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A47309 The practical believer, or, The articles of the Apostles Creed drawn out to form a true Christian's heart and practice in two parts. Kettlewell, John, 1653-1695. 1688 (1688) Wing K380_VARIANT; ESTC R36226 263,804 566

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To prove any thing Sinless and Lawful then it is not necessary to produce a Law or Example for it since a Law commanding it would render it not barely Lawful but necessary but it is enough that there be no Law against it Answ. Very right for till a Law forbids a thing there is no sin in it Quest. What is a Wilful Sin Answ. A Sin against Knowledge or doing what we know to be displeasing to God. And this either when we are aware of the Evil at the Time we commit it or should have been so but that we have accustomed our selves to it which makes us sin without observing that we do so Quest. If a Man by custom brings himself to Swear or Lye or the like without thinking of it his Sin you say say is wilful for all he doth not bethink himself in committing it Answ. No doubt of it for he wilfully contracted this Custom and Habit which is so far from being an excuse for his Sin that it is one of the greatest aggravations of it The Habit of Sin is called the Law of sin Rom. 7. 23. and the Body of Death ver 24. Quest. What if a man has such a mind to a Sin that he will not see it but checks and stifles all Thoughts that would arise in his mind against it Nay perhaps endeavours to deceive himself and come to a Persuasion that there is no Fault or it may be some Praise in it Answ. He is a wilful Offender indeed because his own Will makes him ignorant as it did the Pharisees and other Jews who were wilfully Blind Mat. 13. 15. Quest. When is a wilful Sin against Conscience Answ. When 't is acted against the present checks of our own minds and under Fears and Relentings Quest. And when is a Sin against Conscience called Deliberate which I suppose is a higher pitch of Wilfulness Answ. When 't is committed after Fears and Debates and we consider'd and disputed with our selves for some time whether to do it or no before we ventur'd on it Quest. What is a sin of Ignorance Answ. When we do an Evil thing not knowing it to be a sin nor seeing its sinfulness Quest. Doth Ignorance excuse any Offences Answ. Yes when men are not ignorant through culpable Neglects nor blinded by wicked Lusts. For in this ease 't is said Christ can have compassion on the Ignorant and Erroneous Heb. 5. 2. But when they have no mind to see a Thing nor care to find it out that Ignorance is faulty because chargeable on their own wills Quest. What say you when their Judgments are resolv'd on the wrong side and they act under Erroneous Opinions Are they not excusable in any Actions so long as they only follow their Conscience Answ. No except their Conscience Errs so pitiably as to be reasonably qualified for excuse The Jews followed their Consciences when they crucified Christ Act. 3. 17. and 1 Cor. 2. 8. but yet God esteemed them wicked Murderers Act. 7. 52. Paul verily thought that he ought to Persecute the Church Act. 26. 9. But in that he declares he was the greatest of sinners 1 Tim. 1. 13 15. The times are coming saith our Lord that they who kill you will think therein they do God service Joh. 16. 2. But yet God would take vengeance on them for the Blood of these Righteous Persons Mat. 23. 35. 'T is no sufficient warranty in what a Man doth that he follows his Conscience except he take care to have a right Conscience or when 't is wrong it err only through misfortunes not out of a wilful Neglect a wicked Lust or an unteachable Temper Quest. What is a Sin of inadvertence Answ. When in the general we know a thing to be a sin but are not free at the time of acting it to consider and reflect upon its sinfulness This generally happens because we do the evil suddenly e're we can bethink our selves whence they are called sins of Surreption i. e. which steal upon us unawares and sins of Surprise And thus it falls out in the many sudden envious lustful repining or otherwise ill thoughts or Desires the beginnings of Anger the rash Words and Censures Good People are Guilty of All which till they can come to observe them if then they are careful to check and Repress them are pitiable inadvertences and surprises which because we are all apt daily to fall into more or less are call'd sins of Daily incursion Quest. What think you of sins of Passion when either mens own Consciences or other Friendly Monitors tell them they are doing ill but they go on notwithstanding because Passion is strong and Lust or Anger hurries them away being very high in them Answ. These are not perfectly wilful because when their Passions are at such height their Wills are captivated and have little Power over them for that time But they are punishable as wilful sins are because it is Mens voluntary Fault if they do not mortifie all such inordinate Passion and they that belong to Christ must not suffer Passion to arise so high that it can captivate and reign in them They that are Christ's have Crucified the Flesh with the Affections or Passsions and Lusts Gal. 5. 24. Quest. From what you have said I perceive what Sin is but what is meant by the Forgiveness of it Answ. A Release of the Punishment which is due to it For then God forgives a sin when he acquits Men of the Punishment of it And because this is a passing over sins as if they had never been and taking no notice of them it is called covering sins and not imputing them Rom. 4. 7 8. Quest. What are the Punishments due to Sin Answ. Death and Diseases and all the Miseries of this World. But especially the Eternal Torments of Hell Fire in the next Quest. The Eternal Pains of Hell must needs be acquitted when a Sinner is pardon'd For we can never think any sin pardon'd whilst the Sinner is eternally suffering for it But when the everlasting Punishments of the other Life are released are all the Temporal Inflictions in this Life struck off too Answ. No for Death is the Wages of sin and that still is all Mens Portion And when Men by their sins have greatly dishonoured God or given great Scandal unto others to manifest the justice of his Providence God oft-times here chastiseth them by present Judgments yea even after they have Repented and he has thereupon remitted to them all eternal Pains Thus when Nathan told Penitent David that God seeing his Repentance had put away his sin so that as to the last account he would be acquitted Yet because thereby he had given occasion to the Enemies of God to Blaspheme he should be punished here and the Child should die for it 2 Sam. 12. 13 14. And at Corinth several of those who on the score of their Repentance should not be condemned with the Wicked World at last Yet for their
Gentiles together with their abominable Idolatries they walked in lasciviousness excess of wine revellings 1 Pet. 4. 3. as the Israelites joyning themselves to the Idol Baal Peor committed whoredoms Num. 25. 1 2 3. They served Moloch that is Saturn by most horrible and unnatural cruelties dropping their own Children into the Fire through the Hands of his Statue and so burning them alive to him which the Scripture calls making them pass through the fire to Moloch as a burnt-offering Lev. 18. 21. Jer. 19. 5. But the True God is most utterly opposite to all such impositions He commands nothing but what is pure and virtuous and for our own good and advantage what is honorable and perfective of our Natures nay what is worthy not only of Men but of Angels and when he would submit to any Laws as he did when in Christ he became Man of God himself Quest. This shews the excellency of his Laws But what say you to the equity of them Are they not rigorous and over-burdensome requiring more than we are able to perform Ans. No though he requires great things yet together with that he offers such help and grace as will render them not only possible but tolerably easie to us His commandments are not grievous 1 John 5. 3. His yoke is easie and his burden light Matth. 11. 30. Quest. Is God Righteous also as a Judge that is when he comes to Judgment will he impartially execute his Laws without favour or respect of Persons Ans. Yes For in his Righteous Judgment he will render to every Man according to his deeds To those who by continuance in well-doing sought Glory eternal Life But to all that obey unrighteousness and are impenitent sinners wrath and anguish and that on every one that doth evil without respect of persons Rom. 2. 5. to 12. Quest. What will become then of all those that break his Laws Ans. Unless they make their peace by Repentance they must be condemned to that eternal Death which his Law threatens Quest. But doth not God sometimes punish one Man for another's sin as the Children for the Parents or the Parents for the Children whereas the rule of Justice is to give every Man his own Ans. No in all his allotments he assures us the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him Behold saith he all souls are mine as the soul of the father so also the soul of the son and one shall not suffer for another but the soul that sinneth it shall die Ezek. 18. 4 19 20. Indeed if a Father shares in a Child's fault by setting an evil example to it or by being too indulgent and not seasonably correcting it then he shall suffer as Eli did but this is not for his Child's but for his own sin in as much as he concurred to it And if a Child follow his Father's sin he shall partake in his punishment as is implied in Ezekiel chap. 18. 14. but that is not because his Father sinned but because he imitated it But if we do not communicate in the sins of other Men we shall not answer for their guilt for every man shall bear his own burden Gal. 6. 5. Quest. But what say you when God punishes a wicked Parent with want or an infirm body doth not that transmit Diseases or Poverty to his innocent Posterity Or when he scourges a sinful Nation with the Sword Famine or Pestilence do not those involve the innocent in common with the Criminals Ans. Yes but these not being directed by Almighty God upon themselves but seizing them through the necessity of second causes and course of things by reason of their joynt Interests and Relations they are not vindictive strokes nor in the way of punishments but only their calamities and misfortunes 'T is their mixt Interests not God's Justice which brings these upon their heads Quest. But when Men have forfeited by their own sins is not God who would otherwise spare oft-times moved to exact the forfeiture for the sins of others who will be afflicted and are intended to be punished in their misfortunes Ans. Yes and that 't is like may be a reason why when God says in the Second Commandment he will punish the sins of Idolatrous Fathers who are particularly called haters of him on the Children he limits it to the third and fourth generation For 't is very possible the Parents may live so long to see their Sufferings and so be punished themselves in beholding what their unfortunate Posterities endure for their sakes But since in this case God only takes just forfeitures and withholds undue favours and forbearance when he has great and wise reasons it is no reflexion at all on his Justice or other Attributes Quest. I see God doth not misplace punishments by punishing one for another's offences But may he not seem to misproportion them when he punishes momentany sins with eternal torments Is that consistent with Rules of Justice Ans. Yes whatever punishments are justly proposed may be justly exacted For what a just and wise Law-giver denounces a just Judge may execute And if Men feel the smart of it they can only blame themselves For why would they deserve it The punishment was denounced to the sin before they had made themselves guilty of it And this denunciation was intended to restrain them from committing it And if they would by God's help they might have been restrained by it So that be their suffering hard or their punishment what it will they have none to accuse but themselves for having voluntarily called it down upon their own heads Quest. But is it just to propose and denounce such heavy punishments Ans. Yes because there is need of them and Mankind will not be restrained by less For so strong is the sinful byass and inclination of our Natures so many and great our temptations and so much the advantage of sensible and present pleasures above future and unseen recompences that Men would never forego the pleasures of their sins on smaller Considerations Not only the offers of all temptations but also the reluctancies of our own Natures are to be out-weighed and the great disadvantage of remote and unseen things is to be compensated by the immensity and eternal duration of these punishments So that less than these would not discourage any numbers in our circumstances Nay alas how few do these hinder and discourage as the general wickedness of those who profess to believe them is a lamentable and abundant evidence Quest. But between sin and punishment as 't is usually said there should be some proportion Whereas sins that are soon at an end and sufferings that have no end bear no proportion Ans. Since sins and sufferings are no material bodily things they are not capable of being proportioned to each other by weight or measure to be weighed out equally in Scales or measured by a Rule and Line as Bodies are Their
it cut off all hopes of impunity and utterly discourage all future offenders Answ. Because God has no more Sons to die for us and when he was sollicited to remit the punishment of our sins he would not do it upon a less exchange When man sinn'd against the Law of unerring Obedience upon the Merits and Death of his Son God pardon'd that and admitted them to favour again upon their Repentance But if they shall offend against this Law too and be finally impenitent there are no Sons of God to suffer again to purchase their Forgiveness Quest. So that Christ's Suffering for us salved all the Honour of God's Attributes and served all the Purposes of his Justice that would have been served by our suffering for our selves Answ. It did so and to the full as well too the punishing of his own Son when he answered for Sinners shewing a more implacable hatred of sin and inexorable Justice than he could have shewn by punishing all the World who were Sinners themselves And therefore his death was a satisfaction to God for the sins of the whole World. Not only a satisfaction to Benevolence and yielding Goodness as when easy and indulgent Natures are appeas'd by any small returns and incompetent Recompences but a Satisfaction to Justice by way of full Compensation and Equivalence Christ by his one suffering displaying the Honour of all God's Attributes as much as God could have display'd them by punishing the whole Humane Race Quest. If the Death and Sacrifice of Christ were so full a satisfaction at first there is no more now to be paid and it need never be repeated Answ. No nor ever must it The Jewish Sacrifices needed constantly to be repeated because being of little worth and very imperfect their virtue was soon spent so that year by year they were continually offered Heb. 9. 25. and 10. 1 3. But his being full and perfect from the first and leaving nothing to be added He is not to be offered often but at once hath he put away sin by the Sacrifice of himself Heb. 9. 25 26. and 10. 14. But altho his Sacrifice is no more to be really acted as it needs not the whole effect of it being as fresh and full now as it was at first yet is it daily still commemorated and the virtue thereof apply'd in every good Prayer but especially in every Sacrament Quest. What learn you from Christ's dying a Ransom for our sins Answ. 1. To abhor sin since it is so odio●● to God that he can spare it in no person no not in his own Son when he took other men's sins upon him And if he spared not him when he would bear the punishment for us how can we hope he will in the least spare us when we come to undergo it for our selves If these things were done in the green Tree what shall be done in the dry Luk. 23. 31. 2 To give our selves up to the service of Christ who hath bought us for his own property at so dear a rate This is the least we can do in Equity and Justice Ye are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your Bodies and Spirits which are God's by such costly purchase 1 Cor. 6. 20. And if there is any spark of Love and Gratitude in our Hearts we can do no less in Resentment of such stupendious kindness For the Love of Christ constrains us because we thus judge that if Christ died for all they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him that died for them 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. Quest. Ought it not also to teach us Faith in God and to beget in us a firm Trust that he will perform whatsoever he has promised Answ. Yes as plainly shewing that nothing is too great for his love to make good He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him freely give us all things Rom. 8. 32. Quest. Must not his Patience and Charity in his Sufferings not reviling again but praying for his Enemies teach us the same when we are called to suffer Answ. Yes for in suffering thus without threatning and when he was reviled not reviling again he hath left us an example that we should follow his steps 1 Pet. 2. 21. 23. Quest. Should not God's imposing so many and great secular hardships and sufferings on his own most dear Son make us have easier thoughts of these things than others have and reconcile us to Affliction Answ. In all Reason it should For it shews how inconsiderable worldly Goods and Glories are in Gods Eyes how temporal evils are allotted to the dearest persons how proper they are to Discipline and improve the most virtuous how they perfect Piety and what a step they are to Felicity and Glory Jesus himself tho' he were a Son yet learned obedience by the things which he suffered Heb. 5. 8. He was made perfect through suffering Heb. 2. 10. He ought to suffer and so enter into his Glory Luk. 24. 26. We see him for suffering death crowned with Glory and Honour Heb. 2. 9. And seeing Sufferings not only thus providentially allotted but also thus profitably undergone and highly recompenced in him the blessed Apostles and primitive Saints whose Ambition it was to be in all things his true followers did not repine and mourn but rejoyce and glory in them Quest. And since in dying for us he has shewed us such stupendious Love must not that mutually endear us and teach us if we would be his followers most tenderly to love one another Answ. Yes if God so loved us we ought also to love one another 1 Joh. 4. 11. Nay since hereby we perceive the love of God to us because he laid down his life for us we ought upon just occasion to lay down our lives for the Brethren 1 Joh. 3. 16. Quest. In the Creed you say dead and buried When Christ expired upon the Cross was his Body taken down and buried Answ. Yes it was laid in a Tomb and a great Stone roll'd before its mouth according to the Jewish Custom And for fear his Disciples should come by night and steal him away the Jewish Rulers when they had sealed the Stone got a Guard from the Governour to watch it Mat. 27. 64 66. Quest. What mean you by Christ's descent into Hell Answ. His abode in that state of Death and Separation or his Soul 's being in the place of Separate Souls till it was united again to his Body at his Resurrection as it is written Thou shalt not leave my Soul in Hell Acts 2. 27. which St. Peter there says was fulfilled in the Resurrection of Christ when he ceased to continue under the power of death and gloriously arose to triumph over it v. 30 31. Quest. Doth the word Hell sometimes signifie only the state of the Dead or the place of Souls departed Answ. Yes as David says of all men What man is he that
of Messiah and then only fully accomplished when Jesus came This cleared from exceptions 2. His having the Spirit of Miracles resting on him 3. His Death with the particular manner and circumstances of it And his returning to Life again 4. His putting an end to the Jewish Sacrifices and Mosaick Covenant and bringing in a New one and a better to supply its defects 5. His erecting an Universal Empire and appearing as a mighty King. This not a Secular but Spiritual Kingdom 6. His converting the Heathen World from their Idol-worship Jesus silenced the Oracles and cast the impure Spirits out of their Temples This an Argument for him not only as accomplishing a Prediction but also as 't is plainly a Divine thing The Prophecies of an Universal Probity and Peace under Messiah cleared up by an account both of their meaning and accomplishment The fore-cited Prophecies understood of Messiah by the Ancient Jews though denied by some later in hatred to our Jesus p. 45. CHAP. III. Proving Jesus to be the Christ from other Divine Testimonies Jesus proved to be the Christ 2. From the testimony of John the Baptist. John knew this by Revelation and had it confirmed by a sign He was an acknowledged Prophet and of most clear and currant fame And gave this testimony before he was personally acquainted with Jesus 3. From the testimony of Jesus himself Several considerations shewing the validity of this testimony though it were in his own case This not impugned by Christ's words John 5. 31. nor gives any colour or advantage to Fanatical Enthusiasts 4. From his Miracles These no lying wonders as may appear because shewn in several instances not imitable by Demons As 1. Foretelling future Contingencies An account of Demon-Predictions among the Gentiles 2. Discerning Hearts and Thoughts 3. Raising the Dead 4. Casting out Devils of most stubborn ranks and in greatest numbers and combinations It may also appear from their intent and design and from their numbers and the manner of working them No opposing the Miracles of Moses against Christ's Miracles because they were wrought to set aside the Law of Moses That Law was given with a design to be altered An account how for all that several of its Precepts are justly called Statutes for ever 5. From the testimony of the Father who declared Jesus to be the Christ by audible voices And by raising him from the dead and shewing him in full possession of his pretences p. 96 The Knowledge of God or an Explication of the Divine Attributes and Providence CHAP. I. Of the Being and Attributes of God. The World declares there is a God. He is an eternal Spirit on whom all things depend Of God's Holiness Several things explained which seem to infringe it as when God is said to harden Mens hearts To inflict Spiritual blindness and a reprobate sense To send a false Spirit to deceive Ahab and strong delusion God oft gives Men up to the delusion of evil Spirits Cautions to prevent this To give Men a Spirit of slumber An account how notwithstanding God's irreconcileable hatred of sin it is still suffered in the World. Of God's Goodness Several false Notions of it In what things it chiefly consists Of God's Justice or Righteousness This shown in giving Righteous Laws And passing Righteous Judgments according to them without respect of Persons His Punitive Justice cleared from misplacing punishments in punishing one for another's sins And from misproportioning them in allotting eternal punishments to momentany fins Some false aspersions on this just God wiped off Of God's Presence in all places The effect of this Of his Faithfulness This shown by inviolable performance of his Promises And interpreting them without evasion or secret reserve according to their plain meanings And by constant adherence to his Friends and Faithful Servants which is no encouragement for any to return to their former sins Of God's Wisdom This shown in setting a just rate and estimate on all things so that he is neither gained nor lost by worthless services In discerning the just power and force of all Means and success of all Methods which should beget the greatest Reverence for all his Ordinances In seeing the best times and seasons for every purpose so that we must never think any Deliverance too long delayed or Affliction too fast hastened No reason to pretend to the Love of God without loving and imitating these Divine Excellencies p. 143 CHAP. II. Of God's Providence God preserves all things he hath made And governs them He observes all our actions And all our temptations He disposes of all good events For he gives the fruits of the Earth And Children And success in business How this should influence us in any enterprize shown in sundry particulars He gives promotion And the favour of Men. And life and health to enjoy all other Blessings And all Spiritual Mercies He disposes also of ill events As death of Friends Unfortunate accidents that afflict us in our Bodies or Goods Crosses and obstructions in our designs and business Sufferings from ill Men. How God stints and governs these No excuse of their unjust violence to say they are God's Instruments and follow Providence He sends also miscarriages of State and Government and presides in the most tumultuary and distressed times In these still have Faith in Providence But God must not be called the Author or sender of th●se evils which we bring down upon our selves by our own faults or follies p. 189 CHAP. III. Of God's Almightiness God's Almightiness implies 1. God's Might and Strength to effect all things viz. all that are the object of any Power And that are not repugnant to his own Nature The exerting this Power creates God no labour He can do whatsoever any things of the World can do This an encouragement to all generous Enterprizes And to build on Providence especially where we have a Promise The value and acceptance of this trust in a seemingly most improbable case And whatsoever any things of the World are inclined or wont to do he can hinder them from doing This also a ground of trust in God. And to keep us in any distress from flying to unlawful aids How God will use this Power 2. His Sovereignty and Power to command and order all things This includes 1. Empire as a Sovereign Ruler What things God may command The unalterableness of some commands 2. Dominion as a Sovereign Proprietor In what cases God allots good and ill out of his Power of Prerogative not according to Mens pre-dispositions Where he dispenses Arbitrarily he doth it always most Wisely and Reasonably Saving Grace he allots not in way of Arbitrary Prerogative but according to Covenant Rules And Heaven and Hell in way of Legal Trials A brief account of the Rectitude of God's Nature which limits his Sovereign Will from the Scriptures This Sovereign Lord and Proprietor an All-sufficient so no selfish Being Several good uses of God's Sovereign Dominion God's Majesty and Almightiness
excellent Glory of God the Father we heard when we were with him in the Holy mount and were eye-witnesses of his Majesty 2 Pet. 1. 16 17 18. And the same he repeated again a third time before a Multitude when Andrew and Philip brought the Greeks to him For before them all Jesus Prayed Father Glorifie thy Name And thereupon came a voice from heaven saying I have both glorified it and will glorifie it again John 12. 28. And this is a most sensible and satisfactory way of God's declaring himself not meerly by shows and resemblances of things which are impressed by Visions and Dreams upon Mens imaginations but by plain proper and significant words such as he used in conversing with Adam in paradise Genesis 3. 8 9. and with Moses at the bush Exodus 3. 4. when assuming a Glorious Light the usual way of shewing himself particularly present he spoke to Men out of it in an audible Voice as sensibly and intelligibly as a Man can talk and discourse with his Friend Quest. Did the Father also testifie Jesus to be the Christ by raising him from the Dead and shewing him openly in full possession of his pretences Ans. Yes on the third day he rose again as we profess in the Creed And Almighty God as S. Peter saith raised him up And hereby he did plainly testifie and vouch for him For after the Jews had done their worst condemning and cruelly executing him in raising him up again God visibly reversed their Sentence and undid what they had done and justified him as one that deserved not to continue under the Power of Death but to live again He was put to Death in the Flesh but justified in the Spirit viz. by that Divine Spirit which raised him from the Dead 1 Tim. 3. 16. He was declared to be the Son of God with power by the resurrection from the dead Rom. 1. 4. Nay after his Resurrection he set him in Heaven at his own right Hand surrounded with a Divine Glory the usual Symbol of God's Presence and Majesty In which august form he shewed him to Stephen to prepare him for his Martyrdom and to Saul at his Conversion Jesus appearing to them from God's right Hand in a Glory that surpassed the Brightness of the Sun. And having enthroned him there he intrusted him with the Holy Ghost to dispose of it as he pleased a plain Evidence of his having all Power in Heaven as well as on Earth as he pretended Which Power he visibly manifested to all Men not only by sending down the Holy Spirit in all variety of most stupendious Gifts upon his own Apostles but enabling them by imposition of Hands in his Name to confer the same upon innumerable Multitudes of his followers as appears from the Acts of the Holy Apostles and from other Scriptures Quest. I will not ask you for any more Evidence in this great point of Jesus being the Christ such demonstrations as you have insisted on being abundantly sufficient to gain belief from every honest mind that is careful to inquire and willing to be informed And as for others who are wantonly captious or wilfully blind and incredulous they are not to be convinced by Reason and Arguments But building on this now as most unquestionably sure That Jesus is the Christ doth not that undeniably prove the Divine Authority of the New Testament which is his Word Ans. Most certainly it doth For that contains only what he either spoke or acted himself in his Life or ordered his Apostles to do and teach in his Name after his Death The same Proofs and Testimonies which justifie him do authorize it since it only sets out to us all that Word in declaration whereof all the Evidences urged hitherto are to gain him credit Quest. I am fully satisfied of the certainty and have heard enough to convince me of the usefulness and efficacy of Faith in Christ. I would desire now to hear something more of the particular points of that Faith whereof we are to be thus firmly persuaded and whereby such admirable things are to be performed Ans. Those as I hinted at first are summed up in that short Creed into the profession whereof we are all Baptized And that I shall next endeavour to discourse on and explain to you THE Knowledge of GOD OR AN EXPLICATION OF THE Divine Attributes AND PROVIDENCE The Knowledge of God or an Explication of the Divine Attributes and Providence CHAP. I. Of the Being and Attributes of God. The Contents The World declares there is a God. He is an eternal Spirit on whom all things depend Of God's Holiness Several things explained which seem to infringe it as when God is said to harden Mens hearts To inflict Spiritual blindness and a reprobate sense To send a false Spirit to deceive Ahab and strong delusion God oft gives Men up to the delusion of evil Spirits Cautions to prevent this To give Men a Spirit of slumber An account how notwithstanding God's irreconcileable hatred of sin it is still suffered in the World. Of God's Goodness Several false Notions of it In what things it chiefly consists Of God's Justice or Righteousness This shown in giving Righteous Laws And passing Righteous Judgments according to them without respect of Persons His Punitive Justice cleared from misplacing punishments in punishing one for another's sins And from misproportioning them in allotting eternal punishments to momentany sins Some false aspersions on this just God wiped off Of God's Presence in all places The effect of this Of his Faithfulness This shown by inviolable performance of his Promises And interpreting them without evasion or secret reserve according to their plain meanings And by constant adherence to his Friends and Faithful Servants which is no encouragement for any to return to their former sins Of God's Wisdom This shown in setting a just rate and estimate on all things so that he is neither gained nor lost by worthless services In discerning the just power and force of all Means and success of all Methods which should beget the greatest Reverence for all his Ordinances In seeing the best times and seasons for every purpose so that we must never think any Deliverance too long delayed or Affliction too fast hastened No reason to pretend to the Love of God without loving and imitating these Divine Excellencies Question WHat are the Articles of Christian Faith or particular points which we Christians are to believe Answer They are all contained in this Creed commonly called the Apostles Creed I believe in God the Father Almighty maker of Heaven and Earth And in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord who was conceived by the Holy Ghost born of the Virgin Mary suffered under Pontius Pilate was crucified dead and buried he descended into Hell the third day he rose again from the dead he ascended into Heaven and sitteth at the right Hand of God the Father Almighty from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the
dead I believe in the Holy Ghost the Holy Catholick Church the Communion of Saints the Forgiveness of Sins the Resurrection of the Body and the Life Everlasting Amen Quest. Doth this Creed contain all points of Doctrine necessary to be believed by every Christian Ans. Yes for it was given for a Confession of Faith that should fit Men for Baptism and shew any Person to be a Christian and they had better have made no Rule or Confession of Faith at all than an imperfect one Quest. What do you make the first Article in this Creed Ans. I believe in God the Father Almighty maker of Heaven and Earth Quest. How doth it appear that there is a God Ans. From this vast World that he has made Even as we are unquestionably assured of the Being of a Skilful Architect where we see a stately and well contrived House erected or of a learned Author from an excellent and well-penned Book or of an Ingenious Artificer from a Watch of exact and various Movements or other elaborate and curious piece of Workmanship And this shows us not only that there is a God on whom we and all this created World depend but also that he is most Wise Powerful and Good because the greatest Power Wisdom and Goodness are every where apparent in the contrivance and formation of it For the invisible things of God even his eternal Power and Godhead are clearly seen from the Creation of the World being understood by the things that are made as S. Paul says Rom. ● 20. Quest. Indeed nothing in reason seems more obvious than that all this World must have an Architect and that we and all the things about us which every where spring up and perish could never make our selves and that things of such admirable Order Harmony and Usefulness could not any one and much less all of them be put together by blind and uncontriving chance And therefore methinks this proof of God's Being from the voice of his Works must needs convince all his reasonable Creatures Ans. Yes and ever since the World began so it has There is neither speech nor language where their voice is not heard their ●i●e is gone out through all the earth and their words unto the end of the world Psal. 19. 3 4. On this or other Arguments all People in every Age and Nation believed and acknowledged that there is a God and delivered down that Belief to those who followed them And therefore no Person can ever oppose this and pretend to reason since thereby he sets up himself against all People of every place and time and against what passed for the plainest and most uncontestable Principle of humane reason ever since there was any such thing So that if therein he has reason he has it to himself alone and all the present World besides yea and all Ages too that went before him had none Quest. What things are we to know and believe concerning God Ans. First His God-head and Divine Attributes Secondly His Providence Quest. There is nothing in all Religion more necessary or useful for us than to have a right apprehension of Almighty God. Is he like any thing which we behold with our Eyes or feel with our Hands or discern by any Bodily Senses Ans. No in Scripture indeed he is said to have Ears and Eyes and Hands and Feet But therein as the Jewish Rabbins say the Law speaks of God with the Tongue of the Children of Men. And we are to understand not that he has any such parts but only that he has as full perceptions and performs the same things as we do by them The invisible God whom no man hath seen or can see 1 Tim. 6. 16. is a Spirit says our Saviour John 4. 24. And this must teach us in all our Services which we pay to him never to think of putting him off with outward Shows Gifts and Ceremonies but to be inwardly affected in all we do or say and always to offer him our Hearts and Spirits For he being a Spirit must be worshipped as Christ said in spirit and in truth John 4. 24. And moreover never to make any Bodily Images and representations of him or fancy to give him Worship and Honour by them since a pure unbodied Spirit is not represented but belyed not honoured but debased by any such thing Ye saw no manner of similitude of God when he came and spake to you said Moses to the Jews therefore take good heed left ye corrupt your selves in making any of him Deut. 4. 15 16. And thou shalt not make to thee any likeness of any thing either in Heaven or Earth to bow down to them said the Law Exod. 20. 4 5. Quest. But although we cannot see him with our Eyes yet we may apprehend several things of him in our minds And one you say is his God-head what mean you by that Ans. His Sovereignty or being the Supreme Being that depends on none and that all other things depend upon Particularly Men who were at first made by him and still absolutely depend on him In him we live move and have our being Act. 17. 28. Quest. If he depends on none he must be an eternal Being which never had beginning Ans. Yes because there was nothing before him to give beginning to him So that if he had not been from all Eternity he could never have been at all Quest. And if all things else but especially all Men do absolutely depend on him that will make all careful to serve and please him and found Religion Ans. Undoubtedly so it should And where it is not only believed but seriously laid to heart so it will. Quest. What are the Divine Attributes or Properties of God which will show us how he stands affected and what will please him Ans. He is all Holiness Goodness Justice Faithfulness Wisdom Almighty every where present and can never change Quest. What is meant by God's Natural Purity and Holiness Ans. His absolute exemption from all sin in himself and his perfect aversation and immutable hatred of it in all others He can take no pleasure in wickedness he hates all workers of iniquity and therefore evil shall not dwell with him Psal. 5. 4 5. Quest. If this be his unalterable Nature he can never be reconciled to Mens sins nor take delight in any Man whilst he goes on to be a sinner Ans. No as soon may we hope to bring Light and Darkness Snow and Fire to dwell together So far is he from living with it that he cannot endure to look upon iniquity Habak 1. 13. Quest. Since God's Holiness bespeaks such absolute abhorrence of all vice and wickedness I see it implies something more than barely his affectation of External Decency or his hatred to be treated rudely and unmannerly Ans. Yes so it doth It implies that too For God's Holiness often notes his supereminent Power and Greatness And to use this peerless Majesty or any things
Jewish Doctors note the Power of a destroying Angel on such as have not received the initiatory Rite of Circumcision answerable whereto is that old tradition among them that God exempted their Nation from the Power of the Angel of death to which he subjected the rest of the World when he chose them for his own People and gave them the Law. Or when being once enter'd they either burst out of it themselves or by just excommunication which as our Lord says brings Men back into the state of the Heathen are cast out into the World again For then the Devils obtain more Power over them as S. Paul notes saying of those that grow turbulent in the Church and oppose themselves that they are taken captive by him 2 Tim. 2. 25 26. and calling excommunication a delivering over unto Satan as it throws them out into his Territory and within the verge of his Dominion 1 Cor. 5. 5. 1 Tim. 1. 20. Yea probably their attempts are more greedy and violent upon those who for a while were rescued out of their hands than on others who were held always under them And accordingly in the Parable of the unclean Spirit we are told that if being once driven out of a man he find him empty and naked of Guards and so fit to be made a prey again he takes with him seven Spirits worse than himself when he seeks to enter into him the second time Matth. 12. 43 44 45. 2 Pet. 2. 20. Quest. Would you note any thing else that is like to provoke God to abandon and give us up to these deluding Spirits Ans. Yes to omit others buying and selling of the Truth or acting for Gain against God and a good Conscience When Men forsake God or a good way or thing not out of sincere convictions but secular interests and for worldly gain then doth the Devil enter and take possession of them For his great way is to open the Door by a golden Key and by the offers of gain to get admission And thus he enter'd into Judas taking possession of him by thirty pieces of silver which he preferred before his Master Luk. 22. 3 4 5. And into Ananias getting him into his Power and filling his heart by a desire of keeping the price of his land to himself Act. 5. 3. When Men once put themselves into Satan's hands by putting away a good conscience and professing or acting against convictions they are in the ready way as S. Paul says to make shipwrack of the right Faith and fall under a delusion of their understandings 2 Tim. 1. 19. Quest. But doth not God himself do more than suffer and give way to sin by leaving them to their own Lusts or to Satan as you say to push them on when he talks of giving men a spirit of slumber Rom. 11. 8 10. Isaiah 6. 10. Is not that something positive of his inflicting Ans. 'T is like it is a sending a sluggishness of thought or a dulness and drowsiness of apprehension on them Not such as makes them quite unable to apprehend but only like a drowsie Man more listless heavy and slow in it 'T is eyes wherewith they should not see and ears wherewith they should not hear that is such wherewith they would not because they could not do it easily Rom. 11. 8. Such abatement of intellectual perspicacity and power God sometimes threatens to obdurate sinners saying he will smite them with madness or blindness or astonishment and stupidity of heart Deut. 28. 28. And this is very just thus to impair the perfection of our minds as well as the health and strength of our Bodies in punishment of our sins For both these being his gratuitous and undeserved gifts are reversible in what measure he pleases And he never withdraws them in his wrath from contumacious sinners but on forfeiture and high provocations when they have winked long against the Light and would not see with quick and clear senses It is all in way of Justice and Judicial Process so that there is nothing but what shows a Holy a Just and Good God too in all this Quest. But if God so irreconcileably hates sin why doth he not employ his Power to keep it out Were it not easie for an Almighty God to prevent sin in the World if he would Ans. It is not fit he should make it impossible by putting it out of our power to chuse it And as for such ways as infer no force upon our wills but consist with our free and rewardable avoidance of sin he has not been wanting in them which is all that is to be expected on his part Quest. Why to ease both himself and us of the evil of sin might not God make it impossible and put it out of our power to chuse it Ans. Because that is inconsistent with our Natures who having Flesh as well as Spirit must needs be free to Evil as well as Good. It would leave nothing in us to be commended or rewarded when we do abstain from it there being no thanks due to any Man for omitting what he was utterly incapable to act To make sin impossible is to offer violence to our free and reasonable Natures and to set aside all Laws all Censure and reward of Actions Which no reason will expect a Holy God should do who looks not only at his own Power and Holiness but at the displaying of his governing-Governing-Justice too and the Freedom and Liberty of his Creatures and will take such ways to keep out sin as best comport with all these So that an utter incapacity for it is no way of hindring us free and rewardable Creatures who are not to be irresistably forced and compelled but drawn and persuaded Quest. And has God done all that can reasonably be expected that way to prevent sin Ans. Yes he has given his own Son to die a cruel Death thereby to purchase Mercy for all that truly repent of their sins he has plainly showed and forbid all sin that no Person need be ignorant of it he has threatned it with the most insupportable punishments that all may be afraid to come near it he offers the most incomparable rewards to all that will overcome it and promises the aid of an unconquerable Spirit and Grace to enable all who will strive as they ought to prevail against it In summ having stupendiously brought about by the meritorious Death of his own Son that Mercy should be offered to all Men to pardon and Grace to extirpate and abolish sin he has left nothing wanting but their own wills to perfect the conquest of it And he has done all that for them and set all those things before them which should not force their wills indeed but bend and persuade them to resolve upon such conquest And that is all which ought to be done with free Creatures whose wills are not to be forced but won and persuaded towards its exclusion So that if after
to the day of judgment to be punished 2 Pet. 2. 9. And in proportioning this continuance he uses great care and tenderness to his Servants that their sufferings may not outlast their patience or wear out their hope in him The rod of the wicked shall not rest or make a fixt abode and stay too long upon the lot of the righteous lest it put them upon desperate counsels and the righteous put forth their hands unto iniquity Psal. 125. 3. Quest. If wicked Men are thus an instrument in God's Hand then whatever evils we suffer from them we must not look only at the immediate actors but see beyond them to Almighty God and own his Providence Ans. Yes and that will not only teach us to please him and to apply our selves to him for redress but teach us patience too because how undeserved soever they may be from others yet we have deserved a thousand times worse at his hands Let him curse says David of wicked Shim●i and would return no ill again for the Lord hath bidden him 2 Sam. 16. 10 11. and I was dumb and opened not my mouth because thou didst it Psal. 39. 9. nay it will teach us willingness in submission For be the Cup untoothsome and bitter as Gall and Wormwood yet he is both our God and our Father that offers it and we should not suspect any hurt in what comes from his Hand The cup which my Father hath given me shall I not drink it said our Blessed Lord of the unparallelled injuries he suffered John 18. 11. Quest. But if when Men wickedly afflict us you say God sends these afflictions will it not excuse them to say God gives them success against us and they follow Providence Ans. No in no wise For God doth not excite or tempt them to injure us But when they are injurious of themselves his Providence sets us in their way that their wickedness may spend it self upon us to exercise our Faith and Patience or to chastise our disobedience So that they are accountable for their own wickedness and when they will be wicked all he doth is to over-rule it to serve his own designs as he did in the murder of our Blessed Saviour which he ordered for the Salvation of the World though the Jews slew him by wicked hands Act. 2. 23. When we suffer by other Mens sins God who punishes us by them will punish them for them as he declared of the Assyrian the rod of his indignation Is. 10. 5 12 17. and as all wicked Slanderers Oppressors Thieves Rebels and Murderers shall find to their cost in the end It is not acting successfully but acting according to our Duty which will justifie what we do when God comes to judge us Quest. But if 't is Providence that sends wicked and violent Oppressors since it is the Patron of Justice as well as the Chastiser of Undutifulness sure God will not continue to such Men the Power to oppress always Ans. No the more violent and boisterous any wicked Oppressor is the sooner will his Power fail him and spend it self The wicked Oppressor says Solomon passes as a whirl-wind which may for a while storm terribly and bluster but is quickly over Prov. 10. 25. The rod of his anger shall fail that is the Might or even the Authority whereby he scourges shall not bear him out or preserve him in unjust violence but by abusing Power he shall soon lose it and then reap that trouble he has justly deserved Prov. 22. 8. And therefore when any are oppressed by Potent Neighbours or Men of Violence they may support themselves to think that God sees all their wrongs and in due time will give them ease Quest. I see those evils which befal our selves in our own particulars are the allotment of Providence But if there be any miscarriages of State and Government must the People look upon these too to be of God's sending Ans. Yes and generally as a punishment for the wickedness and provocations of a Nation For the transgressions of a land many are the princes thereof Prov. 28. 2. And through the anger of the Lord being kindled against Israel God moved David that is left him to be won by Satan moving him to number the people 2 Sam. 24. 1. So that in any publick miscarriages we must not spend our selves in exclaiming against Ministers of State and the Instruments concerned therein but look up to the Justice of Almighty God and reflect with patience and penitent hearts upon our own sins which are punished in them Quest. But must we think God's Providence directs and disposes when Publick Affairs are most tumultuary and irregular and seem to shew forth fewest footsteps of his perfections Ans. Yes the Lord reigns though the people tremble through convulsive and distracting fears he sitteth between the cherubims though the earth be moved with the violence of stirs and tumults Psalm 99. 1. And this must support all good Men in the most dangerous and distracted times because even then they are still under God and are not at the Mercy of all the ill chances and threatning evils that fly round about them which how loose soever they may seem to fly abroad are yet all bound up in God's Hand Quest. If 't is God that sends all these evils then whensoever any of them threaten and hang over us we must look up to him and have Faith in his Providence Ans. Yes and that too though we seem reduced almost to irremediable extremities For God loves to delay deliverance to the last that our Faith and dependance may be more throughly tried and then shows himself nearest to us when we have no more hope left in our selves or in any humane means Thus he appeared not to save Isaac's life till Abraham's hand was stretched out to take it away Gen. 22. 10 11. And then God comes as a present help when we are in the very time of need Psalm 46. 1. Heb. 4. 16. He chuses the time of our distress to give us a more affecting sense of our deliverance And then too he often works it by those very things which seem not only unprofitable but opposite and apt to hinder it that no part of the honour of it may go to humane means but that the whole of it may be ascribed to himself Quest. You have shown that God orders all those ill events which cross accidents or ill Men bring upon us But what say you to those which we bring upon our selves by our own gross faults or follies Must they be ascribed to God's Providence Ans. No this Solomon taxes in fond sinners that when the foolishness of man perverteth his way and he falls because he is Ignorant or rash and hasty with his feet yet for all this his heart fretteth against the Lord as if not his own pure folly but God had brought him to it Prov. 19. 2 3. The most Holy God forbids all our faults and the most Wise God
disclaims all our follies which we must not ascribe to him but take to our selves As all Persons must do when they throw away themselves in foolish Marriages or throw away their Estates by extravagance and foolish projects or are any other ways the direct Authors of their own miseries which they bring upon themselves by going against his will either in such sins as he forbids or in such follies as he disapproves When our calamities are thus of our own seeking we must not remove the blame from off our selves by casting it on God and say they are of his sending Say not thou as the wise son of Sirach most piously and justly cautions it is through the Lord that I fell away for thou oughtest not to do the things that he hateth Say not thou he hath caused me to err for he hath no need of the sinful man Ecclus 15. 11 12. Quest. By this I perceive when any Persons have made a foolish Marriage or otherwise done foolishly for themselves you would not have them say as too ordinarily they do that such match was made in Heaven and is what God had decreed for them Ans. No by no means For that is only to make God accountable for their faults And is it fit when they are ashamed of a thing to lay it upon God to excuse themselves God bids no Man do foolishly or wickedly nor tempts him to it Let no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God. For God cannot be tempted with evil neither doth he tempt any man James 1. 13. Quest. But doth God no way allot these for us Ans. Yes he allots the miseries as a punishment after we have been so faulty or foolish but he doth not allot that foolish miscarriage whereby we bring the misery upon our heads For God is not the Author either of the sins or follies of Men being in himself all Holiness and Wisdom What is well done by us we must ascribe to him but all that is ill we must take to our own selves Quest. But is he not sometimes concerned in sending Mens faults and follies too as well as the miseries in punishment of former provocations For when Men have been great sinners he is oft provoked as you noted above to withdraw his Grace in just Judgment and leave them to themselves whence they fall still into more folly and wickedness Ans. Yes by way of punishment God sometimes gives Men up thus to sin and folly Not that he tempts or inclines Men to be either foolish or wicked as I said but that when they are throughly prepared of themselves to be so in his just Judgment he withdraws his abused Grace the continuance whereof might help to prevent it and leaves them to themselves and the incitation of evil Spirits as I have before declared Quest. So that if any Persons would ascribe any share in their miscarriages to God it must only be in owning his Justice and taking shame to themselves confessing he Righteously gave them up to them in punishment of former sins Ans. Yes Quest. You have instanced in foolish Marriages and I see we must not impute them to Destiny and God's irresistible Decrees which is only a throwing the blame on God to clear our selves But do not you think that the Providence of God which numbers even the Hairs of our Heads is more than ordinarily concerned in making Marriages which are an affair of highest importance Ans. I make no doubt of it Houses and lands are the inheritance of fathers but a prudent wife is from the Lord Prov. 19. 14. 18. 22. But when God's Providence orders and accomplishes Marriages it is not by fate and irresistible ways but only by affording such opportunities and inducements as though oft-times they may very potently induce yet leave a liberty in the Persons themselves I suppose especially ere they are suffered to proceed too far to refuse When God brings them about it is in a way agreeable to free Creatures who have a liberty to refuse and voluntarily of themselves take hold of these offers and facilitating turns of Providence to bring about their own Marriages whence being a matter of their own doing they are accountable for them and deserve Praise when they bestow themselves wisely and blame when they do foolishly Quest. As for all the actions which we do then I perceive we must believe that God observes them And as for all the good or ill events which we meet with we must believe he orders and allots them for us and be accordingly affected with them Ans. Yes and that is walking before God as Abraham was bid to do Gen. 17. 1. and owning Providence which is the ground of all Religion and the great Character through all the Scriptures of good Men and is not only the perfection of our affection and service to Almighty God but the only ground of solid comfort and tranquillity of mind under all the various accidents of this World. Quest. Is this Great and Good God that made and still preserves and carefully provides for us not only our Friend but also our Father Ans. Yes he is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and for his sake he is our Father too And so he has taught us to call him and pray Our Father which art in Heaven c. Quest. What must this teach us Ans. Not only to take the freedom of access and the confidence but withal to pay the Reverence and dutiful Obedience of Children If I be a father where is mine honour Mal. 1. 6. To imitate the ways and virtues of our Heavenly Father and turn followers of God as dear children Eph. 5. 1. this being a Natural Fruit of Spiritual as it usually is of Secular Relation It must engender noble thoughts and pursuits worthy of this high Alliance and not suffer us to debase our selves and dishonour our Race by sinking into sensuality or doting on and taking up with any vain and perishing goods of this life In summ it must cause us to depend on him with trust and affiance to receive what he sends with submission and cheerfulness and an opinion that it proceeds from kindness with other such like which are filial tempers Quest. And this God and Father the Creed says is Almighty and the maker of Heaven and Earth Ans. Yes that is added and is next in course to be explained CHAP. III. Of God's Almightiness The Contents God's Almightiness implies 1. God's Might and Strength to effect all things viz. all that are the object of any Power And that are not repugnant to his own Nature The exerting this Power creates God no labour He can do whatsoever any things of the World can do This an encouragement to all generous Enterprizes And to build on Providence especially where we have a Promise The value and acceptance of this trust in a seemingly most improbable case And whatsoever any things of the World are inclined or wont to do he can
therefore no Persons to whom God has given Estates must think them a priviledge for being idle and careless or for spending them wholly upon sports and pastimes as if wealthy Persons were made for no other business but diversions and much less for laying them out in ostentation of Pride and Vanity or in ministring to Vice and Luxury Health and Wit and Wealth and other Temporal advantages being only Loans of God are to be Faithfully stewarded and laid out not slothfully neglected wasted embezelled or abused Quest. Are we to learn from it any thing further Ans. Yes Fifthly to be humble and think modestly and soberly of our selves under any preeminence of Body or Parts Power or Possessions When these advantages puff Men up with pride and vain fondness and self-conceit they arrogate all the fancied honour and estimation of them to themselves as if they were Proprietors But when they own them as God's Gifts and Trusts and themselves as holding them only during Pleasure by uncertain Tenures they will ascribe all the Honour of them to him and learn Modesty Care Dependance and Thankfulness And withal never insult or deride the want of them in others remembring that he who mocketh the poor and the case is the same in all other Natural Defects or Calamities reproacheth his Maker who disposed of him in that condition as Solomon says Prov. 17. 5. Quest. By this I see God Almighty is an immensly Great Being How must the thoughts of such an irresistible Might and absolute Sovereignty affect us Ans. With the greatest submission of Humility and Reverence For such immense Greatness and Majesty should strike us with holy fear and submission in the highest degree every time we think or speak of this Great God especially in all acts of Adoration and Worship which we pay to him Thou must fear this glorious and fearful name the Lord thy God Deut. 28. 58. He is the excellency of Jacob Amos 8. 7. the most high over all the earth Psal. 83. 18. a great God a mighty and terrible Deut. 10. 17. glorious in holiness fearful in praises doing wonders Exod. 15. 11. Holy and reverend is his name Psalm 111. 9. Quest. By this Almighty Power 't is easie to believe God made the World. Ans. Yes thereby in the beginning God created the heaven and the earth Gen. 1. 1. And by the same Power he still Governs and Preserves it as I have before explained The End of the First Part. Imprimatur Liber cui Titulus The Practical Believer Part II. Guil. Needham R. R. in Christo P. ac D. D. Wilhelmo Archiep. Cant. á Sacr. Domest June 28. 1688. THE Practical Believer PART II. OR THE KNOWLEDGE OF JESUS CHRIST By John Kettlewell Minister of Coles-Hill in Warwick-shire LONDON Printed for Robert Kettlewell and are to be sold by R. Clavell at the Peacock in St. Paul's Church-yard and W. Rogers at the Sun in Fleetstreet 1689. THE CONTENTS CHAP. I. OF the Office and Natures of Jesus Christ. In what Salvation by Christ consists Being Christ notes his being 1. A Prophet to teach his Church We must hear and learn of him in the Holy Scriptures and at the mouths of his Ministers 2. A Priest to Redeem and Intercede for it 3. A King to Govern it by his Laws And by his Officers whom we are to submit to in his place Also to Protect it against all visible and invisible Enemies Jesus Christ is the Son of God as having receiv'd from the Father the Nature of God. And the Power of God. On both these Accounts and others he is our Lord. And to be worshipped What we learn from his being our Lord. Of Christ's being Conceiv'd of the Holy Ghost and Born of a Virgin. He was truly Man. And why he was so CHAP. II. OF the Sufferings of Christ. An Account of what Christ suffer'd and from whom Both he and God the Father were consenting to it What he suffer'd was for our sins to save us from suffering for them when we truly repent of them Pardon on Repentance the design of his Satisfaction and the Merit of his Death This is a free Grace which implies that it is not given in Recompence of our Deserts not that it requires no Conditions An Account why God would not grant this Grace of Pardon to Penitents without Christ's dying to satisfie for them And how his Death serv'd all the designs of God's Justice full as well as their own would have done Christ's Sacrifice but once offered but daily commemorated Several useful inferences from Christ's dying for us Christ's dead Body was Buried Of his descent into Hell. CHAP. III. OF the Resurrection of Christ and his sitting at God's Right-hand An Account how Christ may be said to have been three days in the Earth His Resurrection proved The necessity of it He ascended to Heaven What is meant by his sitting at the Right-Hand of God. There he 1. Intercedes for us as our Priest. This intercession not vocal by Words and formal Pleas but by presenting himself and his own meritorious Sacrifice He intercedes only for Covenant-Mercies and on Covenant-Terms He is an Intercessor of absolute Power with God and truest Affection for us One part of his intercession is to hand and present our Prayers to God. Therefore whensoever we pray for any thing 't is both our duty and wisdom to apply by him 2. Governs his Church as a King. In what Acts this consists 3. Instructs his Church as a Prophet by sending to it the Holy Ghost Christ's Body having now taken up its fixt abode at God's Right-Hand we are not in any Ordinances to expect his Bodily Presence but only a Presence by his Spirit which is more to be desired Some Inferences from Christ's sitting at God's Right-hand CHAP. IV. OF the Future Judgment The necessity of the Future Judgment All men are judged and made happy or miserable at their Deaths But not so fully then as they will be afterwards The Compleat and General Judgment is at the end of the World. In that Jesus Christ is to be the Judge Who are to be Judged In that Judgement no Condemnation but for breaking God's Laws So not for indifferent things Men shall be tryed and sentenced for all their sinful Actions with regard to their lasting Effects For their most secret ones And such ill deeds as were disguised under the fairest Pretences For their sinful Omissions And Neglecting to employ and improve their Talents For sinful Words And Thoughts and Desires For all these Men shall be judged impartially without respect of Persons But with Equity and Candor not in Rigor The Benign Judge will be very ready to observe what makes for us and make the best of our Performances And interpret the seemingly Rigorous Expressions of his own Laws with great condescension to Humane Measures He will allow for involuntary Failings And judge Candidly and Favourably of that involuntariness And for Natural Infirmities And for Providential disadvantages as Multiplicity of
being a shame for a Servant to be more nice and delicate and more hard to please than his Master Answ. Very right And accordingly he presses us on to those Duties which otherwise we should be most like to disdain and grumble at by putting us in mind how he has done or undergone the same himself If I your Lord and Master have washed your feet ye ought also to wash one anothers feet Joh. 13. 14. If men give you hard names be content they have done the same to me and the Disciple is not above his Master nor the Servant above his Lord 't is enough for the Disciple that he be as his Master and the Servant as his Lord Matt. 10. 24 25. He that would be greatest amongst you saith he again let him minister most and strive to be most useful as he that serveth for I am among you as he that serveth Luk. 22. 26 27. Be patient when you are persecuted remembring what I said unto you that the Servant is not greater than his Lord. Joh. 15. 20. Thus must we spurn at no condescensions or labours of Love and Service no nor at Reproaches for well-doing or suffering in God's Cause since thereby we only wear our Lord's Livery nay are made like to him and follow his steps where he has led the way before us Quest. Since he is the common Lord both of Masters and Servants must not this teach us great Moderation and Equity towards our Servants and Dependants who however inferior and subject they may be in Humane Respects are yet equally near to him and Brethren and Fellow-servants in respect of his Dominion Answ. Yes God would not permit the Jews to make any of their Brethren Slaves tho' they might use them as Fellow-servants because they were all his Servants They are my Servants which I brought forth out of the Land of Egypt they shall not be sold as Bondmen Lev. 25. 42. And give unto your Servants that which is just and equal saith St. Paul knowing that ye also have a Master in Heaven Col. 4. 1. Quest. What is the third Article of the Creed Answ. Who was conceived by the Holy Ghost born of the Virgin Mary Quest. Why must Christ out of the Natural Course of Generation be born of a Virgin And why must the Holy Ghost beget him Answ. Because he was to be undefiled from the Womb and fit to satisfie for the sins of others having none of his own For such an High-Priest became us as was Holy Undefiled seperate from Sinners Heb. 7. 26. Quest. Was Christ truly man Answ. Yes he underwent all the wants of our Natures for he was hungry weary and sleepy as we are And all the Infirmities for he wept and was sorrowful troubled and sore amazed He was in all points tempted as we are only without sin Heb. 4. 15. Quest. Having felt them thus in himself will he not be apt to sympathize and have compassion on all our weaknesses Answ. Yes thereupon the Apostle argues him to be soon touched with the feeling of our infirmities Heb. 4. 15. Quest. Why was it requisite that to redeem us the Son of God should become Man Answ. To fit him 1. To attone and appease God that Man might gain what Man had lost and that by his performing Obedience he might be capable to restore what Disobedience had forfeited As by one man's Disobedience many were made Sinners so by the Obedience of one were many to be made Righteous Rom. 5. 19. And we having Flesh and Blood he also took part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the Devil Heb. 2. 14. 2. To be Gentle and Compassionate towards us affectionately interceding for us and reasonably bearing with our infirmities It behoved him in all things to be like unto his Brethren that he might be a merciful and faithful High-Priest Heb. 2. 17. Quest. How was his becoming man necessary to give him a knowledge and compassionate sense of our infirmities was he not God before And doth not God who made our Frame know our infirmities better than we who feel them Answ. Yes he doth but on other accounts as the appeasing God because not God but only Man could suffer and satisfie and man's Obedience was fittest to regain what man 's Disobedience had lost and it would be most easie and favourable to us that he who should give Laws to us and judge us at the last should be a man like our selves it was requisite the Mediator should be man. And when he was so to make not only his Divinity that made our Frame but his Humane Nature too in which he transacts with us compassionate to the utmost of our infirmities 't was requisite he should feel them in himself since there is no way to make men so sensible of any infirmities as their feeling them by sorrowful experience Quest. What must we learn from this Condescention of the Son of God Answ. To be humble and not contemn the poorest and meanest state since he has dignified it with his Appearance in it To be Charitable and Condescensive and think nothing below us whereby we may do good To be content in any state which God allots for us thinking the greatest measure of his Love and Tenderness consistent with the greatest meanness of our outward state and circumstances as it plainly was in his Son's case Lastly To think all wickedness utterly unworthy of our Nature since now God has so marvellously united it to his own These and such like things we must learn and practise from it if we would be his followers and shew the same mind to be in us which was before in Christ Jesus Phil. 2. 3 4 5. Quest. Why must he be both God and Man in one Person Answ. To fit him for the Office of a Mediator and Reconciler who was to go between them and make them both one For it was fit he should be nearly allied to each Party and have interest in both of them CHAP. II. Of the Sufferings of Christ. The Contents An Account of what Christ suffer'd and from whom Both he and God the Father were consenting to it What he suffer'd was for our sins to save us from suffering for them when we truly repent of them Pardon on Repentance the design of his Satisfaction and the Merit of his Death This is a Free Grace which implies that it is not given in Recompence of our Deserts not that it requires no Conditions An Account why God would not grant this Grace of Pardon to Penitents without Christ's dying to satisfie for them And how his Death serv'd all the designs of God's Justice full as well as their own would have done Christ's Sacrifice but once offered but daily commemorated Several useful inferences from Christ's dying for us Christ's dead Body was buried Of his descent into Hell. Quest. WHat is the Fourth Article in the Creed Answ. Suffered under Pontius Pilate was
lasted and Prayer was added to it Is any Sick among you says St. James let him call for the Elders of the Church and let them Pray over him anointing him with Oyl in the Name of the Lord for in Christ's Name all their Miracles were wrought And the Prayer of Faith i. e. put up in Faith of the miraculous cure shal save the sick viz. from his Disease and the Lord shall raise him up and if he have committed Sins i. e. if any Sins brought this sickness they shall be forgiven him in the cure of it Jam. 5. 14 15. Quest. By saving of the Sick here indeed may seem to be meant saving of him from his Disease because it follows and the Lord shall raise him up But the Prayer of Faith and forgiveness of Sins seem to note something else Answ. As for the Prayer of Faith that Agrees very well for a Faith or belief that God will enable him to do it is necessary in every one that works a Miracle And as for the Forgiving of his Sins you must know that the Punishment of Sin is not only eternal Death but Present Diseases and therefore that the sin is forgiven at least in part when either of these is taken off And thus the Scripture speaks of it For when any sickness or infirmities come for sin our Saviour makes it the same thing to say thy sins are forgiven as to say arise and walk and accordingly when he design'd to work a Cure he would say thy sins are pardoned Mat. 9. 2 5. Quest. What other Miracles had they the gift of Answ. Of casting out Devils as the Apostles did out of Multitudes Act. 5. 16. Of Raising the Dead as Peter raised Dorcas Act. 9. 39 40. and Paul Eutichus Act. 20. 9 10 12. Of inflicting Bodily Diseases and Torments as well as Spiritual Horrors and Supernatural Agonies on contumacious sinners as Paul did on Elymas the Sorcerer striking him with blindness Act. 13. 8 9 11. and on the incestuous Corinthian whom he thus punished for the destruction of the Flesh 1 Cor. 5. 5. Which Corporal inflictions he seems plainly to threaten the Back-sliders at Corinth withal when he tells them of coming to them with a Rod 1 Cor. 4. 21. Of using sharpness 2 Cor. 13. 10. Of Revenging all Disobedience 2 Cor. 10. 6. Yea of such sharpness as would over-awe and humble the most carnal minds and contemptuous Opposers of Church Authority and Censures bringing down the Flesh as he said of the Incestuous Persons and making them afraid to Blaspheme as he said of Hymeneus and Alexander who were most contemptuous and stubborn in their Heretical Opinion 1 Tim. 19. 20. And this infliction of smart and Bodily Diseases upon obstinate Sinners is called Delivering over unto Satan as the Apostle says he had done in these last mentioned Cases Quest. Why was this infliction of Bodily smart and punishment upon them called Delivering over to Satan Answ. Because these Pains were to be the Effect of God's immediate Justice and Satan should be the Tormentor and Executioner of God's Vengeance And therefore when these Offenders were given up to God's Justice they were said to be delivered into his Hands When God in a more immediate and extraordinary way sends present heavy Plagues upon Men especially as a Punishment for sin Satan is often said to inflict them Saul's Melancholly is called an Evil Spirit from the Lord upon him 1 Sam. 18. 10. God's Plagueing the Egyptians sending evil Angels among them Ps. 78. 49. The Woman who had been bowed together eighteen years one whom Satan had bound Luk. 13. 11 16. The Lunatick a Demoniack or one vexed with an unclean Spirit Mat. 17. 15 18. and Luk. 9. 39 42. And thus when the Apostles gave up offenders to God to punish them because the Devil executes the Punishment which God decrees it is called Delivering them over unto Satan Quest. This delivering to Satan then was an Act of Divine Justice upon these Criminals and God commanded Satan thus to afflict them as formerly he afflicted Job at the instance of the Apostles Answ. Yes and therefore as 't is not improbable it was done with Prayer to God to take vengeance For so the Apostle may seem to express himself on his Delivering up Alexander Alexander the Copper-Smith did me much Evil the Lord reward him according to his Works 2 Tim. 4. 14. In this he Acted as a Spiritual Judge delivering up to Justice and Prayed God to exact the Penalty according to his Sentence Quest. Had they the Gift of any other Miracles Answ. Yes for such I reckon was their Joy in Tribulations and Glorying even in the very Hour of their sufferings When the Council had beaten them they departed from their Presence rejoycing that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for Christ's Name Acts 5. 40 41. Whilst their Stripes were yet sore and they were pinched in the Stocks in the Dark Dungeon Paul and Silas sang Praises to God and triumphed rejoycing Act. 16. 23 24 25. And upon their Persecution at Antioch the Disciples were filled with Joy and with the Holy Ghost Act. 13. 50 52. Thus as if they were not of the same Mold nor had Bodies like other Men did they Glory in their Shame for Christ and rejoice in Tribulation Quest. But is not Joy an ordinary Fruit of the Spirit And why then do you think this rejoicing of theirs had something Miraculous in it Answ. A secret Joy in the sense of God's Love is common among Good Men and an ordinary Fruit of the Spirit and so 't is reckon'd Gal. 5. 22. Yea and Joy in Tribulation after the Tribulation is past for afterwards it yields the Peaceable Fruits of Righteousness to those that are exercised with it Heb. 12. 11. But to rejoice in the very midst of it and under the Stroke as they did I think has an extraordinary Gift and miraculous Aid in it For under the ordinary Assistance of the Spirit the Bodily Pain hinders rejoycing at the very instant For the Present no chastening seemeth to be joyous but grievous Heb. 12. 11. Quest. What say you then to the Words of Christ Rejoice and be exceeding glad when you are Persecuted for my sake Mat. 5. 11 12. Answ. I think they do not so much express a Duty that he strictly exacts as a Gift and Priviledge which he sometimes bestows upon his Martyrs and Confessors As was visible in the Apostles days and among the Primitive Martyrs For their minds were sometimes so ravished and transported with Spiritual Consolations as to seize all the Powers of their Souls and not suffer them to attend to the most Exquisite Bodily Tortures So as they could smile upon Racks and sing under their Executioners and be so far intranced in Spiritual Comforts as to declare under the most Bloody Butcheries that they were not sensible of any Pain And the same stupendious supports God has sometimes vouchsafed in later and modern Persecutions