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A26879 The catechizing of families a teacher of housholders how to teach their housholds : useful also to school-masters and tutors of youth : for those that are past the common small chatechisms [sic], and would grow to a more rooted faith, and to the fuller understanding of all that is commonly needful to a safe, holy comfortable and profitable life / written by Richard Baxter ... Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1683 (1683) Wing B1205; ESTC R22783 252,758 464

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Christ wrought his Miracles and rose again and that the Apostles by the Holy Spirit did work theirs and that Believers received the Spirit by their Ministry 2. They had not been made Christians but by these Miracles They all professed that it was the Gifts of the Spirit that Convinced and Converted them 3. All the forementioned Professions of their Christianity contained a Profession that they believed these Miracles As the use of the Lords day Baptism the Eucharist shewed their Belief of Christs Life Death and Resurrection 4. They suffered Persecution and Martyrdom in the Profession of that Belief 5. They pleaded these Miracles in all their Defences against their Adversaries 6. The Writings of their Adversaries commonly acknowledge this Plea yea and deny not the most of the Miracles themselves 7. But most fully their receiving the Sacred Scriptures as the Word of God as indited by the Holy Ghost in the Apostles sheweth that they believed the Miracles recorded in that Book Q. 25. You are come up to the last part of the Doubt in the History How are we sure that these Christians then commonly believed the Book as now we have it and that it is the very same A. We have for this full infallible historical Proof premising that some parcels of the Book the Revelations the Epistle of Iude the Second of Peter the Epistle to the Hebrews and that of Iames were longer unknown to some particular Churches than the rest 1. The constancy of Christian Assemblies and publick Worship is a full proof seeing that the Reading Expounding and applying of these Books was a great part of their publick work as all History of Friends and Enemies agree 2. The very Office of the Ministry is full proof which lay most in reading expounding and applying these same Books And therefore they were as much by Office concerned to keep them as Judges and Lawyers are to keep the Statute-book 3. These Ministers and Churches which so used this Book were dispersed over a great part of the World If therefore they had changed it by adding or diminishing they must have done it by Confederacy or by single mens errour or abuse It was impossible that all Countreys should agree in such a Confederacy but the meeting motives and treaties would have been known But no History of Friend or Foe hath any such thing but the clean contrary And that it should be done by all single Persons in the Christian World agreeing by chance in the same Changes is a m●d supposition 4. And it is the belief of all Christians that it ●s a damnable Sin to add or alter in this Book And the Book it self so concludeth Therefore if ●ome had agreed so to do the rest would have detected and decryed it 5. They took this Book ●o be the Charter for their Salvation And therefore would never agree to alter it when Men keep the Deeds Evidences Leases and Charters of their Estates and Worldly Priviledges unaltered 6. When a few Hereticks rose up that forged some new Books as Apostolical and rejected some that were such indeed the Christian Churches condemned and rejected them and appealed to the Churches that had received the Apostles own Epistles and kept them 7. The many Heresies that rose up did so divide Men and set them in cross Interests and Jealousies against each other that it was impossible for any one Sect to have altered the Scripture but the rest would have fallen upon them with the loudest Accusations But all sorts of Adversaries are agreed that these are the same Books And though the weakness and negligence of Scribes have made many little Words uncertain for God promised not infallibility to every Scribe or Printer yet these are not such as alter any Article of Faith or Practice but shew that no Corruption hath been designedly made but that the Book is the same For instance Let it be questioned Whether our Statute-Book contained really the same Statutes that are there pretended And you will see that the Historical certainty amounteth even to a natural certainty the contrary being a meer impossibility For 1. They are the Kings Laws and the King would not bear a fraudulent alteration 2. Parliaments would not bear it 3. Judges that successively judge by these Laws would soon discover it 4. So would all Justices and Magistrates 5. Mens Lives and Estates are held by them and therefore Multitudes would decry the Fraud 6. Enemies have daily Suits which are tryed by these Laws and each Party pleads them for himself and their Advocates and Lawyers plead them against each other and would soon detect the Forgery So that to suppose such a Change is 1. To suppose an Effect that hath no Cause in Nature 2. And that is against a stream of Causes Moral and Natural and so impossible And to ●eign such forgeries in the Book that all Christians have taken for Gods Laws is just such another Case and somewhat beyond it That is but Moral Evidence which dependeth only on Mens Honesty or any free unnecessary acts of Mans will But Mans will hath also of Natural Necessity such as the Love of our selves and our felicity c. And it is a Natural Impossibility that all Men or many should agree in a Lie which is against these Acts of Natural necessity But so they must do if all Men of cross Interests Principles and Dispositions should knowingly agree c. g. That all our Statutes are counterseit that there is no such place as Rome Paris or other such l●●s And so the Gospel History hath such Testimony of necessary Truth Q. 26. You have made the Case plainer to me than I thought it had been But you yet seem to intimate that some Words yea some Books of Scripture have not the same Evidence a● the rest can a man be saved that Believeth not all the Scripture A. All Truth is equally True and so is all Gods Word But all is not equally Evident He that taketh any Word to be Gods Word and yet to be false believeth nothing as Gods Word For he hath not the ●ormal essentiating Act and Object of Faith If God could lie we had no certainty of Faith But he that erroneously thinketh that this or that word yea Epistle or Text or Book in the Bible is not Gods but came in by mistake may be saved if he believe that which containeth the Essentials of Christianity A lame Faith may be a saving Faith And he may see how Miracles sealed the Gospel that cannot see how they sealed every Book Text or Word in the Bible Q. 27. Though we have been long on this it is of so great importance to us living or dying to be sure of the Foundations of our Faith that I will yet ask you Have you any more Proof A. I have told you of four Proofs already I. The Antecedent Testimony of the Spirit in the Old Testament II. The Inherent Constitutive Testimony in Christ and the Gospel III. The concomitant Testimony
to that Empire as the Subscriptions yet shew 3. And there never can be an Universal Council It were madness and wickedness to attempt it To send for the Aged Bishops from all Nations of the Christian World when none is Empowered to determine Whither or When even from the Countreys of Turks and other Infidels or Princes in War with one another that will not permit them And what room shall hold them and what one Language can they all speak And how few will live to return home with the Decrees And will not the Countrey were they meet by nearness have more Voices than all the rest And what is all this to do To condemn Christ as not having made Laws sufficient for the Universal part of Government but leave such a burden on uncapable Men And to tell the Church that Christian Religion is a mutable growing thing and can never be known to attain its ripeness but by new Laws must be made still bigger and another thing Q. 20. But the Bishops of the World may meet by their Delegates A. Those Delegates must come from the same Countreys and distance And how shall the whole World know that they are truly chosen And that all the Choosers have trusted them with their Judgments Consciences and Salvation and will stand to what they do Q. 21. But if the Universal Church be divided into Patriarchates and chief Seats those can Govern the whole Church when there is no General Council even by their Communicatory Letters A. 1. And who shall divide the World into those chief Seats and determine which shall be chief in all the Kingdoms of Infidels and Christian Kings in the World And which shall be Chief when they differ among themselves How many Patriarchs shall there be and where There were never Twelve Pretenders to succeed the Twelve Apostles The Roman Empire had three First and Five after within it self But that was by Humane institution and over one Empire and that 's now down and those Five Seats have many Hundred Years been separated and condemning one another so far are they from being One Unifying Aristocracy to Govern all the World And if they were so then Europe is Schismatical that now differs from the Major Vote of those Patriarchs Q. 22. But did not the Apostles as one Colledge Govern the whole Church A. 1. I proved to you before that the Holy Ghost was given the Apostles to perfect Universal Ligislation as Christs Agent and Advocate and that in this they have no Successors 2. And it was easie for them to exercise Acts of Judicial Determination over such as were among them and near them when the Church was small 3. And yet we read not that ever they did this in a General Council or by the Authority of a Major Vote For that meeting in Act. 15. was no General Council and the Elders and Brethren joyned with them that belonged to Ierusalem and they were all by the same Spirit of the same mind and none Dissenters Every single Apostle had the Spirit of Infallibility for his proper work And they had an Indefinite charge of the whole Church and in their several circuits exercised it Paul could by the Spirit deliver a Law of Christ to the World without taking it from the other Apostles Gal. 2. The Apostles were foundation Stones but Christ only was the Head Corner-stone They never set up a Judicial Government of all the Churches under themselves as a constitutive Unifying Aristocracy by whose major Vote all must be Governed When they had finished the work of Universal Legislation and settled Doctrine and Order for which they stayed together at Ierusalem they dispersed themselves over the World and we never find that they Judicially governed the Churches either in Synods or by Letters by a major Vote but settled Guides in ever Church as God by Moses did Priests and Levites that had no Legislative Power Q. 23. But hath not Christ his Subordinate Official Governours A. Yes Magistrates by the Sword and Pastors by the Word and Keyes These are Rulers in their several Circuits as all the Judges and Justices and Shoolmasters of England are under the King But he that should say that all these Judges and Justices are one Sovereign Aristocracy to make Laws and Judge by them by Vote as one Person political though many Natural would give them part of the Supream power and not only the Official All the Pastors in the World Guide all the Churches in the World by parts and in their several Provinces and not as One Politick Person Q. 24. But how is the Universal Church visible if it have no Visible Unifying Head and Government under Christ A. It is Visible 1. In that the Members and their Profession are visible 2. And Christ's Laws are visible by which he ruleth them 3. And their particular Pastors are visible in their places 4. And Christ was visible on Earth and is now visible in his Court in Heaven and will visibly Judge the World e're long And God hath made the Church no further Visible nor can Man do it Q. 25. But should not the whole Church be One A. It is one It is one Body of Christ having one God and one Head or Lord one Faith one Baptism one Spirit one Hope of Glory Q. 26. But should they not do all that they do in Unity and Concord A. Yes as far as they are capable Not by feigning a new Universal Legislative Power in Man or making an Universal Head under Christ but by agreeing all in the Faith and Laws that Christ hath left us And Synods may well be used to maintain such Union as far as capacity reacheth and the case requireth But an Universal Synod and a partial or National a Governing Synod and a Synod for Concord of Governours differ as much as doth a Monarch or Governing Senate over all the World and a Dyet or an Assembly of Christian Princes met for mutual help and concord in the conjunction of their strength and Councils Q. 27. What is the Pastoral Power of the Church Keyes A. It is the Power of making Christians by the Preaching of the Gospel and Receiving them so made into Communion of Christ and his Church by Baptism and feeding and guiding them by the same Word and communicating the Sacrament of Christ's Body and Blood in his Name declaring Pardon and Life to the Penitent and the contrary to the Impenitent and applying this to the particular Persons of their own charge on just occasion and so being the stated Judges who shall by them be received to Church Communion or be rejected and this as a presage of Christ's future Judgment Q. 28. But have not Pastors or Bishops a power of constraint by the Sword that is by Corporal punishments or mulcts A. No That is proper to Magistrates Parents and Masters in their several places Christ hath forbidden it to Pastors Luke 22. and appointed them another kind of work Q.
not my own but his that made me All things shew me that there is a God who must needs be Greater Wiser and Better than all his Creatures and therefore ought to be most Honoured Feared Loved and Obeyed I see multitudes of persons of the same Nature with me and therefore obliged to the same duty to God I see much of Gods work in them which is Good and therefore to be Loved And I see that we are all parts of one World and made to be useful to one another These and many such things the Reason of man may discern in himself and other works of God Q. 6. But I thought the Law of Nature had been every mans natural temper and disposition which inclineth him to action And you make it to be only a notifying sign of duty A. Figuratively some call every Inclination a Law but it 's no such thing that we are speaking of Only a mans natural Inclination among other signs may notifie his duty But I hope you cannot think that a mans vicious Inclination is Gods Law Then you would make Original sin and the work of the Devil to be Gods Law One mans sinful distemper of Soul and another mans bodily distemper the fruit of sin inclineth him to wrath to lust to idleness to sinful sports or drinking or gluttony And these are so far from being Gods Law of Nature that they are the contraries and the Law of Satan in our members rebelling against the Law of God And though the good Inclinations of our common Nature to Justice Peace Temperance be by some called The Law of Nature it is not as they are Inclinations but as from them we may know our duty Q. 7. Hath God any Natural Officers under him in governing man I pray you tell me how far Mans Power is of God A. God hath set up divers sorts of humane Governing Powers under him in the World which all have their place and order assigned them some by Nature as entire some by the Law of Nature since the Fall and some by supernatural Revelation which is not to be here spoken to but afterward Q. 8. Because I have heard some say that God made no Government but men do it by consent for their necessity I pray you shew me what Government God made by Nature and in what order A. 1. Next to Gods own Governing Right which is the first God hath made every man a Governour of himself For God made him with some faculties which must be ruled as the Appetite Senses and Tongue and other bodily members yea and Passions too and with some which must Rule the rest as the Understanding by guidance and the Will by command And this self-governing power is so necessary and Natural that no man can take it from us or forbid us the due exercise of it any more than they can bind us to sin or to self-destruction Q. 9. Which is the next humane Power in order A. 2. The Governing power of the Husband over the Wife whose very nature as well as Original shews that she was made to be Subject though under the Law of Love Q. 10. But is not this by consent rather than by nature A. It is by Consent that a woman is married but when she hath made her self a Wife Nature maketh her a Subject unless madness or disability make the man unmeet for his place Q. 11. Which is the next sort of Natural Government A. 3. The Parents Government of their Children Nature maketh it the duty of Parents to rule and of Children to obey And though some have been so unnatural as to deny this and say that Children owe nothing but reverence and gratitude yet there is no danger of the common prevalency of such a Heresie which the nature of all mankind confuteth save that licentious Youth will take advantage of it to disobey their Parents to please their lusts Q. 12. What is the humane Government which Gods Law of Nature hath instituted to man since his fall and corruption A. 4. That is to be afterward explained But Magistracy or Civil Government is certainly of Natural Institution though it is uncertain how God would have governed Man in such Societies by man if they had not sinned The Law of Nature teacheth man the necessity of Civil Society and of Government therein and therefore obligeth man thereto Q. 13. This seemeth to be but the effect of mens own perceived necessity and so to be but their arbitrary choice A. Their Necessity is Natural and the notice of it is Natural and the desire of Remedy is natural and the fitness of Magistracy to its use is natural Therefore it is the Law of God in Nature that bindeth them to choose and use it And if any Countrey should choose to live without Magistracy they would sin against the Law of Nature and their own good Q. 14. But I have heard that God hath made no Law what Form of Civil Government shall be used but left it to every Countreys choice A. God hath by nature made it necessary that there be Magistracy that is some men in power over Societies to enforce the obedience of Gods own common Laws and to make their subordinate Laws about undetermined mutable matters to that end for the honour of God and the Good of the Society But 1. Whether this Government shall be exercised by one or many 2. And who shall be the Persons Gods Law hath left undetermined to humane Liberty The Form and the Persons are chosen neither by the said persons nor by the People only but by the mutual consent and contract of both 3. And also by this contract the Degree of power and order of the exercise may be Stated and limited But for all that when humane consent hath chosen the persons the essential Power of Governing in Subordination to Gods Laws floweth not from man but immediately from Gods Law of Nature Q. 15. But what if these sorts of Government prove cross to one another and Reason commandeth one thing an Husband another a Parent another and the Magistrate another which must be obeyed A. Each have their proper Work and End which none of the other can forbid Self-Government is the Reasonable management of our own Faculties and actions in obedience to God for our own Salvation And no King or other can take this from us And if they forbid us any necessary duty to God or necessary Means of our Salvation they do it without Authority and are not to be therein obeyed A Husbands power to govern his Wife is for the necessary Ends of their Relation which the King hath no power to forbid A Parents power to rule his Children is for the Necessary Education of them for the welfare of Soul and Body and the King hath no power to forbid it Should he forbid Parents to feed their Children or teach them Gods Laws or to choose for them Orthodox fit Tutors Pastors and Church-Communion where God is lawfully worshipped
true Christians in the World And 2. Because it consisteth of Persons that have every where in the World the same Essentiating qualifications summed up Eph. 4. 3 4 5 6. One Body one Spirit one hope of our Calling one Lord one Faith one Baptism one God and Father of all though i● various Measures of Grace And so the Concordan● Churches of Christ through the World were called The Catholick Church as distinct from the Sects and Heresies that broke from it Q. 4. How comes the Pope of Rome to call only his Subjects Catholicks A. The greatest part of the Church on Earth by far was long in the Roman Empire and when Emperors turned Christians they gave the Churches Power for the Honour of Christianity to form the Churches much like the Civil State And so a General Council of all the Churches in that Empire was their Supream Church Power And three Patriarchs first and five after were in their several Provinces over all the rest of the Archbishops and Bishops And so the Orthodox Party at First were called The Catholicks because they were the greater Concordant part But quickly the Arrians became far greater and carryed it in Councils and then they called themselves The Catholicks After that the Orthodox under wiser Emperors got up again and then they were the greater part called Catholicks Then the Nostorians a little while and the Eutychians after and the Monothelites after them got the Major Vote in Councils and called themselves the Catholick Church And so since then they that had the greatest countenance from Princes and the greatest number of Bishops in Councils claimed the Name of the Catholick Church And the Pope that was the first Patriarch in the Empire first called himself the Head of the Catholick Church in that Empire and when the Empire was broke extended his claim to the whole Christian World partly by the abuse of the word Catholick Church and partly by abuse of the Name General Councils falsly pretending to Men that what was called Catholick and General as to the Empire had been so called as to all the World And thus His Church was called Catholick Q. 5. Why is the Catholick Church called Holy A. 1. To notifie the work of our Saviour who came to save us from our sins and gather a peculiar People a holy Society who are separated from the unbelieving ungodly World 2. To notifie the Work of the Holy Ghost who is given to make such an Holy People 3. Yea to notifie the Holiness of God the Father who will be Sanctified in all that draw near him and hateth the impure and unholy and will have all his Children Holy as he is Holy 4. And to tell us the fitness of all Gods Children for his favour and Salvation Q. 6. Wherein consisteth the Holiness of the Church A. 1. Christ their Head is perfectly Holy 2. The Gospel and Law of Christ which is our objective Faith and Rule are Holy 3. The Founders of the Church were eminently Holy 4. All sincere Christians are truly Holy and marked out as such for Salvation 5. The common Ministers have an Holy Office 6. The Church Worship as Gods Ordinances are Holy works 7. All that are Baptized and profess Christianity are Holy as to Profession and so far separated from the Infidel World though not sincerely to Salvation Q. 7. What is it now that you call The Holy Catholick Church A. It is The Universality of Christians Headed by Iesus Christ. Or It is a Holy Kingdom consisting of Iesus Christ the Head and all sincere Christians the sincere Members and all professed Christians the professing Members first founded and gathered by the Holy Ghost eminently working in the Apostles and Evangelists Recording the Doctrine and Laws of Christ for their Government to the End and guided by his Ministers and Sanctifying Spirit according to those Laws and Doctrine in various degrees of Grace and Gifts Q. 8. What is it that makes all Churches to be One A. 1. Materially their concord in the same qualifications which is called Eph. 4. 3. The Unity of the Spirit They are all that are sincere Sanctified by the same Spirit and have the same Essentials of Faith Hope Baptismal Covenant and Love And the Hypocrites profess the same 2. Formally their common Union with and Relation to God the Father Son and Holy Ghost that is to Iesus Christ their Head bringing them home to God the Father by the Spirit Q. 9. Is there no one Ministerial Head of all the Church on Earth A. No neither One Man nor one Council or Collection of Men For 1. None are naturally capable of being One Supream Pastor Teacher Priest and Ruler over all the Nations of the Earth nor can so much as know them or have hum●ne converse with them And a Council gathered equally out of all the World as One such Supream is a more gross Fiction of impossibles than that of a Pope 2. And Christ that never so qualified any never gave any such power But all Pastors are like the Judges Justices and Mayors that rule subordinately under one King in their several Precincts and not like an Universal Viceroy Lieutenant or Aristocracy or Parliament Q. 10. But is not Monarchy the best Form of Government and should not the Church have the best A. 1. Yes and therefore Christ is its Monarch who is capable of it 2. But a Humane Universal Monarchy of all the World is not best nor was ever an Alexander a Caesar or any Man so mad as soberly to pretend to it or plead for it Who is the Man that you would have to be King at the Antipodes and over all the Kings on Earth 3. Yea the case of the Church is liker that of Schools and Colledges that rule Volunteers in order to Teaching them And did ever Papist think that all the Schools on Earth of Grammarians Philosophers Physicians c. should have one humane Supream Schoolmaster or a Council or Colledge of such to Rule them Q. 11. But Christ is not a Visible Head and the Church is Visible A. We deny not the Visibility of the Church but we must not feign it to be more visible than it is 1. It consisteth of visible Subjects 2. Their Profession is visible and their Worship 3. They have visible Pastors in all the particular Churches as every School hath its Schoolmaster 4. Christ was visible in the Flesh on Earth 5. He was after seen of Stephen and Paul 6. He is now visible in Heaven ●● the King is in his Court 7. And he will come in glorious Visibility shortly to judge the World 8. And his Laws are visible by which he ruleth us and will judg us If all this Visibility will not satisfie Men Christ will not approve of Usurpation for more Visibility Q. 12. Of what use is this Article to us A. 1. To tell us that Christ dyed not in vain but will certainly have a Holy Church which he will save
is Worldly and Sensual and Idolatrous so it leadeth a Man from God Holiness Heaven yea and from common honesty to all Iniquity A Worldling and lover of Riches is false to his own Soul to God and Man and never to be much trusted CHAP. XXIX And forgive us our Trespasses as we forgive them that Trespass against us Or as we forgive our Debtors Qu. 1. WHy is this made the fifth Petition or the second of the second part A. Because it is for the second thing we Personally need Our Lives and Natural being supposed we next need Deliverance from the Guilt and Punishment which we have contracted Else to be Men will be worse to us than to be Toads or Serpents Q. 2. What doth this Petition imply A. 1. That we are all Sinners and have deserved punishment and are already fallen under some degree of it 2. That God hath given us a Saviour who died for our Sins and is our Ransom and Advocate with the Father And 3. That God is a gracious pardoning God and dealeth not with us on the terms of rigorous Justice according to the Law of Innocency But hath brought us under the Redeemers Covenant of Grace which giveth Pardon to all penitent Believers So that sin is both pardonable and conditionally pardoned to us all Q. 3. What then are the presupposed things which we pray not for A. 1. We pray not that God may be Good and Love it self or a merciful God for this is presupposed 2. We pray not that he would send a Saviour into the World to fulfill all Righteousness and die for Sin and that his Merit and Sacrifice may procure a Conditional Universal Pardon and Gift of Life viz. to all that will repent and believe For all this is done already Q. 4. Is it to the Father only or also to the Son tha● we pray for Pardon A. To the Father primarily and to the Son as Glorified for now the Father without him judgeth no Man but hath committed all Judgment to the Son Ioh. 5. 22. But when Christ made this Prayer he was not yet Glorified nor in full possession of his Power e Q. 5. What Sin is it whose forgiveness we pray for A. All sin upon the Conditions of pardon made by Christ that is for the pardon of all Sin to true penitent Believers Therefore we pray not for any pardon of the final non-performance of the condition that is to finally impenitent Unbelievers Q. 6. Sin cannot hurt God what need then is there of forgiveness A. It can wrong him by breaking his Laws and rejecting his moral government though it hurt him not And he will right himself Q. 6. What is forgiving Sin A. It is by tender Mercy on the account of Christ's Merits Satisfaction and Intercession to forgive the guilt of Sin as it maketh us the due subjects of punishment and to forgive the punishment of sin as due by that guilt and the Law of God so as not to inflict it on us Q. 7. What punishment doth God forgive A. Not all For the first Sentence of Corporal punishment and death is inflicted But he forgiveth the Everlasting punishment to all true Believers and so much of the temporal both Corporal and Spiritual as his Grace doth fit us to receive the pardon of and so he turneth Temporal correcting punishments to our good Q. 8. Doth he not pardon all Sin at once at our Conversion A. Yes All that is past for no other is sin But not by a perfect Pardon Q. 9. Why must we pray for Pardon then every day A. 1. Because the Pardon of old Sins is but begun and not fully perfect till all the punishment be ceased And that is not till all sin and unholiness and all the evil effects of sin be ceased No nor till the Day of Resurrection and Judgment have overcome the last Enemy Death and finally Justified us 2. Because we daily renew our sins by omission and commission and though the foundation of our Pardon be laid in our Regeneration that it may be actual and full for following sins we must have renewed Repentance Faith and Prayer Q. 10. God is not changeable to forgive to day what he forgave not yester day What then is his forgiving Sin A. The unchangeable God changeth the Case of Man And 1. By his Law of Grace forgiveth penitent Believers who were unpardoned in their impenitence and unbelief And 2. By his Executive Providence he taketh off and preventeth punishments both of Sense and Loss and so forgiveth Q. 11. How can we pray for pardon to others when we know not whether they be penitent Believers capable of Pardon A. 1. We pray as Members of Christ's Body for our selves and all that are his Members that is penitent Believers 2. For others we pray that God would give them Faith Repentance and Forgiveness As Christ prayed Father forgiv them for they know not what they do that is Qualifie them for Pardon and then pardon them Or give them Repentance and Forgiveness Q. 12. Why say we as we forgive them that trespass against us A. To signifie that we have this necessary qualification for forgiveness God will not forgive us fully till we can forgive others And to signifie our Obligation to forgive And as an Argument to God to forgive us when he hath given us Hearts to forgive others But not as the Measure of God's forgiving us For he forgiveth us more freely and fully than we can forgive others Q. 13. Are we bound absolutely to forgive all Men A. No But as they are capable of it 1 We have no power to forgive wrongs against God 2. Nor against our Superiours or other Men or the Common-wealth or Church further than God Authori●eth any Man by Office 3. A Magistrate must forgive sins as to Corporal punishment no further than God alloweth him and as will stand with the true design of Government and the common good And a Pastor no further than will stand with the good of the Church And a Father no further than will stand with the good of the Family And so of others 4. An Enemy that remaineth such and is wicked must be forgiven by private Men so far as that we must desire and endeavour their good and seek no revenge But not so far as to be trusted as a familiar or bosom Friend 5. A Friend that offended and returneth to his Fidelity must be forgiven and trusted as a Friend according to the Evidence of his Repentance and Sincerity and no further The rest about forgiveness is opened in the Exposition of that Article in the Creed The forgiveness of ●●ns Still remembring that all forgiveness is by God's Mercy through Christs Merits Sacrifice and Intercession CHAP. XXX And lead us not into Temptation but deliver us from Evil. Qu. 1. WHy is this made the Sixth Petition A. Because it is the next in order to the attainment of our
last man have the greatest guilt A. No because all guilt from Adam and from our nearer parents too is pardoned by Christ when we are baptized as sincere Believers or their seed But it 's true that we are so far more guilty as to have the more need of a Saviours grace 2. And Guilt is considerable either as more obligations to the same punishment or as obligation to more or greater punishment It 's true that impenitent persons who are the seed of a line of wicked Ancestors have more obligations to the same punishment but not obligation to greater punishment because as great as they were capable of was due before Q. 21. But many say that for nearer parents sins no punishments but temporal are due A. 1. If any at all are due it proveth an answerable guilt 2. To say that Adams sin deserveth our spiritual and eternal punishment and all other Parents sin only temporal is to speak without and against Scripture and the Nature of the Case The Case of the seed of the old World the Sodomites the Canaanites and the present Heathens speaks much more 3. It 's clear that nearer Parents sin is a cause that many of their Posterity are more sinful in Lust Pride Fornication Heresie Ignorance than others And Sin as well as Grace hath a tendency to perpetuity if not cured and remitted Q. 22. Why doth God name only the third and fourth Generation A. To shew us that though he will punish the sins of his Enemies on their Posterity who imitate their Parents yet he sets such bounds to the Execution of his Justice as that sinners shall not want encouragement to repent and hope for Mercy Q. 23. Who be they that be called here Haters of God A. All that have a predominant hatred to his Servants his Service and his holy Laws But the Text specially meaneth those Societies of Infidels Heathens and Malignants who are the professed enemies of his Church and Worship As I said before The outward symbols of Idolatry were the Professing signs by which his Churches Enemies were openly noted in the World as Baptism and the Lords Supper were the Badges of his Church and Servants Q. 24. What is the meaning and extent of the promise of Mercy to thousands of them that Love him and keep his Commandements A. 1. As to the Subject it must be noted that such a Belief in God as causeth men to Love him and keep his Commandements is the qualification of them that have the promise of Gods saving Mercy Faith working by Love and Obedience 2. The words signifie Gods wonderful Mercy and his delight to do good to those that are qualified to receive it 3. And they signifie that God will not only love and bless a Godly Offspring for their own sake but also for the sake of their godly Ancestors and while they succeed them in true Piety God will increase his Blessings on them 4. And though those forfeit all that prove ungodly when they come to age yet the Insant-seed of the Faithful while such are in Covenant with God on the account of their relation to those godly Parents who dedicate themselves and theirs to him Q. 25. How doth God perform this Promise when many godly Parents have wicked and miserable Children A. This Promise doth not say that God will keep all the Children of the faithful from sinning against him and casting away his Mercy and Salvation But if men be sincerely Godly and dedicate themselves and their Children to God and enter them into his Covenant and perform their own part promised by them God will accept them into his Family and pardon their Original Sin and give them the necessary helps for their personal Faith and Obedience when they come to the use of Reason And if the Children keep their Covenant according to ●heir capacity and do not violate it and reject his Grace God will accept and save them as actual obedient Believers Q. 26. Will he not do so also by the Children of Unbelievers A. If such at age see their Parents sin and forsake it and devote themselves to God he will accept them But as Infidels and wicked Hypocrites have no Promise of Gods acceptance of them and theirs so such do not dedicate themselves and their Children to God He that will devote his Child to God must do it as it were a part of himself and cannot do it sincerely if he first devote not himself to God Q. 27. But may not others do it for his Children A. In Infancy they are considered in the Covenant of Grace but as Infants that is Appurtenances to another As the Infidels Infants they have neither Capacity nor Promise But if any other adopt them and take them truly as their own I am in hope that God accepteth such so devoted to him CHAP. XXXVI Of the Third Commandement Qu. 1. WHat are the words of the Third Commandement A. Thou shalt not take the Name of the Lord thy God in vain for the Lord will not hold him guiltless that taket● his Name in vain Q. 2. What is it that is specially here forbidden A. Prophaneness that is The unholy using of Gods holy Name and holy things especially by Perjury or any other entitling him to falshood or to any of the sins of men as if he were the Author or approver of them Q. 3. What is meant by the Name of God A. Those words or other signs by which he is described denominated or otherwise notified to man which I opened so fully on the first Petition of the Lords Prayer that to avoid repetition I must referre you thereto Q. 4. What is meant by taking the Name of God in vain A. Using it Prophanely and specially falsely it is contrary to the Hallowing of Gods Name which is mentioned in the Lords Prayer In the Scripture 1. The Creature is called Vanity as being but a Shadow and untrusty thing and to use Gods Name and Holy things in a common manner as we use the Creatures is to Profane his Name and take it vainly 2. And Falshood and Lyes are usually called Vanity for Vanity is that Shadowyness which seemeth something and is nothing and so deceiveth men A Lye is that which deceiveth him that trusteth it so Idols are called Vanity and Lyes for their Falshood and deceit and all men are said to be Lyars that is Untrusty and deceitful Q. 5. What is an Oath A. I have said heretofore as others that it 's but an Appeal to God as the Witness of the Truth and the Avenger of a Lye but on further Thoughts I find that the common nature of an Oath is to Pawn some greater thing in attesting of the truth of our words or to take some grievous thing on our selves as a penalty if we Lye or to make some certain Truth a pledge of the truth of what we say And to Swear by our Faith or Truth or Honesty by the Temple the Altar the Fire
to its good and safety Q. 8. What if a Prince think that the death 〈◊〉 an Innocent man is accidentally necessary to the s●…ty of himself or the Common-wealth through other 〈◊〉 fault may he not kill him A. No he is a Murderer if he kill the Innoce●● or any whose fault deserveth not death should 〈◊〉 permit killing on such pretences no mens lives wo●… be safe In Factions there be other wayes of ●…medy and such wicked means do but hasten 〈◊〉 increase the evil which men would so prevent Q. 9. May not Parents have power to kill bad ●●●ldren A. No I have given you the reason under the 〈◊〉 Commandement Q. 10. May not a man kill another in the neces●●●y defence of his own Life A. In some cases he may and in some not He ●…y in case it be his equal or inferiour as to pub●●● usefulness and he have no other means being ●…ulted by him to save his Life from him But 〈◊〉 may not 1. If by flight or other just means he 〈◊〉 save his own Life 2. Nor if it be his King 〈◊〉 Father or any publick Person whose death ●…uld be a greater loss to the Common-wealth than 〈◊〉 own Q. 11. How prove you that A. Because the Light of Nature tells us that see●… Good and Evil are the objects of our Willing 〈◊〉 Nilling therefore the Greatest Good should still 〈◊〉 preferred and the greatest evil be most avoid●… and that the Good or Hurt of the Common●●alth is far greater than of a single private per●… Q. 12. But doth not Nature teach every Creature preserve its life and rather than die to kill ano●… A. The Nature of man is to be Rational and ●…ve bruitish Nature and to choose by Reason ●…gh against sensitive inclination Why else ●●t Martyrs choose to dye rather than to sin and ●●ldiers choose their own death before their Captains or their Kings in which God and reason ju●fie them Q. 13. But by this Rule an Army should kill th● General rather than to be killed or betrayed to de●● by him because all their lives are better than one man A. If they be but some part of an Army a● the Generals life be more useful to the rest and 〈◊〉 their King and Countrey and the publick good th●… all theirs they should rather dye as the Theb●… Legion did But if the General be a Traytor to 〈◊〉 King and Countrey and would destroy all or p●… of the Army to the publick loss and danger i●… no Murder if they kill him when they have no o●… way to save their Lives Q. 14. How many sorts of Murder are there 〈◊〉 which are the worst A. I. One of the worst is Persecution Kill●… men because they are good or because they 〈◊〉 not break Gods Lawes And lower degrees of P●…secution by Banishment Imprisonment Mul●… participate of guilt against this Command II. A second sort of hainous Murder is by 〈◊〉 sacres and unlawful Wars In which multitudes 〈◊〉 murdered and that studiously and with greatest 〈◊〉 dustry and Countreys ruined and undone The m●●titude of hainous Crimes that are contained in 〈◊〉 unlawful Warre are hardly known but by sad ●●perience III. Another sort of hainous Murder is when 〈◊〉 rents kill their own Children or Children their 〈◊〉 rents IV. Another is when Princes destroy their own Subjects whom by Office they are bound to protect or Subjects their Princes whom they are bound to obey and defend and honour V. Another sort of hainous Murder is when it is committed on pretence of Justice by Perjured Witnesses false Accusers or false Iudges or Magistrates As Naboth was murdered by Iezebel and Ahab and Christ by the Iews upon false accusations of Blasphemy and Treason For in this case the Murder is fathered on God and on Iustice which most abhorre it and the best things which should preserve the peace of the Innocent are used to the worst ends even to destroy them And a man hath no defence for himself as he may have against Murtherers or open Enemies and he is destroyed by those that are bound to defend him And the most devilish wicked Perjured men are made the Masters of mens Lives and may conquer Subjects by perverting Law VI. One of the most hainous crimes is soul-murder which is done by all that draw or drive men into sin or from their duty to God and the care of their Salvation either by seducing false Opinions opposing necessary Truth and Duty or by scorns or threats But none here sin so grievously as wicked Rulers and wicked Teachers and Pastors of the Churches Others kill Souls by one and one but these by hundreds and thousands And therefore it is the Devils main endeavour through the World to get Rulers and Teachers on his side and turn the Word and Sword against him that did ordain them All the Idolatrous World that know not Christ are kept under the Power of the Devil principally by wicked Rulers and Teachers And so is the Infidel and Mahometan World When the Turks had once conquered the Eastern Empire how quickly did those famous Churches and large Nations forsake Christ and turn to the grossest of Deceivers O how many millions of Souls have been since hereby destroyed And what wicked deceitful and contentious Teachers have done to the murdering of Souls alas the whole Christian World is witness Some by Heresie and some by Proud Tyranny and some by malignant opposition to the serious practice of that holy Law of God which they preach and some by Ignorance and some by slothful treacherous negligence and some by Church-divisions by their Snares or contentiousness Such as Paul speaks of Phil. 1. 15 16. 2. 3. And some in envy malign and hinder the preaching of the Gospel by such as they distast 1 Thes. 2. 16. VII But of all Soul Murder it is one of the greatest which is done by wicked Parents on their own Children who breed them up in Ignorance Wickedness and profane neglect if not hatred and scorn of serious Holiness And teach them malignant principles or hinder them from the necessary means of their Salvation That by Example teach them to Swear and lie and be drunken or profane For Parents to be the cruel damners of their own Children and this when in false hypocrisie they Vowed them in baptism to God and promised their godly education is odious cruelty and perfidiousness VIII And it is yet a more hainous Sin to be a Murderer of ones own Soul as every ungodly and impenitent sinner is For Nature teacheth all men to Love themselves and to be unwilling of their own destruction And no wonder that such are unmerciful to the Souls of Wives Children and Servants who will damn themselves and that for nothing and that after all the importunities of God and man to hinder them Q. 15. When may a man be accounted a Soul-selfmurderer seeing every man hath some sin A. Every sin as
to wink for it self and the Gust to taste for it self immediately and yet also consequently for every Members good and principally for the whole Man so every Man must get possess and use ●hat he can immediately for himself But as a Member of the Body which hath a due regard to ●e good of every Member and is more for the ●hole than for himself Q. 29. Who be the greatest breakers of this Com●andement A. 1. They that care for no body but themselves ●●d think they may do with their own as they list 〈◊〉 if they were absolute Proprietors whereas they ●…e but the Stewards of God And it is the pleasure 〈◊〉 the Flesh which is the use they think they may ●…t all their Estates to 2. Those that see their brother have need and ●…at up the bowels of their compassion from him that is Relieve him not when it is not for want o● ability but of compassion and will Or that drop but some inconsiderable pittance to the Poor like the crumbs or bones to the Dogs the leavings of the Flesh while they please their Appetites and Fancies with the rest and live as he Luk. 16. who wa● cloathed in Purple and Silk and fared sumptuously or deliciously daily while the Poor at the door had but the Scraps That make so great a difference between themselves and others as to preferre their own Superfluities and Pleasures before the Necessitie of others even when multitudes live in distressing Poverty 3. Those that live Idly because they are ric● or slothfull and think they are bound to labour fo● none but themselves whereas God bindeth all tha● are able to live in some profitable Labour for others and to give to them that need So also they that b● Prodigality Drunkenness Gaming Luxury or othe● Excess disable themselves to relieve the Poor 4. Those that out of a covetous worldly Mind hea● up Riches for themselves and their Children t● leave a Name and great Estate behind them th●● their Children may as hardly be saved as themselves As if all that they can gather were thei● Childrens due while others better than they are u●… terly neglected 5. Those that give with grudging or make to● great a matter of their Gifts and set too high 〈◊〉 Price upon them and must have it even extorte from them 6. Those that neglect to pay due wages to them that labour for them and would bring down the Price below its worth so that poor Labourers cannot live upon it And that strive in all their Bargainings to have every thing as cheap as they can get it without respect to the true worth or the Necessities of others 7. Those that help not to maintain their own Families and Kindred as far as they are able Q. 30. Who are the greatest Robbers or breakers of both parts of this Command Negative and Preceptive A. 1. Emperours Kings and other Chief Rulers who oppress the People and impoverish them while they are bound by Office to be Gods Ministers for their good 2. Soldiers who by unjust Wars destroy the Countreys or in just war unjustly rob the People O the Woful ruines that such have made So that Famine hath followed the Poverty and desolations to the death of Thousands 3. Unrighteous Judges who for Bribes or Partiality or culpable ignorance do fine righteous men or give away the Estates of the just and do wrong men by the pretence of Law Right and Justice and deprive the just of their remedy 4. Perfidious Patrons who Simoniacally Sell or Sacrilegiously alienate the devoted maintenance of the Church 5. Much more those Rulers and Prelates who ●actiously maliciously or otherwise culpably silence and cast out Faithful Ministers Sacrilegiously alienating them from the Work of Christ and the Churches service to which they were consecrated and devoted and casting them out of their publick ministerial Maintenance 6. All Persecutors who unjustly fine men and deprive them of their Estates for not sinning against God by Omission or Commission especially when they ruine multitudes 7. Cruel oppressing Landlords who set their poor Tenants such hard Bargains as they cannot live on 8. Cruel Lawyers and other Officers who take such Fees as undo the Clients so that men that have not Money to answer their Covetous expectations must lose their right 9. Unmerciful Physicians who consider not the scarcity of Money with the Poor but by Chargeable Fees and Apothecaries bills put men to die for want of Money 10. Unmerciful Usurers and Creditors that will not forgive a debt to the poor who have it not to pay 11. People that rob the Ministers of their Tythes 12. Cheaters who by Gaming false Playes and tricks of Craft or false Writings Concealments o● by quirks in Law that are contrary to Equity d● beguile men of their right And especially th● Poor who cannot contend with them Yea and some their own Kindred CHAP. XLII Of the Ninth Commandement Qu. 1. WHat are the Words of the ninth Commandement A. Thou shalt not bear false Witness against thy Neighbour Q. 2. What is it which is herein forbidden A. All Falshood injurious to the innocency right or reputation of another especially in witness-bearing accusations or judgments contrary to publick Justice The Act forbidden is Falshood The object against which it is done is our Neighbours good or right of any sort whether his good Name or Estate or Life especially as it perverteth the hear●●s Judgment and Love or publick Justice Q. 3. Is all Lying here forbidden or only injurious Lying A. All Lying is injurious and forbidden Q. 4. What injury doth a jeasting Lie do to any one ●r a Lye which only saveth the speaker from some hurt ●ithout hurting any other Yea some Lies seem to be ●●rofitable and necessary As if a Parent or Physici●n tell a Lie to a Child or Patient to get them to take a Medicine to save their lives or a Subject tell a lye to a Traytor or Enemy to save the Life of the King Tell me I pray you why God forbiddeth all such Lies A. 1. You must consider that God is the Author of Order And Order is to ●●e World it 's useful disposition to it's Operations and Ends Just as it is to a Clock or Watch or a Coach or Ship or any such Engine Disorder the parts and it 's good for nothing A Kingdom Army Church or any Society is essentiated by Order without which it is destroyed And the World of Mankind being made up of individual persons the ordering of particular Men is the Chief thing to the Order of the humane World As we dye when disorder of parts or humors maketh the Body uncapable of the Souls Operations So a mans Soul is vitiated and dead to it 's Chiefends when it 's Order is overthrown All Godliness and Morality is nothing but the right Order of the dispositions and acts of man in our subordination to the Governing
If all Magistrates loved the People as themselves how would they use them If Bishops and Teachers loved others as themselves and were as loth to hurt them as to be hurt and to reproach them as to be reproached and to deliver them from Poverty Prison or Danger as to be safe themselves what do you think would be the consequent How few would study to make others odious or ●o ruine them how few would backbite them or ●ensoriously condemn them if they loved them as themselves If all this City and Kingdom loved each other as themselves what a foretast would it be of Heaven on Earth How delightfully should we all live together Every man would have the good of all others to rejoice in as his own And be as ready to relieve another as the right hand will the left We can too easily forgive our selves our faults and errours and so should bear with others Love is our Safety who is afraid of any one who he thinks loveth him as himself who is afraid that he should persecute imprison or destroy himself unless by ignorance or distraction Love is the delight of Life when it is mutual and is not disappointed what abundance of Fears and Cares and Passions and Law-suit's would it End It is the fulfilling of the preceptive part of the Law and as to the penal part there is no use for it where Love prevaileth To such saith Paul there is no Law They are not without it but above it so far as it worketh by fear 5. Love is the Preparation and Foretast of Glory Fear Care and Sorrow are distantly preparing works but it 's Ioyful Love which is the immediate Preparation and foretast There is no War no Persecution no Hatred Wrath or Strife in Heaven But perfect Love which is the uniting Grace wi●… there more nearly unite all Saints than we that a●… in a dividing world and body can now conceive or perfectly believe Q. 12. Is there any hope that Love should reign on Earth A. There is hope that all the Sound Believers should increase in Love and get more victory over Selfishness For they have all that Spirit of Love and obey Christs last and great Command and are taught of God to Love one another yea they dwell in Love and so in God and God in them and it will grow up to Perfection But I know of no hope that the Malignant Seed of Cain should cease the hating of them that are the Holy seed save as Grace converteth any of them to God Of any Common or universal Reign of Love I see no Prognosticks of it in Rulers in Teachers or any others in the World Prophesies are dark But my greatest hope is fetcht from the three first Petitions of the Lords Prayer which are not to be put up in Vain Q. 13. What should we do towards the increase of Love A. 1. Live so blamelesly that none may find just matter of hatred in you 2. Love others whether they Love you or not Love is the most powerful cause of Love 3. Do hurt to none but by necessary Justice or defence And do as much good as you can to all 4. Praise all that is good in men and mention not the Evil without necessity 5. Do all that you can to make men Holy and winne them to the Love of God And then they will Love each other by his Spirit and for his sake 6. Do all that you can to draw men from sinfull worldly Love For that Love of the World which is Enmity to God is also Enmity to the love of one another Further than you can draw men to center in Christ and in holy Love there is no hope of true Love to others 7. Patiently suffer wrongs rather than provoke men to hate you by unnecessary seeking your right or revenge Q. 14. Is all desire of another mans unlawfull A. All that is to his hurt loss and wrong You may desire another mans daughter to Wife by his Consent or his House Horse or Goods when he is willing to sell them But not else Q. 15. But what if in gaming betting or trading I desire to get from him though to his loss A. It is a covetous selfish sinfull desire You must desire to get nothing from him to his loss and hurt Q. 16. But what if he consent to run the hazard as in a Hors●-race a Game a Wager c It 's no wrong to a Consenter A. The very desire of hurtful drawing from him to your self is selfish sin If he consent to the hazard it is also his covetous desire to gain from you And his sin is no excuse for yours And you may be sure it was not the Loss that he consented to But if he do it as a Gift it 's another Case Q. 17. What be the worst sorts of Covetousness A. 1. When the Son wisheth his Fathers death for his Estate 2. When men that are Old and near the Grave still covet that which they are never like to need or use 3. When men that have abundance are never satisfied but desire more 4. When they will get it by Lying Extortion or other wicked means even by Perjury and Blood as Iezebel and Ahab got Naboths Vineyard 5. When Princes not content with their just Dominions invade other Mens and plague the World with unjust Warres Blood and Miseries to enlarge them Q. 18. How differ Charity and Iustice A. Charity Loveth all because there is somewhat in them lovely and doth them good without respect to their Right because we love them Justice respecteth men as in the same Governed Society under God or Man and so giveth every man his due Q. 19. Is it Love or Justice that saith Whatever you would that men should do to you do ye also to them A. It is both Justice saith Do right to all and wrong to none as you would have them do to you Charity saith Love and pity and relieve all to your power as you would have them Love Pity and Relieve you Q. 20. Hath this Law no exceptions A. It supposeth that your own Will for your selves be just and good If you would have another make you drunk or draw you to any sinfull or unclean Pleasure you may not therefore do so by them But do others such right and good as you may lawfully desire they should do to you Q. 21. What are those Foundations on which this Law is built A. 1. That as God hath made us Individual Persons so he is the free Distributer of his allowance to every Person and therefore we must be content with his allowance and not covet more 2. That God hath made us for Holiness and endless Happiness in Heaven And therefore we must not so Love this World as to covet fulness and desire more of it than God alloweth us 3. That God hath made every man a member of the humane World and every Christian a Member of