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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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that it commandeth otherwise it threatneth the curse but Faith requireth onely that we truly believe 3. The righteousness of the Law coming from our selves should set up Merit and put away Grace but that of Faith which is from God taketh away Merit and setteth up Grace As there is a double keeping of the Law 1. A strict and exact keeping of it 2. An Evangelical keeping of it that is when we desire and endeavor to fulfil the Law in all things So accordingly there is a double curse 1. A curse that follows the breach of the Moral Law that belongs to all mankinde till they be in Christ 2. An Evangelical curse that follows upon the Evangelical breach of the Law This is the curse of the Gospel which cannot be repealed and is more terrible then the curse of the Law Which curse consists in four things 1. A separation from Grace Goodness and Holiness 2. A seperation from the presence of God that is from the joy influence and protection of God 3. A curse on the outward estate wherein a man may be cursed in the midst of plenty 4. The eternal curse at the day of Judgement And in this fourfold curse we must note that men may be cursed though the curse be not executed Though no man can perfectly keep the Law yet is it of most excellent use these three ways 1. To humble us in regard of our miserable estate hereby discovered 2. To be a Rule of good life unto us 3. To be a Schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ driving us unto him as our onely Refuge to be made righteous by faith Gal. 3.24 God willeth us to desire in this life the perfect fulfilling of the Law for these Reasons 1. Because in those that desire it he will at length effectuate it hereafter 2. That we may now go forward in godliness according to Gods rule 3. That by this desire of fulfilling the Law God may exercise us in Repentance and Obedience This perfection is here two ways to be understood 1. As it is opposed to imperfections and wants and this is perfection of degrees whereby the Law is kept without failing in any thing Thus no man can keep the Law 2. As it is opposed to hypocrisie and this is called perfection of parts whereby what is outwardly professed is inwardly embraced so that as the outward part maketh a good shew the inward part is also right and sincere Thus David Josiah and others are said to be perfect and not otherwise and thus every regenerate man can and doth approve himself in some measure for perfect though amidst great weaknesses Again a man may be said to be perfect 1. Comparatively in regard of others that are more imperfect 2. In endeavor when a man setteth himself so much as possibly he can to keep not some but all and every of the Commandments of God Though the Law is impossible even to the regenerate in respect of God that is as touching the perfect inward and outward obedience of the Law yet is the Law thus possible to them and them onely 1. As concerning outward Order and Discipline 2. By the benefits of Justification and Regeneration both which we obtain by Faith 3. As touching the beginning of inward and outward obedience in this life 1 Joh. 5.3 and as concerning the imputation of Christs Righteousness Christ fulfilleth the Law three ways viz. 1. By his doctrine 1. By teaching it that is by repurging and purifying it from errors and corruptions and by restoring the true doctrine and understanding thereof Mat. 5.6 7. and by restoring unto it his proper meaning and true use as when he corrected the corrupt interpretations thereof by the Pharisees 2. By revealing the right way whereby the Law may be fulfilled 2. By his person 1. By paying sufficient punishment for our sins Rom. 8.3 By becoming accursed to the Law in suffering death upon the Cross for us 2. By his own Righteousness Heb. 7.26 By performing perfect obedience unto the Law doing all that the Law required Thus was he said to be under the Law Gal. 4.4 3. In men of 2 sorts 1. Elect in whom he fulfilled the Law two ways 1. By creating Faith in their hearts whereby they lay hold on Christ who for them fulfilled it 2. By giving them his own Spirit thereby reforming them unto the Image of God Rom. 6. 7. making them endeavor to fulfil the Law which in Christ is accepted for perfect obedience in this life and in the life to come is perfect obedience indeed 2. Unbelievers in whom Christ fulfilleth the Law when he executeth the curse of the Law upon them for that is a part of the Law and the execution and enduring of the curse is one fulfilling of the Law The uses or ends of the Law viz. 1. Maintenance of Order and Discipline as well in the regenerate as unregenerate 2. That we may know that God is and what he is 3. The knowledge of sin 4. A preparing to fearful horror in the thoughts and consciences of the wicked 5. A mean whereby Repentance may be kindled and encreased in Gods children 6. A Level or Rule of living unto the faithful The principal uses of the Moral Law 1. The preserving and maintaining of Discipline both in the Church and without also 1 Tim. 1.9 2. The acknowledgement and accusing of sin in the regenerate and unregenerate Rom. 3.20 3. An instructing and informing concerning the true service and worship of God and this use of the Moral Law is proper to the regenerate Jer. 31.33 Psal 1.2 119.50 The less principal uses of the Moral Law 1. It is a Testimony of God that there is a God as likewise who and what he is 2. It is a Testimony of the excellency of mans Nature which was before the Fall and which shall be in the life to come 3. It is a Testimony of eternal life for in this life it hath not its end in us How far the whole Law is abrogated 1. As touching Justification because Judgement is not given according to the Law for that Judgement would condemn us but according to the Gospel 2. As touching constraint we are under Grace and therefore we are stirred up by the Spirit of Christ to yield voluntary obedience unto the Law for now the Law doth not wrest obedience from us as a Tyrant because Christ beginneth voluntary and free obedience in us by his Spirit The causes or the chief ends for which the Sacrifices under the Law were instituted and ordained 1. To maintain the publike Assemblies of the faithful and their meetings together to serve the Lord. 2. That they might be shadows of good things to come to put them in minde of Christ and his sacrifice who is therefore called The Lamb slain from the beginning of the world Rev. 13.8 3. They were as the Sacraments of the Church and Testimonies of Gods infallible promise made to the Fathers touching salvation in the Messiah to come
to pray for it as children ravished with the desire of Gods glory Thus we pray not here to perform obedience equal in measure and degree of perfection to the obedience of the blessed Angels and glorified Saints in heaven but such as is like unto it for this note of Comparison here imports a likeness and resemblance not equality in doing the will of God chearfully without murmuring speedily without delaying generally without omitting sincerely without dissembling constantly without forbearing and perfectly without halting even as the Saints and Angels in heaven Now as many as truly be in Gods Kingdom cannot but thus immediately do Gods will for obedience to Gods will is an effectual sign that the kingdom of God is in us 1 Joh. 1.3 into which not every one that saith Lord Lord shall enter but such alone whose actions say Thy will be done Matth. 7.21 Gods will is either Secret or Revealed according to that of Moses The secret things of the Lord belong unto the Lord but 〈◊〉 revealed to us 〈◊〉 our children Yea we must know That Gods will is onely one considered in it self as God is one but for our understanding it may be thus distinguished 1. His absolute or secret will which is the will of his good pleasure whereby according to his eternal Counsel he determines all things what shall be done or what shall not be done and in what maner and is touching the number of those that shall be saved The Day of Judgement The time of the Jews Conversion The final confusion of Antichrist And particular estates of other men The particular afflictions and crosses appointed for us The day of our death and such like This absolute will extendeth over all Creatures and over all their actions Eph. 1.11 Mat. 10.26 and is hidden from us till he reveal it by the event which being his secret will because unknown and therefore uncertain to us we may not rashly presume on for in these things we here pray That we may rest contented in the Lords good pleasure 2. His revealed will being whatsoever is manifested in his word and works to be his will concerning both faith and practice This we are precisely to follow for here we pray that it may be answerably done as it is required Thy will that is not my will thy will onely not thine and mine also betwixt which two there is no proportion thy will both for matter and maner and thy will though contrary unto or against my will As it is in Heaven as by the Inbitants of heaven that are free from all temptations and discouragements When we say Thy will be done it is not meant of the absolute or secret will but of the revealed will of God and that for these Reasons 1. Because the Absolute will of God is alway done and cannot be resisted Isa 46.10 Rom. 9.19 but his Revealed will is generally transgressed by men who do that which seemeth good in their own eyes notwithstanding Gods revealed will to the contrary 2. Because a man may dissent from the absolute and secret will of God without sinning so be it he still submit himself to the will of God resting therein when it is revealed Thus Abraham prayed for the safety of Sodom yet submissively which God willed and decreed to destroy Gen. 18.23 27. and David for the life of his childe which God would have to dye 2 Sam. 12.16 24. and our Savior Christ for the removal of that Cup which God had absolutely decreed that he should drink of Mat. 26.39 yet submitting his will unto his Fathers with all chearfulness of obedience The special Branches of Gods revealed Will 1. The Conversion of a sinner Ezek. 33.11 and obedience to his Commandments 2. That we deny our selves and relye wholly on our Savior Christ for salvation Joh. 6.40 3. Our Sanctification in Soul in Body and in Spirit 1 Thess 4.3 4. That every one that lives in the Church of God beside his general calling of a Christian should have a particular Calling to live in wherein he must seek the glory of God in the good of others 1 Cor. 7.20 24. and love our Brethren Joh. 13.14 15. 5. To subject our selves unto the hand of God in all crosses and afflictions whatsoever Acts 21.14 to labor for the knowledge of Gods will Joh. 17.3 and for holiness of life Eph. 1.4 Hence it appears what the will of God signifies viz. 1. The Commandment of God Psal 103.21 2. Events or rather Gods Decree concerning Events Mat. 26.39 Isa 46.10 Be done There be two degrees of doing Gods will 1. Evangelical obedience prescribed in the Gospel that is a sincere endeavor according to all the power of grace that God hath given us to do the will of God and this especially is here meant 2. Legal commanded in the Law that is a perfect fulfilling of the Law and of Gods will but this is not attained to in this life Of perfections there are three kindes viz. 1. A perfection of Sincerity which was in Hezekiahs obedience Isa 38.3 2. A perfection of Parts which was in Zachary and Elizabeths obedience Luke 1.6 3. A perfection of Degrees which was onely in the first and second Adam and is now onely in the holy Angels In earth as it is in heaven which in this Petition our Savior Christ addeth 1. To prescribe and draw us a patern of obedience and example of perfection to imitate in likeness and resemblance though we cannot in equality which likeness stands in these four things especially 1. In chearfulness and willingness for the Angels readily obey Gods commands 2. In priority the Angels prefer to do the will of God before all other things 3. In speed and quickness without delay or slackness 4. In faithfulness and sincerity 2. That by this desire of perfection we may be assured that God will give us here the beginning and the perfection in the life to come That Gods wil may be done in this Petition we desire 1. That we may have grace to deny our selves our own wills and affections which Self-denyal consisteth of two parts viz. 1. That we may be ready to renounce all our affections which are disagreeing from the Law of God 2. That we may be ready to execute the will of God willingly submitting our selves thereto in all things 2. That Gods word may be Preached diligently and faithfully because his will is revealed therein and that God would incline and dispose our hearts towards his holy word that we may not onely know but obey Gods revealed will Psal 119.27,36 3. That Magistrates in a Commonwealth and Masters in a Family see to the practice of doing Gods will in the performance of the duty and calling both of all in general and of each in several that we may rightly and duly perform the duty committed unto us whether common or proper 4. That every one for himself may walk in the obedience of God without pride in prosperity and without murmuring in
exceeding vertue of God 2. Perfect Glory perfect Dignity and full Divine Majesty What is meant by Christs session at the right hand of the Father 1. The perfection of Christs Divine Nature that is the equality of the Word with the Father which he did not receive but ever had 2. The perfection of Christs Humane Nature which compriseth 1. The personal union of the Humane Nature with the Word For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily Col. 2.9 2. The Collation or bestowing of gifts on him far greater and more in number then are bestowed on all Men and Angels 3. The perfection or excellency of the Office of the Mediator that is the Prophetical Priestly and Royal Function which Christ now as the glorified Head of his Church doth in his Humane Nature gloriously exercise in Heaven 4. The perfection of Christs honor that is the Adoration Worship and Reverence which is yielded unto him both of Men and Angels Heb. 1.6 The benefits we receive by Christs sitting at the Fathers right hand are all the benefits of the Kingdom and Priesthood of Christ glorified 1. His Intercession for us 2. The gathering governing and guarding of his Church by the Word and Spirit 3. His defending of the Church against her enemies 4. The abjection and destruction of the Churches enemies 5. The Glorification of the Church The difference of Christs Ascension and ours stands thus He ascended by his own power and vertue we shall not by our own but by his John 3.13 He ascended to be Head we to be his Members He to glory agreeable for the Head we to glory fit for Members Christs Ascension was the cause of ours but it is not so of the contrary Whom seek'st thou Mary What is Jesus he He goes before thee into Galilee This was the Angels voyce Nor was the news Less strange to his Disciples then the Jews Though herein for himself he did no more Then what he did for Lazarus before He 's now ascended and has verifi'd What Enoch and Elias typifi'd He sits at Gods right hand and has thereby In Earth all Power in Heav'n all Majesty §. 7. From thence he shall come to judge both the Quick and the Dead THe last Judgement shall be a manifestation or declaration and seperation of the just and unjust who ever have lived or shall live from the beginning of the world unto the end proceeding from God by Christ and a pronouncing of Sentence on these men and an execution thereof according to the Doctrine of the Law and the Gospel which Execution is not an annihilation or final destruction of the Body and Soul or a perpetual senslesness but an infinite and endless continuance of those Torments which the Wicked in this life despairing do begin to feel forsaken and abjected of God subject to all torments both of Body and Soul And in this last Judgement Absolution to the godly shall be principally according to the Gospel but shall be confirmed by the Law Condemnation to the wicked shall be principally by the Law but shall be confirmed of the Gospel Sentence shall be given on the wicked according to their own Merit but on the godly according to Christs Merit applyed unto them by faith a Testimony and Witness of which Faith shall be their Works Now the Judge shall be Christ John 5.22 neither yet are the Father and the Holy Ghost removed from this Judgement but Christ immediately shall speak and give Sentence and that in his Humane Nature and when he speaketh the Father shall speak by him so that the Judgement shall belong to all the three persons of the Godhead as concerning their Consent and Authority but unto Christ as touching the publishing and executing of the Judgement yea and the Church also shall judge as touching the Allowance and Approbation of this Judgement whereunto they shall then subscribe Luke 22.30 What Christs coming to Judge both the Quick and the Dead signifies 1. That at the second coming of Christ shall follow the renewing of Heaven and Earth 2. That the self same Christ shall come who for us was born suffered and rose again 3. That he shall come gloriously to deliver his Church whereof I am a Member 4. That he shall come to abject and cast away the wicked The Reasons why or causes for which Christ-Man shall be Judge are these 1. Because the Church is to be glorified by the same Mediator by whom and for whom it was justified Acts 17.31 2. That we may have comfort and consolation knowing him to be our Judge who hath purchased us with his blood 3. To deliver his Church and cast away the wicked 4. The Justice of God because they have dealt contumeliously with the Son of Man Zech. 12.10 5. Christ-Man must be Judge because he must judge men therefore he must be beheld of all But God is invisible 6. That he may the more confound the wicked his Enemies who shall be forced to behold him their Judge whom they have so much withstood so wickedly dishonored The Day of the Lord or the time of Judgement is twofold 1. General when Christ shall come to judge the Quick and the Dead in the end of the world 2. Particular at the day of our death when every particular soul must appear before the bar of Gods Tribunal and give an account of what it hath done How Christ shall come to Judgement 1. Truly visibly and locally not imaginarily Mat. 24.30 2. He shall come furnished and prepared with glory and divine Majesty with all the Angels with the voyce and trump of the Archangel and with divine Power 3. The dead shall be raised and the living changed 4. The world shall be dissolved with fire not annihilated but purified 5. He shall come suddenly to the great joy and comfort of all his How the Devil is said to be already judged yea and the wicked also 1. By the Decree of God 2. In the Word of God 3. In his own Conscience 4. As touching the beginning of his Condemnation For what causes the last Judgement shall be 1. The chief and principal cause is the Decree of God 2. A less principal and subordinate cause is both the Salvation of the Elect who are here vexed and the Damnation of the wicked who here do flourish 3. Because of Gods Justice whereof in this life is not a full and perfect execution The threefold effect of Christs coming to Judgement 1. A gathering together at the sound of the Trumpet both of the dead and the living Dan. 12.2 2. A seperation the Elect shall be set at his right hand the Reprobate at his left Mat. 25.33 3. The Judgement it self the Elect shall be with him the Reprobate shall be cast into Hell Mat. 25.46 The execution of the last Judgement shall be thus 1. By the force and vertue of the Divine Power of Christ 2. By the Ministery of the Angels 3. The World Heaven and Earth shall be dissolved
by fire at the execution of this Judgement there shall be a change of this present state and a purifying of the creatures but not a consuming of them 4. This change shall come suddenly 5. There shall be a casting of the wicked into everlasting pains and an advancing of the godly into everlasting happiness and glory Why God would have us certain of the last judgment viz. 1. In respect of his glory that we may be able to refute Epicures who account this heavenly doctrine of the divine Judgment to come for a fable 2. For our comfort that amidst our evils and miseries we may know there shall come a time when we shall be delivered from this corruption and rottenness 3. That we may retain and keep our selves in the fear of God and our duty and that others also may be reclaimed from evil 4. That the wicked may be left excuseless for they are warned sufficiently that they should be ready at every season For what Reasons God would not have us certain of the time of the last Judgement 1. That he might exercise our faith and patience 2. That he might bridle our curiosity 3. That he might keep us in his fear in godliness and in exercising of our duty Why God deferreth the last Judgment 1. To exercise Faith Patience Hope and Prayer in the godly 2. That all the Elect may be gathered unto the Church 3. That he might grant unto all a time and space of Repentance as at this time and that he might leave the wicked without excuse Rom. 2.4 There are a certain sort of people that superstitiously sit up all night at certain times of the year fondly conceiting that Christ will come to Judgement on one of these nights but such most grosly erre and that these four ways especially 1. In that they prescribe certain set times for Christs coming whereas no man knoweth it Mat. 24.36 42. 2. In that they conceit he shall come in the night from that Text Luke 17.34 which is uncertain the night being there taken as a part for the whole by the figure Synecdoche and he calleth it the Day Luke 17.30 3. In that they imagine That they which are asleep when Christ cometh cannot be well prepared to meet him whereas Repentance maketh the soul prepared at all times 4. In that they interpret the Precept of Watching to bodily watching of the Eye whereas it is not meant of that onely but of the heart also This Judgement shall be in the end of the world whereof there are three parts The one before the Law another under the Law the third under the Gospel or under Christ which is called The end of the world The end of days The last time because there shall not be so long space between Christs first coming and his second as was from the beginning of the world unto his first coming But of that day Christ himself as Man knoweth not Mark 13.32 Tremble O Earth Tremble and be afraid Behold the Son of God he that was laid At first in Swathing-bands then in a shrowd Comes with Thousands of Angels in a Cloud To judge both Quick and Dead Silence Who may Language the Joy or Horror of that Day When all from Adam shall be chang'd or rise To meet their Judge or Savior in the Skies To hear the Sentence of Eternal Rest Or that which is too sad to be express'd §. 8. I believe in the Holy Ghost WHich is as much to say As I acknowledge the Holy Ghost to be God and so confess him to be one with the Father and the Son also I acknowledge his Office of Sanctifying and making holy the people of God And as I depend upon God the Father as my Creator and daily Protector and upon God the Son as my Redeemer and daily Mediator so I depend upon God the Holy Ghost as my Comforter and the worker of Grace and all Vertue in me being of my self a lump of Sin and mass of Corruption yet I acknowledge not three Gods but one God a Trinity of persons in Unity of Godhead So that the Holy Ghost is the third person of the true and onely Godhead proceeding from the Father and the Son and Coeternal Coequal and Consubstantial with the Father and the Son and is sent from both into the hearts of the Elec● to sanctifie them unto eternal life And though extraordinary Revelations are ceased yet the Holy Ghost in and by the Word revealeth some things unto men for which cause he is called and that truly The Spirit of Revelation Now that the Holy Ghost is very and eternal God appears from his creating of all things Gen. 1.2 Psal 104.24 29 30. And Christians are to be Baptized in the Name of the Holy Ghost Mat. 28.19 as well as of the Father and the Son As God he chooseth assigneth and sendeth forth men for the Ministery of the Gospel Acts 13.2 4. As God he decreeth Orders for his Church and People Acts 15.28 As God he is to be invocated and prayed unto as well as the Father and the Son 2 Cor. 13.13 The Holy Ghost is of one Substance Majesty and Glory with the Father and the Son for these three the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost are one 1 Joh. 5.7 who proceedeth from the Father and the Son for the Father sendeth the Comforter in the Name of the Son Joh. 14.16 and the Son sendeth the Comforter the Spirit of Truth from the Father Joh. 15.26 And whereas we believe the Holy Ghost to have proceeded from the Father and the Son understand Proceeding is here a communication of the Divine Essence whereby the third person onely of the Godhead receiveth from the Father and the Son as the Spirit from him whose Spirit it is the same whole Essence which the Father and the Son have and retain Of God the Holy Ghost three things are to be considered by us viz. 1. What the Holy Ghost is viz. of the same Essence with the Father and the Son a distinct person proceeding from both 2. The Office of the Holy Ghost which doth sanctifie us many ways 1. Because he is the key of all heavenly Treasures illuminating our understanding to receive the Mystery of Faith 2. Because he is the Earnest of the Promises 3. Because he is the Seal wherewith the Truth of the Divine Promises is signed and sealed in our mindes 4. Because he is the Minister of Truth guiding us in the way of all Truth 5. Because he is the Author of light expelling the darkness gathered by sin 6. Because he is the Fountain of Wisdom and Understanding 7. Because he is the water that purgeth us from all filth consecrating us into the Holy Temple of God fertilizing us to bring forth the fruits of Righteousness 8. Because he is the Fire that purgeth away the corruption of our mindes enflaming our hearts with the love of Righteousness 3. Our Faith in the Holy Ghost 1. That we believe in God the
and being exhorted will not hear being admonished will not obey being reproved will not repent As for them that are without the Lord will judge them the Church hath nothing to do with them 1 Cor. 5.12 13. For those that were never of the Church cannot be cast out of it being never of the number of the Faithful And here also know That one person may not be Excommunicated for another but onely the party offending Now if any man be truly ingrafted into Christ indued with Faith in Christ and Repentance from dead works being a Member of his Body in Deed and in Truth Excommunication shall hurt him nothing at all in regard of that Spiritual Union or Communion forasmuch as the Sentence so given is in that particular void and frustrate And though a man justly deserveth to be Excommunicated through his sin and to be separated from the Communion of Saints yet Excommunication is not the first and chief cause thereof but his own sin and the continuance in it seeing it doth not sever him from God but declareth him to be severed through his impenitency as the Priests under the Law putting out the Leprous did not defile them with the Leprosie but pronounced them to be defiled or like the sentence of the Law which is but declared onely by the Judge upon the Malefactor So it is impenitency obstinacy and perseverancy in sin that separates a sinner from the Church Excommunication is onely the Declarative sentence thereof Ecclesiastical Discipline is the Order in the Church instituted by God especially for these two ends viz. 1. That the Ministery of God may be preserved and that all things may be done in the Church decently and in order 2. That the Conversation of every one may be looked into that such as have given offences may be amended and according to the degrees prescribed by Christ The order which the Church doth use in the exercise of her power may be comprehended in these three Verses of the eighteenth Chapter of Matthew viz. 1. If thy Brother trespass go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone if he hear thee thou hast won thy Brother Matth. 18.15 2. If he hearken not unto thee let him be again privately admonished by thee taking one or two others with thee Mat. 18.16 3. If he will not vouchsafe to hear them tell it unto the Church if he refuse to hear the Church also let him be unto thee as a Heathen man and a Publican Matth. 18.17 In Excommunication there are three Judgements to be considered viz. 1. Of God when he doth hold any obstinate Sinner guilty of his offence and so guilty of condemnation 2. Of the Church after that God hath holden him guilty for the Church is onely to pronounce and to declare him so to be not absolutely but with condition of Repentance 3. Of God again whereby he ratifies that in Heaven which the Church hath done on earth The Power of Ecclesiastical Discipline is very necessary in several respects viz. 1. In respect of the Commandment of God 1 Cor. 5.5 2. In respect of Gods glory which would be much impeached if without difference the wicked and blasphemers go in the number of Gods children 3. Lest the Sacrament of the Lords Supper be prophaned by the wicked and that be given them in the Supper which is denied them in the Word 4. For the safety of the Church which shall be punished if she permit willingly the prophanation of Christs Ordinance 5. For avoiding offence in the Church that others be not corrupted 1 Cor. 5.6 6. For the safety of sinners that they being often admonished may return to Repentance and be received again into the Church 7. For avoiding of offence among those that are without and that the Name of God may not be blasphemed nor evil spoken of nor they who are not as yet Members of the Church kept from coming into it nor the Covenant of God despised nor reproached 8. That from the sinners themselves punishments may be averted because the wicked approaching to the Lords Table eat their own damnation The difference between Church-Discipline and State-Government viz. 1. The power committed unto the Church dependeth on Gods Word the Civil power is armed with the Sword 2. In the Church Judgement proceedeth according to Gods Laws in the Civil State according to Civil Laws 3. The Church punisheth the obstinate with the Word of God yet so as it pierceth unto their Consciences The Civil State punisheth the obstinate onely with corporal punishments 4. Oftentimes the Discipline of the Church hath place where there is none for Civil Judgement and the Civil Government oftentimes hath place where there is none for Church Discipline 5. The Judgement of the Church hath degrees of Admonition before it comes to punish but the Civil Judgement proceedeth to punishment without it 6. The Church does often reverse and retract her Judgement and Punishment if there come Repentance but it is otherwise with the Civil Magistrate Touching Excommunication observe these four things from Matth. 7.6 viz. 1. The Foundation thereof it is an Ordinance of God for all obstinate enemies of God by Christs Commandment must be kept from holy things A man living in the Church may be worse in practice then an open enemy and such an one was Ishmael who for mocking Isaac the Son of the Promise was cast out of Abrahams Family that is out of the Church of God Gen. 21.10 11. For Abrahams Family at that time was Gods visible Church 2. The End thereof which is to preserve the holy things of God from pollution contempt and prophanation even the Word Prayer and Sacraments which wilful Enemies would trample upon as Swine upon Pearls And herein we may see the abuse of this Ordinance when it is made for Politique and Civil Respects 3. Who must execute this Censure of the Church namely they to whom the disposing and keeping of the holy things of God is committed that is The lawful Ministers of the Word and Sacraments but without the Exercise of this Censure which God hath given unto the Church they cannot keep those holy things pure which God hath committed unto them 4. How far this Censure of the Church reacheth and extendeth against obstinate and wilful Enemies namely to the debarring of them from the use of the Saints Communion in Prayer and Sacraments Indeed if the party be excommunicated for some particular Crime and there be hope of his Repentance because he doth not maliciously persist by wilful obstinacy in his sin and contempt of the Church then although he be excluded from Communion with them in the Sacraments and Prayer yet he may be admitted to the hearing of the Word because that is a means to humble him for his sin and to bring him to Repentance which is the end of all Ecclesiastical Censures The Censures of the Church are of three sorts all of them having their proper time and place and use and
4. They served to be as an open confession of their Faith what God they served and in whom they believed and that they hated and detested the vanity and the Idolatry of the Gentiles 5. They were also a Testification of their thankfulness for sundry benefits received that thereby they might be taught to acknowledge from whence they came 6. They served for the maintenance of the Ministery and consequently for the furtherance of the worship of God Deut. 18.3 4. 1 Cor. 9.13 Under the Law the Priests as Priests 1. Were ordinary Ministers of the old Church 2. Were appointed by men 3. Were tyed to the Doctrine of Moses and the Prophets which they learned not from God immediately but mediately by men 4. They might erre in Doctrine and Counsels and did erre often when they departed from the Rule of the Prophets So that the difference between the Priests and the Prophets stands thus 1. The Priests were ordained out of one certain Tribe the Levitical but God raised up Prophets out of any Tribe 2. The Prophets were called extraordinarily and immediately by God himself and so received from him the Doctrine which they were to declare to men 3. They were so guided by the special motion of the Holy Ghost that they could not erre in that Doctrine which they uttered to men in the name of God but with the Priests it was otherwise In the Law as the Priesthood so the Priest was twofold 1. Signifying or typical who was a person appointed by God 1. To offer typical Sacrifices 2. To make intercession for himself and others 3. To declare to the people the Doctrine of the Law and the Promise of the Messias and true Sacrifice which was to come 2. Signified that is Christ of whom the most notable Type was the High Priest himself The things that were proper and peculiar to the high Priest onely 1. He alone entred into the Tabernacle called The Holiest of all or Sanctuary and that but once every year 2. His raiment was more gorgeous then the vesture of the other Priests 3. He was set over the rest 4. He onely was consulted with in matters doubtful touching Religion or the Common-weal 5. He did therefore govern and order some Counsels and Offices of the State and Kingdom and did see that all things were lawfully administred They that were under the Law were of three sorts viz. 1. Israelites which were of Abrahams posterity and were necessarily bound by the Law to observe Circumcision and the Ceremonies 2. Proselytes who of the Gentiles were converted unto the Jews and did more and more for confirming of their faith submit themselves unto Circumcision and the whole Ceremonial Law 3. Those of the Gentiles who were converted unto the Jews but did not observe the Ceremonies these embraced onely the Doctrine and Promises of God And unto the Gentiles and Proselytes it was free to keep or not to keep Circumcision and the Ceremonies Four special Sects among the Jews under the Law 1. The Essens who were like Popish Monks and Fryars which did seperate themselves from the people vowing and dedicating themselves to live in perpetual Sanctity 2. The Sadduces who did expound the Law according to the letter and syllable and withal denyed the Resurrection and Immortality of the Soul as appears Acts 2.3 8. 3. The Pharisees who did forsake the common Exposition of the Scribes and taught and framed a more exact and strict Exposition of the Law according to the Traditions of the Fathers These Pharisees were by office Scribes as appears by comparing Joh. 1.29 with ver 24. 4. Herodians who as some think were Courtiers who held and taught that Herod was the Messias The Church of Rome erreth grosly in Confounding the Law and the Gospel under pretence that the Precepts of both are the same for substance that both require righteousness both promise life threaten death both command faith repentance and obedience Put his opinion overturns true Religion and is erroneous for these Reasons 1. Adam in his innocency knew the Law but he knew nothing then of believing in Christ and though both require righteousness promise life and threaten death yet the maner is far different 2. Likewise they differ in the commanding of faith for the Gospel commandeth faith not as a work done as the Law doth but as an instrument laying hold on Christ Again the Law commands faith generally as to believe in God and to believe his word to be true but besides this the Gospel requires a particular faith in Christ the Redeemer whom the Law never knew 3. The Law commandeth not Repentance for the knowledge of the Law was in Adams heart when he needed no Repentance True Repentance therefore is a saving Grace wrought and commanded onely by the Gospel 4. Though obedience be commanded both by the Law and the Gospel yet not in the same maner The Law commandeth obedience every way perfect both in parts and in degrees and alloweth no other but the Gospel in Christ approveth imperfect obedience that is an endeavor in all things to obey and please God if it be without hypocrisie Again the Law commandeth obedience as a work to be done for the obtaining of salvation but the Gospel requires obedience onely to testifie our faith and thankfulness to God This is not the onely Error touching the Law there are certain people in the world living under a Christian Climate known by the Name of New-Libertines who say The Old Testament is abrogated others think us necessarily tyed to all the Judicials of Moses boldly affirming That the Laws Judicial of Moses belong as well unto Christians as they did unto the Jews Others have entertained an Opinion That Love was now come in the place of the Ten Commandments Others will not have Gods Law to be preached nor the Conscience of sinners to be terrified and troubled with the Judgements of God yea it hath been held How that it was utterly unlawful for the Elect so much as to think much less to speak or hear of the fear of God which the Law preacheth Now the common Objection of such men is That Christians are not ruled by the Law but by the Spirit of Regeneration according as it is said Ye are not under the Law but under Grace Again the Law is not given unto the righteous man therefore it is not to be taught in the Church of Christ But the Answer hereto is as ancient as the Error Christians indeed are not ruled that is are not compelled and constrained by the Law and fear of punishment unto whatsoever Discipline or Order like as are the wicked but yet they are taught and instructed by the Law of God what worship is pleasing unto God and the Holy Ghost useth the voyce of the Law to teach and incline them to an obedience not constrained or hypocritical but true or voluntary so that not onely the Law commandeth them what to do but the Spirit also of Grace doth
That even before the giving of the Law all the Precepts of the Ten Commandments were in a maner known and acknowledged though they require whatsoever was commanded Adam in his Integrity and whatsoever was commanded since Gen. 2.16 17. Exod. 20. The Law being that which God himself delivered to his people by the hand of Moses which also with his own finger he wrote in two Tables of Stone called The Moral Law because it sheweth the Vertues to be followed and the Vices to be avoided as also to distinguish it from the Ceremonial Law which comprehendeth the Ceremonies prescribed by God in the old Church and from the Judicial and Political Laws which contain Judgements and the Penalties to be inflicted on the breakers of this Moral Law The sum whereof is this The First Table containing the four first Commandments Commandeth all the Duties which man oweth to God The Second Table containing the six last Commandments commandeth all that Man oweth to Man according to the Will of God For the Commandments of the Latter Table are to be referred to the first that is to say They are to be kept not indeed so much for our Neighbors sake as for Gods sake of whom they are commanded the First Table being immediately the Second mediately referred unto God the Commandments whereof are not notwithstanding less then those of the First Table but the principal service of the First Table is greater then the principal service of the Second Matth. 22.37 38. Instances of Scripture proving that the Decalogue was in mans heart before it was written in the two Tables of Stone 1. The First Commandment was known unto Abraham when as almost in so many words the Lord said unto him I am God All-sufficient stand before me and be upright Gen. 17.1 And Jacob said Put away the strange gods Gen. 35.2 2. The Second was also known unto Jacob for he purged his house from Idols when he was to build an Altar in Bethel Gen. 35.2 Acknowledging hereby that this was a Corruption which the true God would be offended at 3. The Third Abraham also seemeth to have well known when he sware by the true God unto Abimelech to confirm his League Gen. 21.23 And Jacob when he sware unto Laban by the fear of his father Isaac Gen. 31.53 4. The Fourth is recorded by Moses to have been given in Paradice Gen. 2.2 3. And is likewise set down in Exodus 16.23 5. The Fifth Jacob shewed in his practice when he followed his Fathers direction in taking a wife and his children by going at his command into Egypt and Josephs nourishing him there in his old age Shem and Japheth reverencing their Father Noah are blessed but Ham scorning him is cursed in his Son Canaan Gen. 9.25 26. 6. The Sixth was written in Cain's Conscience which made him cry My sin is greater then can be forgiven and God expresly forbiddeth it Gen. 9.6 7. The Seventh was to be seen in the Sons of Jacob when they said Should he make our Sister a whore Gen. 34.31 In Joseph when his Mistris tempted him Gen. 39.9 and in Judah when he commanded Thamar to be burnt Gen. 48.2 8. The Eighth Laban urgeth upon Jacob Gen. 31.30 who acknowledgeth Death to be due for it Gen. 45.5 And Jacobs Sons say God forbid that we should steal Gen. 44. 9. The Ninth Heathen Abimelech shewed to be written in his heart when he complained of Abrahams false testimony touching his Wife Gen. 20.9 26.9 And of Isaac's for the like yea and Judah kept promise not lying or deceiving Gen. 38.20 10. The Tenth Abraham sheweth to be written in his heart when having recovered the goods of Sodom he coveted none of them being other mens and it was sin to look on a woman to lust after her and punished even in Kings Gen. 12.17 20.7 The maner how this Law was given viz. 1. There was great preparation three days together the people were sanctified according to the maner of those times by Washings and Purifyings So let us prepare our selves by prayer before we come to hear the Lord speaking unto us in the Ministery of his holy Word 2. A strict charge was given them That neither man nor beast on pain of death should come near the Mount whence the Law was to be delivered how much less mercy deserved the Transgressors of these glorious Laws 3. The Lord descended with great terror the Trumpet sounding the Earth shaking and Lightnings flying about Shewing with what fear of offending against those weighty Laws they were to be received into the heart 4. Almighty God himself spake all these words in the hearing of all the people and afterward writ them in two Tables of Stone with his own finger intimating hereby the perpetuity of them and how stony-hard our hearts be that the finger of God alone is able to imprint them there 5. When Moses had broken these two Tables the Lord writ the same words in two other Tables So mans heart by Gods Creation had all the Laws written in it but after his Fall it was without any letter thereof in effect until that the Lord writ them anew 6. At Moses his return from the Lord with these Laws his face did so shine that the people were not able to look on him till he vail'd it neither could the Jews nor any of the Gentiles be able to see into the end of the Law Christ Jesus till the Lord took away their vail of blindeness and hardness of heart 2 Cor. 3.13 14. The Decalogue is divided after a threefold maner viz. 1. It is divided by Christ and Moses into two Tables the former whereof comprise our duty towards God immediately the Second our duties towards God mediately 2. It is divided into Ten Commandments whereof four are ascribed to the First and six other unto the Second Table 3. It is divided according to the things themselves which are commanded or forbidden in the Decalogue now generally is commanded the Worship of God and that which is contrary thereto is forbidden The worship of God being that which is generally commanded in the Decalogue is 1. Immediate when Moral works are immediately performed unto God which is 1. Internal which consisteth partly in this that we worship the true God and that that be performed unto the true God which is commanded in the first Commandment partly that the maner or form of Worship be right and lawful whether it be internal Worship or external which Form is taught in the Second Commandment 2. External which is 1. Private which containeth the private Moral works of every one which are always to be of every man in particular performed and this private Worship is delivered in the Third Commandment 2. Publike which consisteth in sanctifying of the Sabbath and is delivered in the Fourth Commandment 2. Mediate when Moral works are performed to our Neighbor in respect of God delivered in the Second Table which likewise is 1. External which
consisteth partly in the duties of Superiors towards their Inferiors and so of the contrary of which duties as also of Civil order comprised under them is spoken in the Fifth Commandment partly in the duties of one Neighbor towards another which are ratified in the rest of the Commandments 2. Internal which consisteth in the internal affection of the heart being the very uprightness of mens affections towards their Neighbor which is to be included and understood in all the former Commandments and is prescribed in the Tenth and last Commandment In what respect the Second Table is said to be like unto the First viz. 1. As touching the kinde of the chief Worship also in respect of the Ceremonial which are not the chief Worship of God 2. As touching the kindes of Eternal Punishment because the transgression of both Tables meriteth eternal punishment 3. As touching the unseparable coherence of the Love of God and our Neighbor which love of God is declared and exercised by our love to our Neighbor The Reasons for which obedience is to be yielded to the Second Table 1. That in this Obedience God himself may be worshipped and our love towards him shewed by our love towards our Neighbor for his sake 2. That by the love of our Neighbor our conformity with God may appear 3. That the Society of Mankinde may be preserved which was ordained of God for the celebration and magnifying of his Name Certain Rules concerning the substance and meaning of the Decalogue in general and for Expounding the Commandments viz. 1. The Moral Law or Decalogue is to be understood according to the Interpretation of Scripture not according to the sense or judgement of man onely or of Moral Philosophy 2. The Decalogue requireth in all the Commandments obedience both external and internal chargeth the understanding heart and affection commandeth perfect obedience not in parts onely but also in degrees not onely in all the duties but also in the degrees of these duties 3. The obedience of the First Commandment must be the motive or final Cause of our obedience towards the rest of the Commandments otherwise it is not the Worship of God but hypocrisie whatsoever we do 4. We must above all things consider the drift or end of each Commandment for the end of the Law sheweth the meaning thereof and by the end we shall judge aright and easily of the means 5. We must know that the same vertue is often in a diverse respect commanded in diverse Commandments that is the same vertue is required for performing of obedience unto many Commandments 6. In Affirmative Commandments commanding Vertues are comprehended the Negative forbidding the contrary Vices so likewise in Negative Commandments are comprehended the Affirmative Vertues 7. We must take heed that we restrain not the Commandments and take them too straitly for in the General all the Specials and in the chief Special the next allyed Specials and in the Effect the Causes be contained So that under one kinde manifest are all of like sort whether commanded or forbidden yea and the Means whereby the things are done are also commanded or forbidden 8. The Obedience or Commandments of the Second Table yield or give place to the Obedience or Commandments of the First Table The Commandments of the First Table are absolutely to be kept and for themselves the other of the Second Table are to be kept for the First Though they are alike as concerning the kinde of Moral Worship the kinde of punishment and as concerning their coherence or connexion 9. Every Negative Commandment doth binde always and at and unto all times Every Affirmative Commandment doth onely binde always but not at and unto all times also 10. Howsoever the least Commandment is not so small but the breach thereof deserveth Eternal Death yet the breaches of some Commandments are greater and more heinous then of others 11. There is so near a relation betwixt all the Commandments of the Moral Law that whosoever observeth all saving onely in one point is guilty of all James 2.10 Because one and the same is the Author of them all 12. To the breach of every Commandment there is annexed a curse although it be not expressed The use of the Commandments 1. To lay open our Miseries Rom. 7.7 9 13 14 18. 2. To whip us to Christ Gal. 3.24 3. To be our Guide in all things that we are to do when we are come to him Mat. 19.17 18. There are certain Libertine Antinomies who contend That the Law is not to be taught in the Church of Christ misinterpreting the Sacred Text to cloke their Rebellion against the Law of God with a pretence of Obedience to the Spirit of Regeneration But this Heresie was long since refuted Mat. 5.17 Rom. 3.31 The Law 's voyce was Thunder the Tables Stone Break one and all who keeps not all keeps none Most sweetly tun'd they to each other are In Practice then thou may'st not make them jar Obedience they do for each other call A joynt Obedience is requir'd in all But who can keep the Law Who 's just an hour Frail Man hadst thou a Will where is thy Power Though since the Fall this is thy power above Yet is the Law fulfill'd by Christ and Love The First COMMANDMENT §. 1. I am the Lord thy God Thou shalt have no other gods but me THerefore thou shalt have Me that Jehovah which have manifested my self in the World by my Creation Preservation and Government thereof that Jehovah which have declared my self in my Church by the Participation and Manifestation of my self to be the true God that God alone Therefore Thou shalt have none other gods that is beside me the onely true God neither shalt thou have them before me that is in my sight that is in thy heart or elswhere Now not to have the true God is either to have no God or to have more Gods or another then the known God or not to acknowledge God to be such unto us as he is manifested Likewise not to trust in God and to subject and submit our selves unto God in true humility and patience not to hope for all good things from him alone not to love and fear him for we are here commanded to have the Lord for our God that is to love him above all to fear him above all to put our whole trust in him and to make our prayers to him alone And he onely hath no other gods who is so dead to the world and doth so adhere to God that he is neither puffed up with Riches nor cast down with Poverty nor swelled with Honor nor pined with Ignominy nor made joyful by Life nor afraid of Death but this sufficeth him That he hath God knowing his Savior disdain'd both Riches and Glory and Pleasure and Life The Preface of this Commandment belongeth to the whole Decalogue and the Commandment it self is mixed with a Negative Prohibition and an Affirmative Command The Duty
and Beasts but of Beasts in respect of Men. 7. That men should provoke one another by their Example to godliness and to the praising and honoring of God Psal 22.22 8. That the Church may be seen and heard among men and be discerned from the other Blasphemous and Idolatrous multitude of men that they may joyn themselves thereto who are yet separate from it The Sabbath is broken and prophaned by such things as are opposed to the sanctifying thereof viz. 1. Unto the Delivering and Teaching of the Doctrine is opposed the Omitting or Neglect of Teaching as also a corrupting or maiming of the Doctrine or a sitting of it to the Opinions Affections Lusts or commodities of the Hearers or to any of them 2 Cor. 2.17 2. Unto the right and due Administration of the Sacraments is opposed an Omitting or Neglect of Exhortation to the Receiving thereof as also a corrupt and unlawful Administration of them 3. Unto the study of learning the Doctrine is opposed 1. A contempt and neglect of the Doctrine 2. Curiosity which is a desire and study of knowing those things which God hath not Revealed unnecessary strange and vain 4. Unto the right use of the Sacraments is contrary the omitting and contempt thereof as also a prophaning of them when they are not received as God hath commanded neither by them for whom they were ordained likewise all superstitious using them as when Salvation and the Grace of God is tyed to the Observation of the Rites and Ceremonies or when they are used to such ends as God hath not appointed 5. To publike Prayers is opposed the Neglect of them and an hypocritical pretence at them without any attention or inward devotion also such Reading and Praying as serveth not for any edifying 1 Cor. 14.16 6. To the Bestowing of Alms is repugnant a Neglect of the works of Charity as when we do not according to our power succor the poor that stand in need of our help 7. To the honor of the Ministery of the Church is opposed the contempt thereof as when either the Ministery of the Church is abolished or committed to men unworthy or unable or is denied to be the means and instrument which God will use for the gathering of his Church Likewise when the Members are reproached when their Doctrine is heard and not obeyed maintenance not allowed Time was when this unhappy Nation Might break by Law by Proclamation This Great Commandment and keep this Rest Prophaner then their dumb or silly Beast Silence the Word lest men be Edified And so the Sabbath ' chance be Sanctified Sport it with Heath'nish May-Games make a Jest Of what the Lord had made a serious Rest The Lord hath one Day more but that 's to come Horror I quake to think upon their Doom The Fifth Commandment Honor thy Father and thy Mother that the days may be long in the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee THe Sum of this Commandment is That we perform all such Duties as one man oweth unto another by some particular bond Here are commanded all Vertues proper and peculiar to all kindes of Superiors or to Inferiors or common to them both And all Vices contrary to these Vertues are here prohibited as all irreverence towards those that be in Place or Authority above us and all churlish behavior in such towards those that be of low degree For the End of this Commandment is the preservation of civil order decreed and appointed by God in the mutual Duties of Superiors and Inferiors which are comprehended by the Name of Father and Mother And the Reason of this Commandment is taken from the Promise of long life if God please not to prevent us with the Blessing of Eternal life Now to honor one is to have an high esteem of him and to yield a respect unto him it must first be placed in the heart and then outwardly manifested and that in relation to Parents Authority and Necessity So as honor compriseth here all those Daties which Children in any respect owe unto their Parents it implieth in regard of their Authority both an inward reverent estimation and also an outward submission and in regard of their Necessity Recompence and Maintenance Here both Father and Mother are expresly mentioned to take away all pretence from children of neglecting either of them So that it is not sufficient to honor the Father onely because he is the Mothers Head nor the Mother onely because she is the weaker vessel the Law condemneth him that neglecteth either The Authority of Parents requireth Fear from children their Affection Love Affection in Parents without Authority would make children too bold and insolent Authority without Affection too much like Slaves but both discreetly tempered together make a very good composition Love like Sugar sweetneth Fear and Fear like Salt seasoneth Love Thus the childes duty must be a Loving Fear or a Fearing Love This Fear is an awful Respect of his Parents arising from an honorable esteem which he hath in his judgement and opinion of them as they are his Parents Whence proceedeth on the one side a desire and endeavor in all things not contrary to Gods Word to please them and on the other side an unwillingness to offend them This Fear is an essential Branch of that honor which the Law requireth to their Parents Exod. 20.12 and is in express words enjoyned by the Law Lev. 19.3 This Fear keepeth Love in compass restraining it from sawcy follies for as the heart is affected the carriage will be ordered Had Cham had this filial Fear in him he had never derided his Father Gen. 9.22 nor been cursed for his labor or had Absolom had it in him he had never broached untruths to father them on his Father 2 Sam. 15.3 Mocking and cursing of Parents is expresly condemned Prov. 30.11 The Reward whereof is by Gods Law death Lev. 20.9 yea a shameful and ignominious death for the Ravens of the valley shall pluck out his eyes and the yong Eagles shall eat it Gen. 40.19 which phrase not unproperly describes the execution of a notorious Malefactor that is hang'd and indeed how dyed undutiful Absolom Yet we must know That no submission is to be given to man but such as may stand with the Fear of God Which seasonable Doctrine indicts all such of folly as fear man more then God This was Adams folly to be swayed by a foolish woman This was Aarons folly to erect an Idol to please the people Exod. 32.1 This was Sauls folly to suffer his people to take of the spoil of the Amalekites against Gods express Prohibition 1 Sam. 15.21 This was Joash his folly to hearken to his Princes for the setting up of Idols 2 Chron. 24.17 And thus Pilate played the fool in delivering against his conscience Christ to be crucified to please the people Mark 15.15 As thus Superiors sinned in basely submitting to Inferiors so they likewise sin in unwarrantably submitting to
became obedient to the death even that ignominious death of the Cross and shall not we suffer an ignominious life by Poverty without making it more ignominious by Theft Usury is a main breach of this Commandment as being a Gain exacted by Covenant above the Principal onely in lieu and recompence of lending it and being thus considered it is quite contrary to Gods Word yet is it lawful sometimes to take above the Principal but with these conditions viz. 1. If a man take heed that he exact nothing but that which his Debter can get by good and lawful means 2. He may not take more then the gain nay not all the gain nor that part of the gain which drinks up the living of him which useth the Money 3. He must sometimes be so far from taking gain that he must not require the Principal if his Debter be by inevitable and just casualties impoverished and it be also plain that he could not make no not by great diligence any commodity of the Money borrowed Reasons why a man may sometimes take above the Principal viz. 1. That which the Debter may give having himself an honest gain besides and no man any ways endamaged that the Creditor may safely receive 2. It is convenient that he which hath money lent him and gaineth by it should shew all possible gratitude to him by whose goods he is enriched 3. It is often for the benefit of the Creditor to have the goods in his own hands which he lent whereby he is prejudiced by the forbearance and therefore may justly expect not exact reparation from the Rich not the Poor Lending is twofold viz. 1. Of Due which is the Loan of the Rich to the Poor when his Necessity compels him to borrow and for this a man cannot with good conscience take any encrease 2. Of Courtesie when one rich friend lends unto another this is left to a mans own liberty and discretion and hath not any particular Promise of Reward not in this case is all taking of Encrease simply condemned even for these Reasons in these cases 1. When the encrease is given onely in way of thankfulness for ingratitude is abhorred of all and the Law of Natures requires to do good for good and all Divines allow this kinde of encrease 2. When a man sustaineth damage by his lending he may receive encrease by way of Satisfaction for his loss 3. When a man is contented to adventure his Principal in the hand of him that borroweth it like as a man may receive hire for his Horse or other goods standing to the loss Exod. 22.14 Three general Rules set down by Paul Rom. 14. to direct us in all our actions that we commit not this or any other sin viz. 1. He is happy that condemneth not himself in the use of those things which he knoweth to be lawful This concerneth those that be strong 2. No man must do any thing with a doubtful Conscience for such a one woundeth his own Conscience and offendeth God though perhaps the thing be in it self good which he doth Rom. 14.23 Such a one doth many good things that do displease God which would please him if they were well and rightly done This Rule belongeth to the weak 3. Whatsoever proceedeth not from Faith is a sin committed against God and condemneth him that doth it forasmuch as without Faith its impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 And this Rule engendereth two others viz. 1. Whatsoever proceedeth from meer Naturals whatsoever cometh from the force of any free will in us is sin in the sight of God 2. All the Vertues and actions of the Infidels and Unbelievers though in the substance of the works and as they are the gifts of God they are not evil but good yet in the Judgement of God they are sins Corruption of judgement being also another main breach of this Commandment See to it ye Great Ones and know That Judgement is corrupted four ways viz. 1. Through Fear when we dread to pronounce Truth for fear of offending great persons So did Pilate wrest the Law and sin against his own Conscience for fear of Herod 2. Through Covetousness when we are corrupted by Bribes and hired for Money which blinde the eyes of the wise So did Felix gape after gain and look for Rewards Acts 24.26 3. Through Hatred and Malice for as Naboths Vineyard was Ahabs Sickness so he dealt corruptly with Michaiah because he hated him and could not abide him 1 Kings 22.8 27. 4. Through Favor and Affection when we seek to gratifie or pleasure our Kinsmen or Acquaintance as Pilate did to please Herod In this sense it is that the Lord will not have even the poor man countenanced in his cause Exod. 23.3 The sins forbidden in this Commandment viz. 1. Inordinate living whether it be in no set Calling or idly wherein by neglecting their duties such persons mis-spend their time goods and revenues 2 Thess 3.11 Gen. 3.19 1 Tim. 5.8 2. Unjust dealing in heart which is called Covetousness Mat. 15.19 3. Unjust dealing in deed which is either in bargaining or out of bargaining Unjust dealing in bargaining hath many branches viz. 1. To sell and bargain for that which is not saleable 2. All coloured forgery and deceit in bargaining as using forged cavillation Luke 19.8 or when men sell that which is counterfeit for good as Copper for Gold and mingle any ways bad with good making shew onely of the good Amos 8.4 5 6. by mixture of base things of little or no value with things of price in the sale thereof or by setting a counterfeit gloss on imperfect Ware by sophisticating any Wares or using false lights or slights 3. By false Weights and Measures This is an abomination to the Lord Deut. 25.13 14 16. Lev. 19.35 36. Amos 8.4 4. By over-reaching the Buyer by dissembling lying and extolling speeches when the Ware is unworthy or when the Buyer concealeth the goodness of the thing or the Seller the faults of it and blindefoldeth the Truth with counterfeit speeches Mat. 7.12 Prov. 20.14 5. By Factions when as two or three compact together by offering to buy what they intend not to deceive him that intendeth to buy indeed 6. When in buying and selling the people are oppressed as by raising the just price of things by inhancing the price by reason of a set day for payment by Ingrossing or Monopolizing any Commodity by becoming Bankrupt to be enriched by the damages and goods of other men 7. By not restoring that which was lent pledg'd or found Ezek. 18.7 by delaying any kinde of Restitution from one day to another Prov. 3.18 Psal 37.21 or by practising Usury Psal 15.5 Exod. 22.25 or by detaining the laborers wages Jam. 5.4 4. Unjust dealing out of bargaining is likewise manifold viz. 1. To pronounce false Sentence or Judgement for a Reward either proffer'd or promised Isa 1.23 This is the Lawyers and the Judges sin 2. To feed or clothe stout
pleasures sake Matth. 12.36 4. Other under a colour of Love called Officious Lyes when one thinketh by them to do his Neighbor good 5. Dissimulation when one faineth that which is not or disguising when one hideth that which is to the end the contrary may not appear or seem to be Truth in speech is twofold viz. 1. Of the thing spoken when a mans speech is framed to the thing as it is indeed or as near as possible may be 2. Of the minde wherein it is conceived when one swears as he thinketh or is in Conscience perswaded of the thing The breach in speaking untruth is either 1. In lying which is against a mans knowledge judgement or 2. In speaking untruly which is upon error and rashly Men sin in lying 1. Publikely when being called to witness a Truth or matter they speak not the known Truth also when men go to Law for a light cause or no cause at all and so are the cause of Perjury when the Lawyer pleadeth an evil Cause and when the Judge maketh not diligent enquiry into the matter ere he give Sentence 2. Privately By prejudicing the good-name of their Brethren in reviling backbiting slandering c. By flattering when a man hideth the hatred of his heart with feigned words By false Witness we sin against 1. God whose Commandment is broken 2. The Judge who is deceived 3. The Hearers who are brought to have an uncharitable opinion of our Neighbor without cause 4. The Commonwealth which is disquieted 5. Our Neighbor who is hurt by being defamed 6. Our selves by corrupting our own Souls with a pestilent Lye The common distinction of Lyes viz. 1. An Officious Lye which is the telling of an untruth meerly to save a mans life or his Neighbors or their goods their freedom or peace without intending any hurt unto another And this kinde of Lye hath found some favorers but the least evil must not be done that good may come of it 2. A Pernicious Lye which is the telling of an untruth to deceive and to hurt our Neighbor for some base gain or out of malice or the like This is an essential property of the Devil 3. A Jesting or Sporting Lye which is the telling of things not true for the recreation of the hearers This is also a sinful vanity in all such as use it Rules to be observed that we may do our duty aright towards the maintaining of the credit and good name of our Neighbor viz. 1. We must have a good opinion in Charity of our Neighbor and a desire of his credit especially when he is well reported of 2. We must speak of what is good in our Neighbor to his praise and commendation 3. We must conceal and hide the infirmities of our Neighbor sparing to speak of them to his disgrace 4. If any thing be done by our Neighbor that may have a tolerable construction we must so construe it and not in the worst sense 5. To stop our ears against all slanderous Tales and Reports against our Neighbors credit and when he hath done ought amiss to grieve for it and endeavor to repair his credit by seeking to bring him to Repentance In this Commandment is forbidden 1. Unjust and false Accusations or suborning False Witnesses such shall perish Prov. 6.19 21. to accuse or witness against one falsly 1 Kings 21.13 2. To accept slight Witness against a man and proceed thereon to Sentence of Condemnation or to belye the Truth by giving false Judgement for Bribes or Affection 3. Envy Disdain of others desire of a mans own glory 1 Tim. 6.4 1 Pet. 2.1 4. Evil Suspitions 1 Tim. 6.4 1 Sam. 17.28 Acts 28.4 Here are condemned hard Censures and sinister Judgements against our Neighbor Mat. 7.1 2. Acts 2.13 14 15. 1 Sam. 1.13 5. A relation of the bare words onely and not the sense and meaning of our Neighbor Mat. 26.59 61. 6. A Lye whereby every falshood with purpose to deceive is signified whether in words or in deeds or concealing the Truth or any other way whatsoever be it for never so great a good to our Neighbor Lying is said to be the speaking of any thing contrary to Truth against knowledge with an intent or purpose to deceive because if unwillingly an untruth be told it is no Lye and if a Truth be told the person telling thinking it false it is a Lye in him for it is not that which a man speaketh but the maner how he speaketh that makes it a Lye Psal 12.2 Lying is expresly forbidden Levit. 19.12 Psal 5.6 101.7 Ephes 4.21 This Sin makes a man like the Devil himself Joh. 8.44 7. To pronounce unjust Sentence in Judgement to rest in one Witness to accuse another wrongfully to betray a mans Cause by delusion 1 Kings 21.12 13. Deut. 17.6 8. Openly to raise forged tales and reports of our Neighbor or privily to devise the same Rom. 1.20 Levit. 19.16 1 Tim. 5.13 to spread abroad flying tales or to feign and adde any thing unto them Prov. 26.20 21. 2 Cor. 12.20 To receive or believe those tales which we hear of others Exod. 23.1 1 Sam. 24.10 Slandering and backbiting Thou shalt not walk about with tales saith the Lord Lev. 19.16 9. To accuse our Neighbor for that which is certain and true through hatred and with an intent to hurt him 1 Sam. 22.9 10. Psal 52.1 2 3 4. 10. To open or declare our Neighbors secrets to any man especially if he did it of infirmity Mat. 18.15 Prov. 11.13 11. All babling talk and bitter words Eph. 5.3 Joh. 19.34 12. Flattery whereby we praise our Neighbor above that we know in him Prov. 27.6 Acts 12.22 This is a grievous sin in the Ministers of the Word 1 Thess 25. Jer. 6.13 14. Rom. 16.18 Dissembling against Truth with fawning insinuations for by-respects as by extolling him for Liberal who is vainly Prodigal or him for Frugal who is miserably Covetous Such will be cursed Prov. 14.24 13. Foolish and over-confident boasting Prov. 27.1 2. To be possessed with vain-glory and self-love which is the fountain of all Disgrace-doing unto our Neighbor 1 Tim. 6.4 14. To have ears open to false Rumors Thou shalt not receive a false tale faith the Lord Exod. 23.2 15. To be long-tongued more ready to blaze abroad the infirmities of others then to amend our own 16. In the heart to judge ill of our Neighbor without apparent cause or for some infirmities to pass Judgement against any man This is a most common vice though thereby we usurp Gods Office Rom. 14.4 and bring the Judgement of God upon our selves Mat. 7.1 17. False Records Ezra 4.19 18. Deriding and mocking the godly as the children did Elisha 19. To conceive a thought of prejudice wrongfully against his Neighbor 20. To envy the prosperity of our Neighbor 21. To seek onely our own good Report 22. To be suspicious 1 Cor. 13.5 23. To take mens sayings and doings alway in the
is a part of mans body and yet receiveth no nourishment They who are effectually called are onely the Elect for whom God Electeth them he calleth in the time appointed for the same purpose This Calling of the Elect being nothing else but a singling and a severing of them out of this vile world and the customs thereof 2 Thess 2.13 14. to be Citizens of the Kingdom of Glory after this life Eph. 2.19 And this severing or chusing of the Elect out of the world is then performed when God by his holy Spirit endueth them with true saving Faith Col. 2.7 Joh. 15.19 This effectual Calling to Christ and to his Gospel in which the Elect are onely called is a benefit and effect of our Predestination because it is by the Purpose and Grace of God which is given us in Christ 2 Tim. 1.9 Rom. 8.30 it is not Universal to all for Christ is Hidden Manna Rev. 2.17 therefore effectual Vocation is definite and particular and those onely whom God had before predestinate them he called Rom. 30. So many as were ordained to life everlasting believed Acts 13.48 that is were called unto the faith It is not given to all to understand the mysteries of the kingdom Mat. 13.11 These things are hid from most of the wise of the world and revealed unto Babes Mat. 11.25 All therefore are not called effectually The Calling of God is threefold viz. 1. Gods general Calling whereby he calleth all men to Repentance by the Gospel and so to life Eternal Rom. 8.30 11.29 2. His particular Calling when he calleth and assigneth men to some particular estate and duty in Family Church or Common-wealth 3. God calleth some men to some private personal Duty which he designeth not to others but to be done by them alone Such a Calling had he assigned him that would needs be perfect Go sell all that thou hast c. And to Abraham when he called him to leave his Countrey his Kindred his Lands and Possessions c. Heb. 11.8 For the better conceiving of the Nature of Effectual Vocation consider these 6 Points viz. 1. The Ground and Foundation of it namely Gods eternal free Election of us unto life Everlasting 2 Tim. 1.9 2. The means thereof both Preparing Instrumental 1. The Reading of the Scripture serving to beget a general Historical Faith 2. Afflictions in Body Goods Name Friends or otherwise tending to humble a man and prepare his heart as soft ground 3. The denouncing of Gods Judgements and Threats of the Law 4. The Preaching of the glad Tidings of the Gospel which is the most principal and effectual means of this special and effectual Vocation 2 Thess 2.14 3. The Persons that are called those are mentioned Rom. 30. namely those whom he had before predestinated 4. The Time of this Calling The particular time of any mans Calling is not revealed but laid up in the Secret Counsel of God in whose hands Times and Seasons are some at the Sixth hour some at the Ninth and others at the Eleventh c. Defer not therefore but accept the Acceptable time 5. Wherein this effectual Calling doth consist viz. both in the outward and inward Calling especially in the inward when the heart is pierced Psal 40.6 from stone changed into a heart of flesh made tractable and plyable Ezek 11.19 a heart like that of Lydia's Acts 16.15 6. The Excellency of this Calling being a great work as was the Creation of man at first Rom. 4.18 2 Cor. 4.6 yea this effectual Calling goes beyond the work of our Creation for here a man is taken out of the first Adam and set into the second in the Creation God onely called things that were not as though they were but here God calls not onely things that are not but things that would not and refuse to be To raise a man out of the Blood of Christ is more then to raise Eve out of Adams side to raise a dead Soul from the death of Sin far more glorious and powerful then to raise a dead body from bodily death to raise a man to supernatural life far greater then to a Natural onely The means whereby God executeth this effectual Calling viz. 1. The Saving Hearing of the Word of God that is when the Word preached comes savingly to one dead in his sins and does not so much as dream of his Salvation Ezek. 16.6 Isa 55.1 John 1.12 Rom. 7.7 1 Joh. 2.27 Acts 16.14 Psal 40.6 2. The Mollifying of the Heart which must be bruised in pieces that it may be fit to receive Gods Saving Grace offered unto it Ezek. 11.19 The heart is mollified by the Spirit of God and bruised by the knowledge of the Law of Sin and the Punishment due for Sin by a feeling of the Wrath of God for the same sins and by a holy desperation of a mans own power in the obtaining of eternal life Acts 2.37 3. Faith which is a miraculous and supernatural Faculty of the heart apprehending Christ being applied by the operation of the Holy Ghost and receiving him to it self Joh. 1.12 The main duty of a Christian Calling are most chiefly these 1. Invocation of the Name of God in Christ Acts 9.14 1 Cor. 1.2 2. As much as possible we can to further the good estate of the true Church of God Psal 122.6 3. That every one become a Servant to his Brother in all the duties of Love 1 Cor. 9.19 Gal. 5.13 4. To walk worthy that Calling whereto God hath called us Eph. 4.1 The use we are to make of Gods Calling viz. 1. Seeing we are called of God himself in the Ministery of the Word we must labor to joyn the inward Calling with it which is higher then that by having first a grief because we cannot believe next a ready minde then an endeavor to believe and lastly a sorrow because we believe no more and fail so much in the Service of God 2. We must walk worthy of our Calling being holy in our conversation as he that hath called us is holy and there must be the same end of our lives which is of Gods Calling that is to bring us to Heaven The end of our being in the world is to be called out of the world VI. JVstification is that benefit whereby God doth pardon and forgive us all our sins for Christs sake and doth acquit us and absolve us from the guilt of them and doth accept us as Righteous before him in Christ So that Justification is the Absolving of a sinner believing in Christ from sin and the guilt thereof and the Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ unto him and the Acceptation to Life Eternal freely for the Merits of Christ with application of Christ on our part by Faith The Papists say That Faith and Works both are required to Justifie we say That nothing is required but Faith and that Works follow Faith They say Faith and Works we say Faith onely but it must be an effectual Faith
that is a working Faith This Proposition We are justified by Faith being legally understood with the Papists is not true but Blasphemous but being taken Evangelically that is with relation to Christs Merit it is true For the correlative of Faith is the Merit of Christ which Faith also as a joynt relative or correlative respecteth and as an instrument apprehendeth being the true Object of Faith Good Works and Faith are disjoyned in the work of Justification before God but they are conjoyned in the whole course of our lives and coversation both before God and Man No work in man but Faith is required to his Justification but it must be an effectual that is a Living working not a dead Faith and in our lives Faith and Works must go hand in hand together In the Fire is both heat and light yet in the warming of the body the heat hath force onely and not the light which though to many other uses serves necessarily Even so in a childe of God are required both Faith and Works but to justifie him Faith onely is required though Works be necessary through his whole life for they justifie us before men and give us a Testimony of our Justification before God not onely in our own hearts but from the Lord Jam. 2.21 We may not therefore content our selves with a Faith in speculation void of Works for such is not true Faith There is a twofold Justification viz. 1. A Justification of the Person so was Abraham justified by Faith 2. A Justification of the Faith of the Person so Abraham justified his Faith by his Works his Works justifie him that he was no Hypocrite and as touching Sin his Faith justifies him and shews that he was made Righteous Again Justification is twofold viz. 1. Legal which is the working of a conformity with God or with the Law of God in us when as we are Regenerated 2. Evangelical which is an Application of the Evangelical Justice unto us but not a transfusion of the quality into us or It is an Imputation of anothers Justice which is without us and an Absolving of us in Judgement Christs Righteousness is made ours by a double Application viz. 1. The former is Gods who in respect of that fulfilling of the Law performed by Christ accepteth us and applieth the same unto us 2. We then also apply unto our selves the fulfilling of the Law performed by Christ when we are stedfastly perswaded that God doth impute apply and give it unto us and for it imputeth us for Just absolving us of all guilt Christ is in respect of our Justification 1. As the Object or Matter wherein our Justice is 2. As the Impellent cause because he obtaineth 3. As the chief Efficient cause 1. Because he together with his Father doth justifie us 2. Because he giveth us Faith whereby we believe and apprehend it We are justified by Christs Merit onely for these Reasons viz. 1. For his Glory that his Sacrifice might not be extenuated and made of less value 2. For our Comfort that we may be assured that our Justice doth not depend upon our own Works but upon the Sacrifice of Christ onely for otherwise we should lose it many Millions of times By Christs Righteousness we are to understand two things viz. 1. His Sufferings especially in his Death and Passion 2. His Obedience in fulfilling the Law both which go together for Christ in Suffering obeyed and Obeying suffered In Justification consider these five things viz. 1. There must be Faith whereby we may receive the benefits of God offered unto us in his Son so we are justified not for Faith as a Merit but by Faith as an Instrument 2. There is an Absolving of the Sinner from sin 3. Then the Righteousness of Christ is imputed to him 4. This Righteousness being imputed God accepts us to life 5. All this is freely for the Merit of Christ excluding all Humane Merit or Worthiness in man whatsoever freely by Grace not by Works Eph. 5.8 9. The Signs or Effects of Justification viz. 1. The true and sincere loving of God Luke 7.47 2. Inward peace of conscience Rom. 5.1 3. Rejoycing in Troubles and Afflictions Rom. 5.3 4. Sanctimony and holiness of life a practice of piety and godliness Rom. 6.22 Two Reasons why the faithful cannot be justified by good Works 1. Because Justification and therefore Sanctification and Salvation goeth before Good Works for the Holy Ghost joyning us with Christ makes us fit by Regeneration to do them So that by Faith being made one with Christ we are justified and saved by the Imputation of his most perfect Holiness and Righteousness the effects or fruits whereof be the Good Works that we do 2. Because the Faithful after Regeneration cannot fulfil the Law Rom. 7.14 18. which is necessarily required for Salvation by Good Works yea we are justified by Faith without the Works of the Law Rom. 3.28 The Reasons why Good Works are required seeing they justifie not 1. Because they evidence our Right in Christ 2. Because God rewards us according to our works 3. Because they are Necessary though not to Justification VII SAnctisication is an inward change of a man justified whereby the Image of God is restored in him or that whereby a man being justified is cleansed more and more from the corruption of Nature laboring to rise up daily to newness of life living in a continual pra●tice of Holiness To be sanctified comprehendeth both a purging from the corruption of Nature and an enduing us with inward Righteousness This corruption of sin is purged out of us by the Merits and Power of Christs death Rom. 6.4 which being by Faith applied is as a Corasive to abate consume and weaken the power of all sin And we are endued with inward Righteousness through the vertue of Christs Resurrection Rom. 6.5 6. which being applied by Faith is as a Restorative to revive a man that is dead in sin to newness of life This Sanctification is wrought in every part both of Body and Soul 1 Thess 5.23 it is begun in this life in which the Faithful receive onely the First-fruits of the Spirit and it is not finished before the end of this life Rom. 8.23 2 Cor. 5.2 3. And the Graces which do usually shew themselves in the heart of a man sanctified are the hatred of Sin and love of Righteousness Psal 119.113 Justification goes with Sanctification though Justification be before in Nature yet they are wrought at the same time for when God accepts a mans person then is he made just who is also sanctified And know That Sanctification is such a gift of God as that in changing the man it doth not change the substance of the Body or the faculties of the Soul but the corruption disorder and sinfulness of man it rectifieth but abolisheth not affections Sanctification floweth to us not from our Parents though regenerate but onely from Christ who is made of God unto us Sanctification 1
object according to the nature of the offence and party offending 1. Admonition or Exhortation to amendment which also is joyned with reprehension and denunciation of Gods judgements against the party not repenting but persisting in his evil way Gen. 3.11 4.6 7. 2. Suspension whereby the offenders for a time are barred from the Lords Supper This is not a Separation from all holy things but some onely till clearer evidence produce either farther punishment or absolution 2 Thes 3.14 15. 3. Excommunication which is a Separation from all holy things and the Priviledges of the Church and the Communion of Saints because to their sin they adde this obstinate contempt of the Admonitions given unto them Gen. 17.14 Ezra 10.8 Matth. 18.17 There is a twofold Communication or Communion from which an excommunicate person may be said to be excluded viz. 1. Inward and Spiritual which every Faithful one hath by Faith and Love first with God and then with the Saints of God 1 Joh. 1.3 7. From this Fellowship can none be excluded but by sin which is it alone can separate any man from the Grace of God and from Communion with him The Church Excommunication can bar and shut out no man from this Communion 2. Outward and Corporal which standeth in a common partaking together in the Word in Prayers and in the receiving of the Sacraments and in familiarity and friendship one with another from all which Excommunication separateth The Bands or Duties which no Excommunication doth dispence withal viz. 1. Natural if any Excommunicate person be in want or any distress we must minister unto him such things as are necessary for his preservation 2. Domestical as the duties of Wives Children and Servants may not be shaken off under any colour or pretence of Excommunication Provided that they cease not to pray for them to admonish them to hate their sins and see they defend them not in their wicked courses or joyn with them in opinion 3. Civil or Politique it is lawful to buy of him or to sell unto him yet we ought not to converse and commerce with him as with a Friend The Duties which are to be performed to Excommunicate persons viz. 1. We must love the Persons of the Excommunicate in the Lord and thirst after their souls health and for their conversion 2. We must exhort and rebuke them so that albeit we love them we must take heed that we do not flatter them and so harden them in their sins 3. We are bound to pray for those that are bound by the Church Censures we are not to pray with them but it is required of us to pray for them 4. We are to assure them that upon their Repentance we are ready to embrace them and to receive them as Brethren forasmuch as there is joy in Heaven for one sinner that is converted from the error of his ways The fearful estate and condition of Excommunicated persons viz. 1. Their Names whilest they persist in their obstinate Impenitency are cancelled out of the number of the people of God Gen. 1.7 2. The Sentence that is pronounced on Earth is ratified in Heaven Matth. 18.18 c. for Christ is the Author of it 1 Cor. 5.4 3. They are barred from the Word and Sacraments and from Prayers with the Congregation the Word prevailed not to do them good the Sacraments would do them hurt 4. They are infamous for they are to be called and accounted as the Heathens and Publicans Matth. 18.17 5. Such as thus contemn the Admonition and Reprehension of the Church lose the Communion of Saints and become the bondslaves of Satan 1 Cor. 5.3 4 5. 6. Being cast out of the Church they are banished out of all Churches the Churches of God have all cast them out whom one hath cast out And if we be not of the Church of God we are of the Synagogue of Satan 7. The sundry Decrees and Constitutions established by Humane Laws do much aggravate and set forth the hideous condition of such as are worthily cast out of the Church The ends of Excommunication are these viz. 1. The good of the person Excommunicated that if it be possible he may be won 2. The Salvation or preservation of the whole Church 1 Cor. 5.13 lest others be infected 3. That the rest may fear and be kept within the bounds of their duty 1 Tim. 5.20 4. That those Punishments which hang over the Church for sin may be kept off and avoided Josh 7.11 Numb 25.7 5. The Glory of God and if this be before their eyes that are Governors of the Church it will keep them from declining either to the right hand or the left from winking at the sins of great ones and censuring the faults and infirmities of those of low degree too sharply from winking at great beams in some and from having Eagles eyes to pry into the motes of others The use of Excommunication ought to be perpetual and universal in the Church because the causes of this power of the Church are perpetual and universal As 1. The Commandment of Christ Matth. 18.18 1 Cor. 5.5 2. That obstinate Sinners being made ashamed may be brought to Repentance 3. That no others should be infected by their evil life and corrupt example 4. Because it is the ordinary Office of the Church to judge them that are within 1 Cor. 5.12 Obstinate Sinners are to be cast out of the Church which ought not to Tolerate open Offenders for these Reasons viz. 1. Because it is a comely thing for the Saints of God to purge themselves of them that as they differ from Heathen men so they may differ from Heathen Meetings for They are a holy people Deut. 2.14 2. Because for the neglect of this Duty the Wrath of God falleth upon the Sons of men Col. 3.6 3. Because it is a cause of great Mercy and wonderful Blessing from God when such as transgress are resisted and punished Joh. 7.13 8.1 2. 4. Because it would be reproachful to God and his Son Jesus Christ if they who lead wicked and wretched lives should be admitted freely to his Table as if his people were a company or conspiracy of prophane persons whereas the Church is the Body of Christ Col. 1.24 5. By continual company of the wicked the godly are corrupted 1 Cor. 5.6 7. it is better that one Member be cut off then that the whole Body of the Church should perish 6. They are to be cut off to the end that such as are wicked livers may begin to be ashamed of themselves and their wickedness who by winking at their sin would grow the more obstinate but by this chastisement may be reclaimed and preserved 1 Cor. 5.5 We must have no company with scandalons livers that they may be ashamed 2 Thess 3.14 Excommunication described by its several parts viz. 1. It is a Sentence of the Church Mat. 18.17 2. It must be executed upon him that is a Member of the Church 1