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A26892 A Christian directory, or, A summ of practical theologie and cases of conscience directing Christians how to use their knowledge and faith, how to improve all helps and means, and to perform all duties, how to overcome temptations, and to escape or mortifie every sin : in four parts ... / by Richard Baxter. Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1673 (1673) Wing B1219; ESTC R21847 2,513,132 1,258

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6. Cases about losing and finding Q. 1. Must we seek out the loser to restore what we find Q. 2. May I take a reward as my due for restoring what I found Q. 3. May I wish to find any thing in my way or be glad that I find it Q. 4. May I not keep it if no owner be found Q. 5. If others be present when I find it may I not conceal or keep it to my self Q 6. Who must stand to the loss of goods trusted to another p. 130 Tit. 7. Directions to Merchants Factors Travellers Chaplains that live among Heathens Infidels or Papists p. 131 Q. 1. Is it lawful to put ones self or servants specially young unsetled Apprentices into the temptations of an Infidel or Popish Countrey meerly to get Riches as Merchants do p. 131 Q. 2. May a Merchant or Embassadour leave his Wife to live abroad p. 132 Q. 3. Is it lawful for young Gentlemen to travail into other Kingdoms as part of their education The danger of Common Traveling p. 133 Directions for all these Travellers in their abode abroad p. 135 CHAP. XX. Motives and Directions against Oppression The sorts of it The greatness of the sin of Oppression The Cure p. 137 Tit. 2. Cases about Oppression especially of Tenants p. 140 Q. 1. Is it lawful to buy land of a liberal Landlord when the buyer must needs set it dearer than the S●l●er did Q. 2. May one take as much for his Land as it is worth Q. 3. May he raise his Rents Q. 4. How much below the full worth must a Landlord set his Land Q. 5. May not a Landlord that is in debt or hath a payment to pay raise his Rents to pay it Q. 6. If I cannot relieve the honest poor without raising the Rent of Tenants that are worthy of less charity may I do it Q. 7. May I penally raise a Tenants Rent or turn him out because he is a bad man Q. 8. May one take house or Land while another is in possession of it Q. 9. May a rich man put out his Tenants to lay the Lands to his own d●mesnes Q. 10. May one Tenant have divers Tenements Q. 11. May one have divers Trades Q. 12. Or keep shops in several Market Towns CHAP. XXI Cases and Directions about Prodigality and sinful waste What it is p. 143. Wayes of sinful waste Q. 1. Are all men bound to fare alike Or what is excess Q. 2. What cost on visits and entertainments is lawful Whether the greatest good is still to be preferred Q. 3. What is excess in buildings Q. 4. May we not in building dyet c. be at some charge for our Delight as well as for Necessity Q. 5. When are Recreations too costly Q. 6. When is Apparel too costly Q. 7. When is Retinue Furniture and other pomp too costly Q. 8. When is House-keeping too costly Q. 9. When are Childrens Portions too great Q. 10. How far is frugality in small matters a duty Q. 11. Must all labour in a Calling Q. 12. May one desire to increase and grow rich Q. 13. Can one be prodigal in giving to the Church Q. 14. May one give too much to the poor Q. 15. May the Rich lay out on conveniences pomp or pleasure when multitudes are in deep necessities Directions against Prodigality p. 143 c. CHAP. XXII Cases and Directions against injurious Law suits witnessing and judgement p. 148 Tit. 1. Cases of Conscience about Law suits and proceedings Q. 1. When is it Lawful to go to Law Q. 2. May I Sue a poor man for a Debt or Trespass Q. 3. May I Sue a Surety whose interest was not concerned in the debt Q. 4. May I Sue for the Use of Money Q. 5. May Law Suits be used to vex and humble an insolent bad man Q. 6. May a rich man use his friends and purse to bear down a poor man that hath a bad cause Q. 7. May one use such forms in Law Suits Declarations Answers c. as are false according to the proper sense of the words Q. 8. May a guilty person plead Not guilty Q. 9. Is a man bound to accuse himself and offer himself to justice Q. 10. May a witness voluntarily speak that truth which he knoweth will be ill used Q. 11. May a witness conceal part of the truth Q. 12. Must a Iudge or Iury proceed secundum allegata probata when they know the witness to be false or the Cause bad but cannot evince it T it 2. Directions against these sins p. 150. The evil of unjust Suits The evil of false witness The evil of unjust judgements The Cure p. 150 CHAP. XXIII Cases of Conscience and Directions against backbiting Slandering and Evil speaking p. 152 Tit. 1. Q. 1. May we not speak evil of that which is evil Q. 2. May not the contrary be sinful silence and befriending mens sins Q. 3. What if Religious credible persons report it Q. 4. If I may not speak it may I not believe them Q. 5. May we not speak ill of open persecutors or enemies of Godliness Q. 6. What if it be one whose reputation countenanceth his ill Cause and his defamation would disable him Q. 7. If I may not make a true Narrative of matters of fact how may we write true Histories for posterity Q. 8. What if it be one that hath been of● admonished Q. 9. Or one that I cannot speak to face to face Q. 10. In what Cases may we open anothers faults Q. 11. What if I hear men praise the wicked or their sins T it 2. Directions against back-biting slandering and evil speaking p. 154 Tit. 3. The great evil of these sins p. 155 CHAP. XXIV Cases of and Directions against Censoriousness and sinful judging p. 157 Tit. 1. Cases Q. 1. Am I not bound to judge truly of every one as he is Q. 2. How far may we judge ill of one by outward appearance as face gesture c. Q. 3. How far may we censure on the report of others Q. 4. Doth not the fifth Command bind us to judge better of Parents and Princes than their lives declare them to be Q. 5. Whom must we judge sincere and holy Christians Q. 6. Is it not a sin to err and take a man for better than he is Q. 7. Whom must I take for a visible Church member Q. 8. Whom must I judge a true Worshipper of God Q. 9. Which must I take for a true Church Q. 10. Whom must we judge true Prophets and true Pastors of the Church p. 157 Tit. 2. Directions for the Cure of sinful Censoriousness p. 159 Tit. 3. The evil of the sin of Censoriousness p. 160 Tit. 4. Directions for those that are rashly censured by others p. 162 CHAP. XXV Cases and Directions about Trusts and Secrets p. 163 Tit. 3. The Cases Q. 1. How must we not put our Trust in man Q. 2. Whom to choose for a Trust Q. 3. When may I commit a
was not And so I answer 1. He that seemed Ordained and indeed was not is not Re-ordained when he is after Ordained 2. It is needful therefore to know the Essentials of Ordination from the Integrals and Accidentals 3. He that was truly Ordained before may in some cases receive again the Repetition of the bare words and outward Ceremonies of Ordination as Imposition of hands Where I will 1. Tell you in what Cases 2. Why. 1. In case there wanted sufficient witnesses of his Ordination and so the Church hath not sufficient means of notice or satisfaction that ever he was ordained indeed Or if the witnesses die before the notification Whether the Church should take his word or not in such a case is none of my question but Whether he should submit to the Repetition if they will not 2. Especially in a time and place which I have known when written and sealed Orders are often counterfeited and so the Church called to extraordinary care 3. Or if the Church or Magistrate be guilty of some causeless culpable incredulity and will not believe it was done till they see it done again 4. Or in case that some real or supposed Integral though not essential part was omitted or is by the Church or Magistrate supposed to be omitted And they will not permit or receive the Minister to exercise his office unless he repeat the whole Action again and make up that defect 5. Or if the person himself do think that his ordination was insufficient and cannot exercise his Ministry to the satisfaction of his own Conscience till the defect be repaired 1. In these cases and perhaps such others the outward Action may be repeated 2. The Reasons are 1. Because this is not a being twice ordained For the word Ordination signifieth a Moral action and not a Physical only As the word Marriage doth c. And it essentially includeth the new Dedication and Designation to the Sacred office by a kind of Covenant between the Dedicated person and Christ to whom he is consecrated and devoted And the external words are but a part and a part only as significant of the action of the mind Now the oft expressing of the same mental dedication doth not make it to be as many distinct dedications For 1. If the Liturgy or the persons words were tautological or at the Ordination should say the same thing often over and over or for confirmation should say often that which else might be said but once this doth not make it an often or multiplyed Ordination It was but one Love which Peter expressed when Christ made him say thrice that he Loved him nor was it a threefold Ordination which Christ used when he said thrice to him Feed my Lambs and Sheep 2. And if thrice saying it that hour make it not three Ordinations neither will thrice saying it at more hours dayes or months or years distance in some Cases For the Time maketh not the Ordinations to be many It is but one Moral Action But the common errour ariseth from the custom of calling the outward action alone by the name of the whole moral Action which is ordinarily done to the like deceit in the case of the Baptismal Covenant and the Lords Supper 3. The common judgement and custome of the World confirmeth what I say If persons that are marryed should for want of witness or due solemnity be forced to say and do the outward action all over again it is by no wise man taken in the proper moral full sense for a second Marriage but for one marriage twice uttered And if you should in witness bearing be put to your Oath and the Magistrate that was absent should say Reach him the Book again I did not hear him swear The doing it twice is not Morally two witnessings no● Oaths but one only twice Physically uttered If you Bind your Son Apprentice or if you make any Indentures or Contract and the Writings being lost or faulty you write and sign and seal them all again this is not morally another Contract but the same done better or again recorded And so it is plainly in this case 4. But Re-ordination morally and properly so called is unlawful For 1. It is or implyeth a ly● viz. that we were not truly Dedicated and Separated to this office before 2. It is a Sacrilegious renunciation of our former dedication to God whereas the Ministerial dedication and Covenant is for Life and not for a tryal which is the meaning of the Indelible Character which is a perpetual Relation and obligation 3. It is a taking the Name of God in vain thus to do and undoe and do again and to promise and renounce and promise again and to pretend to receive a power which we had before 4. It tendeth to great confusions in the Church As to make the people doubt of their Baptism or all the Ministerial Administrations of such as are re-ordained while they acted by the first Ordination 5. It hath ever been condemned in the Churches of Christ as the Canons called the Apostles and the Churches constant practice testifie 5. Though the bare Repetition of the outward Action and words be not Re-ordination yet he that on any of the forementioned occasions is put to repeat the said words and actions is obliged so to do it as that it may not seem to be a Re-ordination and so be a scandal to the Church Or if it outwardly seem so by the action he is bound to declare that it is no such thing for the counterpoising that appearance of evil 6. When the Ordainers or the common estimation of the Church do take the Repetition of the words and Action for a Re-ordination though the Receiver so intend it not yet it may become unlawful to him by this accident because he scandalizeth and hardeneth the erroneous by doing or receiving that which is Interpretative Re-ordination 7. Especially when the Ordainers shall require this Repetition on notoriously wicked grounds and so put that sense on the action by their own doctrines and demands As for instance 1. If Hereticks should as the Arrians say that we are no Ministers because we are not of their Heresie or Ordained by such as they 2. If the Pope or any proud Papal Usurpers shall say You are no Ministers of Christ except we ordain you And so do it to establish a trayterous usurped Regiment in the Church It is not lawful to serve such an usurpation As if Cardinals or Arch-bishops should say none are true Ministers but those that we Ordain Or Councils or Synods of Bishops or Presbyters should say None are true Ministers but those that we Ordain Or if one Presbyter or one Bishop without Authority would thus make himself master of the rest or of other Churches and say You are no Ministers unless I Ordain you we may not promote such Tyranny and Usurpation 3. If Magistrates would usurp the power of the Keys in Ecclesiastical Ordination and say that
more of the reproach that falleth upon themselves Their case is to be pitied but the case of their inferiours more For it is their own wilful choice which hath imprisoned their understandings with-such informers and it is their unexcusable negligence which keepeth them from seeking truer information A good Landlord will be familiar with the meanest of his Tenants and will encourage them freely to open their complaints and will labour to inform himself who is in poverty and distress and how it cometh to pass that when he hath heard all he may understand whether it be his own oppression or his Tenants fault that is the cause when proud self-seeking men disdain such inferiour converse and if they have servants that do but tell them their Tenants have a good bargain and are murmuring unthrifty idle persons they believe them without any more enquiry and in negligent ignorance oppress the poor § 18. Direct 5. Mortifie your own lusts and sinful curiosity which maketh you think that you need Direct 5. so much as tempteth you to get it by oppressing others Know well how little is truly necessary And how little nature well-taught is contented with And what a priviledge it is to need but little Pride and curiosity are an insatiable gulf Their daily trouble seemeth to them a necessary accommodation Such abundance must be laid out on superfluous recreations buildings ornaments furniture equipage attendants entertainments visitations braveries and a world of need-nots called by the names of handsomness cleanliness neatness conveniences delights usefulness honours civilities comeliness c. So much doth carnal concupiscence pride and curiosity thus devour that hundreds of the poor must be oppressed to maintain it And many a man that hath many score or hundred Tenants who with all their families daily toil to get him provision for his fleshly lusts doth find at the years end that all will hardly serve the turn but this greedy devourer could find room for more when one of his poor Tenants could live and maintain all his family comfortably if he had but as much as his Landlord bestoweth upon one suit of Clothes or one proud entertainment or one Horse or on a pack of Hounds I am not perswading the highest to level their garb and expences equal with the lowest But mortifie pride curiosity and gluttony and you will find less need to oppress the poor or to feed your concupiscence with the sweat and groans of the afflicted § 19. Direct 6. Be not the sole Iudge of your own actions in a controverted case but if any complain Direct 6. of you hear the judgement of others that are wise and impartial in the case For it is easie to mis-judge where self-interest is concerned § 20. Direct 7. Love your poor brethren as your selves and delight in their welfare as if it Direct 7. were your own And then you will never oppress them willingly and if you do it ignorantly you will quickly feel it and give over upon their just complaint As you will quickly feel when you hurt your selves and need no great exhortation to forbear Tit. 2. Cases of Conscience about Oppression especially of Tenants Quest. 1. IS it lawful for a mean man who must needs make the best of it to purchase tenanted Quest. 1. Land of a liberal Landlord who setteth his Tenants a much better pennyworth than the buyer can afford Answ. Distinguish 1. Between a seller who understandeth all this and one that doth not 2. Between a Tenant that hath by custome a half-title to his easier Rent and one that hath not 3. Between a Tenant that consenteth and one that consenteth not 4. Between buying it when a liberal man might else have bought it and buying it when a worse else would have bought it 5. Between a case of scandal and of no scandal And so I answer 1. If the Landlord that selleth it expect that the buyer do use the Tenants as well as he hath done and sell it accordingly it is unrighteous to do otherwise ordinarily 2. In many Countreys it is the custome not to turn out a Tenant nor to raise his rent so that many generations have held the same Land at the same rent which though it give no legal title is yet a half-title in common estimation In such a case it will be scandalous and infamous and injurious and therefore unlawful to purchase it with a purpose to raise the rent and do accordingly 3. In case that a better Landlord would buy it who would use the Tenant better than you can do it is not ordinarily lawful for you to buy it I either express or imply ordinarily in most of my solutions because that there are some exceptions lye against almost all such answers in extraordinary cases which the greatest Volume can scarce enumerate But if 1. It be the sellers own doing to withdraw his liberality so far from his Tenants as to sell his Land on hard rates on supposition that the buyer will improve it 2. And if it be a Tenant that cannot either by custome or any other plea put in a claim in point of equity to his easie-rented Land 3. And if as bad a Landlord would buy it if you do not 4. If it be not a real scandal I say if all these four concurr 5. Or alone if the Tenant consent freely to your purchase on those terms then it is no injury But the common course is for a covetous man that hath money never to consider what a loser the Tenant is by his purchase but to buy and improve the Land at his own pleasure which is no better than Oppression Quest. 2. May not a Landlord take as much for his Land as it is worth Quest. 2. Answ. 1. Sometimes it is Land that no man can claim an equitable title to hold upon any easier rent and sometimes it is otherwise as aforesaid by custome and long possession or other reasons 2. Sometimes the Tenant is one that you are obliged to shew Mercy to and sometimes he is one that no more than commutative Justice is due to And so I answer 1. If it be an old Tenant who by custome or any other ground can claim an equitable title to his old pennyworth you may not enhaunse the Rent to the full worth 2. If it be one that you are obliged to shew Mercy as well as Justice to you may not take the full worth 3. The common case in England is that the Landlords are of the Nobility or Gentry and the Tenants are poor men who have nothing but what they get by their hard labour out of the Land which they hold And in this case some abatement of the full worth is but such a necessary Mercy as may be called Justice Note still that by the full worth I mean so much as you could set it for to a stranger who expecteth nothing but strict Justice as men buy and sell things in a Market But 1. If you
as you have no need § 5. As for Play books and Romances and idle Tales I have already shewed in my Book of Self-d●nyal how pernicious they are especially to youth and to frothy empty idle wits that know not what a man is nor what he hath to do in the world They are powerful baits of the Devil to keep more necessary things out of their minds and better Books out of their hands and to poyson the mind so much the more dangerously as they are read with more delight and pleasure and to fill the minds of sensual people with such idle fumes and intoxicating fancies as may divert them from the serious thoughts of their salvation And which is no small loss to rob them of abundance of that precious time which was given them for more important business and which they will wish and wish again at last that they had spent more wisely I know the fantasticks will say that these things are innocent and may teach men much good like him that must go to a Whore-house to learn to hate uncleanness and him that would go out with Robbers to learn to hate Theevery But I shall now only ask them as in the presence of God 1. Whether they could spend that time no better 2. Whether better Books and practices would not edifie them more 3. Whether the greatest Lovers of Romances and Playes be the greatest Lovers of the Book of God and of a holy life 4. Whether they feel in themselves that the Love of these vanities doth increase their love to the Word of God and kill their sin and prepare them for the life to come or clean contrary And I would desire men not to prate against their own experience and reason nor to dispute themselves into damnable impenitency nor to befool their souls by a few silly words which any but a sensualist may perceive to be meer deceit and falshood If this will not serve they shall be shortly convinced and answered in another manner Direct 17. TAke heed that you receive not a Doctrine of Libertinism as from the Gospel nor conceive Direct 17. of Christ as an encourager of sin nor pretend free grace for your carnal security or sloth For this is but to set up another Gospel and another Christ or rather the Doctrine and works of the Devil against Christ and the Gospel and to turn the Grace of God into wantonness § 1. Because the Devil knoweth that you will not receive his doctrine in his own Name his usual Siquis est hoc robore ani●●t atque hoc indole virtu●s a● continenti● ut resp●at omnes vo 〈…〉 omnem●●● vitae ●uae ●●rs●m ●a●●●● co 〈…〉 aequalium fludia non ●udi non convivia delectant nihil in vita expe●endum putet nisi quod est cum laude honore conjun●tum hunc mea sententia divinis quibusdam bonis instructum atque ornatum puto Ci● p●o Cal. method is to propound and preach it in the name of Christ which he knoweth you reverence and regard For if Satan concealed not his own Name and Hand in every temptation it would spoil his game And the more excellent and splendid is his pretence the more powerful the temptation is They that gave heed to seducing Spirits and Doctrines of Devils no doubt thought better of the Spirits and the Doctrines especially seeming strict for the Devil hath his strictnesses as forbidding to marry and abstinence from meats which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving 1 Tim. 4. 1 3. But the strictnesses of the Devil are alwayes intended to make men loose They shall be strict as the Pharisees in Traditions and vain Ceremonies and building the Tombs of the Prophets and garnishing the Sepulchres of the Righteous that they may hate and murder the living Saints that worship God in Spirit and in truth Licentiousness is the proper Doctrine of the Devil which all his strictness tendeth to promote To receive such principles is pernicious but to father them upon Christ and the Gospel is blasphemous § 2. The Libertines Antinomians and Autonomians of this age have gathered you too many instances The Libertine saith The Heart is the man therefore you may deny the truth with your tongue you may be present at false Worship as at the Mass you need not suffer to avoid the speaking of a word or subscribing to an untruth or error or doing some little thing but as long as you keep your hearts to God and mean well or have an honest mental reservation and are forced to it by ther● rather than suffer you may say or subscribe or swear any thing which you can your selves put a lawful sense upon in your own minds or comply with any outward actions or customs to avoid ●ffence and save your selves The Antinomians tell you that The Moral Law is abrogated and that the Gospel is no Law and if there be no Law there is no Governour nor Government no duty no sin no judgement n● punishment no before they are born or repent or believe that their sin is pardoned 〈…〉 that God t●●k them as suffering and fulfilling all the Law in Christ as if it had been they that di● i● in ●i● that we are justified by faith only in our consciences that justifying faith i● but t 〈…〉 we are justified that every man must believe that he is pardoned that he may 〈…〉 ed in ●is c●●science and this he is to do by a Divine faith and that this is the sense of the A●ti●le I beli●●●● the forgiveness of sins that is that my s●ns are forgiven and that all are forgi 〈…〉 it that it is legal and sinful to work or do any thing for salvation that sin once pa 〈…〉 ssed and lamented or at least we need not ask pardon of sin daily or of one 〈…〉 t that 〈◊〉 are no punishments and yet no other punishment is threatned to believers for their sins and consequently that Christ hath not procured them a pardon of any sin after believing but prevented all necessity of pardon and therefore they must not ask the pardon of them nor do any thing to obtain it that fear of Hell must have no hand in our obedience or restraint from sin And some add that he that cannot repent or believe must comfort himself that Christ repented and believed for him 〈…〉 a contradiction Many such Doctrines of Licentiousness the abusers of Grace have brought forth And the Sect which imitateth the Father of Pride in affecting to be from under the Government of God and to be the Law-givers and Rulers of themselves and all others which I therefore call the Antonomians are Licentious and much more They equally contend against Christs Government and for their own They fill the world with Wars and bloodshed oppression and cruelty and the ears of God with the cryes of the Martyrs and oppressed ones and all that the spiritual and holy Discipline of Christ may be suppressed and
you have to do and to answer for and therefore most to mind and talk of § 11. Tempt 6. The Tempter also suiteth his Temptations to our advantages and hopes of rising Tempt 6. or thriving in the world He seeth which is our rising or thriving way and there he layeth his snares accommodate to our designs and ends making some sinful omission or commission seem necessary thereto Either Balaam must prophesie against the people of God or else God must keep him from honour by keeping him from sin Numb 24. 11. If once Judas be set on What will you give me The Devil will teach him the way to gain His way is necessary to such sinful ends § 12. Direct 6. Take heed therefore of overvaluing the world and being taken with its honour Direct 6. pleasure or prosperity Take heed lest the Love of earthly things engage you in eager desires and designs to grow great or rich For if once your heart have such a design you are gone from God The heart is gone and then all will follow as occasion calls for it Understand these Scriptures Prov. 23. 4. Labour not to be rich Prov. 28. 20 22. He that maketh haste to be rich shall not be innocent He that hasteth to be rich hath an evil eye 1 Tim. 6. 9. But they that will be rich fall into Temptations and a snare and into many foolish and hurtful lusts which drown men in destruction and perdition For the love of money is the root of all evil But godliness with contentment is great gain Seek not great matters for your selves Jer. 45. 5. Be dead to the world Fear more the Rising than the falling way Love that condition best which fitteth thee for communion with God or maketh thee the most profitable servant to him and hate that most which is thy greatest hinderance from these and would most enslave thee to the world § 13. Tempt 7. The Tempter suiteth his Temptations to our company If they have any error or Tempt 7. sin ●r are engaged in any carnal enterprise he will make them snares to us and restless till they have ensnared us If they love us not he will make them continual provocations and set before us all their wrongs and provoke us to uncharitableness and revenge If they love us he will endeavour to make their Love to us to be the Shooing-horn or Harbinger of their errors and evil wayes to draw us to their imitation He findeth something in all our company to make the matter of some Temptation § 14. Direct 7. Converse most with God Let faith make Christ and Angels your most regarded Direct 7. and observed company that their mind and presence may more affect you than the mind and presence of mortal men Look not at any mans Mind or Will or Actions without respect to God who governeth and to the Rule by which they should all be suited and to the Iudgement which will open and reward them as they are Never see man without seeing God see man only as a creature dependant on his Makers will And then you will lament and not imitate him when he sinneth and you will oppose and Christ saith Hate Luke 14. 26. and not be seduced by him when he would draw you with him to sin and Hell Had Adam more observed God than Eve he had not been seduced by his helper Then you will look on the proud and worldly and sensual as Solomon on the slothful mans Vineyard Prov. 24. 30 31 32. I saw and considered it well I looked on it and received instruction You would not long for the Plague or Leprosie because it is your friends disease § 15. Tempt 8. The Tempter maketh advantage of other mens Opinions or Speeches of you or dealings Tempt 8. by you and by every one of them would ensnare you in some sin If they have mean thoughts of you or speak despising or dishonouring words of you he tempteth you by it to hate them or love them less or to speak contemptuously of them If they applaud you he tempteth you by it to be proud If they wrong you he tempteth you to revenge If they enrich you or are your benefactors he would make their benefits a price to hire you to some sin and make you pay as ●e●●r for them as your salvation cometh to If they scorn you for Religion he would make you ashamed of Christ and his Cause If they admire you he would draw you by it to hypocrisie If they threaten you he would draw you to sin by fear as he did Peter If they deal rudely with you he tempteth you to passion and to requite them with the like And even to distaste Religion it self if men professing Religion be against you or seem to do you any wrong Thus is every man a danger to his brother § 16. Direct 8. Discern in all men what there is of God to be your help and that make use of Direct 8. and what there is of Satan sin and self and that take heed of Look upon every man as a Helper and a Tempter and be prepared still to draw forth his Help and resist his Temptation And remember that man is but the Instrument It is Satan that Tempteth you and God that tryeth you by that man Saith David of Shimei The Lord hath bidden him that is He is but Gods Rod to scourge me for my sin as my Son himself is As Satan was his instrument in trying Iob not by Gods effecting but permitting the sin Observe God and Satan in it more than men § 17. Tempt 9. His Temptations also are suited to our fore-received opinions and thoughts If you Tempt 9. have but let in one lustful thought or one malicious thought he can make great advantage of that Nest-Egg to gather in more as a little leaven to leaven the whole lump He can rowl it up and down and do much to hatch it into a multitude If you are but tainted with any false opinion or prejudice against your Teacher your Ruler or your Brother he can improve it to such increase and raise such conclusions from it and more from them and reduce them all to practice as shall make observers with astonishment say Behold how great a matter a little fire kindleth § 18. Direct 9. Take heed what Thoughts you first admit into your mind And especially cherish Direct 9. and approve none but upon very good tryal and examination And if they prove corrupt sweep clean your fantasie and memory of them that they prove not inhabitants and take not up their lodgings in you or have not time to spawn and breed And fill up the room with contrary thoughts and useful Truth and cherish them daily that they may encrease and multiply And then your Hearts will be like a well-peopled Kingdom able to keep their possession against all enemies § 19. Tempt 10. Also he fitteth his Temptations to your natural and acquired parts
many § 64. Direct 20. Remember that God needeth no sinful means to attain his ends He will not be Direct 20. beholden to the Devil to do his work He would not have forbad it if he would have had you done it He is never at such a loss but he can find right means enough to perform his work by It is a great p●●t of our wisdom which our salvation lieth on to choose and use right means when we are resolved on a right end It 's a horrible injury against God to intitle him to sin and make it seem necessary to his ends and honour Good ends will not justifie evil actions What sin so odiou● that hath not had good ends pretended for it Even Christ was murthered as a malefactor 〈…〉 ds at least pretended even to vindicate Gods honour from blasphemy and Caesar from 〈…〉 ●●●●●● and the nation from calamity And his disciples were killed that God might be served by it ●●d ●●●●●ent troublers of the world taken away § 65. Tempt 21. He would make us presume because we are Gods children and speciall grace 〈…〉 ●a●●●●t be wholy l●●t and we have found that once we had grace therefore we may venture as being safe § 66. Direct 21. But many a thousand shall be damned that once thought they had the truth Direct 21. of Grace It is a hard controversie among learned and godly men whether some in a state of saving grace do not fall from it and perish But it is past controversie that they shall perish that live and d●● imp●nitently in willful sin To plead truth of grace for encouragement in sin is so much against the nature and use of grace as may make you question the truth of it You can be no su●●r that you have true grace than you are sure that you hate all known sin and desire to be free from it Christ teacheth you how to answer such a horrid temptation Mat. 4. 6 7. I● th●●●e the Son of God cast thy self down For it is written ●e shall give his Angels charge over th●● Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God Son-ship and promises and truth of grace are incongruous arguments to draw you to sin and heynous aggravations of sin so committed § 67. Tempt 22. The Devil ●ft most dangerously imitateth the Holy Ghost and comes in the shape of Tempt 22. ●n Angel of light He will be for knowledge in the Gnosticks for Unity and Government in the Papists for Mortifcation in the Fryars for free-grace and tenderness of our Brethrens Consciences in the Liberti●●s for Peace and Mutual forbearance in the Socinians for Zeal Self-den●al and fearfulness of men and pretended revelations and spirituality in the Quakers He will be against heresie schism error disobedience hypocrisie pretendedly in haters and persecutors of holiness and reformation And when he will seem religious he will be superstitious and seem to out-go Christ himself § 68. Direct 22. Kerp close to Christ that you may know his voice from the voice of strangers Direct 22. And get ●o●y wisdom to try the spirits and to discern between things that di●●●●r Let the whole frame of Truth and Godliness be in your Head and Heart that you may perceive when any would make a breach in any part of it The Devil setteth up no good but in order to some evil Therefore examine whither it tendeth and not only what it is but what use he would have you make of it And love no evil because of any Go●d that is pretended for it and dislike or reject no good because of any evil use that is by others made of it And whatever doctrine is brought you try it thus 1. Receive none that is against the certain Nature Attributes and honour of God 2. Nor any that is against the Light or Law of nature 3. Nor any that is against the Scripture 4. Nor any that is against Holiness of heart and life 5. Nor any against Charity and Justice to men 6. Nor any about matters to be ordered by men that is against order nor any against Government and the peace of Church and State 7. Nor any that is against the true Unity Peace and Communion of Saints 8. N●r any that is certainly inconsistent with great and certain truths Thus try the spirits whether they be of God § 69. Tempt 23. The Tempter usually dra●eth men to one extream under p●etense of avoiding another Tempt ●3 causing men to be so fearful of the danger on one side as to take no heed of that on the other s●de § 70. Direct 23 Understand all your danger and mark the latitude or extent of Gods commands Direct 23. and watch on every side And you must know in what duties you are in danger of extreames and in what not In th●se acts of the soul that are purely rational about your ultimate end you cannot do too much as in knowing God and Loving him and being willing and resolved to please him But passions may possibly go too farr even about God especially fear and grief for they may be such as nature cannot bear without distraction death or hinderance of duty But few are guilty of this But towards the creature passions may easily exceed And in external actions towards God or man there may be excess But especially in point of Iudgement its easie to slide from extream into extream 2. And you must know in every duty you do and every sin which you avoid and every truth you receive what is the contrary or extream to that particular truth or sin or duty and keep it in your eye If you do not thus watch you will r●●l like a drunken man from side to side and never walk uprightly with God You will turn from Prodigality to Covetousness from cruel persecution to Libertinism or from Libertinism to persecuting cruelty from hypocritical formality to hypocritical pretended spirituality or from enthusiasms and faction to dead formality But of this I have spoke at large Chap. 5. Part. 2. Dir. to Students § 71. Tempt 24. On the contrary the Tempter usually pleadeth Moderation and Prudence against Tempt 24. a holy life and accurate zealous obedience to God and would make you believe that to be so diligent in duty and s●rupulously afraid of sin is to run into an extream and to be righteous over much and to make Religion a vexatious or distracting thing and that its more a do than needs § 72. Direct 24. This I have answered so oft that I shall here say but this that God cannot be Direct 24. too much loved nor Heaven too much valued nor too diligently sought or obeyed nor sin and Hell be too much avoided nor doth any man need to fear doing too much where he is sure when he hath done his best to do too little Hearken what men say of this at death § 73. Tempt 25. The Tempter would perswade us that one sin is necessary to avoid
you have the wisdom which is from above if you be first pure then peaceable gentle easie to be entreated full of mercy and good fruits without partiality and hypocrisie James 3. 17. But if you have hitter envying and strife in your hearts glory not and lye not against the truth as if this were the wisdom from above which glorifieth God For this wisdom descendeth not from above but is earthly sensual and devilish v. 14 15. A m●●k and quiet Spirit is of great price in the sight of God 1 Pet. 3 4. An Ornament commended to women by the Scripture which is amiable in the eyes of all § 39. Direct 8. It honoureth God and your profession when you abound in love and in good works Direct 8. Loving the godly with a special love but all men with so much love as makes you earnestly desirous of their w●l●a●e and to love your enemies and put up wrongs and to study to do good to all and hurt to none To be abundant in love is to be like to God who is LOVE it self 1 Iohn 4. 7 11. and sh●w●th that God dwelleth in us v. 12. All men may know that we are Christs Disciples if we love one another Iohn 13. 35. This is the new and the great commandment The fulfilling of the Law Rom. 13. 10. John 15. 12 17 13. 34. You will be known to be the children of your heavenly Father if you love your enemies and bless them that curse y●u and pray for them that hate and persecute you and d●spightfully use you Matth. 5. 44. Do all the good that possibly you can if you would be like him that doth good to the evil and whose mercies are over all his works Shew the world that you are his workmanship created to good works in Christ Iesus which he hath ordained for you to walk in Eph. 2. 10. Herein is your Father glorified that ye bring forth much fruit John 15. 8. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in Heaven Matth. 5. 16. Honour God with thy substance and with the first fruits of all thy increase Prov. 3. 9. And th●se that honour him he will honour 1 Sam. 2. 30. When barren worldly hypocrites that honour God only with their lips and flattering words shall be used as those that really dishonour him § 40. Direct 9. The Unity Concord and Peace of Christians doth glorifie God and their profession Direct 9. when their divisions contentions and malicious persecuti●ns of one another doth heinously dishonour him Men reverence that faith and practice which they see us unanimously accord in And the same men will despise both it and us when they see us together by the ears about it and hear us in a Babel of confusion one saying This is the way and another That is it one saying Lo here is the true Church and Worship and another saying Lo it is there Not that one man or a few must make a Shoo meet for his own foot and then say All that will not dishonour God by discord must wear this Sh●● Think as I think and say as I say or else you are Schismaticks But we must all agree in believing and obeying God and walking by the same rule so far as we have attained Phil. 3. 15 16. The strong must bear the infirmities of the weak and not please themselves but every one of us please his neighbour for good to edification and be like minded one towards another according to Christ Iesus that we may with one mind and one mouth glorifie God Receiving one another as Christ also received us to the glory of God Rom. 15. 1 2 5 6 7. § 41. Direct 10. Iustice commutative and distributive private and publick in bargainings and in Direct 10. Government and Iudgement doth honour God and our profession in the eyes of all when we do no wrong but do to all men as we would they should do to us Matth. 7. 12. That no man go beyond or defraud his brother in any matter for the Lord is the avenger of all such 1 Thess. 4 6. That a mans word be his Master and that we lye not one to another nor equivocate or deal subtilly and deceitfully but in plainness and singleness of heart and in simplicity and godly sincerity have our conversation in the world Perjured persons and Covenant-breakers that dissolve the bonds of humane society and take the name of God in vain shall find by his vengeance that he holdeth them not guiltless § 42. Direct 11. It much glorifieth God to worship him rationally and purely in Spirit and in truth Direct 11. according to the glory of his wisdom and goodness and it dishonoureth him to be worshipped ignorantly and carnally with spells and mimical irrational actions as if he were less wise than serious grave underderstanding men The worshippers of God have great cause to take heed how they behave themselves Lest they meet with the reward of Nadab and Abihu and God tell them by his judgements that he will be sanctified in all them that come nigh him and before all the people he will be glorified Lev. 10. 1 2 3. The second Commandment is enforced by the Iealousie of God about his Worship Ignorant rude unseemly words or unhansome gestures which tend to raise contempt in the auditors or levity of speech which makes men laugh is abominable in a Preacher of the Gospel And so is it to pray irrationally incoherently confusedly with vain repetitions and tautologies as if men thought to be heard for their babling over so many words while there is not so much as an appearance of a well composed serious rational and reverent address of a fervent soul to God To worship God as the Papists do with Images Agnus Dei's Crucifixes Crossings Spittle Oyl Candles Holy Water kissing the Pax dropping Beads praying to the Virgin Mary and to other Saints repeating over the Name of Iesus nine times in a breath and saying such and such sentences so oft praying to God in an unknown Tongue and saying to him they know not what adoring the consecrated Bread as no Bread but the very flesh of Christ himself choosing the tutelar Saint whose name they will invocate fasting by feasting upon Fish instead of Flesh saying so many Masses a day and offering Sacrifice for the quick and the dead praying for souls in Purgatory purchasing Indulgences for their deliverance out of Purgatory from the Pope carrying the pretended bones or other Relicts of their Saints the Popes canonizing now and then one for a Saint pretending Miracles to delude the people going on Pilgrimages to Images Shrines or Relicks offering before the Images with a multitude more of such parc●lls of Devotion do most heinously dishonour God and as the Apostle truly saith do make unbelievers say They are mad 1 Cor. 14. 23. and that they are children in understanding and not men v.
n●● renewed by the Holy Gh●●t and will not be pleased with you unless you will sin against your Lord and do as they d● 1 Pet. 4. 3 4 5. Walking in lascivi●usness lu●ts exc●ss of wine revellings banquettings and abominable id●l●tries wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them to the same ex●ess of riot speaking evil of you who shall give acc●unt to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead You must be counted as Lot among the Sod●mites a busie fellow that comes among them to make himself their Judge and to controll them if you tell them of their sin You shall be called a pre●ise hypocritic●l Coxcomb or somewhat much worse if you will not be as bad as they ●nd i● by your abstinence though you say nothing you seem to reprehend their sensuality and contempt of God Among Bedlams you must play the Bedlam if you will escape the fangs of their revilings And can you h●pe to pleas● such men as these § 41. 6. You shall have Satanical God-haters and men of seared and desperate consciences to please that are malicious and ●ruel and will be pleased with nothing but some horrid iniquity and the damning of your own souls and d●●wing ●thers to damnation Like that Monster of Millan that when he had got down his enemy made him Blaspheme God in hope to save his life and then stabd him calling it a noble revenge that killed the body and damned the soul at once There are such in the world Inter haec quid agant quibus loquendi a Christo officium mandatur Deo displicent si tace●nt hominibus si loquan●ur Sa●●●●as ad E●●le Cath. ● 4. that will so visibly act the Devils part that they would deb●uch your Consciences with the most horrid perjuries perfidiousness and impiety that they may triumph over your miserable souls And if you think it worth the wilful damning of your souls its possible they may be pleased If you tell them we cannot please you unless we will be dishon●st and displease God and sin against our knowledge and consciences and hazard our salvation they will make but a jeast of such arguments as th●se and expect you should venture your souls and all upon their opinions and care as little for God and your souls as they do Desperate sinners are loth to go to Hell alone It is a torment to them to s●e others better than themselves They that are cru●l and unmerciful to themselves and have no pity on their own souls but will sell them for a Whore or for preferment and honour or sensual delights will scarce have mercy on the souls of others Matth. 27. 25. His blood be on us and on our children § 42. 7. You will have rigorous captious uncharitable and unrighteous men to please who will make a man an offender for a word and lay a snare for him that reproveth in the gate and turn aside the just for a thing of nought and watch for iniquity Isa. 29 20 21. That have none of that charity Even for the greatness of your services you may perish by the s●●p●ion and e●●y of those great ones whom you served As i● proved by the case of Saul and David 〈◊〉 Na●●●●s Bo●ifacius the two Sons of H●●iades imprisoned and one ●●ain and 〈◊〉 ●●●●● like which covereth faults and interpreteth words and actions favourably nor none of that justice which causeth men to do as they would be done by and judge as they would be judged but judging without mercy are like to have judgement without mercy And are glad when they can find any matter to reproach you And if once they meet with it true or false they will never forget it but dwell as the Flie on the ulcerated place § 43. S. You will have passionate persons to please whose judgements are blinded and are not capable of being pleased Like the sick and ●ore that are hurt with every touch and at last saith Senec● with the very conceit that you touched them How can you please them when Displeasedness is their disease that abideth within them at the very heart § 44. 9. You will find that Cens●riousness is a comm●n Vice and though few are competent judges of your actions as not being a●quainted with all the case yet every one almost will be venturing to ●●st in his censure A proud presumptuous understanding is a very common vice which thinks it self presently capable of judging as soon as it heareth but a piece of the case and is not conscious of its own fallibility though it have daily experience of it Few are at your elbow and none in your heart and therefore know not the circumstances and reasons of all that you do nor hear what you have to say for your selves and yet they will presume to censure you who would have absolved you if they had but heard you speak It is rare to meet even with professors of greatest sincerity that are very tender and fearful of sinning in this point of rash ungrounded judging without capacity or call § 45. 10. You live among unpeaceable twatlers and tale-carryers that would please others by accusing you Who is it that hath ears that hath not not such Vermine as these Earwigs busie at them Except here and there an upright man whose angry countenance hath still driven away such backbiting tongues And all shall be said behind your backs when you are uncapable of answering for your selves And if it be a man that the hearers think well of that accuseth or backbiteth you they think it lawful than to believe them And most that are their friends and of their party and for their interest shall be sure to be thought so honest as to be credible And it is not strange for a learned ingenious yea a godly person to be too forward in uttering from the mouths of others an evil report And then the hearer thinks he is fully justified for believing it and reporting it again to others David himself by the temptation of a Ziba is drawn to wrong Mephi●●sheth the Son of his great deserving friend 2 Sam. 16. 3 4. No wonder then if Saul do hearken do hearken to a Doeg to the wrong of David and murder of the Priests Prov. 18. 8. The words of a tale-bearer are as wounds Prov. 26. 20. Where no wood is the fire goeth out so where there is no tale-bearer the strife ceaseth And when these are still near men and you far off it is easie for them to continue the most odious representation of the most laudable persons actions in the world § 46. 11. The imperfection of all mens understandings and godliness is so great that the differences of judgement that are among the best will tend to the injury and undervaluing of their brethren One is confident that his way is right and another as confident of the contrary And to how great contendings and injuries such differences may proceed he that
reason when we mourn not for sin as sin but as one sin hindereth another or as it marred some ill design 2. And by the effect when it doth but sink men in despair or torment th 〈…〉 and not at all separate them from the sin 3. When it cometh not at all from any love to God or care to please him but only an unwillingness to be damned and so it is l●mented only as a means of damnation which though it be a sorrow positively neither good nor ●●il yet it is evil privatively § 5. But it is the Passion of Grief as in its excess that I am now to speak against And it is in 〈…〉 ma●h 〈…〉 and heaviness ●● an enemy to Christian●ty and to the Spirit of God excess 1. When we grieve for that which we ought not at all to grieve for that is either for some g●od or for a thing indifferent that is neither good or bad Both which come from the error of the mind a. When we grieve too much for that which we may grieve for lawfully in some measure that is for our own afflictions or penal suffering 3. When we grieve too much for that which we are bound to grieve for in some measure As 1. For our sin 2. For our loss of the favour of God or of his Grace and Spirit 3. For other mens sin and suffering 4. For the sufferings of the Church and calamities of the world 5. For Gods dishonour § 6. Though it is not easie to have too much sorrow for sin considering it Estimatively that is we can hardly take sin for a worse evil than it is and accordingly grieve for it yet it is oft too easie to have too much sorrow for sin or any other evil intensively as to the greatness of the Passion And thus sorrow for sin is too great 1. When it distracteth the mind and overturneth reason and maketh us unfit for the ends of sorrow 2. When it so cloudeth and clotheth the soul in grief that it is made unfit to see and consider of the promise to rellish mercy or believe it to acknowledge benefits or own Grace received or be thankful for it to feel the Love of God or love him for it to praise him or to mind him or to call upon him when it driveth the soul from God and weakneth it to duty and teacheth it to deny mercy and sinketh it towards despair all this is too much and sinful sorrow and so is all that doth the soul more hurt than good For sorrow is not good of it self but as it doth good or sheweth good § 7. Direct 1. Keep your hearts as true and close to God as possible and make sure of his love Direct 1. that you may know you have not an unregenerate miserable soul to mourn for and then all other grief is the more curable and more tollerable Be once able to say that God is on your side that Christ and the Spirit and Heaven is yours and then you have the greatest Cordial against excessive grief that this world affords If you say How should this be done I answer that is opened in its proper place No marvail if sorrow overwhelm that soul that is in the chains of sin under the Curse of God as soon as awakened conscience comes to feel it And it is most miserable when it hath the smallest sorrow there being some hope that sorrow may drive it home to Christ. Therefore it thou have been a secure unhumbled carnal wretch and God be now beginning to humble thee by shewing thee thy sin and misery take heed as thou lovest thy soul that thou drive not away necessary healing sorrow and repentance under precence of driving away melancholy or over much sorrow Thy smart tendeth to thy hopes of Cure § 8. Direct 2. Renew not the wounds of Conscience by renewed willful gross sin For sin will bring Direct 2. sorrow especially if thou have any life of grace to feel it Even as falls and breaking the bones brings pain Obey carefully if thou wouldst have peace § 9. Direct 3. Be well acquainted with the General grounds of hope in the Mercy of God the Office Direct 3. and Death of Christ and the free universal offer of pardon grace and life in the New Covenant Abundance of grief doth dwell in many humbled souls through the ignorance of these General grounds of comfort which would vanish away if these were known § 10. Direct 4. Know well the true nature and use of godly sorrow how it is but a means to higher Direct 4. grace and a thing which may exceed and not a thing that we should stop in or think we can never have too much of it Desire is but in its place and to its proper ends § 11. Direct 5. Know well the nature and excellency of those higher graces which sorrow tendeth Direct 5. to Even Love and Thankfulness and Delight in God and fruitful Obedience And then you will be carried after these and will learn to hate the sorrow that hindereth them and to cherish that sorrow which leadeth you up to them and to value it but as a means to them § 12. Direct 6. Manage all your affairs especially those of your souls with prudent foresight and Direct 6. look not only on things as they appear at hand Judge not by Sense but by Reason for Sense cannot 〈◊〉 s●ntenti●●●●● Pru●●n ●●m viro●um esse prius quam adversa c●ntingant praevi●●re ●● ven●●nt ●●●●iu● vero cum i●●a contige●●r aequo animo s●r●e I a●●t in P●tta● f●resee but pleaseth it self at present with that which must be bitterness in the end Thus carnal delight is the common way to overwhelming sorrow He that would not have the pain and sickness of a Surfeit to morrow must not please his appetite against reason to day Poyson will gripe and kill nevertheless for tasting sweet You must fore-know how that which you take will work and what will be the effects of it and not only how it tasteth if you would escape the pain The Drunkard thinketh not of his vomiting and poverty or shame or sickness and therefore causeth them There is no sorrow so intollerable as that of a guilty soul that 's passing in terror to the Bar of God and thence to everlasting pain Foresee this sorrow in your most pleasant sin and remember that when you are tempted to sin you are tempted to sorrow and then you may prevent it And in all your particular actions use a foreseeing judgement and ask what is like to be the end before you enter on the beginning Most of our sorrows come for want of this and express themselves by Had I known or Had I thought of this I had prevented it Do nothing which you may foresee must be repented of for Repentance is sorrowful and the weightier the case the deeper the sorrow How easie and comfortable a life and death might men attain if
Or will you presume to bind God himself by your Vows that he shall make no such alteration Or if you were never so confident of your own unchangeableness you know not what fond and violent affections another may be possessed with which may make an alteration in your duty At the present it may be your duty to live retiredly and avoid Magistracy and publick employments But you may not therefore Vow it for continuance For you know not but God may make such alterations as may make it so great and plain a duty as without flat impiety or cruelty you cannot refuse Perhaps at the present it may be your duty to give half your yearly revenews to charitable and pious uses But you must not therefore Vow it for continuance without some special cause to warrant it For perhaps the next year it may be your duty to give but a fourth or a tenth part or none at all according as the providence of God shall dispose of your estate and you Perhaps God may impose a clear necessity on you of using your estate some other way § 21. Direct 11. If you be under Government you may not lawfully Vow without your Governours Direct 11. consent to do any thing which you may not lawfully do without their consent in case you had not Vowed it For that were 1. Actually to disobey them at the present by making a Vow without the direction and consent of your Governours 2. And thereby to bind your selves to disobey them for the future by doing that without them which you should not do without them But if it be a thing that you may do or must do though your Governours forbid you then you may Vow it though they forbid you if you have a call from the necessity of the Vow § 22. Direct 12. If Oaths be commanded us by Usurpers that have no authority to impose them we Direct 12. must not take them in formal obedience to their commands For that were to own their Usurpation and encourage them in their sin If we owe them no obedience in any thing we must not obey them in so great a thing Or if they have some authority over us in other matters but none in this as a Constable hath no power to give an Oath we must not obey them in the point where they have no authority But yet it is possible that there may be other reasons that may make it our duty to do it though not as an act of formal obedience As I may take an Oath when a Thief or Murderer requireth it not to obey him but to save my life And if any man command me to do that which God commandeth me I must do 〈…〉 because God commandeth it § 23. Direct 13. If a lawful Magistrate impose an Oath or Vow upon you before you take it you Direct 13. must consult with God and know that it is not against his will God must be first obeyed in all things but especially in matters of so great moment as Vows and Promises § 24. Quest. 1. What if I be in doubt whether the Oath or promise imposed be lawful Must I take it or not If I take an Oath which I judge unlawful or false I am a perjured or prophane despiser of God And if a man must refuse all Oaths or promises which the Magistrate commandeth if he do but doubt whether they be lawful then Government and Iustice will be injured while every man that hath ignorance enough to make him dubious shall refuse all Oaths and promises of Allegiance or for witness to the truth Answ. 1. I shall tell you what others say first in the case of doubting Dr. Sanderson saith Praelect 3. Sect. 10. pag. 74 75. Tertius Casus est cum quis juramento pollicetur se facturum aliquid in se fortassis licitum quod tamen ipse putat esse illicitum Ut siquis ante haec tempora admittendus ad beneficium ut vocant Ecclesiasticum promisisset in publicis sacris observare omnes ritus legibus Ecclesiasticis imperatos vestem scilicet lineam crucis signum ad sacrum fontem ingeniculationem in percipiendis Symbolis in sacra coena id genus alios quos ipse tamen ex aliquo levi praejudicio putaret esse superstitiosos Papisticos Quaeritur in hoc casu quae sit Obligatio Pro Resp. dico tria Dico 1. Non posse tale juramentum durante tali errore si●e gravi peccato suscipi Peccat enim graviter qui contra conscientiam peccat etsi erroneam Iudicium enim intellectus cum sit unicuique proxima agendi regula Voluntas si judicium illud non sequatur deficiens a regula sua necesse est ut in obliquum feratur Tritum est illud Qui facit contra conscientiam aedificat ad gehennam Sane qui jurat in id quod putat esse illicitum nihilominus juraturus esset si esset revera illicitum Atque ita res illa ut ut alii licita est tamen ipsi illicita sententiam ferente Apostolo Rom. 14. 14. c. Dico 2. Tale juramentum non obligare c. that is The third case is when a man promiseth by Oath that he will do a thing which in it self perhaps is lawful but he thinketh to be unlawful As if one before these times being to be admitted to an Ecclesiastical Benefice as they call it had promised that in publick worship he would observe all the rites commanded in the Ecclesiastick Laws to wit the Surplice the Sign of the Cross at the sacred Font kneeling in the receiving of the symbols in the holy Supper and others the like which yet out of some light prejudice he thought to be superstitious and Papistical The Question is What Obligation there is in this case For answer I say three things 1. I say that an Oath while such an error lasteth cannot be taken without grievous sin For he grievously sinneth who sinneth against his conscience although it be erroneous For when the judgement of the intellect is to every man the nearest rule of action it must be that the will is carryed into obliquity if it follow not that judgement as swerving from its rule It s a common saying He that doth against his conscience buildeth unto Hell Verily he that sweareth to that which he thinketh to be See before Chap. 3. Gr. Dir. 10. pag. 125 c. unlawful would nevertheless swear if it were indeed unlawful And so the thing though lawful to another is to him unlawful the Apostle passing the sentence Rom. 14. 14 c. 2. I say that such an Oath bindeth not c. Of the Obligation I shall speak anon but of the Oath or Promise I think the truth lyeth here as followeth § 25. 1. The Question de esse must first be resolved before the Question of Knowing or Opinion Either the thing is really lawful which is doubted of or denyed or it is not
unheard or upon rash presumption Prop. 12. Christianity and Heresie being personal qualities and no where found but in individuals Ezek. 18 17. Gen. 18 3 24 ●5 nor one man guilty of anothers error it followeth that it is single persons upon personal guilt that must be judged Prop. 13. Any man may judge another to be a Christian or Heretick by a private judgement of 1 Cor. ●0 1● Acts 1. 19. 1 Cor. ● 3 4 5. 1 Cor. 11. 3. Mat. 5. 11 12. John 16. 2. discerning or the reason which guideth all humane actions But only Church Rulers may judge him by that publick Judgement which giveth or denyeth him his publick priviledges and Communion Prop. 14. If by notorious injustice Church Rulers condemn Christians as no Christians though they may thereby deny them communion with those publick Assemblies which they govern yet do they not oblige the people to take such injured persons for no Christians Else they might oblige all to believe a lye to consent to malicious injuries and might disoblige the people from Truth Righteousness and Charity Prop. 15. There is no one Natural or Collective Head and Governour of all the Churches in the 1 Cor. 12. 27 28 29. world the Universal Church but Jesus Christ And therefore there is none that by such Governing power can excommunicate any man out of the Universal Church And such Usurpation would Eph. 4. 5 6 7. 1 Cor. 1. 12 13 3. 22 23. be Treason against Christ whose Prerogative it is Prop. 16. Yet he that deserveth to be excommunicated from one Church deserveth to be Ephes. 5. 23. 4 15. excommunicated by and from all if it be upon a Cause common to all or that nullifieth his Christianity Col. 1. 18. 2. 19. Prop. 17. And where neighbour Churches are Consociate and live in Order and Concord he that 3 John is orderly excommunicate from one Church and it be notified to the rest should not be taken into the communion of any of the rest till he be cleared or become fit for their communion But Ephes. 5. 11. 1 Cor. 5. 1● this obligation ariseth but from the Concord of Consociate Churches and not from the Power of one over the rest And it cannot reach all the world where the person cometh not nor was ever known but only to those who through neighbourhood are capable of just notice and of giving or denying communion to that person Prop. 18. From all this it is clear that it is not either Papists alone or Greeks alone or Protestants alone or any party of Christians who are the Universal Church seeing that Church containeth All 1 Cor. 1● 12. John 13. 3● 1 Cor. 13 1 2 c. Christians And that reviling others yea whole Nations as Hereticks Schismaticks and no Christians or Churches will no more prove the Revilers to be the only Church or Christians than Want of Love will prove a man to be one of Christs Disciples who by Love are known to all men to be his Prop. 19. It is therefore the shameful language of distracted men to cry out against other Christian Nations It is not you but we that are the Catholick or Universal Church And our shameful Controversie which of them is the Catholick is no wiser than to question Whether it be this house or that which is the Street Or this Street or that which is the City Or whether it be the 1 Cor. 12. 12. 1 Cor. 6. 17. 10. 17. Kitchin or the Hall or the Parlour which is the House Or the Hand or Foot or Eye which is the Man O when will God bring distracting Teachers to Repentance and distracted people to their wits Ephes. 4. 3 c. Prop. 20. There is great difference in the Purity or soundness of the several parts of the Universal Church some being more Orthodox and holy and some de●●led with so many Errours and sins Gal. 4. 11 12. as to make it difficult to discern whether they do not deny the very essentials Prop. 21. The Reformed Churches are the soundest and purest that we know in the world and Rev. 3 8 9 10 11 12. 2 10 11. Act. 14 22. Tit. 1 5. Rom. 16. 4 16. 1 Cor. 7 17. 11. 16. 14. 3● 34. 2 Thes. 1. 4. Rev. 2. 23. therefore their priviledge exceeding great though they are not all the Universal Church Prop. 22. Particular Churches consisting of Lawful Pastors and Christian people associated for personal Communion in Worship and holy living are societies or true Churches of Christ● institution and the chief parts of the Universal Church As Cities and Corporations are of the Kingdom Prop. 23. There are thousands of these in the world and a man may be saved in one as well as in another Only the purest give him the best advantages for his salvation And therefore should be preferred by all that are wise and love their souls so far as they are free to choose their Communion Prop. 24. The case then being easily resolved which is the true Church viz. All Christians ☜ as Christians are the Catholick or Universal Church and All Congregations afore described of 1 Cor. 1. 13. Rom. 16. 17. Act. 20. 30. true Pastors and Christians being particular true Churches differing only in degrees of purity he is to be suspected as a designing deceiver and troubler of the world that pretending to be a Learned man and a Teacher doth still perplex the Consciences of the ignorant with this frivolous question and would muddy and obscure this clear state of the case lest the people should rest in the discerned truth Prop. 25. The Papal Church as such being no true Church of Christs institution of which by it self anon it followeth that a Papist as a Papist is no member of the Church of Christ that is Acts 2. 44. 1 Cor. 1. 10. 1 Thes. 5. 12 13. no Christian. But yet whether the same person may not be a Papist and a Christian and so a member of the Catholick Church we shall anon enquire Prop. 26. There are many things which go to make up the fitness and desireablness of that particular Heb. 10. 25. 1 Tim. 3. 7. 3 Joh. 12. Church which we should prefer or choose for our ordinary personal Communion As 1. That it be the Church of that place where we dwell If the place be so happy as to have no divided Churches that it be the sole Church there However that it be so neer●● to be fit for our Communion 2. That it be a Church which holdeth Communion with other neighbour Churches and is not singular or divided from them Or at least not from the Generality of the Churches of Christ nor Act 16 32 34. Act 10. 2. 22. Act. 18. 8. Col. 4. 15. differeth in any great matters from those that are most pure 3. That it be under the Reputation of soundness with the other Churches aforesaid
of Religion and under the Pastors care But in two respects the External power is only the Kings or Civil Magistrates 1. As it is denominated from the sword or mulcts or Corporal penalties which is the external means of execution As Bishop Bilson of Obed. useth still to distinguish them with many others See B. Carlton of Jurisdiction Though in this respect the distinction were far more intelligibly exprest by The Government by the sword and by the sacred word 2. But the principal sense of their distinction is the same with Constantines who distinguished of a Bishop without and within or of our common distinction of Intrinsick and Extrinsick Government And though Internal and External have the same signification use maketh Intrinsick and Extrinsick more intelligible And by Internal is meant that power which Intrinsecally belongeth to the Pastors ●ffice as Instituted by Christ and so is Intrinsecal to the Pastorship and the Church as preaching praying ☜ sacraments the Keyes of Admission and Exclusion Ordination c. And by External is meant that which is Extrinsecal to the Pastorship and the Church which Princes have sometimes granted them but Christ hath made no part of their office In this sense the assertion is good and clear and necessary that the disposal of all things Circa Sacra all accidents and circumstances whatsoever which by Christs Institution are not Intrinsecal to the Pastorship and Church but extrinsecal do belong to the power of Kings and Magistrates Quest. 62. Is the tryal judgement or consent of the Laity necessary to the admittance of a member into the Universal or particular Church Answ. 1. IT is the Pastors office to bear and exercise the Keyes of Christs Church Therefore by office he is to Receive those that come in and consequently to be the tryer and Iudge of their fitness 2. It belongeth to the same office which is to Baptize to Iudge who is to be baptized Otherwise Ministers should not be rational Judges of their own actions but the executioners of other mens judgement It is more the Iudging who is to be baptized which the Ministers office consisteth in than in the bare doing of the outward act of Baptizing 3. He that must be the ordinary Judge in Church-admissions is supposed to have both Ability and Leisure to make him fit and Authority and Obligation to do the work 4. The ordinary body of the Laity have none of all these four qualifications much less all 1. They are not ordinarily Able so to examine a mans faith and resolution with judgement and skill as may neither tend to the wrong of himself nor of the Church For it is great skill that is required thereunto 2. They have not ordinarily Leisure from their proper callings and labours to wait on such a work as it must be waited on especially in populous places 3. They are not therefore obliged to do that which they cannot be supposed to have Ability or Leisure for 4. And where they have not the other three they can have no Authority to do it 5. It is therefore as great a crime for the Laity to usurp the Pastors office in this matter as in preaching baptizing or other parts of it 6. And though Pride often blind men both people and Pastors so as to make them overlook the burden and look only at the Authority and honour yet is it indeed an intolerable injury to the Laity if any would lay such a burden on them which they cannot bear and consequently would make them responsible for the omissions or misdoing of it to Christ their Judge 7. There is not so much as any fair pretence for the Laity having power to judge who shall be received into the Universal Church For who of the Laity should have this power Not All nor the Major Vote of the Church For who ever sought the Votes of all the Christians in the World before he baptized a man Not any one particular Church or persons above the rest For they have no Right Joh. 20 21 22 23. 21. 15 16 17 Mat 28. 19 20. 1 Cor. 4. 1 2. 1 Tim. 5 17. Heb. 13. 7 17. 1 Cor. 5. 3 4 5 6 11. 2 Thes. 3 6 10 14. Tit. 3. 10. 2 Joh. Mar. 13 9 23 33. Mar. 4 ●4 Mat. 7. 15 16. Mat. 16. 6. 11 12. Mar. 12. 38. 8 15. Phil. 3. 2 3. Col. 2. 8. 1 Pet. 3. 17. Mat 24. 4. to shew for it more than the rest 8. It is not in the power of the Laity to keep a man out of their own particular Church Communion whom the Pastor receiveth Because as is said it is his Office to judge and bear the Reyes 9. Therefore if it be ill done and an unworthy person be admitted the Consciences of the people need not accuse themselves of it or be disturbed because it is none of their employment 10. Yet the Liberty of the Church or people must be distinguished from their Governing power and their Executing duty from the power of Iudging And so 1. The people are to be Guided by the Pastors as Volunteers and not by Violence And therefore it is the Pastors duty in all doubtful cases to give the people all necessary satisfaction by giving them the Reasons of his doings that they may understandingly and quietly obey and submit 2. And in case the people discern any notable appearance of danger by introducing Hereticks and grosly impious men to corrupt the Church and by subverting the order of Christ they may go to their Pastors to desire satisfaction in the case 3. And if by open proof or notoreity it be certain that by Ignorance fraud or negligence the Pastors thus corrupt the Church the people may seek their due Remedy from other Pastors and Magistrates 4. And they may protest their own dissent from such proceedings 5. And in case of extremity may cast off Heretical and Impious and Intolerable Pastors and commit their souls to the conduct of fitter men As the Churches did against the Arrian Bishops and as Cyprian declareth it his peoples duty to do as is aforesaid Quest. 63. What power have the people in Church Censures and Excommunication Answ. THis is here adjoined because it requireth but little more than the foregoing answer 1. As it is the Pastors office to judge who is to be received so also to judge who is to be excluded 2. But the Execution of his sentence belongeth to the people as well as to himself It is they that 1 Cor 5. 3 6 11. either hold Communion with the person or avoid him 3. Therefore though ordinarily they must acquiesce in the Pastors judgement yet if he grosly offend 2 Joh. ●●●● 3. 10. against the Law of God and would bring them e. g. to communion with hereticks and openly impious and excommunicate the Orthodox and Godly they may seek their remedy as before Quest. 64. What is the peoples remedy in case of the Pastors male-administration Answ. THis also
judging And if you knew how bad you are you would not be so forward to condemn your neighbours So that here is together the effect of much self-estrangedness hypocrisie and pride Did you ever well consider of the mind of Christ when he bid them that accused the adulterous woman John 8. 7. He that is without sin among you let him first cast a stone at her Certainly adultery was a heinous crime and to be punished with death and Christ was no Patron of uncleanness But he knew that it was an hypocritical sort of persons whom he spake to who were busie in judging others rather than themselves Have you studied his words against rash censurers Matth. 7. 3 4. And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brothers eye but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye Or how wilt thou say to thy brother Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye and behold a beam is in thine own eye Thou hypocrite first cast out the beam out of thine own eye and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote which is in thy brothers eye I know well that impenitent sinners do use to pervert all these words of Christ against any that would bring them to repentance for their sin and account all men rash censurers who would make them acquainted with their unsanctified hearts and lives But it is not their abuse of Scripture which will justifie our overpassing it with neglect Christ spake it not for nothing and it must be studied by his Disciples § 5. 5. Censoriousness is injustice in that the censurers would not be so censured themselves You will say Yes if we were as bad and did deserve it But though you have not that same fault have you no other And are you willing to have it aggravated and be thus rashly judged You do not as you would be done by yea commonly censurers are guilty of false judging and whilest they take things hastily upon trust and stay not to hear men speak for themselves or to enquire throughly into the cause they commonly condemn the innocent and call good evil and put light for Isa. 5. 20. darkness and take away the righteousness of the righteous from him when God hath cursed such with a woe § 6. 6. And false censuring is the proper work of the Devil the accuser of the brethren Rev. 12. 10. Who accuseth them before God day and night And Christians should not bear his Image nor do his work § 7. 7. Censoriousness is contrary to the Nature and Office of Jesus Christ He came to pardon sin and cover the infirmities of his servants and to cast them behind his back and into the depth of the Sea and to bury them in his grave And it is the censurers work to rake them up and to make them seem more and greater than they are and to bring them into the open light § 8. 8. Censoriousness causeth uncharitableness and sinful separations in the censurers when they have conceited their brethren to be worse than they are they must then reproach them or have no communion with them and avoid them as too bad for the company of such as they Or when they have usurped the Pastors work in judging they begin the execution by sinful separation § 9. 9. Censoriousness is an infectious sin which easily taketh with the younger and prouder sort of Christians and so setteth them on vilifying others And at this little gap there entereth all uncharitableness backbitings revilings Church-divisions and Sects yea and too often rebellious and bloody Wars at last § 10. 10. Censoriousness is a sore temptation to them that are censured either to contemn such as censure them and go on the other hand too far from them or else to comply with the errors and sinful humours of the censurers and to strain their consciences to keep pace with the censorious And here I must leave it on record to posterity for their warning that the great and lamentable actions changes and calamities of this age have arisen next to gross impiety from this sin of ☜ censoriousness producing these two contrary effects and thereby dividing men into two contrary parties The younger sort of Religious people and the more ignorant and many women having more zeal than judgement placed too much of their Religion in a sharp opposition to all Ceremonies Formalities and Opinions which they thought unlawful and were much inclined to Schism and unjust separations upon that account and therefore censured such things as Antichristian and those that used them as superstitious or temporizers And no mans learning piety wisdome or laboriousness in the Ministry could save him from these sharp reproachful censures Hereupon one party had not Humility and Patience enough to endure to be so judged of nor love and tenderness enough for such pievish Christians to bear with them in pity as Parents do with froward Infants but because these professed holiness and zeal even holiness and zeal were brought under suspicion for their sakes and they were taken to be persons intolerable as unfit to lye in any building and unmeet to submit to Christian Government and therefore meet to be used accordingly Another sort were so wearied with the prophaneness and ungodliness of the vulgar rabble and saw so few that were judiciously religious that they thought it their duty to love and cherish the zeal and piety of their censorious weak ones and to bear patiently with their frowardness till ripeness and experience cured them And so far they were right And because they thought that they could do them no good if they once lost their interest in them and were also themselves too impatient of their censure some of them seemed to please them to be more of their opinion than they were and more of them forbore to reprove their petulancy but silently suffered them to go on especially when they fell into the Sects of Antinomians Anabaptists and Separatists they durst not reprove them as they deserved lest they should drive them all out of the Hive to some of these late swarms And thus censoriousness in the ignorant and self-conceited drove away one part to take them as their enemies and silenced or drew on another party to follow them that led the Vann in some irregular violent actions and the wise and sober moderators were disregarded and in the noise of these tumults and contentions could not be heard till the smart of either party in their suffering forced them to honour such whom in their exaltation again they despised or abused This is the true summ of all the Tragoedies in Britain of this Age. Tit. 4. Directions for those that are rashly censured Direct 1. REmember when you are injured by Censures that God is now trying your Humility Direct 1. Charity and Patience And therefore be most studious to exercise and preserve these three 1. Take heed lest Pride make you disdainful to the censurers A humble