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A48737 Solomons gate, or, An entrance into the church being a familiar explanation of the grounds of religion conteined in the fowr [sic] heads of catechism, viz. the Lords prayer, the Apostles creed, the Ten commandments, the sacraments / fitted to vulgar understanding by A.L. Littleton, Adam, 1627-1694. 1662 (1662) Wing L2573; ESTC R34997 164,412 526

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take up the yoke and bear the burden quietly and cast it upon the Lord who will bring it to pass That we may not boldly pry into his decrees nor presume upon a rash confidence or despair in distrust of his love but adhere to the plain rule of his word and busy our selves in doing his will That we would tread carefully in the path of duty and mind the business of our general and particular calling and trust God with the success in the use of all lawfull means That we may not be discontented peevish and froward when our humours and interests are cross'd and when his providence answers not our desires but bless God when he takes away as well as when he gives and give him the glory whatever befalls us That we may resign all to his blessed will and rest fully satisfied with his determinations that in all cases we may say with our Saviour Not my will but thine be done That he would write his laws in our hearts and teach us his statutes and acquaint us with his will that we may doe it That he would assist us with his grace and strength from above for the performance of his commandements That he would mortifie our lusts and the corrupt desires of the flesh that we may not set up them in opposition to his Holy will but bring every proud imagination in obedience to him That we may be so acted by his spirit that we may be quickend in every good way and work and be carried on from strength to strength till we come to perfection That we may have a holy emulation for the blessed spirits above and endeavour to imitate them in yielding an obedience without delay without murmuring and without weariness That we may endeavour to the utmost to find out what that good that acceptable and perfect will of God is and to perform it and never think we can doe too much for him or suffer too much for his sake That we would lay aside all worldly cares and serve God without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the dayes of our life and fit our selves for the business of eternity by having our conversation in heaven whilest we are here on earth Thus the three Petitions do immediately concern God and may also have particular reference to the three Persons of the Trinity That the name of the Father who is God blessed for ever may be exalted and glorified That the Kingdom of his Son and his glorious presence may be hastned That the spirit would frame our hearts to the obedience of his will And to the three offices of Christ By whose name as he is our Priest we are saved whose name is above every name holy and excellent who as King rules in our hearts and will come in triumphant manner at the last day to own his faithfull subjects and be avenged of his enemies And who lastly as Prophet hath declared unto us the will of the Father and came to do his will on earth as it is in Heaven with an exact unsinning obedience Nor is the word Thy idle but hath a great significance commending to us that great Gospel-duty of self-denial which is indeed the essential character of a right Christian who can be content to part with all so God may have his due For so the opposition is to be understood Thy name not our honour Thy Kingdom not our interest Thy will not our humour And thus the three petitions seem to be levell'd at the world's Trinity Honour Riches and Pleasure We ought not to study our own honour but to doe all for the glory of God we must not strive for deceivable riches but set the Crown upon Christ's head We should not follow our own pleasure and pursue our own satisfactions and contents but submit to God's will It is no wonder that this holy form of Prayer was so displeasing to the ambitious and factious spirits of these latter times a generation of self-seeekers who meant to advance their own names and get the power of the Kingdom into their own hand and pretended a divine authority for their own will as if they would have prayed rather Our will be done in heaven as it is on earth nor did they stick to say as much when they father'd all their mischiefs on providence and from their successes concluded God's approbation of their wickedness These last words On earth as it is in Heaven may seem to look back upon the three precedent Petitions after this manner on earth as in Heaven Hallowed be thy Name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done May we men on earth praise and glorify thy name adore thy power and Majesty perform thy commands and submit to thy holy will even as the Angels those ministring spirits and the blessed Saints doe in Heaven saying Holy Holy Holy Lord God of Sabaoth Now follow the Petitions which concern us and our necessities which are either temporal supplyes of food and a comfortable subsistence and a dayly provision and sustenance or spiritual wants such as are the Pardo● of our sins and justification by the blood of the Son of God which was shed for the remission of sins and the strength of assisting grace whereby we may resist and overcome temptation sanctification wrought by the spirit of God dwelling in us and cleansing our hearts by faith So that these three also may have respect to the three persons seeing that they seem particularly directed to the Father for maintenance to the Son for pardon to the Spirit for grace BREAD What more natural for children to ask or for a father to give Bread is the staff of life the stay and support of nature the chief nourishment and that which alone will keep nature in repair and the body in health but is usually taken by a Synecdoche for all manner of food whatsoever even for flesh meat and drink whence to eat bread with one was a common form of speech meant for sitting down at table dining or supping and being entertain'd and indeed feasted with varieties And yet more largely sometimes as here it is for all the provisions and accommodations of life not only food but raiment habitation health strength money friends estate preferment vigour of mind soundness of body success in our undertakings a blessing upon our labours comfort from our relations with all other temporal concernments as seasonable weather the early and the later rain fruitfull fields plenty peace deliverance from dangers long life and a good old age with all those good things of mind of body and of fortune as we call them which may be the objects of a right order'd natural desire and all those additional advantages which the custome of countryes hath made convenient and agreeable to people according to their severall ranks and qualities which are all here comprehended under the name of Bread to teach us frugality and contentedness that if we have but bread we
Scripture The one was when he came in the flesh in the form of a servant to die for us that he might reign upon the tree as some readings have it in the Psalms The other will be when he shall come in the clouds with power and glory attended with Angels to judge the world at that great and dreadful day when the trumpet shall summon all to appear before the tribunal And when that 's done he shall deliver up the Kingdom to his Father and the time of this his coming and the end of the world he hath left here to be the subject of our prayers and not of our inquiries to exercise devotion not curiosity the uncertainty of the time being an argument to quicken our diligence in preparing for it that we may watch and pray he having told us afore-hand that he will steal upon us as a thief in the night But what need we trouble our selves about the age of the world when our own time is so uncertain that we cannot call the next hour our own and know not how soon the arrest of death may hurry us away to judgement He that dies now in the Lord rests from his labour his good works follow him and if we cannot properly say that the Kingdom of God is come to him we may safely say he is gone to it At the end of the world then is Christ's great coming and the general judgement but at every single death there is a particular doom past when the soul immediately after it's delivery out of the body is dispatched either into the regions of life or lodged in the chambers of death so that in this sense Christ may be said to come too And there is a gracious visit when he comes and knocks at the heart and calls to his beloved by his word When he comes into us to a feast and banquet of love furnished with the consolations of the spirit The sum of this request is that God would declare his power even to the heathen that know not his name and make discoveries of his Majesty by his outward administrations not leaving himself without witness but convince profane spirits that there is a God that rules in the world that he would manage the affairs of the world for his peoples good and for the advancement of the Kingdom of his Son that he would bless the civill societies of men that he would fill Soveraigns with wisdom to go in and out before the people and people with loyalty to their rulers and with love to one another That he would establish the state wherein we live in peace and order preserving us on one hand from the tyranny and oppression of superiours and on the other hand from rebellion and conspiracy of inferiors That he would save the King whom he hath set under himself our supream Head and Governor from all treasons and treacherous designs that he would subdue the people under him cloath his enemies with shame and upon himself let his crown flourish that he would give the King his judgements and make our Magistrates men of courage fearing God and hating covetousness That he would preserve us from all dreadfull calamities the plague pestilence and famine from wars fires inundations from murder and sudden death That he would take a special care of his Church and his chosen ones that he would send labourers into his vineyard that he would endue his Ministers with righteousness that he would illuminate all Bishops and Pastours with true knowledge and understanding of his word that both by their preaching and living they may set it forth and shew it accordingly That he would inlarge the tents of Japhet remember his ancient people the Iewes gather in the remnant of the gentiles send forth his Gospell into the dark corners of the earth and publish the glad tidings of salvation unto all mankind that he would fill up the number of his elect and hasten the glorious appearance of Christ That he would confound the devices of all that have evill will to Zion and turn the hearts of hereticks schismaticks and bloody tyrants That he would assist those that suffer for the testimony of a good conscience with strength from above and send them the comforter That he would destroy the man of sin with the breath of his mouth That he would garrison our hearts with his grace that he would teach us his laws that we may walk in his statutes and keep his commands That he would mortify the desires and lusts of the flesh subdue us to himself and make us a willing people in the day of his power That he would open our hearts for the receiving of his word and rule in them by his spirit That his Kingdom may first enter into us that we may enter into it Lastly that we may have our feet shod with the preparation of the Gospell live in a constant exspectation of our great change that when our Lord comes he may find us doing his will on earth as it is in Heaven And blessed is he whom his Lord when he comes shall find so doing THY WILL BE DONE The nature of God is not made up of a body and soul nor hath he bodily parts as eyes hands feet c. or faculties of mind as understanding memory affections and 't is no less improper to say of God that he knows or wills any thing as that he walks sees c. which are metaphorical expressions taken from men God being pleased in holy writ to condescend to our capacity and speak of himself after the manner of men God is all understanding all will nor is there any thing in God which is not infinite i.e. himself His will then is not a thing really distinct from his understanding or indeed from his essence neither is it a blind power as it is in us that needs the guidance of reason and the light of another faculty to be convey'd into it to represent the object and advise it to choose the good and eschew the evil but is of it self most free most wise most good It self is a law and rule to it self determins it self and is the measure and standard of all goodness righteousness and holiness The Lord is righteous in all his wayes and holy in all his works And his pracepts are more to be desired then gold yea then fine gold sweeter then hony the hony-comb Now there is a twofold will of God that of his decrees and that of his commands Nor do these two cross and oppose the one the other as if God decreed one thing should be and commanded the contrary but they keep a sweet harmony and mutuall correspondence God's word and his providence may seem sometimes to clash and justle one another yet they do keep the same road of righteousness nor does God ever contradict himself or speak one thing and mean another Let God be true and every man a lyar '
other recreation to entertain himself with but to set gins and snares to catch souls in it being the design of his implacable spight to see man who by his means fell from Paradise the place of bliss to an accursed earth fall yet lower into the torments of Hell to be a companion to the damned spirits He 'l accompany thee to Church and watch thee into thy closet whatever thou art about hee 's at hand he intermeddles in thy civil affairs in thy religious duties hee 'l bear a part and suggest vain thoughts hee 'l buy and sell with thee nay hee 'l watch and pray with thee Our Saviour himself was led by the spirit into the wilderness to be tempted where after the preparation of a forty dayes fast for the conflict he was to enter the lists and vanquish this grand enemy of our salvation O blessed preparatory Lent O happy encounter when the Captain of our salvation with the buckler of faith and girt with the sword of truth and meekness upon his thigh was pleas'd to meet this spiritual Goliah in the field and combate with him that he might tread him under our feet break his head his strength and his policy and give his flesh to be mea● for his people in the wilderness that as the viper's flesh proves an excellent Antidot against the poyson of the viper and is a great restorative to nature which the creature it self would destroy so temptations might turn to advantages and the malice of Satan improve our bliss How little able should we be to resist him who made such fierce assaults on the Son of God himself How little hope can we have to escape being tempted to the fowlest and most horrid sins when he had the impudence to tempt God himself for such was Christ to the fowlest Idolatry to fall down and worship the Divel Oh dreadfull blasphemy Oh outragious confidence O a Divel void of all ingenuity past all shame and fear All these things will I give thee if thou fall down and worship me All these things all which things Base bold feind hast thou any thing to give All too all at a clap false pretender thou hast nothing to bestow of thy own but evil hell and death the wages of sin All that 's good is God's already or if thou hast any thing to give dost know saucy creature who it is thou speakest to wilt thou offer thy maker any thing dost think that hee 'l take any thing at thine hand If he stood in need would he pass by all his creatures canst imagin to accept thy kindness And why feind this unusual bounty so great a present to him thou hatest What wouldst thou have him doe for 't wouldst thou purchase his favour Hast a mind to buy thy peace and compound for pardon spare thy gifts bring thy self repent and beg that thou mayst have leave to fall down at his footstool and worship before the mercy seat canst thou confess and forsake thy sins Thou hast Scripture for 't and thy former discourse shews thee well read in Scripture thou shalt find favour And what an opportunity hast thou The Saviour of the world in thy company who came on purpose to reconcile sinners and save what was lost will be easily intreated to intercede for thee and get admittance for a faln Angel nor is all his charity tyed to faln men thy brother Angels whom thou left'st in heaven trust in him and worship him And why maist not thou hope the day of thy return is coming now that heaven gates are set open to all that will enter the Kingdom of Heaven suffers violence And thou hast greater reasons to prevail with thee for repentance then miserable men have as knowing the great happiness thou hast parted with and having so long felt the torments of an evil conscience thy own hell and of that hell which thou art heating for others If any man were in thy case who yet is of a shallower understanding and sense then thou art would he not willingly leap out of those flames in which thou fryest would he not gladly be freed from the wrath of God which thou hast for so many ages lain under and which for ever thou must lye under unless thou canst repent And to what end shouldst thou stand out any longer in an enmity to him that overpowers thee to whom thy hatred can doe no hurt who constantly baffles thy counsels defeats thy strengths and has bound thee with everlasting chains one would think this very conflict might sufficiently convince thee how poor thy malice shows and how successless all thy attempts No Repentance is a doctrine to be preached only to men as the good Angels cannot sin so neither can the bad repent The Divel is but enraged with the tidings of salvation and his dispair imboldens him and he is resolv'd to be damn'd for ever He has an inveterate hatred and implacable malice against God which has call'd him forth now unto this defiance He hates the very thoughts of being blessed because he cannot be so out of God's company he hates God as God hates sin with a perfect hatred and would treat with God upon no other terms then this that God would not be Out of hatred to God he hates himself and is contented to foregoe his happiness rather then to acknowledge it and buyes his spight with endless torments If God should reinstate him as he is in heaven and inlarge him from his bonds he would look on the favour as a more painful imprisonment and account heaven his worse hell Though he knows aforehand that nothing he doth against God shall prosper he thinks it success enough of his plots that he has shown a contempt and in this very temptation of Christ nothing pleases him so much as the effrontery of it that he could as his servant Herod after did mock him and set him at nought when he was not suffer'd to doe him any more hurt For what is it he tempts him to that which he could not have impudence to hope would be hearkned to that which he knew was impossible for Christ in his very nature as well as in his will to doe to sin the holy one to commit a sin Oh audacious tempter couldst thou offer to corrupt him who knows no sin with a bribe couldst thou fancy the judge of all the earth could be made doe wickedly for reward when every upright judge scorns to have justice bought many an honest lawyer will not be hired to be an advocate for wrong But oh Divelish impudence what sin He had tempted him before to distrust and then to tempt providence and seeing Scripture as he applyed it would not prevail is not dismayed by a double repulse but that he might go of with a boast seeing he could not with conquest shews himself right Divel and belcheth out a blasphemy big enough to fill the wide mouth of hell He would
to upbraid any one Party For though the Act of Oblivion injoyns us to forget Injuries done to Men yet Religion will oblige us to remember our Sins against God The Sacraments I have handled with that brevity that I have not there much insisted on the Rites wherewith our Church administers them but elsewhere in the Book have in the general offer'd somewhat to their defence Where I plead Admission of all to the holy Table I would not be understood to speak for those which are under Church-censures On every of these parts I have said little of the much which might have been said and for ought that I know nothing that has been said by others having had a special care all the way of the Eighth Commandement Sir You are the onely Author that I have consulted and these sheets have not been the travail so much of my Invention as of my Memory while I have been recovering those Notices your Institution lodg'd in my young head and heart Wherefore what I have fail'd in Elegance of expression or Solidity of matter I must first here beg your Pardon for seeing that contrary to the method of the Resurrection what was sown in strength is now ra●s'd in weakness And next crave your Blessing upon the Book and Me that God would make us both serviceable to the Publick For I very well understand what hazard of censure I run by appearing thus in Print and what Obligations I now lay upon my self to walk carefully and order my conversation aright since he that puts forth a Book of Religion and leads an irreligious life doth but libell himself and scandalize his Book Sir As it was your great care and love to send me in my younger years to several places for my education so 't was my no lesse happinesse that I was principled in Religion by your self and though Scholar to sundry Masters was your Catechumenus I thought it then the most fitting Gratitude to return you what I receiv'd and design your own Instructions the Memorial of my Dutie That the God of all Consolation would crown your Old age with Honour and Ioy and after these many years of Suffering and Persecution wherein you have had so large a share heap upon you the blessings of Peace and a long Life that you may see and partake the prosperity of Jerusalem shall be the dayly prayer of Dear Father St. Thomas-day 1661. Your most dutifull and obedient Son Adam Littleton Sentences out of Scrip ure Heb. V. 12. FOr when for the time ye ought to be Teachers ye have need that one teach you again which be the first Principles of the oracles of God and are become such as have need of milk not of strong meat 1 Tim. I. 13. Hold fast the Form of sound Words which thou hast heard of me in Faith and Love which is in Christ Iesus Prov. XXII 6. Train up or Catechise a Child in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it Psal. XXXIV 11 12 13 14. Come ye Children hearken unto me I will teach you the fear of the Lord. What man is he that desireth life and lov●th many dayes that he may see good Keep thy Tongue from evil thy lips from speaking guile Depart from evil do good seek Peace and pursue it Prov. IV. 23. Keep thy Heart with all diligence or above all keeping for out of it are the issues of life Psalm CXI 10. The fear of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdom a good Vnderstanding or good success have all they that do his Commandements Eccles. XII 13. Let us hear the Conclusion of the whole matter Fear God and Keep his Commandements for this is THE WHOLE DUTIE OF MAN An Explanation of the GROUNDS OF RELIGION RELIGION is the Fear of God i.e. the acknowledging worshipping of God God is known by his Works and by his Word There was never any Nation which did not profess the worship of God An Atheist was alwayes counted a monster Now most Countries following Nature as their guid have mistaken either in the matter or manner of their worship The Heathens therefore such as Indians Scythians Turks c. worship either a false God or with false worship But God's people being guided by the light of Scripture do embrace the true Religion the Iewish Church in the time of the Law the Christian Church under the Gospel For after the coming of Christ the Religion of the Iews hath now no longer use since it was but a shadow and type of Christ to come For Christ the Sun of Righteousnesse being risen the Ceremonies like shadows are scatter'd and fled away Christian Religion then is that Doctrine which Christ himself taught when he was on earth confirm'd by miracles and holinesse of Life and sealed with his precious Blood dying on the Cross. Christian Religion is at large conteined in the holy Scriptures i.e. in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles who were the Pen men of the holy Ghost But it is chiefly compriz'd in the four Heads of Catechism which we call the Principles of Religion Now Catechism is a brief and plain Institution which explains the Mysteries of Faith and the Duties of a holy Life in that manner that they may be easily understood by any even the most vulgar apprehension Wherefore 't is call'd the Sincere milk of the Word as being fitted to the capacity of little children which as yet cannot bear more weighty discourses which are compar'd to solid meat This Doctrine then is plain that it may be receiv'd by the Understanding and short that it may be held in Memory yet full too that it may instruct us in all things necessary to salvation For it is made up of four parts whereof the First teacheth us what we are to believe concerning God and the Church the Second what duty we owe to God and man the Third describes a method of praying the Fourth delivers those Sacred seals by which this doctrine is confirm'd The Confession of Faith is set down in the Apostles Creed The Law of God contein'd in the Ten Commandements is the Rule of life The Lord's Prayer is a most absolute form and pattern of Prayer And lastly the two Sacraments of Baptism and the Holy Supper are instead of Seals These are the Pillars upon which not onely the Church but every faithfull soul is in the Spirit built up to perfect knowledge and blessednesse to grace and glory AN EXPLANATION Of the LORD'S PRAYER The Lord's Prayer OUr Father which art in heaven Hallowed be thy Name Thy kingdom come Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven Give us this day our dayly bread And forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil For thine is the kingdome the power and the glory for ever and ever Amen The LORDS PRAYER PRAYER is a calling upon God in time of
to call upon the Lord and to give thanks unto the name of the Lord c. Not unto us but to thy name give the glory i.e. to thy self for so the opposition stands not to us but to thy self Sometimes it is taken for fame and renown and glory which accompanies a good name and makes it like good oyntment the Giants of old were men of name to wit famous renowned men much talked of Christ's name after he had wrought some miracles was spread abroad throughout the country i.e. he grew famous We will make mention of thy name saith the Psalmist often and will speak well of thy name and sing praises to thy name i.e. set forth thy praise in verse and contribute the skill of my tongue and harp which are my glory in the celebration of the glory Then 't is taken for those abilityes virtues which commend a man to fame and raise an admiration and esteem of him as power wisdom goodness mercy c. And such are the glorious attributes of God the excellencies and perfections of his nature as How excellent is thy name in all the earth sayes David when he meditates upon the works of creation wherein those attributes of his doe most conspicuously shine forth to the amazement of any serious beholder And lastly it comprehends all the effects atchievements of the divine attributes whether produced by common providence in the world such as are his works daily accidents extraordinary events or by special grace such as are his word and ordinances the Sacraments the Gospell his Ministers his Sabbaths his Temple his inheritance persons places times and things dedicated to his service and whatsoever wears upon it a stamp of holiness to the Lord. Thus in thy name will we tread down our enemies i.e. by thy assistance and help and by the conduct of thy providence so ordering it defeating the counsels and breaking the strength of our adversaries In thy name we have prophecied and cast out devils c. by virtue of thy commission by thy command and appointment and the warrant of thy word Baptizing them in the name of the Father c. to wit into the profession of the Gospell into the worship and service of God faith in his promises and obedience to his commands Nor is the principal and usual signification to be laid aside God having many such names given him in Scripture both proper as Iehovah Iah Elohim Adonai Shaddai and appellative even a full Alphabet of names as the Syric Grammarians reckon them And so too Holy and reverend is his name Our petitions here begin in God's name a form so well liked that it came to be taken up even up even in the civil affairs of life wills contracts c. and made use of at last as a stale to countenance the worst designs of cheat prostituted to base self-ends even to the infamy of a Proverb And surely if we facing our prayers with it make it only a vizar to our own corrupt desires we doe it a fowl reproach and profane it when we pray it may be sanctified To Sanctify hath also a doubtful meaning according to the thing it is applyed to The Philosopher has in a moral respect rank'd things into three forms For there are some things absolutely and in their own nature good others as naturally bad and a third sort of indifferent things which in their own nature are neither good nor bad but according as they are used His distinction may find room here and accordingly admit of a threefold Sanctification That which is in it self holy is sanctified when 't is acknowledged and reverenc'd as holy And thus we are bid to Sanctify the Lord of Hosts himself the holy One. That which is by nature evill and corrupt is sanctified by being made holy and having that nature renewed according to righteousness And thus God sanctifies us by his spirit creating us to good works in Christ Iesus and he bids us also Sanctify our selves by a diligent attendance on the holy ordinances and holiness of life and conversation That which is of a middle and indifferent nature is sanctifyed when we set it apart from common service and apply it to holy uses So our meat is sanctified by the word and Prayer so the Priest with his vests the Temple with it's utensils the Sabbath c. become sacred and inviolable And who offers a violence to any thing that thus belongs to God's peculium is profane and sacrilegious Our request then in this petition is That all things may be done to the glory of God that he would order his own counsels and all the dispensations of his providence and his grace to the utmost advantages of his own praise that he would sanctify us that we might sanctify him in our hearts that we may fear before him that is dreadfull in holiness that we may entertain reverent thoughts of him admire him in his infinite perfections be astonished at his unsearchable glory study his praises meditate on his goodness delight our selves in him and speak well of his name and set forth his noble acts that we may take notice of him in his out-goings observe his providences mark his particular supplyes and restraints regard his mercies with thankfulness and mend under his judgements that we may wait on him in his sanctuary in the use of his ordinances go to his house in his fear praise his name in the assembly among those that keep holy dayes attend to his word keep his Sabbaths honour his Ministers and give due respect to every thing that belongs to him and that we use not any of his names or titles but upon weighty occasions and with great reverence And lastly that our whole life be so holy and blameless that we may not give occasion for God's name or his wayes to be evill spoken of but rather that our light may so shine before men that they seeing our good works may glorify our Father which is in Heaven And this being done will promote set forward the interests of his Kingdom and so speed the second petition too THY KINGDOM COME God is the Lord of Lords and the King of Kings the great Soverain of the world who does whatsoever he pleases and neon saith unto him what dost thou who hath resisted his will or given him counsel For that the word signifies also in the Chaldee dialect those two things being necessary to compleat a Monarch's right and make him absolute to doe what he doth by a clear and full authority and power of his own and by his own counsel and pleasure to act and determine that power He is the great Basis and support of all societies and governments in the world For the powers that are are ordain'd of God By me King's reign and for him too being his Vice-gerents and sword-bearers to be a terror to evill-doers
and a praise to the good And as he hath corwn'd all mankind with honour and dignity giving them dominion over their fellow-creatures so he hath put that Majesty upon rulers whom he hath appointed to govern their fellow-men who else without lawes and order would be little better then beasts that they may be looked upon and observ'd with that reverence as if they were earthly Gods I have said ye are Gods but ye shall dy like men They are God's anointed ones and honour'd of him accountable only to him required therefore to do their homage and kiss the Son least he be angry And as they must like all other men dy so they must also appear before the judgement-seat of God Kings to their subjects dreadful stand O're Kings themselv's is Gods command He hath all the royalties that belong to an Imperial Crown a righteous Scepter righteous lawes loyal subjects glorious priviledges blessed rewards for the obedient and great punishments for the disobedient Not ought Kings of the earth to be impatient at mutinous and rebellious spirits when God himself wants not those who rise up against him and which may set them a copy of princely clemency to write their acts of grace after gives gifts to the rebellious leaving some of them as monuments of his mercy though too others he make trophies of his justice I might note that sure Kingship is the best form and model of government since God himself rules under that title that the Regicide is a kind of Deicide and when subjects dare mate their soverain and contrive a Common-wealth to justle out the Kingdom they do but challenge divine vengeance for that which perhaps their injur'd princes forces cannot chastise and call upon themselves Lucifer's fate who left his first estate by clambering higher whose pride prefer'd him to the principality in Hell where he gnashes his teeth and curses God who questionless hath been that Angel of light that hath cloak'd sedition with the name of Godliness and taught the late teachers to despise dominion and speak evil of dignities and blaspheme the name of Kings And all nature hath by instinct followed divine example gathering it self as much as may be into oneness making every sort of creature almost submit to monarchical rule and preaching as it were the Apostle's lesson Be not many masters But the sad experience of these nations in the time of tyranny and the wonderfull providence of God in the restitution hath sufficiently convinc'd all honest English of this truth that That government is best which is likest God's to wit a Monarchy a Kingdom Now God hath a twofold Kingdom one universal at large all the world over the other particular and special his Church For he is King of the nations and King of the Saints or we may say a threefold Kingdom in respect of the different administration of this later according to the different condition of the church militant here on earth or triumphant in heaven to wit a temporal spiritual and eternal Kingdom or the Kingdom of his power the Kingdom of grace and the Kingdom of glory By his power he governs the whole fabric of the world disposes of all things appoints seasons sets bounds to human power over-rules their purposes stills the raging of the Sea and the madness of the people raises up casts down kills and makes alive strikes the earth with his thunder and darts forth his lightnings the winds obey him blow only where he lists All things are his servants and he doth what he pleaseth both in heaven and in earth By his grace he governs his Church sets up his throne in the hearts of his people appoints officers gathers the elect and rules them by his word and spirit conquers sin and death kills our corruptions subdues our lusts and treads Satan under our feet and breaks the powers of hell that the gates thereof shall not prevail against the church guids the faithfull ones in his wayes tryes their patience exercises their faith teaches them his lawes that they may observe his statutes and ordinances defends the Saints and is a sun and shield to direct and protect them that neither the Devil nor wicked men can doe them any hurt rewards those that doe or suffer any thing for his sake punishes offenders and persues the impenitent and such as obstinately stand out his calls and tenders of grace and go on presumptuously in their evill way with the fury of his indignation afflicting them with bodily plagues temporal calamities and spiritual judgements as blindness of mind hardness of heart c. giving them up to their own shamefull lusts and a reprobate mind into the power of the divel and either passing final sentence upon them in this life or reserving them till the great Assises of the last judgement In the Kingdom of glory as he himself is call'd the King of glory he sits on his Throne incompass'd with millions of Angels and blessed Saints who fall down before him and sing praises to him that sits upon the Throne and to the Lamb. This is to have it's beginning when the other two end not to be compleated till the last day when the Angels gather the elect from the four corners of the earth whom God shall reward with everlasting bliss when he shall send the ungodly to Hell where the worm never dyeth and the fire never goes out Then those who were sufferers shall be conquerers and wear a never-fading crown I have fought a good fight saith St. Paul and henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness All the Saints then shall be Kings there shall be the glorious orders of pure Virgins that defiled not themselves of blessed Co●●essors that were not ashamed of their profession of holy Martyrs who lov'd not their soules to death of Prophets the Harbingers of Christ and Apostles the heralds of the Gospell and all the quire of Heaven singing Halleluiahs This is that Kingdom of Christ which he said was not of this world for which he despised the shame with which his servants that have a tast of the heavenly gift and are afforded the earnest of their meditations a sight of the heavenly Canaan and glorified transfiguration as from Pisgah and on mount Tabor are so ravished and deeply affected that they must needs cry come Lord Iesus come quickly Thy Kingdom come COME i.e. appear and show it self may its interest be promoted may it get ground and inlarge it self may it be seen that the Lord is King let the people be never so unquiet may it come into our hearts and rule there and beat down every proud imagination that lifts it self up against God may Christ hasten his coming illustrious presence which the Iews Liturgy is ful of even to this day the coming of Messias Now there is a twofold advent or coming of Christ mentioned in
to our condition and to that station of life whereunto his good providence hath design'd us That he would give us strength of body and vigour of mind perfect health and all natural and moral abilities that may fit us for the discharge of our duties and above all a contented spirit that we may eat our bread with chearfulness and be satisfied with his gracious disposals of us and any condition that he shall in his wisdom cast us into either riches or poverty That he would neither send us so much of the world 's good as to tempt us to wantonness and riot nor so little as to make us repine but assign us such a competent portion that we may find a comfortable subsistence and have where with to doe good to others That we may be enabled to provide things honest and fashionable before all men yet not make provision for the flesh to satisfy the lusts thereof That our food may be wholsome rather then delicious so that in the strength thereof we may do him service That our attire may be decent and comely to cover shame not to show pride and vanity that we may not turn his gifts into wantonness or ●mbezill his talents but imploy them to his glory and others good ● and make us friends of the unrighteous mammon That he would bless our labours and give success to our honest undertakings that we may eat the labour of our hands and it may be well with us That he would procure us faithfull friends diligent servants dutifull children fruitfull seasons and furnish us with all other perquisites that may make our condition comfortable That he would bless the nation with righteous government and honest magistrates indue the nobles with courage the commons with loyalty bless all orders and conditions of persons from the highest to the lowest from him that sitteth on the throne to him that is behind the mill enlarge all that are in distress send us plenty and peace in our dayes crown the year with his goodness and make all his steps toward us drop fatness that we may thankfully acknowledge his benefits and be charitably disposed to those that are in want that we may be tender-hearted compassionate not forget to communicate and distribute and show gratitude to all those whom he has made instruments of good to us who have obliged us by any kindness and pray for them that God would restore seaven-fold into their bosome That he would keep us in an humble constant dependance on him and provide honest courses for us that we may not eat the bread of idleness or tempt his providence with the use of unlawfull means That he would deliver us from dangers and distresses preserve us from rapine and spoil and keep us from distrusts and anxietyes about the things of this life but that we may seek first the Kingdom of God and the righteousness thereof assuring our selves that then all things else shall be added to us and whatsoever our share be of outward things take the Lord for our portion and our inheritance That he would to this end give us Christ the bread of life and with him all things and that he would with that bread which came down from heaven feed our souls to life everlasting strengthning our graces pardoning our sins and subduing our lusts AND FORGIVE US OUR TRESPASSES AS WE FORGIVE THEM THAT TRESPASS AGAINST US Pardon is as necessary for our spiritual life as bread for our natural For the soul that sins shall dy In many things we offend all even the righteous falls seven times a day For death came into the world by sin over all mankind but righteousness and life came by Iesus Christ And we have dayly need on 't too for we provoke God every day So then we are to hunger and thirst after the righteousness of Christ that our souls may live And as Christ's flesh is bread indeed so is his blood which he shed for the atonement of wrath and forgiveness of sins drink indeed the water out of that spiritual rock which is Christ. Oh that our souls might thirst for the living God as the wounded hart panteth after the water-brooks OUR TRESPASSES The other Evangelist useth another word debts which comes all to one both signifying sins by a translated sense borrowed from dealings amongst men betwixt creditor and debtor the person suffering the injury and the person doing it For a debtor or trespasser that is not solvent or hath not wherewith to make satisfaction agrees with his adversary puts it to reference comes to composition and by mediation of friends takes up the business that there may be no arrest or inditement or other procedeur in law against him as knowing that he should come by the worst be cast in his fuit and be sent to prison where he must ly by it till he have paid the uttermost farthing which being utterly unable to doe he must never hope to come out but rot in prison The same is the case betwixt God and us we are bound to him by our creation to an observance of his laws or to undergoe the penalty of the breach which is everlasting death But we are fallen short and are unable to discharge that debt nor are we able to answer him one word of a thousand so that there are due to us all the plagues written in his book We have gone astray and done abominably we have broken all his laws and commandments we have been rebellious children from our youth up and the imaginations of our hearts have been evill continually we have neglected our duty in every thing and have not harkned to him to obey his voice so that to us belongs shame and confusion of face for ever Now Christ became our surety took up the business undertook our reconciliation and hath answer'd the law satisfied justice discharg'd our debts cancell'd the obligation and nail'd the hand writing of the law unto his cross making a new covenant of life betwixt God and us upon Gospell-terms of grace and new obedience yet still we are wanting on our part and deal treacherously in our covenant trampling upon his blood and despising so great salvation Nay even the best of Saints have their dayly slips and failings Who is he that can justify himself and if any perfectist say he has no sin he deceives himself and the truth is not in him Our sins All Adam's off-spring the whole race of mankind is tainted Behold saith the holy Prophet a man after God's own heart I was brought forth in iniquity and in sin hath my mother conceiv'd me And the Apostle has concluded all under sin so that we are all guilty of original corruption whereby all the faculties of our soul and members of our body are over-spread as with a leprosie from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot beyond the cure of all humane arts and helps Philosophy education
him without fear That he would overcome the world for us mortify the old man and trample Satan under our feet Finally that he would save us to the uttermost and compleatly in our whole man body soul and spirit from all and all manner of evil whither of this life or of that to come and would so contrive all events and lay the plot of his eternal purposes that all things may work together for our good and procure our everlasting welfare FOR THINE IS THE KINGDOM THE POWER AND THE GLORY FOR EVER AND EVER This is the Doxology which either comes in as a Confirmation to back the foregoing petitions or is added as a bare Confession it being usual that in sacred writings that particle for or because is not alwayes brought in as a causal or rational influence but is many times simply narrative In this later sense the several words may be taken to mean the same thing as in Daniel's prophecy and the Revelation many such synonyma's are heap'd together and in the Psalms several in several places used indifferently to shew that too much cannot be said or too many expressions made use of to set forth divine Majesty We end our Prayer then in an adoration of his exeellencyes and a deep acknowledgement of his greatness represented under a three-fold term Kingdom Power and Glory which are farther rais'd and lifted up beyond our conception by the infinity and eternity of them His Kingdom has neither beginning nor end of dayes his power admits no bounds knows no end and his glory as himself is and was and is to come And as the Church hath worded it which was but a pious descant upon this piece of the Lords Prayer Glory be to the Father to the Son and to the Holy Ghost As it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be world without end Amen In the former sense 't is laid at the bottom of the Prayer as a ground foundation of it as if we were pleading to be heard Nor doe we in these our requests seek our selves or study and design our own emolument and advantage but our souls are touched with a love to thy name and we humbly desire thee to accept these petitions in order to thy own glory which will receive some advantage even then when the necessityes of us thy creatures are supplyed If thou be graciously pleas'd to hear us in these our desires Thy Kingdom will be advanc'd thy power made manifest and thy Glory promoted 'T is not for our selves we ask nor can we think our poor concernments an argument sufficient to ground a confidence on but for thy names sake Alas should we aim at Kingdom power or glory what poor short-arm'd● short-liv'd thing would it be bound up within the measure of a transitory life of a span length but thine lasts to ages of ages thy Kingdom has the same date as eternity never commenced never shall exspire thy power reaches from everlasting to everlasting and thy glory indures from generation to generation 'T is our earnest request that thou wouldst provide for the honour of thine own name that thou wouldst not be wanting to thy self in the vindication of these thy glorious attributes nor let them suffer by turning thy face away from our prayers And thus these three words may cast back a respect to the several petitions as has been before observ'd to those which concern God in this manner Thine is the Kingdom therefore let thy Kingdom come since it doth of due belong unto thee Again thine is the power therefore let thy will be done for whose will should carry but his whose will no one can resist And lastly which was propos'd first in the petitions that the Prayer might begin and end alike and God's glory might be the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it Thine is the glory therefore h●llowed be thy name And in subordination to these we proceed to ask in our own behalf wherein yet those attributes seem to be no less concern'd with some such reflection as this Thine is the Kingdom wherefore give us bread it was a Pharaoh's care to provide bread for his subjects how much more will our King and our God supply all our wants and allow us necessaries Thine is the power therefore forgive us our sins for who has power to forgive sins but God Oh! that it would please thee to shew this thy power in pardoning our iniquities and not in avenging them and lastly again Thine is the glory wherefore lead us not into temptation whereby we may bring dishonour to thy name but deliver us from evil that we may glorify thee the author of all our good And all these requests to be granted not for the present only for a day or an age but this provision for his own glory and our wants to be for ever because his Kingdom and his power which are the store whence this provision is to be made and his glory which is to be provided for are for ever as also our wants need a continual supply Now these his attributes having been in ages past and being to last for all ages to come by former experience of those that have been before us and our own beget a confidence for the future that as our fathers trusted in him were not ashamed so succeeding generations shall find 't is not in vain to seek him and that he whose goodness is unexhausted will not be weary of doing good So that the eternity of Gods perfections ingages our posterity to hope in him and concludes this prayer fit to be used as long as the world indures This Doxologie or Conclusion of the prayer is set down only by St. Matthew St. Luke mentions it not and accordingly the Church in her offices leaves it out nor does this difference plead any thing against the formality of the prayer it self or the omission of this part prove that the whole may be omitted and laid aside For as 't has been said before Christ propos'd this Prayer upon two several occasions at two several times one was when he was preaching his Sermon on the mount before a great multitude of au●ditors wherein he delivers in a large discourse the sum of Christian institution and the dutyes of a holy life of which Prayer being none of the least himself propounds a pattern for imitation and use The other was more private in the company only of his disciples when after he had been at prayers by himself they desir'd him to teach them to pray as Iohn had done his disciples whereupon he gives them this form for their constant use at least upon solemn occasions when ye pray say c. Now this latter appointment of it leaving out the conclusion shews that it is not an essential part of the Prayer necessarily belonging to it but an addition that may be spared indifferent to be used or not wherefore whether
who sunk in the midst of the red Sea which divided it self to give thee passage dry-shod 'T was not thy own wit nor thy own strength that has brought about this great deliverance for thee but it must be confess'd even to the astonishment of the heathen roundabout that my wisdom contriv'd and my power hath effected it by the conduct of my faithful servant Moses who by my appointment by the guidance of my holy Angel has led thee OUT OF THE LAND OF EGYPT Where thou wast by the tyranny of Pharaoh his task-masters cruelly dealt with and slavishly imployed having neither freedom of body nor of soul deny'd all opportunityes of serving thy self or thy God captiv'd amongst Idolaters straightned in a land of straits in so much that thy number increasing they sought to destroy thee by cruel edicts hating thee out of Antipathy as a stranger and of another religion and out of fear because they saw thee grow numerous wherefore after so many years captivity in a strange and Heathen Land I have call'd thee forth to bring thee to a countrey of peace and plenty flowing with milk and hony and above all the Land of promise and which if you will be a holy people will deservedly be stiled the Holy Land OUT OF THE HOUSE OF BONDAGE Out of that prison from whence your sighs and groanes have oft pierc'd Heaven out of that Bridewell where you were kept to make brick and raise huge piles to be la●●ing monuments of your misery and the tyrants lust without the allowance of any thing for your labour but blowes not so much as stubble affoorded yet your full tale of bricks required at your hands Consider now at distance what a sad life thou hast escaped the day spent in toils and the night in complaints the Nation kept under in poverty and disgrace and none to relieve thee so much as with their pitty but thy God who have brought thee aside into this solitude that I might make my self and my laws known to thee a favour which I have not shown to any nation besides that I may espouse thee unto my self and make thee a Kingdom of Priests and a holy people if thou wilt obey my Statutes hearken to my Law which I am now proclaiming in thy ears I am the Lord that have right to command and power to punish and therefore fear before me I am thy God who have enter'd into Covenant with thee and will reward those that keep Covenant wherefore I exspect thy love I have brought thee forth of Egypt from a sad bondage where thou wast oppress'd with slavery and want shall provide for thee Libertie and plenty and therefore I look for gratitude and let all three thy fear thy love and thy gratitude tye thee fast unto me the Lord and thy God and thy mighty deliverer and oblige thee to an attention and obedience to my Law Now although this historical passage concerning the delivery out of Egypt be peculiar to the children of Israel yet the obligation and the force of the argument will reach all people whatsoever and the Preface is by Analogie of as large and universal an extent as the Law it self For at Christ's death the vail of the Temple was rent in twain and the wall of separation which distinguished the Iews formerly the only people of God from the rest of the nations who had been till then heathen and as it were excommunicate out of the pale of the Church was broken down so that all the nations of the world are now engaged in Covenant with God and have undertaken and made a stipulation in Baptism to be his people and He to be their God And this History is turn●d into Allegory and denotes the salvation purchas'd by Christ who hath redeem'd us from a spiritual Egypt and the slavery of sin and hath led us forth out of the regions of darkness and the bondage of servile fears to the inheritance of light and the glorious priviledges of the Gospell Besides if we take the deliverance in a temporal sense who is there that when he recounts the several passages of his life will not acknowledge God's gracious dealings and his wonderful mercies in providing for him in his wants preserving him from imminent dangers and delivering him from his fears and the evil consequencies many times of his follies so that if he have any ingenuity upon so many instances of divine favour and particular kindness he must needs confess that God is the Lord his God These words may be look'd on also more particularly to relate to the first Commandement not only as an indication of him whom we are to own as our God but as a reason too why we should own him Nor will it so have the less influence upon the other Commandements since all religous duties depend upon the knowledge and fear of God and Atheism is that root of bitterness from whence all transgressions spring for The fool hath said in his heart There is no God and then it follows They have corrupted their way they have done abominably The first Commandement THOU SHALT HAVE NO OTHER GODS Thou shalt not follow the example of blind Pagans and entertain a multitude of gods nor pay that devotion to any of the creatures which is due to the creator alone nor set up in thy heart any thing in opposition to me or give thy self up to the obedience of any lust nor hearken to the suggestions of Satan nor be rul'd by the vanity of this wicked world nor turn Atheist and live without God in the world but shalt acknowledge me the only one God in three Persons and shalt learn to know me the Infinite Almighty Everlasting and Ever blessed God shalt fear before me and have thy thoughts taken up with the meditation of my Nature and my Will my Word and my Works and shalt admire me in my Attributes obey me in my Commands thou shalt set me alwayes before thee that thou mayst walk in my wayes thou shalt perform to me that Homage as is due by right of creation thou shalt observe my providences stand in aw of my Iudgements and have regard to my mercies nor shalt thou ascribe whatever befals thee to chance or fortune to thy own wit or strength but look on all events as the contrivances of my wisdom and the effects of my power Thou shalt bear a love to my name and take thy delight in my Law Thou shalt give up thy heart to me and serv me with truth in the inward parts Thy understanding shall be busily imployed in feeling after me and finding me out according as I have made manifestations of my self in my word and in my works and shall guide thee by the dictates of my holy Spirit Thy will shall be enclin'd to a perfect compliance with my will according to the rules of Holiness and Righteousness and thy affections shall be wholly carried out to me as