vnmerciful gréedinesse and crueltie of some might happily be abused Lastly to expresse and lay before vs some shew of that spirituall and eternal rest in heauen which we all so looke and long for Then these thinges considered to call to minde howe often and grieuously wee haue offended against euery one of these as against the first by absenting ourselues from the Church What it is to be absent from Church and place of common prayer and place of common méeting when wee might haue béene present if
vs. Let euerie one wey their calling and estate sée what of them in this lawe the Lorde requireth and what of them in their places hath béene performed Children in dutie subiect to our parents we are or haue béene euery one of vs. Haue we then euer doone it or presently doe wee in the true testimonie of a féeling conscience reuerence in heart and by al outward ordinarie meanes those ordained instruments by the Lord of so great good vnto vs our naturall parentes Neuer haue our hearts harbored any light or vnworthie thought of them or against them Neuer haue wee failed in any outwarde gesture to testifie to the worlde our hidden loue and duetifull regarde of them Can we say in truth what of a child anie way ought to be or to mitigate the matter a litle what of vs possiblie could be performed in respect of age of strength of abilitie of time oportunitie with such like that of vs hath béene doone euer fullie and willinglie to them O conscience casting in our téethes our corruption thou accusest vs. These boyling harts not bearing iust reproofe vndutifullie haue often if we could remember it repined at their authoritie impatientlie fretted at their due correction and the most of vs out of question at one time or other if we haue not openlie thrown out a curse yet haue our heartes included a wish and wordes peraduenture vttered asmuch not consonant euerie way with our dueties Nay haue not euen outward violences béene offered to them by vs Ioyfull were the speach to the Saintes in heauen if in trueth wee all coulde aunswere no. But God knowes a guiltie minde in manie a one doeth stoppe his speach and filthie fact to beate or wish to beate thē who brought him foorth doeth crie to God without repentaunce for a plague What shoulde I name what shoulde I feare to name so will it wring vs all the mocking of our Parentes Where is that childe that hath carefully couered to his power and euer borne withall in him selfe the wantes or infirmities whatsoeuer of his Parents No no the Lord hath not onelie something against vs in this behalfe but euen great and gréeuous hath béene our fault and still it remaineth in manie of vs. Wée laugh to sée our Parentes shame we smile at their wants wee publishe their infirmities we disdaine their ignoraunce wee loath their age and in manie a thing to our owne confusion if the Lorde giue not an amending repentance we bewray a robbed hart of that true reuerēce which ought to bee in children to their parentes Alas if God iudge vs for our obedience where are we what witles wil erecteth a kingdome in vs Howe cleaue wee to our selues in all matters and thinke our owne direction best Howe despise we● the counsell of our friendes and cast behinde vs their experience Euerie sonne and euerie daughter woulde rule their mariage wholie themselues And euen in euerie action alas what disobedience sheweth it selfe in vs vnto our parentes For mayntaynance which is the thirde braunch of 〈◊〉 euen that also accuseth manie a thi●●● before the Lorde Rare is the man that hath imployed euerie abilitie of his wit of wealth of knowledge of strength at euerie néede to his parentes comfort And therefore the Lord in 〈◊〉 not in furie deale with vs as wee are children Are we parents th●● w●y and marke whether so wee haue alwayes behaued our selues as that th●se duties of our children might be 〈◊〉 vnto vs euen in regarde of our behauiour If not then haue wee pulled vpon vs the guilt of our childrens want of dutie being causes of the same and the Lorde is angry with vs. What life haue wee ledde before our children to bréede and continue these duties in them Hath it béene holy graue and modest and so remayneth as néere as we can séeking to hide from the eyes of their witlesse heades such wantes as we knowe our selues subiect vnto No no but carelesly and loosely euen in euery place parentes bewray neglect of religion they will goe to the Churches or good exercises when they list and that verie rarely they shewe no regarde of the dutie of Christians they carie no grauitie in their doinges no modestie often in their behauiour but liue most dissolutely and often incontinently they sweare fearefully without regarde speake prophanely not respecting the frailtie of the youth that heareth them father and mother let vnkinde spéeches passe from them one towardes an other in the presence of their children to the great impayring of their credite with them carelesse God knowes of their bringing vp and too full of foolish pitie when they should correct them All these are meanes to make the children faile in reuerence to their parentes and to tempt them to sinne And therefore let vs looke if we be parentes and gréeued with vnreuerent regarde in our children of vs whether wee our selues be not causers of the same Againe for their obedience it faileth oft by fault in vs. For if we be Parentes we lay great burdens vpon our children pressing them still with our authoritie we inioyne them what we list not weying well what they can like and not carefully considering aswell their natures as our owne desires aswell their comfort and conuenient beeing as our owne affection and will to haue it so what maruell if often GOD breake our heartes with their disobedience The like may be saide of that thankefull maintaynaunce that shoulde of children to their Parentes be performed The very vnnaturall and vnkinde dealing of Parentes with their children in their youth denying them reléefe and comfortable helpe maketh them often though it should not when they haue attayned to anie estate to deale as vndutifully with their néedie Parentes againe Consider therefore I say if wee be Parentes what cause we giue and compare it with the fruite wee finde in our seede Let sinne appeare if wee haue offended and let the lawe condemne vs if wee haue transgressed For surely what duties this lawe bindeth all children to perfourme it as straitely bindeth all parentes to deserue The Parentes euill excuseth not the childe but it maketh him guiltie of his childes offence Thus may the rest also descende into themselues Too apparant is contempt in our liues of Magistracie and authoritie Wee honour them not as Parentes but both in reuerence obedience and maintaynance of their state by retribution of some part of that wee haue got by them we bewray vngodlinesse and sinne against the Lorde and them very gréeuously For where is that heart that riseth vp in thankefulnesse for them to our God that obeyeth them secretly aswell as openly for conscience not for feare Nay O sin of ours if it be sought out by the Lorde in this respect euen growen assuredly vp to heauen For howe dare we and doe we defeate their lawes continually Howe set wee our shiftes against the wisedome and working of the Lorde by them We mocke the Lorde and swell in pride against him
this matter Ans Truth it is but none to the warranting of this sinne For first saith hee what if a woman do it to shunne pollution of her body or after shée is polluted to flie the ignominie following vpon it And he answereth to it that the first is wicked and procéedeth of this error that whatsoeuer is doone in vs the same is also doone by vs which is not so For then were chastitie a vertue of the bodie and not of the mind It is not for a christian to say this will I not suffer but this wil I not do The mind being stained the body is filthie though it neuer did act but not contrariwise for the bodie by violēce abused is neuer able to make guilty that mind which cōsenteth not to it And therfore this excuse saith Austen can not warrant such sin as to kil ourselues For flying of shame which would follow the fact neither yet may it be doone For the shame is not so great as the act and therefore if the déed done vnto her may not warrant her the ignominy following may not do it Si non est impudica quae inuita comprimitur non est illa iustitia qua casta punitur That is If she be not vnchast which vnwilling is oppressed thē is it no iustice whereby the harmeles is punished Sed mulier auida laudis metuit ne quod violenter passa est dum viueret putaretur libenter passa si viueret But saith he a woman that standeth vpon speach and praise reasoneth with her selfe that what she suffered against her wil while she liued she should be thought to suffer with her wil if she liued And therfore she wil kil her selfe Indéede so may a womā reason the regardeth more man thā God but the christian guided with the spirit that Dauid had learneth to say with him O god thou knowest mine innocencie c. And to rest in ioy of spotlesse minde whatsoeuer the worlde speaketh Then goeth hee further and they will aunswere saith hee what can they tell howe they may be tempted to consent by long importunitie or by sight of hard extxemity and therefore they will prouide before hand least they should offend and they wil kill thēselues O saith Austen what a speach is this Iam nunc peccemus ne postea forte peccemus iam nunc perpetremus certum homicidium ne postea incidamus in incertum adulterium That is Let vs nowe sinne least hereafter wee doe sinne let vs now commit certaine murder least wee fall hereafter into vncertayne adulterie Let vs nowe doe that which wee cannot liue to repent least hereafter wee doe what we may repent c. Que. But indeede is it not a vile thing to fall into the handes of mine enemie Ans In déed Cato an heathen with manie other could not abide it neither Saul a cast away coulde suffer it But better is the warrant euer of this ought to be done than of this is doone therefore we must not weygh the latter but the former And we sée neither Patriarches Prophetes nor Apostles euer to haue doone it Nay saith Christ When they persecute you in one Citie flie into an other Where he might haue saide dispatch your selues least your enimies triumph ouer you Nowe if they might not doe it for whom euerlasting mansions in heauen were prouided what care we for a thousande examples of infidels and Paganes Thus then I conclude that neither for these causes alleadged nor anie other whatsoeuer wee may violentlie deale with our selues and ende our life Que What if wee neither kill others nor our selues but yet peraduenture cōsent Ans Euen that consent of heart is horrible murther condemned in this lawe Herodias as guiltie for consenting to the death of Iohn Baptist and séeking it as if shée had hewed off hys heade her selfe Haman as guiltie for Mardocheus as if he had doone it Dauid for Vrias Iesabel for Naboth Pylate for Christ as if they themselues had béene executioners Que. Often also haue I hard men say that sorow and care wil shorten our time Ans Indéed it is not mans speach only but euen the doctrine of the spirit of God Prou. 17.22.12.25 For a ioyfull hart saith Salomon causeth good health a sorowful mind drieth the bones Heauinesse in the heart of man bringeth it downe but a good word reioyceth it yea a ioyfull hart maketh a cheereful countenance 15. v. 13. by the sorow of the hart the mind is heauie This doctrine of god hath man by experience found euer so true that when any of thē in their writings haue spoken of care sorow they haue giuē vnto thē the epithites of biting eating consuming care such like because in déed they haue that worke in those that are too much subiect to them Galen the Prince of Phisitions in his booke of the preseruation of health affirmeth plainly that cares doe pull on and hasten many diseases in vs. Aristotle a Philosopher saith that sorowe drieth wasteth that naturall heat in vs wherein our life consisteth and so as it were giueth a reason of Galens assertiō No doubt the thing is true tryed and found to their harme in thousands And therfore euē in this respect must a christian beware least the Lord haue against him in the day of iudgement that he shortned his owne life by suffering vncomfortable sorowe to lie snubbing chéecking his hart within both day night Alas what is it that euer happen to that man or woman in earth which tast the mercie of God in Christ Iesus towardes them so bitter as that it may not be delaied and comforted euen with this that God is on their side Rom. 8. who or what can be against them Doth not euerie thing yea euen euery thing happen for the best to those that loue God Haue a true hart and meane not falsely and then say in faith as Dauid doth My helpe commeth of God which preserueth them that are true of heart Yea Psal 7.11 let me say to all that euer shall reade this in the name of the Lorde of heauen when cause of humilitie happeneth differre not to be humbled harden not your hearts in the day of affliction but sacrifice them vp brused and troubled to the LORD O Lord helpe Omnes cum valemus c. yet euer so farre yéelde to sorowe as that you constantlie and euen chéerefullie holde that which followeth in the Prophet a broken and contrite heart is neuer despised And therfore whatsoeuer the matter is with Dauid vnto your sad soule in euerie corner crie Psal 42. Why art thou so sad O my soule Psal 27. vlt. and why art thou so disquieted in mee Still trust in God still trust in God for I will yet thanke him hee is the helpe of my countenaunce and my God Thus tarrie ye the Lordes leasure be strong and he shall comfort your heart and put your trust in the
obserue his will We nowe knowe not our actes onely but our inwarde thoughtes must euer be holy we now knowe many meanes that leade to offence heerein and that euen the meanes must also be eschewed Nowe then if we liue as in ignorance wee did scorning at counsell cleauing to our pleasures and reiecting the Lorde and his lawe shall we escape He that knoweth his maisters will and doth it not shall hee be vnpunished Marke what I say and pray euer to féele it as the wrath of the king bad heate the furnace seuen times hootter than e●er it was to consume the men that withstoode him to his face for truth so shall the wrath of God that made this lawe cause hell to be hette 70 times 7 times hotter for vs if wilfully after warning and maliciously after knowledge we oppose our life against it That is he shall multiply the paines of hell vppon vs for these pleasures of our fleshe that swéete sinne may haue bitter and sower confusion for euermore Nowe the God of heauen giue vs sense and féeling the Lorde of mercie touch vs with a taste of sinne by the viewing of his lawe For we cannot alwayes liue and thus dally with our owne soules neither standeth it with the nature of our God who is iust finally to forgiue vs though he long forbeare vs vnlesse we amend But he must haue his iudgement and we must haue our torment as sure as we liue Nowe doeth hee wish vs to consider our wayes and to turne our feete into his testimonies his warninges waste and his wrath increaseth if wee settle our selues against him Yet O howe I feare wee will wilfully doe it For it is so swéete and so incident to vs which this lawe forbiddeth that a thousande to one we forsake the Lorde The allurementes I haue named wee will neuer withstande no wee will not heare of it that they cause vs to fall But pleasing this fleshe for the time wee doe vse them wee will neuer espie the paine that will followe them Yet why should I feare since God is of power to pierce anie hart and hath promised to doe it if wee heartily begge it O Lorde I hope thou wilt worke with vs that by this lawe we may sée howe we haue offended thée and what héereafter we must more eschewe the one with sorrowe and true remorse the other with faith and continuall care Then shall thy Christ and our comfort who in our flesh fulfilled the lawe for vs couer with his righteousnesse all our sinnes against it Then shall sinnes past in his bloud be forgiuen and wee by him euer héereafter strengthened Then we shall order our eyes with a carefull heart we shall set a watch before our mouth and keepe the dore of our lippes all false inticementes to forbidden lustes wee shall gladly refraine and so escape the sinne it selfe the better This I say good Lorde we shall doe if thou worke with vs that is thou and thy power and thou and thy mercie shall doe it in vs. Which voutchsafe O father of heauen for thy vnmeasurable vnsearchable goodnesse sake Amen The eight Commaundement Thou shalt not steale Question HOwe can this commaundement possiblie stande with that opinion of communitie Ans Indéede no way for it manifestly ouerthroweth so vile an imagination and sheweth the distinction of dominions propriety in things was and is the ordinance of the Lorde For euerie prohibition sheweth an ordinance before established which should be obserued either in Gods lawes or mans though not alwaies expressely As the forbidding of murther sheweth preseruation of life to be the wil of God and the denyall of adulterie inferreth the liking of chastitie either in mariage or out So the forbidding of stealth which is an alienation of an other mans goods to our selues sheweth that euery thing is not our owne to take at our pleasure but proprietie in possession is the will of the Lorde For if all thinges be common there can be no stealth and so this law friuolous and to no purpose which God forbid we should affirme or thinke Que. Yet many haue bin of this opinion affirming that tyranny not diuinitie maketh this difference amongst men Ans It is verie true Yet I hope you sée how euidētly this law of God which I trow they will account diuinitie doth ouerthrowe them and their folly as do also all other lawes that may héereunto be reduced with many scriptures mo For as there can bee no stealth if all thinges be common and therefore this lawe of God as I saide in vaine giuen so there can be no buying or selling no borowing or lending no letting or leasing or any such thing amongst men if euery man haue like interest to take at his pleasure therfore the Lord God euen in these also greatly ouerséene for that he would troble himselfe to make lawes touching these matters when as no mā hath or ought to haue anie proprietie in anie thing more than an other Againe all the exhortations in the Scripture to almes déedes and to mercie toward the poore is friuolous for they haue as good right to take anie thing they want from anie man as the other haue to giue them But all these you sée are absurde and therefore the opinion and the contrary of it the wil and ordinance of the Lord. Que What is then the verie drift of this commandement Ans The verie end of it is this to bind our loue and care to our neighbors goods as before it hath béene to his life and things déere vnto him as his life For it cannot bee that our heartes shoulde bee right in affections towards our brethren and wee spoylers and wasters or anie way harmers of the commodities which they inioy Loue chéerisheth kéepeth euen euery thing so néere as it can which he accompteth of whome wee loue and especiallie which hee liueth by and maintaineth both himselfe and others by And therefore as I thinke we cannot take a better course to lay before our owne eyes that wants of loue in vs towards the goods of our neighbors and consequently our breaches of this commaundement than diligently to wey some particular dueties specified in the worde wherein the Lord God would haue our loue to show it selfe As for open rapine and plaine stealth no man I thinke wil excuse it or denie it to be sinne and therfore I stand not vpō it your booke hath euident places quoted against it I come rather to those other duties of borowing and lending of hyring and letting of buying and selling and such like Que. First then what is the Lawe of borowing and lending in the worde Ans If a man saith the lawe borow anie thing of his neighbour Exod. 22.14 and it bee hurt or else die the owner of it not being by hee shall surelie make it good If it be an hyred thing he shal not make it good for it came for his hyre In which lawe if wee well wey
spirituall and therefore his lawes not resting onely in outwarde actions as mens lawes doe Secondly by that spéech concerning adulterie which is true in all the commaundementes Hee that looketh Mark 7.23 and lusteth or coueteth hath sinned And by the testimonie of our Sauiour Christ who reckneth couetousnesse amongst those thinges that procéeding out and not going in difile a man To all which Chrysostome subscribeth and sayeth In Thes homilia 11. Auarus fur latro est A couetous man is a theefe Nowe what couetousnesse is albeit euerie man for the acquaintance that he hath with it may knowe yet doe I thus define it to be a damnable vice of the mind pricking and prouoking vs to followe after filthy lucre Which thing without the name and euen vnder the name is maruelously inueighed against in the scripture Chap. 2.5 The prophet Habacuc cryeth out against the heart that inlargeth his desire as the hell and is as death and cannot be satisfied but gathereth vnto him all nations and heapeth vnto him all people No he that coueteth an euill couetousnesse to his house that he may set his nest on heigh to escape from the power of euill Thou hast consulted shame to thine owne house by destroying many people and hast sinned against thine owne soule The stone shall cry out of the wall and the beame of the timber shall answere it wo to him that buildeth a towne by bloud and erecteth a citie by iniquitie and so foorth It is cryed out against in the gospell called the roote of all euill idolatrie and a thing not to be named amongest Christians Luke 12. 1. Timoth. 6. Ephes 5. Coloss 3. There is no speciall calling amongest men whereunto by name this vice is not forbidden as a venome of all vertue in euerie degrée in Princes in iudges in ministers in all it is forbidden and surely this is no small argument to a Christian man against it Fearefully punished was it in Gehezi the prophets man in Achan and a number mo And to conclude our scriptures Iob the seruant of the Lorde most notablie sheweth Iob. 31. howe hee shunned it Psal 119. and Dauid with all the heat of his heart prayeth against it O Lorde let my heart be neuer inclined to coueteousnesse I might recite the lawes o● God against raking their landes too cleane in the time of haruest Deut. 24.19 against gathering so cleane their grapes in th● time of vintage as that nothing was left for the poore All which directly shoote at the shame of this sinne in 〈◊〉 professour of godlinesse And I migh● also heape vp héereunto a thousand● testimonies of men heathen and Christian vttered in detestation of this foule sinne But whom the word feares not men shall hardly moue Onely a spéech or two I cannot passe ouer which pretily describe the corruption of our nature De breuitate vitae Omma tanquam mortales timemus omnia tanquam immortales concupiscimus sayth Seneca That is Wee stand in feare of diuers things as though we thought we could die but we couet so as though we thought we should neuer die Fortune sayth an other hath giuē too much to many but ynough to none And againe Non solum auarus est quirapit aliena August sed qui cupidè seruat sua He is not onely couetous which greedilie catcheth at more but he also which pinchinglie spareth that which he hath Whereof verie excellentie speaketh both Salomon and Syrac Eccles 6.1 Syrac 14.3 paynting out the filth of this follie to haue the blessinges of GOD and yet to want no thing more through a miserable minde than the blessinges of GOD. But I will followe no further this common place this litle which I haue spoken I haue doone it to giue vs a tast of this subtle sinne which with griefe we may marke those men and women verie gréeuously assaulted withall and fearefully ouercome after their profession made of Gods trueth and his glorious gospell who in the dayes of their vanitie before their calling neuer felt any such temptation So séeketh Sathan to slander the worde and to hinder the credit of the gospell When he cannot longer detaine vs in swearing in excesse of diet or apparell in adulterie and vncleannesse in spoyling and spending wastfully Gods giuen graces and in other fruites of ignorance and of an vnreformed soule then créepeth he in and draweth vs subtlelie ere euer wee espie him to the other extremitie euen greater care to get and nearer séeking howe to saue than can or may stande with the credit of the trueth which we professe or calling often which wee haue in the common wealth This is too true wee sée examples daylie and mens owne heartes being well examined shall confesse it The Lorde then giue vs iudgementes to sée and heartes to abhorre so foule an euill For what a derogation from Gods promises and damnable mistrust is this when wee doe feare God and serue him attende to his worde vse his Sacramentes forbid sinne in others and forbeare it our selues then so to looke at wife and children and other expenses as that we feare to want who liuing before in a farre looser sort neuer doubted yet anie such defect Will God bee worse to men when they followe him than hee was when they forsooke him Surelie an eye must be had vnto this thing and ●erie déere vnto must be the credite of the Gospell that others by vs may be woonne vnto it or at least none deter●ed from it God strengthen vs for satan is subtill and we are soone deceiued And truely better wee had neuer giuen our names to Christ than by any faith●esse gréedinesse or vnséemely hardnes to ouerthrowe all againe and hinder by offence others that are yet without The earth is the Lords and the Lord ●s ours if wee serue him with all that either heauen or earth hath to doe vs good withall Que. And what of the stealth of the eye Ans The eye is saide to steale because it maketh the heart to couet For by our eyes créepe in desires into our heartes both in this behalfe which nowe wee meane and in other also as before hath béene saide By the eye first did Achab steale Nabothes vineyarde 1. King 21. and then by his eye the desire of it créept into his heart And the Prophete saith They couet feeldes meaning no doubte which they sawe to lie commodious for them Wherefore Gods children must stop the verie first beginnings and look● to their eyes Mach. 2.2 and eares that they mak● no flame which God or charitie doth mislike and let vs learne to thinke a● an heathen saide Turpe est non solu● pedes sed oculos in alienas possessione● immittere It is a foule thing not onely t● let our feete but euen our eyes walk● into other mens possessions anie further than becommeth vs as wee ar● Christians Que. What stealth committeth the ●ongue Ans By fraude