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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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terrified them and told the Rulers what they saw And after all it was to Paul a Persecutor and partly to his company that Christ appeared Q. 6. Why must Christ rise from the Dead A. You may as well ask Why he must be our Savior 1. If he had not risen Death had conquered him and how could he have saved us that was overcome and lost himself 2. He could not have received his own promised Reward even his Kingdom and Glory It was for the Joy that was set before him that he enendured the Cross and despised the shame Therefore God gave him a Name above every Name to which every created Knee must bow 3. His Resurrection was to be the chief of all those Miracles by which God witnessed that he was his So● and the chief Evidence by which the World was to be convinced of his Truth and so was used in their Preaching by the Apostles That Christ rose from the Dead is the chief Argument that makes us Christians 4. The great executive parts of Christs saving Office were to be performed in Heaven which a dead Man could not do How else should he have Inceded for us as our heavenly High-priest How should he have sent down the Holy Ghost to renew us How should he as King have governed and protected his Church on Earth unto the End How should he have come again in Glory to Judge the World and how should we have seen his Glory as the Mediator o● Fruition in the Heavenly Kingdom Q. 7. I perceive then that Christ's Resurrection is t● us an Article of the greatest use What use must ●● make of it A. You may gather it by what is said 1. By this you may be sure that he is the Son of God and his Gospel True 2. By this you may be sure that his Sacrifice on the Cross was accepted as sufficient 3. By this you may be sure that Death is Conquered and we may boldly trust our Saviour who tasted and overcame Death with our departing Souls 4. By this you may be sure that we have a powerful High-priest and Intercessour in Heaven by whom we may come with reverend boldness unto God 5. By this we may know that we have a powerful King both to obey and to trust with the Churches Interest and our own 6. By this we may know that we have a Head still living who will send down his Spirit to gather his Chosen to help his Ministers to Sanctifie and Comfort his People and prepare them for Glory 7. By this we are assured of our own Resurrection and taught to hope for our final Justification and Glory 8. And by this we are taught that we must Rise to Holiness of Life CHAP. XV. He ascended into Heaven and sitteth on the right Hand of God the Father Almighty Qu. 1. HOw long was it between Christ's Resurrection and his Ascension A. Forty dayes He rose on the day which we call Easter-day and he ascended on that which we call Ascension day or Holy Thursday Q. 2. Did Christ stay all that while among his Disciples visibly A. No but appeared to them at such seasons as he saw meet Q. 3. Where was he all the rest of the Forty Days A. God hath not told us and therefore it concerneth us not to know Q. 4. He shewed them that he had Flesh and Blood ho●●●en was he to them invisible the most part of the Forty dayes A. The Divine power that raised Christ could make those alterations on his Body which we are unacquainted with Q. 5. How was Christ taken up to Heaven A. While he was speaking to his Apostles of the things concerning the Kingdom of God and answering them that hoped it would presently be and had given their Commission and the Promise of the Holy Ghost and commanded them to wait for it at Ierusalem he was taken up as they gazed after him till a Cloud took him out of their sight And two Angels like two Men in white stood by them and askt them why they stood gazing up to Heaven telling them that Iesus who was taken up should so come again Q. 6. Had it not been better for us that he had staid on Earth A. No He is many wayes more useful to us in Heaven 1. He is now no more confined in presence to that small Countrey of Iudea above the rest of the World as a Candle to one room but as the Sun in his Glory shineth to all his Church on Earth 2. He is possessed of his full Power and Glory by which he is fit to protect and Glorifie us 3. He intercedeth for us where our highest Concerns and Interest are 4. He sendeth his Spirit on Earth to do his work on all believers Souls Q. 7. What is meant by his sitting on the right Hand of God A. Not that God hath Hands or is confined to a place as Man is But it signifieth that the Glorified Man Iesus is next to God in Dignity Power and Glory and as the Lieutenant under a King is now the Universal Administrator or Governour of all the World under God the Father Almighty Q. 8. I Thought he had been only the Lord of his Church A. He is Head over all things to his Church All Power and things in Heaven and Earth are given him Even the frame of Nature dependeth on him He is Lord of all But it is his Church that he Sanctifieth by his Spirit and will Glorifie Q. 9. If Christ have all power why doth he let Satan and Sin still reign over the far greatest part of the Earth A. 1. Satan reigneth but over Volunteers that wilfully and obstinately choose that Condition And he reigneth but as the Jailor in the Prison as Gods Executioner on the wilfull refusers of his Grace And his reign is far from absolute he crosseth none of the Decrees of God nor overcometh his power but doth what God seeth meet to permit him to do He shall destroy none of Gods Elect nor any that are truly willing of Saving Grace And as for the fewness of the Elect I shall speak of it after about the Catholick Church Q. 10. But is not Christs Body present on Earth and in the Sacrament A. We are sure he is in Heaven and we are sure that their Doctrine is a fiction contrary to Sense Reason and Scripture that say the Consecrated Bread and Wine are substantially turned into the very Body and Blood of Christ and are no longer Bread and Wine Bu●… how far the presence of Christs Soul and Body extendeth is a question unfit for Mans determination unle●… we better knew what Glorified Souls and Bodies are ●… We see that the Sun is eminently in the Heaven An●… yet whether its lucid Beams be a real part of its substance which are here on Earth or how far they extend we know not nor know we how the Sun differeth in Greatness or Glory from
with desire and hope As Heaven is the State and Place where God shineth to the understanding Creature in the greatest Glory and where he is best known so it is this heavenly Glory seen to us by Faith which is the most Glorious of all the Names or Notices of God to be hallowed by us Q. 19. What is the profaning of this Name of God A. The minding only of Earthly and Fleshly things and not believing considering or admiring the heavenly Glory Not loving and praising God for it nor desiring and seeking to enjoy it Q. 20. So much of God's Works which make him known Next tell us what you mean by the Words which you call his Name A. 1. All the Sacred Scripture as it maketh known God to us by History Precepts Promises or Penal Threats With all God's Instituted means of Worship 2. More specially the Descriptions of God by his Attributes 3. And most specially his Proper Name GOD Iehovah c. Q. 21. I 'le not ask you what his Attributes are because you have told us that before But how is this Name of God to be hallowed A. When the Soul is affected with that Admiration Reverence Love Trust and Submission to God which the meaning of these Names bespaeks And when the manner of our using them expresseth such affections Especially in publick Praises with the Churches Q. 22. How is this Name of God prophaned A. When it is used lightly falsly unreverently without the aforesaid Holy regard and affections Q. 23. III. What is that which you call God's Name imprinted on Mans Mind A. God made Man very good at first and that was in his own Image And so much of this is either left by the interposition of Grace in lapsed Nature or by common Grace restored to it as that all Men till utterly debauched would fain be accounted Good Pious Vertuous and Just and hate the imputation of Wickedness dishonesty and Badness And on the Regenerate the Divine Nature is so renewed as that their Inclination is towards God and HOLINESS TO THE LORD is written on all their Faculties And the Spirit of God moveth on the Soul to actuate all his Graces and to plead for God and our Redeemer and bring Him to our Remembrance to our Affections and to subject us wholly to his Will and Love And thus as the Law was written in Stone as to the Letter which is written only on tender fleshy Hearts as to the Spirit and Holy effect and disposition so the Name of God which is in the Bible in the Letter is by the same Spirit imprinted on Believers Hearts that is They have the Knowledge Faith Fear and Love of God Q. 24. How must we hallow this inward Name of God A. 1. By Reverencing and Loving God that is God's Image and Operations in us Not only God as glorified in Heaven but God as dwelling by Grace in Holy Souls must be remembred and reverenced by us 2. By living as in habitual Communion and Conversation with that God who dwelleth in us and who hath made us his Habitation by the Spirit 3. And by ready obeying the moving Operations of the Spirit for God And to contemn or resist these inward Ideas Inclinations and Motions is to prophane the Name of God Q. 25. But what is all this to the Sanctfying of God himself A. The Signs are but for him that is signified It is God himself that is to be admired Loved and Honoured as notified to us by these Signs or Name otherwise we make Idols of them In a Word God must be Esteemed Reverenced Loved Trusted and Delighted in Transcendently as God with affections proper to himself and this is to Sanctifie him by advancing him in our Heart in his Prerogative above all Creatures And all Creatures must be used respectively to this Holy End And specially those Ordinances and Names which are specially Separated to this use And nothing must be used as common and unclean especially in his Worship and Religious Acts. CHAP. XXVI Thy Kingdom come Qu. 1. WHy is this made the Second Petition A. To tell us that it must be the Second thing in our Desires We are to begin at that which is highest most excellent and ultimate in our Intentions and that is Gods Glory shining in all his Works and seen admired honoured and praised by Man which is the hallowing of his Name and the Holy Exalting him in our Thoughts Affections Words and Actions above all Creatures And we are next to desire that in which God's glory most eminently shineth And that is his Kingdom of Grace and Glory Q. 2. What is here meant by the Kingdom of God A. It is not that Kingdom which he hath over Angels and the innumerable glorious Spirits of the Heavenly Regions For these are much unknown to us and we know not that there is any Rebellion among them which needeth a Restoration But Man by Sin is fallen into Rebellion and under the Condemnation due to Rebels And by Christ the reconciling Mediator they are to be restored to their subjection to God and so to his Protection Blessing and Reward And because they are Sinners corrupt and guilty they cannot be Subjects as under the Primitive Law of Innocency And therefore God hath delivered them to the Mediator as his Vicegerent to be governed under a Law of healing Grace and so brought on to Perfect Glory So that the Kingdom of God now is his Reign over fallen Man by Christ the Mediator begun on Earth by Recovering Grace and perfected in heavenly Glory Q. 3. But the Scriptures sometimes speaks of the Kingdom of God as come already when Christ came or when he rose and ascended to his Glory and sometime as if it were yet to come at the great Resurrection Day A. In the first case the meaning is that the King of the Church is come and hath established his Law of Grace and Commissioned his Officers and sent forth his Spirit and so the Kingdom of healing Grace is come But in the second case the meaning is that all that Glorious Perfection which this Grace doth tend to which will be the Glory of the Church the Glory of Christ therein and the Glorification of Gods Love is yet to come Q. 4. What is it then which we here desire A. That God will enlarge and carry on the Kingdom of Grace in the World and bear down all that Rebells and hindereth it and particularly in our selves And that he would hasten the Kingdom of Glory Q. 5. Who is it then that is the King of this Kingdom A. GOD as the absolute Supream and Iesus Christ the Son of God and Man as the Supream Vicegerent and Administrator Q. 6. Who are the Subjects of this Kingdom A. There are three sorts of Subjects 1. Subjects only as to Obligation And so those without the Church are Rebellious obliged Subjects 2. Subjects by meer Profession And so all Baptized professing Christians
29. But if Bishops judge that Civil Magistrates are bound to destroy or punish Hereticks Schismaticks or Sinners are not such Magistrates thereby bound to do it A. They are bound to do their duty whoever is their Monitor But if Prelates bid them sin they sin by obeying them Nor may a Magistrate punish a Man meerly because Bishops judge him punishable without trying the Cause themselves Q. 30. But if it be not of Divine Institution that all the Church on Earth should have one Governing Unifying Head Monarchical or Aristocratical is it not meet as suited to humane Prudence A. Christ is the builder of his own Church or House and hath not left it to the Wit or Will of Man to make him a Vicegerent or an Unifying Head or Ruler of his whole Church that is to set up an Usurper against him under his own Name which is Naturally uncapable of the Office Q. 31. But sure Unity is so excellent that we may conceive God delighteth in all that promoteth it A. Yes And therefore he would not leave the Terms of Unity to the Device of Men in which they will never be of a mind nor would he have Usurpers divide his Church by imposing impossible Terms of Unity Must God needs make one Civil Monarch or Senate to be the Unifying Governour of all the Earth as one Kingdom because he is a lover of Unity The World is politically Unified by one God and Soveraign Redeemer as this Kingdom is by one King and not by one Civil humane Supream Ruler Personal or Collective Men so mad as to dream of one Unifying Church Governing Monarch or Aristocracy are the unfittest of all Men to pretend to such Government Q. 32. At least should we not extend this Unifying Government as far as we can even to Europe if not to all the World A. Try first one Unifying Civil Government Monarchical or Aristocracitical for Europe and call Princes Schismaticks as these Men do us for refusing to obey it and try the success 2. And who shall make this European Church-Soveraign And by what Authority and limit his Kingdom 3. And what is all this to do To make better Laws than Christs When were any so mad as to say that all Europe must have one Soveraign Person or Colledge of Physicians School-masters Philosophers or Lawyers to avoid Schism among them 4. Is not Agreement by Voluntary consent a better way to keep Civil and Ecclesiastical Unity in Europe than to have one Ruling King Senate or Synod over all Councils are for voluntary concord and not the Soveraign Rectors of thei● Brethren Q. 33. But are not National Churches necessary A. No doubt but Christ would have Nations discipled baptized and obey him And Kings to govern them as Christian Nations and all men should endeavour that whole Nations may be Christians and the Kingdoms of the World be voluntarily the Kingdoms of Christ. But no man can be a Christian against his will Nor hath Christ ordained that each Kingdom shall have one Sacerdotal Head Monarchical or Aristocratical But Princes Pastors and People must promote Love Unity and Concord in their several places Q. 34. So much for Gods publick Kingdom on Earth But is there not also a Kingdom of God in every Christians Soul A. One mans Soul is not fitly called A Kingdom But Christ as King doth govern every faithful Soul Q. 35. What is the Government of each Believer A. It is Christs Ruling us by the Laws which he hath made for all his Church proclaimed and explained and applyed by his Ministers and imprinted on the Heart by his holy Spirit and judging accordingly Q. 36. What is the Kingdom of Glory A. It hath two degrees The first is the Glorious reign of our Glorified Redeemer over this World and over the Heavenly City of God before its Perfection which began at the time of Christs Ascension his Resurrection being the Proeme and endeth at the Resurrection 2. The perfect Kingdom of Glory when all the Elect shall be perfected with Christ and his work of Redemption finished which begins at the Resurrection and shall never end Q. 37. What will be the state of that Glorious Kingdom A. It containeth the full Collection of all Gods Elect who shall be perfected in Soul and Body and employed in the perfect Obedience Love and Praise of God in perfect Love and Communion with each other and all the blessed Angels and their Glorified Redeemer and this is in the sight of his Glory and the Glory of God and in the continual joyful sence of his Love and essential Infinite Perfection All imperfection sin temptation and suffering being for ever ceased Q. 38. But some think this Kingdom will be begun on Earth a Thousand Years before the General Resurrection and some think that after the Resurrection it will be on Earth A. This very Prayer puts us in hope that there are yet better things on Earth to be expected than the Church hath yet enjoyed For when Christ bids us pray that His Name may be hallowed his Kingdom come and his Will done on Earth as it is done in Heaven we may well hope that some such thing will be granted for he hath promised to give us whatever we ask according to his Will in the Name of Christ And he hath not bid us pray in vain But whether there shall be a Resurrection of th●… Martyrs a thousand years before the general Resurrection or whether there shall be only a Reformation by a holy Magistracy and Ministry and how far Christ will manifest himself on Earth ●… confess are Questions too hard for for me to determine He that is truly devoted to Christ shall have his part in his Kingdom though much be now unknown to him of the Time Place and Manner And as to the Glory after the General Resurrection certainly it will be Heavenly for we shal●… be with Christ and like to the Angels And th●… N●w Ierusalem being the Universality of the Bless●… how with Christ may well be said to come do●… from Heaven in that he will bring all the Bless●… with him and in the Air with them will judge t●… World But whether only a New Generation sh●… inhabit the New Earth and the Glorified rule the●… as Angels now do or whether Heaven and Eart●… shall be laid common together or Earth made ●… Glorious as Heaven I know not But the perfect knowledge of Gods Kingdom ●… proper to them that enjoy it Therefore even w●… who know it but imperfectly must daily pray tha●… it may come that we may perfectly know it whe●… we are perfected therein CHAP. XXVII Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Qu. 1. VVHy is this made the Third Petition A. Because it must be the Third in our Desires I told you this Prayer in perfect Method beginneth at that which must be the first in our Intention and that is God's Interest as above our own which is consistent
Relations are here included A. That we being Gods Creatures and Redeemed Ones are 1. His Own 2. His Subjects to be Ruled by him 3. His poor Beneficiaries that have all from him and owe him all our Love Q. 8. What do the words signifie that brought thee out of the Land of Egypt A. That besides the Right of Creation God hath a Second Right to us as our Redeemer The deliverance from Egypt was that Typical one that founded the Relation between him and the Common-wealth of Israel But as the Decalogue is the Law of Christ the meaing is I am the Lord thy God who Redeemed thee from sin and misery by Iesus Christ. So that this signifieth the nearest Right and Reason of this Relation between God and Man He giveth us his Law now not only as our Creator but as our Redeemer and as such we must be his willing Subjects and obey him Q. 9. Are all Men Subjects of God's Kingdom A. 1. All are Subjects as to Right and Obligation 2. All that Profess Subjection as profest Consenters 3. And all true hearty Consenters are his sincere Subjects that shall be Saved God the Creator and Redeemer hath the Right of Soveraignty over all the World whether they Consent or not But they shall not have the Blessing of Faithful Subjects without their own true Consent nor of visible Church Members without profest Consent But antecedent Mercies he giveth to all Q. 10. Why is this description of Gods Soveraignty and Mans Subjection and the Ground of it set before the Commandements A. Because 1. Faith must go before Obedience He that will come to God and obey him must Believe that God is God and that he is the Rewarder of them that diligently seek him Heb. 11. 6. And he that will obey him as our Redeemer must believe that we are Redeemed by Jesus Christ and that he is our Lord and King 2. And Relations go before the Dutyes of Relation And our Consent foundeth the mutual Relation The nature and form of Obedience is To Obey anothers Commanding will because he is our Rightful Governour No Man can Obey him formally whom he taketh not for his Ruler And Subjection or Consent to be Governed is Virtually all Obedience Q. 11. But what if Men never hear of the Redeemer may they not obey Gods Law of Nature A. They may know that they are Sinners and that the sin of an Immortal Soul deserveth endless punishment And they may find by experience that God useth them not as they deserve but giveth many mercies to those that deserve nothing but misery and that he obligeth them to use some means in hope for their recovery and so that he Governeth them by a Law or on terms of Mercy And being under the first Edition of the Law of Grace though they know not the second they ought to keep that Law which they are under and they shall be judged by it Q. 12. How then doth the Christian Church as Christs Kingdom differ from the World without if they be any of his Kingdom too A. As all the World was under that Common Law of Grace which was made for them to Adam and Noe and yet Abraham and his Seed only were chosen out of all the World as a peculiar Holy Nation to God and were under a Law and Covenant of Peculiarity which belonged only unto them so though Christ hath not revoked those common Mercies given to all by the first Edition of the Law of Grace nor left the World ungoverned and lawless yet he hath given to Christians a more excellent Covenant of Peculiarity than he gave the Natural Seed of Abraham and hath elected them out of the World to himself as a chosen Generation a Royal Priestood an Holy Nation a peculiar People to shew forth the Praises of him that hath called them out of darkness into his marvellous Light 1 Pet. 2. 9. Q. 13. It seems then we must take great heed that we make not Christs Kingdom either less or Greater than it is A. To make it Greater than it is by equalling those without with the Church or Church-hypocrites with the sincere doth dishonour Gods Holiness and the wonderful design of Christ in Mans Redemption and the Grace of the Spirit and the Church of God and obscureth the Doctrine of Election and God's peculiar Love and tendeth to the discomfort of the Faithful and even to Infidelity And to make Christ's Kingdom less than it is by de●ying the first Edition of the Law of Grace made to ●ll and the common Mercies given to all antecedently ●o their rejection of them doth obscure and wrong ●he Glory of Gods Love to Man and deny his com●on Grace and Law and feigneth the World either ●o be under no Law of God or else to be all bound to be perfectly Innocent at the time when they are guilty and either not bound at all to hope and seek for Salvation or else to seek it on the Condition of being Innocent when they know that it is impossible they being already guilty And it maketh the World like the Devils almost shut up in despair and it leaveth them as Guiltless of all sin against Grace and the Law of Grace as if they had none such And it contradicteth the judgment of Abraham the Father of the Faithful who saw Christ's day For he thought that even the wicked City Sodom had had Fifty Persons so Righteous as that God should have spared the rest for their sakes to say nothing of Iob Nineve c. In a word the ungrounded extenuating the Grace o● Christ and the Love of God hardeneth Infidels and tempteth Christians to perplexing Thoughts of the Gospel and of the Infinite Goodness of God and maketh it more difficult than indeed it is to see hi● Amiableness and consequently to Glorifie and Lo●● him as the Essential Love whose Goodness is equa● to his Greatness It is Satan as an Angel of Light and Righteousness who pretending the defence of God's special Love to his Elect denyeth his common Mercies to Mandkind to dishonour Gods's Love and strengthen our own Temptations against the Joyfu● Love of God Q. 14. Is Government and Subjection all that ●● here included A. No God's Kingdom is a Paternal Kingdom ●…ling Children by Love that he may make them happy I am the Lord thy God signifieth I am thy great●● Benefactor thy Father who gave thee all the Goo● thou hast and will give to my obedient Children Grace and Glory and all that they can reasonably desire and will protect them from all their Enemies and supply their wants and deliver them from Evil and will be for ever their Sun and Shield their Reward and Joy and better to them than Man in Flesh can now conceive even Love it self CHAP. XXXIV Of the First Commandment Qu. 1. VVHat are the words of the First Commandement A. Thou shalt have no other Gods before me Exod. 20. 3. Q. 2. What
lose much and fall into foul sin and grow worse than they once were so common Grace and I think this middle Infant Grace which Children have as related to their Parents may be lost Q. 20. But is it not safer to hold that Baptism put● none but the Elect who never lose it into a title to Salvation A. 1. Then it would be little comfort to Parents when their Children die who know not whether one of ten thousand be Elect. 2. And it would be little satisfaction to the Minister to Baptize them who knoweth not the Elect from others 3. It 's plain that it is not another but the same Covenant of Gra●● which is made with Infants and Adult And th●● Covenant giveth pardon of Sin and right to Life to all that have the requsiite qualification And ●… that qualification in the Adult is Faith and R●pentance so in Infants it is nothing but to be the Children of the faithful dedicated to God God never insti●uted any Baptism which is not for Remission of Sin If I thought Infants had no visible right to Remssion in which Baptism should invest them I durst not Baptize them I think their Holiness containeth a certain title to Salvation Q. 21. But is it not enough to know that they are of the Church visible A. All at Age that are of the visible Church are in a state of Salvation except Hypocrites Therefore all Infants that are of the visible Church are also of the Mystical Church except such as had not the requisite qualification and that is such as were not the Children of the Faithful All the World are in the Kingdom of the Devil who are not in the Kingdom of God And if there be no visible way of Salvation for them what reason have we to hope that they are saved Q. 22. Some say we must leave their case to God as unknown to us and that he will save such of them as he electeth A. True Faith and Hope is grounded on Gods Promise What reason have we to believe and hope that any are saved whom God never promised to save This would reach wicked men to presume that God will save them too though he do not promise it And this giveth no more comfort to a Christian than to an ●nfidel How know we but by his promise whether God elect one of ten thousand or any at all But God hath promised a special blessing to the Seed of the Faithful above all others Q. 23. You make the Mercy so very great as maketh the denyal of it seem a hainous sin in the Anabaptists A. There are three sorts of them greatly differing 1. Some say that no Infants have Original sin and so need no Baptism nor Pardon Or if it be sin it 's done away by Christs meer death and all Infants in the World are saved 2. Others say that Infants have Original sin but have no visible Remedy nor are any in Covenant with Christ nor Members of his Church because no Pardon is promised but to Believers 3. Others hold that Infants have Original sin and that the Promise is to the Faithful and their Seed and that Parents ought thankfully to acknowledge this Mercy and devote them to Christ as Infant-members of his Church but that Baptism is not for Infant-members but only as the Lords Supper for the adult This last sort are they whom I speak of as such whom I would not separate from if they separate not from us But the other two sorts are dangerously erroneous When God hath made so many plain Promises to the Seed of his Servants and in all Ages before Christ hath taken Infants for Church-members and never made a Covenant but to the faithfull and their Seed to say that Christ the Saviour of the World came to cast all Infants out of the Visible Church into the visible Kingdom of Satan and give them no greater Mercy instead of it seemeth to me very great Ingratitude and making Christ too like to Satan as coming to do much of his destroying work Q. 24. But every where Salvation is promised only to Believers A. The Promise is to them and their Seed keeping Covenant The same Text that saith He that believeth shall be saved saith He that believeth not shall be damned Which sheweth that it is only the Adult that it speaketh of Or else all Infants must be damned for Unbelief It shuts them no more out of Baptism than out of Heaven Q. 25. But the Scripture speaks of no Infants baptized A. 1. No Infants are to be baptized but the Infants of the Faithful Therefore the Parents were to be made Believers first 2. The Scripture speaks of baptizing divers Housholds 3. No Scripture mentioneth that ever any Child of a Believer was baptized at age 4. The Scripture commandeth it and that 's enough Disciple Nations baptizing them Mat. 28. 19. Q. 26. How can Infants be Disciples that learn not A. 1. Did Christ mistake when he sent them to Disciple Nations of which Infants are a part 2. Cannot Infants be Disciples of Christ if Christ an Infant can be the Master and King of his Church Christ was our Teacher Priest and King in his Infancy by Right Relation and Destination and undertaking and Obligation to what he was after to do and so may Infants be his Subjects and Disciples May not an Infant be a King that cannot rule And are not Infants the Kings Subjects though they cannot obey May not they be Knights and Lords and have right to inheritances 3. Yea are not Infants called Gods Servants Levit. 25. 42. Yea and Christs Disciples Act. 15. 10. Peter saith those that would have imposed Circumcision would put a Yoak on the neck of the Disciples But it was Infants on whom they would have put it Q. 27. We are all by Nature Children of Wrath and none can enter into Heaven that is not regenerate and born of the Spirit A. But we are all the Children of God we and our Seed by the Grace of Christ And Infants are capable of being regenerate by the Spirit Or else they would not be called Holy 1 Cor. 7. 14. Q. 28. The Apostle only giveth a reason why a believing Husband may lawfully live with an unbelieving Wife A. True But what is the Reason which he giveth The doubt was not whether it be Fornication that was past doubt But the Faithful must in all their Relations be a peculiar Holy People and the doubt was Whether their Conjugal Society became not such as Infidels common and unholy And Paul saith No To the pure all things are Sanctified The Unbeliever is not Holy in her self but sanctified to the Husband for conjugal Society Else saith he Your Children were unclean not Bastards but unholy as those without are But now are they Holy as the Israelites adult and Infants were a Holy People separated from the World to God in the Covenant of peculiarity and not common and unclean Q. 29. Is it the
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
though Hypocrites are the Church-visible and his professed Subjects 3. Subjects by sincere Heart-consent And so all such are his Subjects as make up the Church-mystical and shall be saved So that the Kingdom of God is a word which is sometime of a larger signification than the Church and sometime in a narrower sence is the same Eph. 1. 23. Christ is Head over all things to the Church Q. 7. What are the Acts of Christs Kingly Government A. Law-making Judging according to that Law and executing that Judgment Q. 8. What Laws hath Christ made and what doth ●e rule by A. First He taketh the Law of Nature now as his own as far as it belongeth to sinful Mankind And 2. He expoundeth the darker passages of that Law And 3. He maketh new Laws proper to the Church ●ince his Incarnation Q. 9. Are there any new Laws of Nature since the Fall A. There are new Obligations and Duties arising from our changed State It was no duty to the Innocent to repent of Sin and seek out for Recovery and ●eg Forgiveness But Nature bindeth Sinners not yet ●nder the final Sentence to all this Q. 10. What new Laws hath Christ made A. Some proper to Church Officers and some ●ommon to all Q. 11. What are his Laws about Church-Officers A. First He chose himself the first chief Officers ●nd he gave them their Commission describing their Work and Office and he Authorized them to gather ●nd form particular Churches and their fixed Officers ●t Pastors and necessary Orders and gave them the ●xtraordinary Conduct and Seal of his Spirit that their determinations might be the infallible significations of his Will and his recorded Law to his Universal Church to the end of the World His Spirit being the Perfecter of his Laws and Government Q. 12. How shall we be sure that his Apostles by the Spirit were Authorized to give Laws to all future Generations A. Because he gave them such Commission to teach Men all that he Commanded 2. And promised them his Spirit to lead them into all Truth and bring all things to their Remembrance and to tell them what to say and do And 3. Because he performed this Promise in sending them that extraordinary measure of the Spirit And 4. They spake as from Christ and in his Name and as by his Spirit And 5. They sealed all by the manifestation of that Spirit in its Holy and Miraculous manifold Operation Q. 13. Have not Bishops and Councils the same Power now A. No To be the Instruments of Divine Legislation and make Laws which God will call His Laws is a special Prophetical Power and Office such a● Moses had in making the Iewish Laws which no●… had that came after him But when Prophetical Revelation hath made the Law the following Office●… have nothing to do But 1. To preserve that Law 2. And to expound it and apply it and guide th● People by it and themselves obey it 3. And to determine undetermined mutable Circumstances As the Iewish Priests and Levites were not to make another Law but to preserve expound and Rule by Moses Law so the ordinary Ministers Bishops or Councils are to do as to the Laws of God sufficiently made by Christ and the Spirit in his Apostles Q. 14. What are the New Laws which he hath made for all A. The Covenant of Grace in the last Edition is his Law by which he obligeth Men to Repent and Believe in him as Incarnate Crucified and Ascended and Interceding and Reigning in Heaven and as one that will Judge the World at the Resurrection As one that pardoneth Sin by his Sacrifice and Merit and Sanctifieth Believers by his Spirit And to believe in God as thus reconciled by Him and in the Holy Ghost as thus given by him And he promiseth Pardon Grace and Glory to all true Believers and threatneth Damnation to impenitent Unbelievers And he commandeth all Believers to devote themselves thus to God the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost by a solemn Vow in Baptism and live in the Communion of Saints in his Church and Holy Worship and the frequent Celebration of the Memorial of his Death in the Sacrament of his Body and Blood especially on the first Day of the Week which he hath separated to that Holy Comemoration and Communion by his Resurrection and the sending of his Spirit and by his Apostles And he hath commanded all his Disciples to live in Unity Love and Beneficence taking up the Cross and following him in Holiness and Patience in hope of Everlasting Life Q. 15. But some say that Christ was only a Teacher and not a Law-giver A. His Name is King of Kings and Lord of Lords and all Power in Heaven and Earth is given him and all things put into his Hands the Government is laid on his Shoulders and the Father without him judgeth no Man but hath committed all Judgment to the Son For this end he died rose and revived that he might be Lord of the Dead and of the Living He is at God's right Hand above a●● Principalities and Powers and every Name being Head over all things to the Church Q. 16. May not this signifie only his Kingdom as ●● is God or that which he shall have hereafter only at the Resurrection A. 1. It expresly speaketh of his Power as God and Man the Redeemer 2. And he made his Law i● this Life though the Chief and Glorious part of h●● Judgment and Execution be hereafter How els● should Men here keep his Law and hereafter ●● judged according to it He that denieth Christ to be the Lawgiver denied him to be King and he that denieth him to be King denieth him to be Christ and is no Christian. Q. 17. Hath Christ any Vicegerent or Universal Governour under him on Earth A. No It is his Prerogative to be the Universal Governour for no mortal Man is capable of it As no one Monarch is capable of the Civil Government of all the Earth nor was ever so mad as to pretend to it much less is any one capable of being an Universal Church-Teacher Priest and Governour over all the Earth when he cannot so much as know it or send to all or have access into the contending Kingdoms of the World To pretend to this is mad Usurpation Q. 18. But had not Peter the Monarchical Government of all the Church on Earth in his Time A. No He was Governour of none of the Eleven Apostles nor of Paul nor ever exercised any such Government no nor it seems so much as presided at their meeting Act. 15. Q. 19. But is not a General Council the Universal Governour A. No 1. Else the Church would be no Church when there is no General Council for want of its Unifying Government And 2. There indeed never was a general Council of all the Christian World But they were called by the Roman Emperours and were called General as
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.
must here re●…ve and the Glory which we shall receive hereafter at Death and at the General Resurrection A●… the great dutyes of Faith and Repentance of Obdience and Love to God and Man and renounc●… the Lusts of the flesh the world and the Devil wh●… must be done by all that will be Glorified by a●… with Jesus Christ. This is the Catechism which Parents must te●… their Children Q. 20. Alas it will be a hard and long work ●… teach Children all this or Servants either that ●… at age A. All this is but the plain meaning of the Cr●… and ten Commandements which the Church re●…reth all to learn And no more than in their B●…tism the Parents should and the Godfathers do ●…lemnly Promise to see them taught It is these thi●… for which God hath given them life and time and ●…son and on which their present safety and comf●… and their Everlasting Life dependeth And will y●… set them seven years Apprentice to a Trade ●… set them Seven and Seven to Schools and Univ●…sities and Innes of Court where study must be th●… daily business And will you think it too much teach them the sence of the Creeds Lords Pr●…er and ten Commandements needful to far gre●…er and better ends Q. 21. In what manner must Parents teach th●… Children A. 1. Very plainly by familiar talk 2. Ge●…ly and Lovingly to win them and not discour●… them 3. Beginning with the History and the ●…ctrine which they are most capable to receive 4. Very frequently that it be not neglected or forgotten Deut. 6. 11. 5. Yet a little at a time that they be not overwhelmed 6. Praising them when they do well 7. Doing all with such holy reverence that they may perceive it is the Work of God and not a Common matter 8. Teaching them by an answerable Life Q. 22. What else besides Teaching is the Parents duty A. 3. To use all just means to make Religion pleasant to them and win their Hearts to Love it And therefore to tell them the Author the Excel●…ency the certainty and profit of it here and here●…fter 4. To possess them with necessary Fear of God of Death of Hell and of Sin 5. To make ●… great difference between the good and the bad ●…ewarding good Children and Correcting the bad ●…isobedient and stubborn 6. To choose safe and ●…odly School-masters for them if they teach them ●…ot all themselves 7. To keep them out of ill Com●…ny and from Temptations especially to know ●…heir Vices and watch against all occasions of their ●… 8. To choose meet Trades or Callings for them ●…d faithful Masters ever preferring the welfare ●…f their Souls before their Bodies 9. To choose ●…eet Husbands or Wives for them if they are to ●…e marryed 10. To settle them under a faithful ●…astor in the real Communion of Saints And all this with constant serious diligence praying to God for his Grace and Blessing O how happy were the Church and World if Parents would faithfully do all this needful certain Duty and not perfidiously and cruelly break the Promise they made in Baptism and by negligence worldliness and ungodliness betray the Souls of their own Children to Sin and Satan The happiness or misery of Families Churches Cities Kingdoms and of the World lyeth most eminently on Parents hands Q. 23. What is the duty of Children to their Parents in special A. To Honour their Judgment and Authority to be Thankful to them for their Being Love and Education To Love them Dearly To learn of them willingly and diligently To obey them faithfully and to requite them as they are able and what is included in the General duty of Subjects opened before Q. 24. What if the Father be a Papist and th● Mother a Protestant and one commandeth the Chil● to read one book and go to one Church and the oth●● another which must be obeyed A. Either the Child is of age and understanding to try and Judge which of them is contrary to God● Law or not If he be he must obey God first and therefore not obey any thing that is contrary t● his Law But if not then he is one that will not pu● such questions nor do what he doth out of Conscience to God but perform meer humane Obedienc● to man And if his Ignorance of Gods Law b● through his own negligence it will not excuse h● Sin if he mistake But if it be from natural incapacity he is ruled like a Bruit and no doubt the Father is the Chief Governour of the house ●●d will and must be obeyed before the Mother when obedience to God doth not forbid it which this Child understandeth not Q. 25. What if Children be rebellious in wickedness as Drunkenness Stealing c. must the Parents cause them to be put to death as Moses Law Commanded or what must they do with them A. Moses Law had some special Severities and was peculiar to that Nation and is abrogate whether the Common good and safety require the death of such a Son or any the Supream Power is judge and not the Parents Nor is it meet though some think otherwise that Parents have the Power of putting to death their Children For the Common-wealth which is better than the Family is concerned in all the Subjects lives And experience proveth it that were this granted Whores Beggars and raging passionate Persons would be Common Murderers of their Children But if the Magistrate would appoint one house of Correction in every County for Children that will not be ruled by Parents where they may be kept ●n labour till they are humbled and subdued it would ●e an excellent work Q. 26. But what shall such sorrowfull Parents ●o A. First use all means by Wisdom Love and Pa●ience while there is hope And next if they are ●ast their Correction send them to the House of ●orrection And lastly disinherit them or deny them ●l maintenance for their lust Q. 27. Is it a duty to disinherit an incorrigible wicked Son or to deny such filial maintenance and Portions A. Supposing it to be in the Fathers power it is a duty to leave them no more than will maintain their lives in temperance For all men are Gods Stewards and must be accountable for all that he doth trust them with And they ought not to give it to be the fewel of Lust and Sin when they have reason to believe that it will be so used That were to give Gods Mercies to the Devil to be turn'd against him Nor are Parents bound to give those Children the necessary maintenance for their lives and health or any thing at all who by obstinate rebellion utterly forfeit it Nature is not so strong a bond but that some sin may dissolve it and forfeit Life it self and therefore forfeit fatherly maintenance The rebellion and ingratitude of an incorrigible Child is far more hainous than a Neighbours injuries And though Moses Law and its rigors be ceased
that can●… be done they must marry whether their Parents ●… or not For man hath no Power to forbid what ●…d Commandeth Q. 25. Is that Marriage void which is without ●… consent of Parents and must such be separate as ●…lterers A. Some Marriage as aforesaid is Lawful without their consent some is sinfull but yet not Null nor to be dissolved which is the most usual Case Because all at age do choose for themselves even in the matters of Salvation And though they ough● to be ruled by Parents yet when they are not thei● own act bindeth them But if the incapacity of the persons make it null that 's another Case Q. 26. How shall men be sure what degrees ar● prohibited and what is Incest when Moses Law i● abrogated and the Law of Nature is dark and doubtful in it and Christ saith little of it A. Those passages in Moses Law which are b●… Gods Explication of a dark Law of Nature do st●… tell us how God once expounded it and conseque●ly how far it doth extend though Moses Law ●… such be abrogated 2. The Laws about such restraint of Marriag●… are Laws of Order And therefore bind when ●… der is necessary for the thing ordered but not wh●… it destroyeth the good of the thing ordered whi●… is its End Therefore Incest is unlawfull out of ●… cases of Necessity but to Adams Sons and Daug●ters it was a Duty And all the Children of No●… three Sons must needs marry either their own B●… ther 's and Sisters or the Children of their Fath●… Brethren which moved Lo●s Daughters to do w●… they did 3. In these matters of Order some Laws of ●… Land must be obeyed though they restrain ●… more than the Laws of God Q. 27. Is Marriage in every forbidden degree ●… be dissolved A. Not if it be a degree only forbidden by M●… Laws Or if it were in such foresaid cases of absolute necessity But that which God doth absolutely forbid must not be continued but dissolved as the Case of Herod and him 1 Cor. 5. tells us CHAP. XLI Of the Eighth Commandement Qu. 1. WHat are the Words of the Eighth Commandement A. Thou shalt not Steal Q. 2. What is the Stealing here forbidden A. All injurious getting or keeping that which is ●others Q. 3. When is it injurious A. When it is done without right And that is ●hen it is done without the Owners Consent or by ●… fraudulent or forcible getting his consent and with●ut just Authority from a superiour power who may ●arrant it Q. 4. What Power may allow one to take that which ●… anothers A. 1. God who is the only Absolute Owner of ●… did allow the Israelites to take the Egyptians ●nd Canaanites goods and so may do by whom he ●ill 2. And a Magistrate may take away the goods ●f a Delinquent who forfeiteth them And may take ●…m an unwilling Subject such Tribute as is his due ●… as much of his 〈◊〉 as the Law alloweth him to take for the necessary defence of the Common-wealth and may force him to pay his debts And a Father may take from his Child who is but a conditional Subproprietor what he seeth meet Q. 5. But what if it be so small a matter as will be no loss to him Is it sinful Theft to take it A. Yes if there be none of his Consent nor any Law to warrant you it is Theft how small soever the thing be But if the common sence of Mankind suppose that men would consent if they knew it or if the Law of God or the just Law of Man enable you to take it it is no Theft And so God allowed the Israelites to pluck the Ears of Corn or eat Fruit as they pass'd through a Vineyard in hunger so be it that they carryed none away And a man may gather a Leaf or an Herb for Medicine in another Mans Ground because Humanity supposeth that the Owner will not be against it Q. 6. But what if he can spare it and I am in great necessity and it be his duty to relieve me and he refuseth A. You are not allowed to be your own Carver The common good must be preferred before you● own And if every one shall be judge when thei● Necessity alloweth them to take from another th● Property and Right of all men will be vain and the common Order and Peace be overthrown And whil● you may either beg or seek to the Parish or Magistrate for Relief there is no place for a just Plea o●… your Necessity Q. 7. But should a man rather die by Famine than take from another that is bound to give and will not A. If his taking will by encouraging Thieves do the Common-wealth more hurt than his Life will do good he is bound rather to die than Steal But I dare not say that it is so where all these following Conditions concurre 1. If it be so small a thing as is meerly to save Life as God allowed the foresaid taking of Fruit and Corn. 2. If you have first tryed all other Means as Begging or seeking to the Magistrate 3. If by the Secresie or by the Effect it be no hurt to the Common-wealth but good As for instance If to save life one take an Apple from a Tree of him that is unwilling or eat Pease or Corn in the Field If Children have Parents that would famish them If a company in a Ship should lose all their Provision save one mans and he have enough for them all and would give them none I think the Law of Nature alloweth them to take as much as will save their Lives against his will If David the Lords Anointed and his six hundred men want Bread they think they may take it from a churlish Nabal If an Army which is necessary to save the Kingdom from a foreign Enemy should want Money and Food and none would give it them it seemeth unnatural to say that they should all famish and lose the Kingdom rather than take Free Quarter or things absolutely necessary from the unwilling The Common-wealths right in every Subjects Estate is greater than his own as the Common good is better than his But these rare Cases are no excuse for the unjust taking of the least that is anothers without his consent Q. 8. But may not a Child or Servant take that Meat or Drink which is but meet if the Parents and Masters be unwilling A. No unless as aforesaid meerly to save Life If Children have hard Parents they must patiently bear it If Servants have hard Masters they may leave them or seek Remedy of the Magistrate for that which they are unable to bear But the World must not be taught to invade other mens Property and be Judges of it themselves Q. 9. But what if he owe me a debt and will not pay me or keep unjust possession of my goods may I not take my own by stealth or force if I be able A.
I. I am under no Obligation to inform a Robber or an usurping Persecutor as such But to others I may be obliged to open the Truth II. I may deceive a Patient or Child to profit him when I may not do it to hurt him III. I may deceive such as I am not bound to inform by my silence or my looks or gestures which I suppose he will misunderstand when I may not deceive him by a Lie Q. 10. Is it not all one to deceive one way or another A. No 1. I am not bound to open my Mind to all men What right hath a Thief to know my Goods or Heart or a Persecutor to know where I hide my self 2. But I have before largely shewed you that Lying is so great an evil against common Trust and Society in the World as is not to be used for personal Commodity or Safety 3. And other Signs Looks and gestures being not appointed for the natural and common Indications of the Mind are more left to humane Liberty and Prudence to use for Lawful ends As Christ Luk. 24. made by his motion as if he would have gone further And even by words about Caesars Tribute and other Cases concealed his Mind and oft denyed the Pharisees a resolution of Questions which they put to him Stratagems in a Lawful War are lawful when by actual shews and seemings an Enemy is deceived Q. 11. But the Scriptures mention many Instances of Equivocation and flat Lying in the Egyptian Midwives in Rahab in David and many others without blame and some of them with great commendation and reward Heb. 11 A. 1. It is Gods Law that tells us what 's Sin and Duty when the History oft tells us but what was done and not how far it was well or ill done 2. It is not the Lie that is commended in the Midwives and Rahab but their Faith and Charity 3. That which God pardoneth as he did Polygamy and rash Divorce to Godly men that are upright in the main and specially such as knew it not to be sin is not thereby justified nor will it be so easily pardoned to us who live in the clearer Gospel light Q. 12. But when the Scripture saith that All men are Lyars and sad Experience seemeth to confirm it what credit do we owe to Men and what certainty is there of any History A. History by Writing or Verbal Tradition is of so great use to the World that Satan maketh it a chief part of his work as he is the Deceiver and Enemy of Mankind to corrupt it And false History is a most hainous sin and dangerous S●are by which the great Deceiver keeps up his Kingdom in the World Heathenism Mahometanism Popery Heresie and Malignity and Persecution are all maintained by false Tradition and History Therefore we must not be too hasty or confident in Believing Man And yet denying just Belief will be our sin and great loss Q. 13. How then shall we know what and whom to believe A. 1. We must believe no men that speak against God or his Word For we are sure that God cannot lie And the Scripture is his infallibly Sealed Word 2. We must believe none that speak against the Light of Nature and common Notices of all Mankind for that were to renounce Humanity And the Law of Nature is Gods first Law But it is not the Sentiments of Nature as depraved which is this Law 3. We must believe no men against the common Senses of Mankind exercised on their duely qualified Objects Faith contradicteth not common Sense though it goe above it We are Men before we are Christians and Sense and Reason are presupposed to Faith The Doctrine which saith There is no Bread nor Wine after Consecration in the Sacrament doth give the lie to the Eyes Taste and Feeling and intellectual Perception of all sound men and therefore not to be believed For if Sense be not to be trusted we know not that there is a Church or a Man or a Bible or any thing in the World and so nothing can be believed Whether all sound Senses may be deceived or not God hath given us no surer way of certainty 4. Nothing is to be believed against the certain Interest of all Mankind and tending to their destruction That which would damn Souls or deny their Immortality and future Hope or ruine the Christian World or Nations is not to be believed to be duty or lawfull For Truth is for Good and Faith is for Felicity and no man is bound to such destructive things 5. Nothing is to be believed as absolutely certain which depends on the meer honesty of the Speakers For all men are liable to mistake or lie 6. The more Ignorant malicious unconscionable factious siding any man is the less credible he is And the wiser and nearer to the action any man is and the more conscionable peaceable and impartial he is the more credible he is An Enemy speaking well of a man is so far more credible than a Friend Multitudes as capable and honest are more credible than one 7. As that Certainty which is called Morall as depending on mens Free-will is never absolute but hath many degrees as the witness is more or less credible so there is a Certainty by mens Report Tradition or History which is Physical and wholly infallible As that there is such a place as Rome Paris c. and that the Statutes of the Land were made by such Kings and Parliaments to whom they are ascribed and that there have been such Kings c. For proof of which know 1. That besides the free acts the Will hath some acts as necessary as it is to the Fire to burn viz. To Love our selves and Felicity and more such 2. That when all men of contrary Interest Friends and Foes agree in a matter that hath sensible Evidence it is the Effect of such a Necessitating Cause 3. And there is no Cause in Nature that can make them so agree in a lie Therefore it is a Natural Certainty Look back ●o the sixth Chapter Q. 13. Why is false Witness in Iudgement so great a sin A. Because it containeth in it all these odious Crimes conjunct 1. A deliberate lie 2. The wrongfull hurting of another contrary to the two great Principles of Converse Justice and Love ● It depriveth the World of the benefit of Government and Judicatures 4. It turneth them into the ●●ague and ruine of the innocent 5. It blasphe●eth or dishonoureth God by whose Authority Rulers judge as if he set up Officers to destroy us by false Witness or knew it not or would not re●enge Injustice 6. It overthroweth humane Con●erse and Safety when Witnesses may destroy whom they please if they can but craftily agree Q. 14. Is there no way to prevent this danger to Mankind A. God can do it If he give wise and righteous Rulers to the World they may do much towards ●t But wicked Rulers use false Witness as
the Devil doth for to destroy the Just. As Iezebel did Q. 15. How should good Rulers avoid it A. 1. By causing Teachers to open the danger of ●t to the People 2. Some old Canons made inva●id the Witness of all notorious wicked men How can he be trusted in an Oath that maketh no Conscience of Drunkenness Fornication Lying or other Sin Q. 16. How then are so few destroyed by false Witnesses A. It is the wonderful Providence of God declaring himself the Governour of the World that when there are so many thousand wicked men who all have a mortal hatred to the Godly and will daily Swear and Lie for nothing and any two of these might take away our Lives at pleasure there are yet so few this way cut off But God hath not left himself without witness in the World and hath revenged false Witness on many and made Conscience a terrible Accuser for this Crime Q. 17. What is the positive Duty of the ninth Commandement A. 1. To do Justice to all men in our places 2. To defend the Innocent to the utmost of ou● just Power If a Lawyer will not do it for the Love of Justice and Man without a Fee when he canno● have it he breaketh this Commandement 3. To reprove Backbiters and tell them of their Sin 4. To give no Scandal but to live so blamelesly that Slanderers may not be believed 5. On all just occasions especially to defend the Reputation of the Gospel Godliness and Good men the Cause and Laws of God and not silently fo● self saving to let Satan and his Agents make them Odious by Lies to the Seduction of the People● Souls CHAP. XLIII Of the Tenth Commandement Qu. 1. WHat are the Words of the Tenth Commandement A. Thou shalt not Covet thy Neighbours House Thou shalt not covet thy Neighbours Wife nor his Man-Servant nor his Maid-Servant nor his ●x nor his Ass nor any thing that is thy Neighbours Q. 2. What is forbidden here and what Command●d A. 1. In summe the thing forbidden is SELFISHNESS and the thing Commanded is to LOVE OUR NEIGHBOUR AS OUR SELVES Q. 3. Is not this implyed in the five foregoing Commandements A. Yes and so is our LOVE to GOD in all the Nine last But because there are many more particular Instances of Sin and Duty than can be distinctly named and remembred God thought it meet to make two General Fundamental Commandements which should contain them all which Christ calleth the first and second Commandement Thou shalt Love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart c. And thou shalt Love thy Neighbour as thy Self The first is the Summary and root of all the duties of the other nine and specially of the second third and fourth The Other is the Summary of the second Table dutyes And it is placed last as being instead of all unnamed instances As the Captain leads the Souldiers and th● Lieutenant brings up the rear Q. 4. What mean you by the Sin of SELFISHNESS A. I mean that inordinate self-esteem self-love and self-seeking with the want of a due proportionable Love to others which engageth men against the good o● others and inclineth them to draw from others to themselves It is not an ordinate Love of our selves but a diseased self-love Q. 5. When is Self-Love Ordinate and when i● it Sinful A. That which is ordinate 1. Valueth not a ma●● Self blindly above his Worth 2. It employeth ● man in a due care of his own Holiness Duty an● Salvation 3. It regardeth our Selves but as littl● members of the common great body and therefore inclineth us to Love others as our selves without mu●● partial disproportion according to the divers degree● of their amiableness and to Love publick good th● Church and World and much more God above o●… selves 4. It maketh us studious to do good to others and rejoyce in it as our own rather than to draw fro● them to our selves c II. Sinful selfishness 1. Doth esteem and love an● seek self-interest above it's proper worth It is ove● deeply affected with all our own concerns 2. ●… hath a low disproportionable Love and regard others good 3. And when it groweth to full ma●●gnity it maketh men envy the prosperity of others ●nd covet that which is theirs and desire and re●oyce in their disgrace and hurt when they Stand against mens Selfish Wills and to endeavour to draw from others to our selves Selfishness is to the Soul like an Inflamation or Impostume to the Body which draweth the Blood and Spirits to it self from their ●●ue and Common course till they corrupt the in●●amed part Q. 6. What mean you by Loving others as ourselves A. Loving them as members of the same Body or Society the World or the Church as they are ●mpartially with a Love proportionable to their worth and such a careful practical forgiving Patient Love as we Love our selves Q. 7. But God hath made us Individual persons with so peculiar a Self-love that no man can possibly love another as himself A. 1. You must distinguish between sensitive Natural Love and Rational Love 2. And between Corrupt and Sanctified Nature 1. Natural Sensitive Love is stronger to ones Self that is more sensible of self-interest than to all the World I feel not anothers Pain or Pleasure in it self I hunger and thirst for my self A Mother hath that Natural Sensitive Love to her own Child like that of Bruits which she hath not for any other 2. Rational Love valueth and loveth and preferreth every thing according to the degree of its amiableness that is it 's Goodness 3. Rational Love destroyeth not Sensitive but it Moderateth and Ruleth it and Commandeth the Will and Practice to preferre and desire and seek and delight in higher things as Reason ruleth Appetite and the Rider the Horse and to deny and forsake all carnal or private Interests that stand against a greater good 4. Common Reason tells a man that it 's an unreasonable thing in him that would not dye to save a Kingdom Much more that when he is to love both himself and the Kingdom inseparably yet cannot Love a Kingdom yea or more excellent persons above himself But yet it is Sanctification that must Effectually overcome inordinate self-Love and clearly illuminate this Reason and make a man obey it 5. To conquer this Selfishness is the summe of all Mortification and the greatest Victory in this World And therefore it is here perfectly done by none but it 's done most where there is the greatest Love to God and to the Church and publick good and to our Neighbours Q. 8. What is the sinfulness and the hurt of Selfishness A. 1. It is a Fundamental Errour and Blindness in the Judgment We are so many Poor Worms and little things And if an Ant or Worm had Reason should it think it's Life or Ease or other interest more valuable than a Mans or than all the
believing P●rent that the unbeliever is sanctified to the believing for the begetting of a Holy Seed else we●● your Children unclean but now they are Holy mee● Legitimation is never called Holiness nor are He●thens Children Bastards 8. And most plainly Christ when he institute●● baptism saith Go Disciple me all nations baptizi●● them which fully sheweth that he would have M●nisters endeavour to Disciple and baptize Nation● of all which Infants are a part 9. And accordingly many Prophesies foretell th●● Nations shall come in to Christ and Christians a●● Called A Holy Nation And it 's said The Ki●●doms of the World are become the Kingdoms of t●● Lord and of his Christ. Q. 14. But though Infants be Church-Member● is it not better that their Baptism be delayed till th●● know what they do A. Christ knew what 's best And he hath to●● us of no other door of entrance into the visib●● Church regularly but by Baptism And if he 〈◊〉 intended so great a change to the believing Iems to unchurch all their Infants he would have told ●… And the Apostles would have had more ado to qui●● them in this than they had for casting off Circum●…on But we read of no such thing but the c●●stant baptizing of whole housholds Q. 15. But Infant-Baptism seems to let in all the Corruption of the Churches while Infants receive they know not what and are all taken after for Christians how ●ad soever or without knowing what Christianity is Whereas if they stayd till they understood ●…t it would engage them to be resolved Christians indeed A. This is not long of Infant-Baptism but of unfaithful Parents and Ministers For 1. If the Parents were told their Duty and also what a Blessing ●… is to have their Children in Christs Church and Covenant it would awaken them better to do their ●…rt and comfort them in their Childrens state of Grace 2. And if Infants were not betime engaged the ●sage would tempt Multitudes to do as some did of ●●d even sin on as long as they durst that Baptism ●●ght wash it away at last 3. And doubtless with unfaithful Ministers Bap●ism at age also would be made but a Ceremony ●●d slubbered over as Confirmation is now and as ●●stomary going to the Church and Sacrament is 4. But that which should be done is that at age ●ery baptized person before he is admitted among ●●ult Communicants should be as diligently Cate●●ized and as solemnly own and renew his Baptis●al Vow and Covenant as if it were now to be ●●st done The full nature of Baptism is best to be ●●derstood by the case of the adult who were ca●●ble of more than Infants are And no adult Per●●n must be baptized without serious deliberate un●●rstanding Profession of Faith Repentance and ho●… Obedience to Christ. Infants cannot do this ●hough they must not do that again which they did and could doe viz. receive Baptism yet they must do that which they did not nor could do I confess to you of the two evils I think the Church is more corrupted for want of such a solemn serious renewing of the Baptismal Covenant at age and by turning Confirmation into a Ceremony than by those Anabaptists who call People to be seriously rebaptized as the Africk Councel did those that had been baptized by Hereticks Q. 16. Do you think that Anabaptists should be tolerated or that all should not be forced to bring their Children to Baptism A. 1. Infant Baptism is no such easie Controversie or Article of Faith as that no one should be tolerated that receiveth it not 2. The ancient Church which we most reverence left all men to their liberty to be baptized only when they pleased and compelled none for themselves or their Children Tertullian was for the delay till they understood Gregory Nazianzen was ●o● staying some years Augustine and other of the Fathers were baptized at age 3. Baptism giveth so great a gift even Christ a●● Pardon and Adoption and Right to Life Eternal ●● Condition of thankful acceptance and believing Co●…sent that undoubtedly the unwilling have no rig●… to it The ancient Church baptized none till the desired and sought it for themselves or Children Yea they must be willing of it on self-denyal-term● forsaking the Flesh the World and the Devil a●● taking God instead of all So that to force any 〈◊〉 be Baptized by Mulcts and Penalties and bapti●● those so forced is to deceive Souls defile Chris●● Church and profane the Sacred Ordinance of God Q. 17. I have oft wondred what harm twice baptizing doth that it should be accounted a Heresie and intolerable A. It is a fault because it 's contrary to Christs appointed Order Baptism is the Sacrament of our New-Birth and we are born but once To be baptized again implyeth an Untruth that we were not baptized before But I suppose none do it but through Ignorance And Cyprian and the Bishops of many Countreys in many Councils were so ignorant is to be guilty of rebaptizing all that Hereticks baptized The great fault of the Anabaptists is their Schism that they cannot be contented when they are rebaptized to live in Love and Communion with others but grow so fond of their own Opi●●on as to gather into separated Churches and avoid Communion with all that are not of their Mind and ●●end their time in contentious Endeavours to draw ●en to them Q. 18. What the better are Infants for being baptized A. The Children of the Faithful are stated by it ●… a Right to the foresaid Benefits of the Covenant ●…e Pardon of their Original sin the Love of God ●●e Intercession of Christ and the help of the Holy Ghost when they come to Age and title to the Kingdom of Heaven if they die before they for●e●t it Q. 19. Rut how can we judge all such in a state ●f Salvation when we see many at age prove wicked ●●d Enemies A. This is a point of so great difficulty that I ●ay but humbly propose my Opinion to tryal ●… There is a degree of grace or goodness which doth only give a man a Power to believe or obey God but not give a rooted habitual determination to his will such the fallen Angels had and Adam before his fall who was thereby in a state of Life till he fell from it by wilfull sin And so it may be with the baptized Infants of Believers But when the special sanctifying gift of the Holy Ghost is given them and they are habitually rooted in the Love of God as the seed sown in good ground they fall not totally away 2. As Parents and Children are Covenanters for their several Duties if Parents will per●idiously neglect their promised duty for the holy Education of their Children or Children rebelliously sin against that Power and Measure of Grace which they received they may perish by Apostacy as the Angels did or need as Adam a renewing by Repentance All Christs Grace is not confirming As the best may
Worship which seemeth to me flat Idolatry VII They reserve it as their God long after the Sacrament to adore and to work pretended Miracles by VIII They solemnly celebrate a Sacrament before the Congregation where none communicate but the Priests and the People look on IX They say these Masses by number to deliver Souls out of the Flames of Purgatory X. They have many Prayers for the Dead as in Purgatory for their ease and deliverance XI They Pray to the Dead Saints to intercede for them and help them and to the Virgin Mary for that which is proper to Christ. XII They worship God by Images and adore the Images as the representations of Saints and Angels Yea and of God and some profess that the Cross and the Images of the Father Son and Holy Ghost are to be worshipped with honour participatively Divine These with abundance more and many false Doctrines on which they depend are brought into Gods publick Worship and called The Mass and are added by degrees to that sounder Worship which was called the Mass at first Q. 12. You have spoken much about the Consecration in the Sacrament What is it which you call the Commemoration A. It containeth the signal representation of the Sacrificing of Christ as the Lamb of God to take away the sins of the World Where the Signs are 1. The Materials the Bread and Wine 2. The Ministers Breaking the Bread and Pouring out the Wine 3. The Presenting them to God as the Commemoration of that Sacrifice in which we trust and declaring to the people that this is done to this Commemoration The things signified are 1. Christs Flesh and Blood when he was on Earth 2. The Crucifying of Christ the piercing of his Flesh and shedding his Blood 3. Christs Offering this to God as a Sacrifice for mans Sin And this Commemoration is a great part of the Sacrament Q. 13 What think you of the name Sacrifice Altar and Priest here A. The Ancient Churches used them all without exception from any Christian that ever I read of I. As the Bread is justly called Christs Body as Signifying it so the Action described was of old called a Sacrifice as representing and commemorating it And it 's no more improper than calling our Bodies and our Alms and our Prayers Sacrifices Rom. 12. 1. Eph. 5. 2. Phil. 2. 17. 4. 18. Heb. 13. 15 16. 1 Pet. 2. 5. II. And the naming of the Table an Altar as related to this representative Sacrifice is no more improper than that other Heb. 13. 10. We have an Altar whereof they have no right to eat seems plainly to mean the Sacramental Communion And the Rev. 6. 9. 8. 3. 5. 16. 7. and oft useth that word III. And the word Priest being used of all Christians that offer praise to God 1 Pet. 2. 5. 9. Rev. 1. 6. 5. 10. 20. 6. It may sure as well be used of those whose Office is to be Subintercessors between the People and God and their mouth to God in Subordination to Christs Priesthood Causless scruples harden the Papists We are not offended that the Lords day is called the Sabbath though the Scripture doth never so call it and a Sabbath in Scripture sence was a day of Ceremonial rest and the ancient Church called it the Christian Sabbath but by such allusion as it more commonly used the word Sacrifice and Altar Q. 14. But we shall too much countenance the Papists Sacrifice by using the same Names A. We can sufficiently disclaim their turning a Commemoration of Christs Sacrifice into the feigned real Sacrificing of his Flesh and Blood without renouncing the names Else we must for mens abuse renounce the name of a Sabbath too and a Temple c. if not also of a Church and Bishop Q. 15. You have spoken of the Sacramental Consecration and Commemoration What is it which you call the Covenanting part and Communication A. It containeth the Signs and the things signified as Communicated The Signs are 1. The Actual delivering of the consecrated Bread and Wine first Broken and poured out to the Communicants with the Naming what it is that is given them 2. Bidding them Take Eat and Drink 3. Telling them the Benefits and Blessings given thereby And all this by a Minister of Christ authorized thus to act in his Name as Covenanting promising and giving what is offered And on the Receivers part the Signs are 1. Freely taking what is offered the Bread and Wine 2. Eating and Drinking 3. Vocal Praise and Thanksgiving to God and Professed Consent to the Covenant Q. 16. What are the things signified and given A. I. 1. On Gods part the renewed giving of a Sacrificed Saviour to the penitent Believer 2. The Will and Command of Christ that as Sacrificers feasted on the Sacrifice so the Soul by Faith should thankfully and joyfully feast on Christ by hearty Acceptance of the free Gift 3. The actual Applicatory Gift of the Benefits of Christs Sacrifice which are 1. Our confirmed Relation to Christ as our Head and Saviour and to God as our Father reconciled by him and to the Holy Ghost as our Sanctifier and to the Church as his Kingdom or Body 2. The Pardon of our Sins by his Blood 3. Our right confirmed to Everlasting Life 4. The strengthening of our Faith Hope Love Joy Patience and all Grace 4. Christs Promise and Covenant for all this Sealed to us II. On the Receivers part is signified 1. That in the sence of his own Sin Misery and Need he humbly and thankfully receiveth his part in Christ as Sacrificed 2. That he endeavoureth by Faith to feast on him 3. And that he thankfully receiveth the Blessings purchased to wit his Relation to Christ as his Head to God as his Father and to the Holy Ghost as his Sanctifier and Comforter with the Pardon of Sin the Sealed Promise and Right to Heaven and all the helps of his Faith and other Graces 4. That he resolvedly reneweth the Dedication of himself to God the Father Son and holy Ghost as thus related to these ends Covenanting Fidelity in these relations and renouncing the contraries 5. Doing all this as in Communion with all the Church of Christ as being united to them in the same Head the same Faith and Hope and Love 6. Thankfully praising God and our Redeemer for this Grace Q. 17. Should not one prepare for the Lords Supper by Fasting and Humiliation before or how should we prepare A. We must alwayes live in habitual Preparation and special Fasts are not ordinarily necessary thereto the Primitive Church did communicate not only every Lords day but on other dayes when they met to worship God and therefore used not every Week to spend a day in Fasting for Preparation But as Christians must use Fasting on just occasions so must they do before this Sacrament in case that any hainous Sin or heavy Judgment or danger call for it and preparing
Atheists Sadducees or Infidels after And these are worse than common Infidels that never were baptized The Church is no Church if it be common to these 6. Some that continue a Nominal Christianity openly hate and persecute the Practice of it and live in common Adultery Perjury Murder And the Church is Holy and a peculiar People a holy Nation a royal Priesthood And Repentance and Obedience are necessary to the Church as well as Faith If therefore these notorious flagitious impenitent persons must be Members in Communion with the Church it will be a Swine-sty and not a Church a Shame to Christ and not an Honour If his Church be but like the rest of the World Christ will not be honoured as the Saviour of it nor the Spirit as its Sanctifier It is the Unity of the Spirit that all Christians must keep in the bond of Peace But these have none of his Spirit and therefore are none of Christs The Sacraments are Symbols of the Church as differenced from the World and Christ will have them be a visibly distinct Society 7. Communicants come to receive the greatest gift in the world Pardon Justification Adoption right to Heaven The Gospel giveth these to none but Penitent Believers To say that Christ giveth them to flagitious impenitent Rebels whose Lives say We will not have him reign over us is to make a new Gospel contrary to Christs Gospel which Paul curseth were it done by an Angel Gal. 1. 7 8. They are not yet capable of these precious gifts 8. The Objectors take no notice of 1 Cor. 5. 2 Thess. 3. Rom. 16. 16 17. Tit. 3. 10. Rev. 2. 3. where the Churches are reproved for suffering Defilers nor Heb. 13. 7. 17. 24. Luk. 12. 42. 42. 1 Thess. 5. 12 13. which describe the Office of Church-guides nor 1 Tim. 3. 4 c. where the governing of the Church and avoiding Communion of the Impenitent are described 9. In a word Christs Office Works and Law the Nature of the Church and Sacrament the Office of the Ministry the frequent Precepts of the Apostles and the constant practice of the Church in its greatest Purity down from the Apostles dayes do all speak so plainly for keeping and casting out Infidels and impenitent wicked men and for keeping the Church as a Society of visible Saints separated from the World that I can take him for no better than a Swine or an Infidel who would have the Church-Keyes cast away and the Church turned common to Swine and Infidels Q. 24. But it will make Ministers Lords and Tyrants to have such power A. 1. Some body must be trusted with the Power if the work must be done The Church must be differenced from the World Therefore some must trye and judge who are fit to be baptized and to have its Communion And who is fitter than those whom Christ by Office hath thereto appointed Would you have Magistrates or the People do it Then they must be prepared for it by long study and skill and wholly attend it For it will take up all their time Q. 25. Must Ministers examine People before they communicate A. They must Catechize and Examine the Adult before they baptize them and consequently those who were baptized in Infancy before they number them with adult Communicants or else Atheists and Infidels will make up much of the Church who will come in for worldly Interest This Examination should go before Confirmation or the publick owning of their Baptism But there is no Necessity of any more Examination before every Sacrament except in case of Scandal or when persons need and crave such help Q. 26. Who be they that must be Excommunicated or refused A. Those who are proved to be Impenitent in gross scandalous sins after sufficient admonition and patience And to reject such is so far from Tyranny that it is necessary Church-Justice without which a Pastor is but a Slave or Executioner of the sinfull will of others Like a Tutor Philosopher or Schoolmaster who is not the Master of his own School but must leave it common to all that will come in though they scorn him and refuse his conduct But no man must play the Pastor over other mens Flocks nor take the Guidance of a greater Flock than he can know and manage Much less be the only Key-bearer over many Score or Hundred Churches And least of all take upon him to Govern and judge of Kings and Kingdoms and all the World as the Roman deceiving Tyrant doth CHAP. XLVII Of Preparation for Death and Iudgment Qu. 1. HOw must we prepare for a safe and co●fortable Death A. I have said so much of this in my Family Book that to avoid Repetition I must refer you thi●her only in brief I. Preparation for Death is the whole work of Life for which many hundred years are not too long if God should so long spare and trie us And all that I have hitherto said to you for Faith Love and Obedience upon the Creed Lords Prayer and Commandements is to teach you how to prepare for Death And though ●ound Conversion at last may tend to Pardon and Salvation to them that have lived a careless wicked Life Yet the best the surest the Wisest Preparation is that which is made by the whole course of a holy obedient heavenly Life Q. 2. What Life is it that is the best Preparation A. 1. When we have so well considered of the certain Vanity of this World and all its pleasures and of the truth of Gods Promises of the Heavenly Glory as that by Faith we have there placed our chiefest Hopes and there expect our chief Felicity and make it our chief business in this world to seek it preferring no worldly thing before it but resolved for the hopes of it to forsake them all when God requireth it This is the first part of our preparation for Death II. When we believe that this mercy is given by Christ the Mediator between God and Man and trust in his Merits and Intercession with the Father and take him for our Teacher also and our Ruler resolving to obey his Word and Spirit This is the second part of our preparation for Death III. When the Holy Spirit hath shed abroad Gods Love upon our hearts and turned their nature into a habit of Love to God and Holiness and given us a Victory over that Love of the World and fleshly Prosperity and Pleasure which ruleth in the hearts of Carnal men though yet our Love shew it self but in such Mortification and endeavour and grief for what we want we are prepared for a safe Death But if the foretasts of Heavenly Glory and sense of the Love of God do make our thoughts of Heaven sweeter to us than our thoughts of our Earthly hopes and cause us out of Love to God and our glorified Redeemer and his Church and out of love to a Life of perfect Knowledge Love and
to Heaven it is best for us that the rest is known by Christ in whose Hand and Will we are surer and better than in our own As for the special Preparations in Sickness I refer ●ou to the Family Book Q. 6. What shall one doe that is tempted to doubt ●… to think hardly of God because he hath made Heaven for so few A. 1. Those few may be assured that he will ne●er forsake them whom he hath so chosen out of ●ll the World and made his Jewels and his Trea●●re 2. It 's unprobable rashness to say Heaven is but ●or few All this Earth is no more to the Glorious World above us even so far as we see than one ●…ch is to all the Earth And what if God forsake ●…ne Inch or Mole-hill See Heb. 12. 23 24. Again I say I take Hell to be as the Gallows ●nd this Earth to be as Newgate Jail where some ●risoners are that shall die and some shall live and ●he Superior World to be like the City and King●om Who will say that the King is unmerciful because Malefactors have a Prison and a Gallows if ●ll else in the Kingdom live in P●●●e And though this World ●eems almost forsaken as ●he Prison-way to Hell yet while the Elect are saved and the superior lucid Glorious World is many thousand and thousand and thousand times greater than all this Earth I doubt not but Experience will quickly tell us that the Glory of Gods Love is so unmeasurably manifested in Heaven as that the Blindness Wickedness Confusions and Miseries of ●his Earth and Hell shall be no Ecclipse or disho●our to it for ever FINIS a Psal. 25. 4 5. 27. 11. 119. 12 33 66. b Iob. 34. 32. c Heb. 6. 1 2 3. d Tit. 2. 3. e Psal. 34. 11. 32. 8. f 1 Kin. 8. 36. Mic. 4. 2. g Isa. 28. 26. 1 Cor. 11. 14. Iob 12. 7 8. Heb. 5. 12. ●… 2 Tim. 2. 2. Iob 32. 17. Tit. 2. 21. Deut. 6. 7 8. 11. 19 20. Pro. 1. 5. 9. 9. 6. 21 23. k Psal. 119. 99. Hib. 5. 11 12. Pro. 5. 13. l Gal. 6. D●●● 6. 7. 1 Tim. 2. 7. 2 Tim. 1. 11. Eph. 4. 11. Tit. 2. m Hib. 3. 13. Ezr. 7. 25. Col. 3. 16. Heb. 5. 11 6. 1. 2. 2 Tim. 1. 13. n Mat. 11. 30 31 33. Mat. 19. 19. 22. 37 39. Rom. 13. 9. Mat. 28. 19. Mat. 23. 23. Iam. 1. 27. o Is. 30 29. Mat. 28. 19 20. 1 Tim. 1. 3. 3. 2. 6. 2 3. p 2 Tim. 2. 2. 24. Act. 20. 20. 2 Tim. 3. 17. Heb. 5. 12 13. 1● Io. 2. 27. 1 Thes. 4. 9. a 1 Io. 1. 1 2 3. Act. 1. 3. 4. 20. 26. 16. b Ioh. 20 20 25 27. a Rom. 1. 19 20 21. a Mat. 11. 27 25. Luk. 10. 22. Deu. 29. 29. Mat. 16. 17. 1 Cor. 2. 10. b Eph. 3. 5. 1 Pet. 1. 12. Dan. 2. 47 22 28 29 Am. 3. 7. Gal. 1. 12. 2. 2. c Eph. 3. 3. d 1 Cor. 14. 6 26. e 2 Cor. 12. 1 7. f 1 I● 1. 1 2 3. g Heb. 2. 3 4. h Gen. 2. 16 17. Gen. 3. 15. i Gen 4. 4. Gen. 9. 1 2 to 8. k Gen. 12. 2 3. 17. 1 2 4 6 7 8 9 10 11. l Exod. 2. c. 20. c. m Ioh. 1. 3. 16. Gal. 4. 4 5 6. 1. 4. Mat. 28. 19 20. n Heb. 7. 22. 9. 15 16 17 18. 9. 13. 8. 10. 10. 16. Matth. 4. o Psal. 14. Rom. 3. Psal. 145.9 Act. 14. 17. 1 Ioh. 3.8 Rom. 3.21 23. Rom. 4. 12.15 16 17. 2 Kings 10. 19. Acts 14. 13. 18. 1 Cor. 10. 20. * Deut. 1. 31. 3. 21 22. 4. 3. 9. 5. 24. 10. 21. 11. 7. 29. 3. Ios. 24. 7. † Deut. 12. 32. p Col. 1. 15 16 17 18 19. Prov. 30. 5. Heb. 4. 12. 1 Pet. 1. 23. 1 Ioh. 2. 14. Ioh. 8. 48. 12. 48. 14. 25. 15. 3. Act. 14. 3. 20. 32. Rom. 10. 8. Eph. 5. 26. Phil. 2. 16. 1 Thes. 1. 5. Iames 1. 2. Matt. 12. 26. Mar. 4. 15. Luk. 10. 18. Act. 26. 18. Rom. 16. 20. Rev. 20. 2 3. q 2 Pet. 1. 20. 2 Tim. 3. 15. 2 Tim. 3. 16. Matt. 5. 16. 44 45. q Ioh. 3. 3. 5. Tit. 2. 14 1 Pet. 2. 9. Rom. 8. 9. Matt. 5. 20. Heb. 12. 14. Matt. 18. 3. 2 Cor. 5. 17. Rom. 8. 14. q Ioh. 16. Act. 2. Matt. 28. 20. The whole Book of the Acts of the Apostles is the History of these Miracles Gal. 3. 1 2 3 4. Ioh. 7. 3. 9. Rom. 1. 4. 1 Cor. 12. 4 7 8 9 11 13. r Luke 4. 22. 24. 27. 32. 45. Ioh. 5. 39. Act. 17. 2. 11. 18. 28. Rom. 1. 2. 16. 26. 1 Cor. 15. 3. 4. 2 Pet. 1. 19 20. Heb. 2. 3 4. Rom. 3. 4. Ioh. 3. 2. 1 Ioh. 5. 10. Tit. 2. 2. t 2 Cor. 11. 4. Mark 16. 17. Exod. 4. 5. 8. 19. 9. t Act. 8. Simon Magus's Case u Io. 19. 35. 20. 31. 1 Io. 5. 13. 1 Cor. 15. 6. x Gal. 1. 2. y Gal. 3. 3. 5. z Act. 2. 3. 4. a 1 Cor. 14. 1 Cor. 12. Rev. 1. 9 10. b Mar. 16. 20. Act. 6. 8. 8. 6. 13. 15. 12. 19. 11. 4. 16. 22. c The Acts of the Historical Tradition of the G●●●el d Rom. 14. 15. e Rom. 3. 10 11 12. f Rom. 8. 5 6 7 8 9. Io. 12. 39 40. Act. 28. 26 27. g Luk. 18. 34. 1 Cor. 13. 11. Isa. 17. 11. 1 Cor. 2. 14. Ier. 13. 23. h 1 Io. 3. 24. 4. 12. 15 16. Matt. 7. 21 22. 25 26. Heb. 12. 14. i Ezek. 36. 26. 1 Io. 5. 10. 2 Tim. 1. 7. Rom. 8. 3 4. 13. 15. 26. 33. 1 Cor. 2. 10 11 12. 6. 10. 11. 17. 12. 11. 13. 2 Cor. 3. 3. 17. Gal. 4. 6. 5. 5. 16 17 18. 25. Eph. 2. 18. 22. 4. 3 4. 23. 5. 9. 2 Thes. 2. 13. 1 Pet. 1. 2 3. 1 Io. 3. 24. 4. 13. k 1 Cor. 1. 1 2. Act. 20. 32. 26. 18. l Ioh. 17. 17. 19. Eph. 5. 26. 1 Thes. 5. 23. Heb. 2. 11. 10. 10. 14. m Prov. 8. 9. 14. 6 n Io. 3. 7 8. Rom 1. 19 20. Act. 14. 17. a Io. 1. 11 12. 3. 16. 21. Act. 26. 18. Mat. 28. 19 20. Io. 14. 5. 15. 10. 1 Ioh. 2. 3. 5. 2 3. Rev. 14. 12. b Mat. 5. 17. 23. 23. Rom. 2. 14. Rom. 8. 4. 7. 13. 8. 10. c Isa. 8. 20. Isa. 33. 22. Iam. 4. 12. Mal. 2. ● 8. Mat. 28. 20. a Heb. 11. 6. b Tit. 1. 2. Rom. 3. 4. Num. 23. 29. c Prov. 12. 22. Prov. 6. 17. Prov. 19. 5. 9. 13. 5 Io. 8. 44. 55. 1 Io. 5. 10. Rev. 21. 8. Prov. 14