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A28819 An antidote against swearing to which is annexed an appendix concerning an assertory and promissory oath in reference to the stature of the two now flourishing sister universities : also a short catalogue of some remarkable judgments from God upon blasphemers, &c. / by R. Boreman ... R. B. (Robert Boreman), d. 1675. 1662 (1662) Wing B3755; ESTC R18222 86,033 206

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6. To speak nothing but what is Necessary to be spoken Profitable to be heard 7. To bridle our Passions chiefly that of Anger the cause of as many other sins so especially that of Swearing 8. To avoid Drunkenness and to be lovers of Temperance 9. To shun the Company and Society of those that are given to Swearing 10. To consider the manifold and great miseries such blasphemers bring upon the Kingdom Places and Families wherein they live 8. A Diet for the Tongue being cured consisting in these three things 1. To be slow to speak 2. To be circumspect in speaking 3. To use few words when we speak 9. The benefit that will redound to us by observing this Religious Diet which is two-fold If we respect First our bodily Estate we procure to our selves hereby reputation and peace Secondly if we respect our Souls health hereby we shall free it from the guilt of many a sin 10. The Conclusion of all comprising an exhortation to this duty of not Swearing in regard that we are Gods Saints elected His Sons adopted His Servants redeemed by the blood of his Son Christ Jesus Therefore in all and for all God is to be glorified by us which is chiefly done by Invocation and Thanksgiving the two parts of Prayer and the Christians best Sacrifice A Prayer To be used by one that is addicted to the Sin of Swearing O Eternal Omnipotent Lord God who in thy self art the fulness and perfection of Glory and Happiness who needest no Tongue to praise thee no Pen to express thee and no Work to magnifie thy Greatness before whose glorious Name that is * Vid. Psal 20.1 Rom. 10.13 thy self an infinitely Great and Glorious God Angels and Arch-Angels bow with an humble lowly dejected reverence to which thy blessed Spirits and Saints of thy Triumphant Church sing perpetual Hallelujahs Rev. 19.1 so that Heaven rings and resounds with their Hymns Praises I a poor sprig of disobedient Adam who am as vile as sin can make me and deserve what curse thy wrath can lay upon me do here presume to take thy holy Name into my defiled lips that Name which I have dishonoured in my words disparaged in my thoughts and profaned in my actions yet knowing that thou art a jealous God and a consuming fire burning with love to a poor humble sinner and believing that as thou art fearful in thy Judgments so faithful in thy promises I fly upon the wings of this Faith from mount Ebal to mount Gerizim Deut. 11.29 from the dreadful Name Jehovah which I have abused to that gracious Name of Jesus wherein thou art well pleased In that most sweet and soul-refreshing Name O God I present my supplications unto thee beseeching thee not to remember what I have said or done but what my Saviour hath suffered for me in his Agony and bitter Passion O let his bloody sweat anoint my bleeding wounds and accept of his death as a full satisfaction to thy Justice for my sins Cleanse thou my heart O God from the stain of this bosom-darling-sin whose custom begun with a wanton imitation and being continued with an habitual presumption had almost taken out of my guilty Soul a sense of it and of thy displeasure against it O my God now that I have begun to have a taste and sight of the foulness and danger of my crying sin afford me I beseech thee that measure of thy Grace which may work in my heart a fear of thy displeasure and beget in me an awful reverence of thy Name Let all my communication be ordered as in thy presence let thy Holy Spirit govern the words of my mouth and so sanctifie my thoughts with the continual meditation of thy Commandments and of those fearful plagues which thy word denounceth against Swearers that I may be ever hereafter of the number of those thy servants who sanctifie the Lord in their Hearts 1 Pet. 5.15 who love and fear thee above all things in Heaven and Earth who delight with trust and affiance in thee above all worldly stayes and comforts and praise thee evermore with joyful lips Lord I desire to praise thee O heighten these desires I resolve by thy assistance no more to blaspheme thee O strengthen this good resolution for the time to come and avert those judgments from me which thy word hath threatned and my sin my black and filthy sin hath deserved And mortifie all those unruly passions which provoke me to offend thy Goodness especially that of Anger which if immoderate and carried on with precipitate rashness benights the Soul darkens Reason and hurries a man to the acting of those things that displease thee Therefore dear God kill this Fury in me and leave only so much life in it as to be zealous for thy Glory Quicken my Soul with faith in thy promises inflame my affections with love of thee for thy mercies fill my mouth with prayers to thee and praises and crown my weak desires of praising thee with the all-sufficient power and strength of thy Grace that glorifying thy Name with my Tongue and by an holy conversation I may escape that vengeance which thy Justice threatens against my sin here and obtain that happiness which thy mercy hath promised hereafter Lord grant these my requests for the merits of thy Son Christ Jesus in whose Name and Prayer sanctified with his sacred lips I beg these mercies and whatsoever else thou knowest requisite for me and for thy Church saying Our Father c. A Prayer For the whole Kingdom MOst glorious Lord God who delightest not in the death of one single sinner nor takest pleasure in the destruction of any Creature thou great and mighty God Jer. 32.18 whose name is the Lord of Hosts who rulest over all and governest all things in Heaven and Earth look down I humbly pray thee from the Throne of thy Glory and behold this sinful Kingdom wherein we live with an eye of mercy and pity Thy goodness and bounty O Lord have displayed themselves to us in many great and undeserved National mercies by restoring to us our most gracious King and Him to His Royal Dignities and redeeming thy Church from that Disorder and Confusion by means of proud and unquiet men whicn threatned our utter ruine and vastation for so great deliverances we are obliged to make returns unto thee of a thankful obedience by reforming our sinful lives and obeying thy commands But we as if we had forgot what thou hast done for us have done nothing for thee but rather much against thee by rebelling against thy word by resisting thy holy will by abusing thy Creatures through our wanton excess by profaning thy Sabbaths and blaspheming thy most sacred Name which ought to be ever hallowed and had in an awfull reverence by us These are our National personal crying sins which like so many infectious Vapours have mounted up to Heaven and being condens'd into a thick Cloud of
hath been broken and the sinner converted Under the old Law he that blasphemed the name of the Lord was stoned to death Levit. 24.16 The severity of forraign Christian Kings and Princes against such Blasphemers is set down in the midst of my Treatise Some were burnt in their Lips with hot Irons some order'd to be drown'd others were beheaded and punish'd with the confiscation of their goods and loss of their lives thus dealt an Earl of Flanders by name Philip with profane Swearers To all which I must adde as a most exemplary piece of Justice which I wish were observed and practised in His Majesties Royal Family that famous Decree of that good King Henry the fifth the whip of France and the scourge of Vice in whom Piety and Valour did as they do in our renowned King meet together he decreed by a Special Order relating chiefly to his Court which might I suppose have an Influence upon the whole Kingdom That every Duke for each Oath should pay forty shillings a Baron twenty Knights and Esquires ten every Yeoman three shillings and four pence ordinary Servants two pence which was accounted a great mulct in those days the younger sort of Boyes and Pages were well whipt for this offence and this Law was so well executed that all the Nation over very few were heard to swear an Oath This I intimate wishing that the same or the like strictness of Severity might meet with the looseness of this Ages Impiety and hoping that persons of worth and preeminency whose reputations in the scale of Honour weigh down the rate or weight of punishment will reform without it and scorn to have their Nobility blotted and their mouths defiled with that unprofitable cursed crying sin which is the badge of debaucht Ruffians the cognisance of accursed miscreants who are branded by the Prophet David with this black mark of being Gods enemies Ps 139.20 and the continual practice of the Devils in Hell and damned Spirits who Curse Swear and Blaspheme God in the midst of their Torments This is the sole Language of those Infernal Inhabitants the which that it may no longer rest or nest in the Tongues of prophane Rabshakehs who are the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys worst of the worst Subjects the most pernicious enemies to the State and Church for that in a manner by their sharp Tongues they clip the wings of Mercy hindering it from flying to us with blessings and quicken the pace of Iustice to proceed in a speedy execution of curses and heavy judgments upon us that their mouths may be stopped and by execution of the Statutes which is their life this common sin of Swearing receive its deaths wound that there may be no more blaspheming in our Streets nor within our private Walls that this glorious Reformation may be throughly wrought and effected in our Land I shall to these my weak endeavours in Print add the assistance and strength of my Prayers to the great God of Heaven the Lord of Lords for a continuance and multiplication of blessings upon all your publick designs and godly undertakings that from your Honoured Persons who next to His Sacred Majesty who is the Upper are the Nether Springs of Iustice Amos 5.24 Iudgment may run down as waters and righteousness as a mighty stream to the bearing down of all profaneness whereby God is dishonoured and to the advance of Piety and Religion that his holy Name may be glorified by us This is and shall be ever a part of the daily Devotions of him who is a well-wisher to the Peace and flourishing happiness of this Kingdom and Your Honours most humble and devoted Servant in Christ Jesus R. BOREMAN Dec. 9. 1661. AN ANTIDOTE AGAINST SWEARING The ground or maine Ingredients whereof are those words of our Saviour MAT. 5.34 I say unto you Swear not at all I Remember a saying of Vincentius Lyrinensis Lib. de Haeres c. 37. Nullam esse ad fallendum faciliorem viam quàm ut ubi nefari● erroris subinducitur fraudulenti● ibi divinorum verborum praetendatur autoritas which as it meets with many bold practises in our times so it nearly concerns my present purpose Nullam esse ad fallendum faciliorem viam c. There is no way so easie sayes he to deceive a multitude or the common people who both love and are easie to be deceived and to invite them to sin as when we endeavour by fraudulent means to sow the seed of errour in their hearts to pretend the Divine Authority of Gods word It seems the Scribes and Pharisees like many in our dayes had learned this art of spreading and maintaining their false Doctrine by corrupting the Text. For whereas God commanding us to have in due Reverence his holy Name forbad the Jews and in them us to take the same in vain Exod. 20.7 i. e. to use it idly or to no purpose without any warrant from necessity and without respect to the advance of his Glory the Scribes expounding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in vain by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 falsly i. e. To back and confirm a lie which word we find Levit. 19.12 Thou shalt not swear by my Name falsly they hereby confounded two distinct precepts For by the latter in Leviticus is forbidden perjury which is the confirmation of a lie by an Oath by the former precept in Exodus all vain Oaths which are so when they are commonly used to confirme or ratifie the Truth in our private negotiations contracts bargainings and discourse From this false glosse of the Scribes interpreting the third Commandement as if only perjury were by it forbid and this too onely in the abuse of Gods sacred Name from this corrupt Spring issued these three perverse Doctrines which in our Saviours time were settled in the minds and hearts of the deluded Jewes First to swear by the Creature and to forswear they affirmed to be no sin Secondly they counted it no breach of the third Commandement if they used in their ordinary discourse the Name of God so long as they did what they promised and affirmed what was true With the Scribes and Pharisees in this second opinion agree both Maldonat the Jesuit on Levit. 19. and Socinus Vid. Rivet in explicatione 3. Praecepti Decalogi In hác corruptelâ eadem cum Pharisaeis sentit impurus iste Socinus c with his followers who maintain that onely perjury is forbidden by that Commandement Thirdly and lastly from this latter stream issued another as corrupt and unsound viZ. That whatsoever they had bound themselves to by an Oath in the Name of God they maintained that they were bound to do it were the thing never so unjust and bad Our blessed Saviour as it became so wise a Teacher who came from God as Nicodemus witnessed of him John 3.2 endeavoured in his first Sermon Ad Populum on the mount to root out of the peoples minds this false Doctrine of the Scribes
before they take hold of us and so get the mastery of our Souls For as wise Princes are wont in the calm of Peace to provide against the storms of Warre so must we in the calmest state of our Souls prepare and provide Antidotes against this inward turbulency of our minds To prevent then the sudden Commotions of this unruly Passion or to allay it when it hath broken the bounds of Reason or Discretion Si passio Domini ad me●●riam revocetur nihil adeo duram quod non aquo animo toleretur Greg. Consider in the first place Christs bitter Death and Passion what or how great pains and torments he hath suffered how much he hath sustained for thee Trace him in thy meditations from the Garden to Golgotha and as Pilate said once out of pity to the Jews Joh. 19.5 Behold the man so say I to thee Behold thy Saviour who was and is God and Man in one Person behold him sweating great drops of Blood in his Agony in the Garden sustaining whippings and scoffings spittings and buffetings in the face and last of all a most shameful and painfull death on the Cross for thee to redeem thee from Hell and to bring thee to Heaven into which it was impossible for thee to climb being clogg'd with the weight and burden of thy many and grievous sins whose pardon he hath purchased by the merit of his death and sufferings When thou hast seriously pondered and considered these things then even when for some distasteful word thou feelest the heat of passion begin to enflame thy blood then bespeak thy self in the words of Saint Basil in his Morals 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What doest thou O Man art thou better then thy Master Hath Christ my Lord suffered such unsufferable pains so many reproches for me and shall I who am a Worm a poor contemptible Creature shall I who am a Cage of Uncleanness a Dunghill of Impurity fret and fume for some conceived spot of disgrace or ignominy thrown upon my name Shall not I suffer this and more for him for the profession of his Truth and glory of his Name for they who profess Christ they that live godly must look to suffer persecution at least that of the Tongue Mitescat savitia mansuescat Iracundia remitta●t sibi omnes culpas invicem suas nec exactor sit vindicta qui petitor est veniae Aug. Shall I by seeking revenge for some injury done me snatch the Scepter out of Gods hand or which is worse deny his Providence and Soveraignty as if he did sit still or sleeping in Heaven not regarding what is done here beneath on Earth God is the Lord to whom vengeance belongeth Psal 94.1 and Vengeance is mine Deut. 32.35 I 'le repay it saith the Lord. Meditate often on this and on thy Saviours sufferings the thought whereof will teach or move thee to be gentle and kind to others Eph. 4.32 forgiving them as God for Christs sake hath forgiven thee And thus by this means having gotten the mastery of thy Passion thou wilt have the better command over thy Tongue and free it as from bitterness and clamour and evil-speaking so from blaspheming Gods Name by Cursing and Swearing In the second place that thou mayst curb this unbrided Passion of Anger a Capital sin for that it is as I have shewed the cause of many other sins and most commonly that of Swearing Consider with thy self in private how oft thou hast offended God Psal 19.12 but who can tell how oft he offendeth and how oft he hath pardoned thee This consideration of thy many infirmities this knowledge of thy filthy sins will move thee to a mean esteem of thy self and he that out of a deep apprehension of his sins and a sight or sense of his infirmities has learn'd to contemn himself that man will not be easily provoked by a small injury and contempt from others Thirdly when thou art moved to Anger labour to suppresse this flame that it break not forth suppress it by silence For as fire under green wood if not blown will go out so anger in the breast kept in by the silence of the tongue will waste and spend it self to nothing An example of this we have in David Psal 39. Ps 39.2 He kept silence he kept his mouth as it were with a bridle whilst the ungodly who did provoke him was in his sight He spake nothing but refrain'd his tongue abstaining even from good words ver 3 which was a pain and grief unto him If we speak any thing at all when we are moved to anger by our Persecuting Reviling Enemies let it be in the phrase of our meekest Saviour upon the Cross Father Luke 23.34 forgive them for they know not what they do or in the Language of that Protomartyr Saint Stephen Acts 7.60 Lord lay not this sin to their charge Yet if thou beest a publick person and thy Injury great and notorious Qui illatam sibi sustinet injuriam contumeliam conviciantis nutrit audaciam Vid. Aqui. 2. 2. 72. Qu. then to prevent scandal lest by silence thou givest men an occasion to suspect the integrity of thy Conscience thou mayest vindicate thy Innocency by a just complaint to the Magistrate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil and from the Decree of Justice seek a Redress of thy Injury and in so doing thou committest thy cause unto the Lord in that thou Revengest not thy self but referrest thy cause to the publick Magistrate Gods Minister of Peace whose Office it is to see that they be righted who suffer wrong as also to encourage Vertue to punish Vice and suppress the growth of sin Fourthly and lastly to incite or move thee further to abstain from immoderate Anger let the examples and practise of the * De his ita Nazianzenus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Anticipant fidem moribus i. Justitiâ Temperantiâ indigent tantum Christianorum nomine quod Christum profitentes decet operibus id suis exhibentes Heathen ever run in your thoughts who by the dimme light of nature have gone further in the way of Piety then we Christians who live in the Sun-shine of the Gospel of Peace To repeate the Stories of them renown'd for their patience would be both impertinent and tedious I will commend to your Meditation but one and that of a true Roman I mean Cato who used to say That he could and did forgive all offenders but himself So be thou angry with the Malice but love i. e. wish well to the Person of thy Enemy that has offended thee forgive him by not studying an hasty Revenge of thy Injury and testifie thy hearty forgiveness of it by thy prayers to God to forgive him his sins and to heal him of his malice And thus if thou imitatest God who is good to his very Enemies thou wilt shew thy self to be a genuine Son of thy *
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. Ep. ad Antioch Heavenly Father If thou imitatest him not but sufferest thy heart to burn with Anger and Malice I pronounce against thee thou art a Bastard and no true Son That then thou mayest truly retain the † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. Ep. ad Magnes name and maintain by thy practise the duty of a good Christian follow the Prophet Davids advice Psal 37.8 Cease from Anger and forsake Wrath else shalt thou be moved to do evil thou wilt wrong thy Neighbour and injure thy good God by breaking his Commandements chiefly the third which concerns the hallowing of his Name which if thou beest a man of an angry and hasty disposition thou wilt often do when by Cursing and Swearing thou takest the same in vain Therefore in a devout imitation of thy Father which is in Heaven be thou as he is full of Compassion and Mercy slow to anger Psal 103.8 and of great goodness and if thou beest addicted or given to much Swearing besides the prevention of many other sins thou shalt by curbing thy angry Passion so bridle and restrain thy Tongue that it shall not so often as formerly nay seldom or never profane Gods holy Name The VIII Remedy To beware of intemperance especially in Drink The eighth Remedy is to beware of Drunkenness that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as St. Basil calls it that common strumpet that bewitches mens hearts and besots their braines That hateful Night-bird which was wont to waite for the Twilight to seek nooks and corners to avoid the houting and wonderment of Girles and Boyes but now is grown audacious and as if it were some Eaglet that dares the bright Sun it flies abroad at high-noon in every Street and displaies its filthy Nakedness in open places without all fear or shame It is observed by Clemens Alexandrinus Clem. Alex. in Strom. that it took first footing in the most barbarous Nations the Scythians who were such lovers of it that it grew into their name and to Scythianize was all one and the same with this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idem quod 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inebrior Suid to be drunk I pray God that stain or reproach be not hereafter thrown upon us as it was upon those sottish Nations If His Majesties late * The 30. day of May 1660. Proclamation for the repressing of this foul sin were duly and strictly observed and put into execution it would not be so common among us But in that it is so frequent I wonder not that Oaths are so familiar in mens mouthes Quod in corde Sobrii est in linguâ Ebrii That which lodges with security in the Heart of a man that is sober discovers it self in his Tongue when he is drunk Hence is that saying of a wise and learned Author He that would Anatomize the Soul i. e. detect its inward and most benighted thoughts and intentions may do it best when wine and strong drink has benummed the senses The reason of this is given by Seneca Ep. 83. Non est animus in suâ potestate Ebrietate devinctus c. again Omne vitium Ebrietas incendit detegit i. e. Reason is not at its own Command so long as it is bound up by Drunkenness and fetter'd as it were with excesse of Meats and Drinks To confirm this besides our daily experience we have the expresse Warrant and Testimony of Gods word Whoredom Wine Hos 4.11 and new Wine take away the heart i. e. deprive a man of the use of Reason Nay which is more excesse of Wine or Drunkenness robs a man of Gods grace and assistance and banishes or drives his holy Spirit from us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil in Moral even as smoke does chase and drive away Bees as St. Basil observes Now what sin is there so horrid what abomination so prodigious and hainous which a Drunkard is not ready to act he being deserted by Gods holy Spirit void of Reason and Sense and left to the Ruling power of the Devil and the rage of his native lust which is well termed by Parisiensis origo seminarium omnium vitiorum the root source and seminary of all sin A man in such a desperate forlorn case or condition is like Sampson Judg. 10.19 when the locks of his haire were cut off and his eyes put out The Text sayes that not onely his strength went from him but that also the Lord had departed from him And as the Philistines did by Sampson so doth the Devil by a Drunken man he leads him in a string where he pleases makes him grind in the Mill of all kinde of Sins and Vices and like a Mill-horse leads him in a round from sin to sin from one wickednesse to another from Lying to Swearing from this to Stealing and from that to Perjury or Forswearing The Devil having moistned and steeped him in liquor shapes him like soft Clay into what mould he pleaseth Having shaken off his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as a Father calls it Basil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Rudder and Pilot his Stay and Prop which is his Reason the Tempter hurries him into the gulf of all licentiousness and uncleanness dashes his Soul upon what Rocks and Sands he listeth and that with as much facility as a man may push down the moistned burthen of his body tottering upon its unstable Porters his feeble legs A man who has thus unmanned or unmade himself devested of Reason which by Plato is term'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a little Deity in the Soul of Man sitting there as it were in a Throne of Judicature prescribing what is good and forbidding what is bad A man I say if I may call him so that is drown'd in drink wanting the eye of Reason and the light of Gods Spirit both which he hath put out by his excessive liquor taken in such a one is the fittest agent for the Devil to work by he is now ready to act and attempt any sin or wickedness be it the sin of Cain or Absalom the killing of a Brother Father or Mother now he Sweares and Blasphemes who in his right wits and sober mood seems to be more Modest Chaste and Devoute And oft-times it so falls out by the just Judgement of God withdrawing his grace from those who are accustom'd to this Vice that the Oathes which fell from their tongues when they were drunk stick in their teeth when they are sober Thus one sin becomes the cause of another thus Swering for the most part accompanies and followes Drunkennesse They are two Sister-Vices whose Mother is our own corrupt nature the Devil their Father They like Hippocrates his twinns are born and live and die together they go as we say hand in hand and seldom part asunder Beware therefore of Drunkennesse Eph. 5.1 1 Pet. 2.21 and shew thy self alwaies a follower of