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A07350 The English catechisme explained. Or, A commentarie on the short catechisme set forth in the Booke of common prayer Wherein diuers necessarie questions touching the Christian faith are inserted, moderne controuersies handled, doubts resolued, and many cases of conscience cleared. Profitable for ministers in their churches, for schoole masters in their schooles, and for housholders in their families. By Iohn Mayer, Bachelour of Diuinitie.; English catechisme Mayer, John, 1583-1664. 1622 (1622) STC 17733; ESTC S100659 485,672 636

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prescribed vnto the Iewes in punishments of crimes euen against the expresse Morall Law Theft Adultery c. But referring the agrauation or mitigation of such penalties to the nature and propensitie of particular Nations and to the necessities of diuers times and occasions To the Iewes saith he God was peculiaris legislator and as a wise Law-maker ordained those Lawes with a singular respect to that people and so hee there concludeth against fome more nice then wise impostures of those lawes vpon vs Quod iactatur a quibusdam fieri contumelium Legi Dei per Mosen Latae quum abrogatâ illâ nouae aliae illi preferuntur vanissimum est It is an idle conceit to think that it is any disrespect to Gods Law deliuered by M●ses if other new lawes be preferred before ti and established in stead of it To this authoritie of Caluin and others I may adde this euident reason for the refuting of that motiue drawne from relation to the Morall Law What Law of the Iudicialls of the Iewes nay what Ciuill Law almost at all in any orderly Common-wealth throughout the world tendeth not to the maintaining some Morall Law and forwarding some duty concerning the liues goods chastitie good name peace and iustice of and among our neighbors must therefore the Lawes I meane the iust and honest lawes of all other Nations bind vs must the same penalties in euer seuerall offence be currant through the world Surely I know no Law for that Generall equitie is diuersified by particular and not onely due punishments but also offences are truly greater and lesser in varietie of times places and people especially in those actions which conserue the more remote parts and skirts of the Morall Law What shall wee say then ate we Christians no more in dutie tied to the Iudicials of Moses then to the Positiue Lawes of the Persians Lacedemonians or the Romans made for the punishment of vice and vpholding of common honestie I dare not in any wise say or thinke so These were deuised by the light of Nature only those suggested by immediate reuelation from God and therefore incomparably exceeding for eminent wisdome and iustice Nay moreouer the Iudicials howsoeuer they haue not in themselues any obligatory power or legall force to bind other Estates and Kingdomes yet in regard of the generall equitie implied in them they remaine as a seasonable and conscionable direction vnto Law-makers now adayes in Christian Common-wealths where the nature of the people and strong motiues from experience doth not enforce another way This exemplary direction though it be lesse to be regarded in those prouisions which are most circumstantiall and variable as being farre off a kind to the Morall Law yet me thinks in the more essentiall and fundamentall parts of the perpetuall and vniuersall Morall Law the discreet imitation of Gods positiue Lawes is very requisite It pertaineth not to vs priuate subiects to prescribe but onely to wish and mention with humilitie what we conceiue out of a good conscience For my part in my poore vnderstanding it many times grieueth me to thinke how in our dayes the foule adulterer vsually escapeth in a manner vnpunished and the pilfering cut-purse is trussed vp on the cursed tree without redemption whereas Gods positiue Mosaicall law strake farre deeper in the former and in the later more gently prouiding also in this a meanes of reliefe to the party wronged by accumulated restitution If any man be so presumptuous as in this heinous crime of violating wedlocke to take Sanctuary in the new Testament and to claime thence impunity for this impuritie I see not what ground of mitigation can bee built vpon that which is by some alleaged out of Saint Iohn Iohn 8. how Christ dismissed the Woman taken in Adulterie without punishment for hee was no Earthly Iudge and did this onely to take downe the insolencie of the proud Pharisees which were greater and more stiffe sinners then shee was Wherefore let vs mourne for the impuritie which is now adayes in this case and seeke to the Lord for a redresse heerein by moouing the hearts of the higher powers to consider of it and to fortifie the law against so spreading and dangerous an euill The third thing to be further generally spoken of is the difference betwixt the Law of the old Testament and the Gospell Differences betwixt the old testament and the new which is of the new and these doe differ 1. In the manifestation the Law is knowne by the light of Nature as hath been alreadie shewed euen before that it was solemnely giuen but the Gospell is a mystery vnto Nature as Saint Paul calleth it saying Without all controuersie 1. Tim. 3.6 great is the mysterie of godlinesse it is a thing hidden from mans reason yea from the very Angels according to that of Peter 1. Pet. 1.12 Which the very Angels desire to behold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word signifieth prying into a thing ouer-veyled and hidden from sight It was first reuealed by God himselfe after published by Angels by Men by Children by Deuils and by dumb Idols 2. The Law doth onely shew what is to bee done that God may be pleased but here leaueth vs without instruction how to do it because that way which it setteth downe is to vs impossible but the Gospell doth fully informe vs how this may be done namely by Iesus Christ who hath fulfilled all for vs and is made vnto vs belieuing in him righteousnes as the Apostle teacheth and so the one may rightly be termed the Law of Faith the other of workes 3. The Law is full of terrible threatnings and without comfort in the promises thereof because nothing is promised but vpon too hard conditions Doe this and thou shalt liue it doth therefore only cast downe and wound with the wounds of deadly sinne Rom. 7. Gal. 2. by it none can be iustified or saued according to the doctrine of the Apostle in sundry places but the Gospell serueth to heale all our wounds and to lift vs vp with comfort for that it is full of sweet promises flowing from Gods meere grace and mercy so that how vnworthy soeuer we are yet turning to the Lord by true repentance wee may be iustified and saued hereby The law is therefore the letter that killeth the Gospell is the spirit that giueth life 2. Cor. 3.6 Gal. 3.24 Lastly the Law is a Schoolemaster to bring vs vnto Christ as the Apostle saith for as without a Schoolemaster first had and vsed for entrance in rudiments children come not to the vniuersities so without the law we cannot be sufficiently taught to be preferred vnto Christ because we rest cōtented through ignorance in sin wounded to the death and yet not knowing that we need to seek a remedy but the Gospell admitteth vs vnto Christ and incorporateth vs into his body it opneth the gate vnto vs and giueth vs entrance into his most stately pallace of heauen The
teares 2. Duty Joy in all bodily sufferings Secondly it begeteth an exceeding contentment and comfort in all our sicknesses bodily pangs and sufferings Christ Iesus hath endured greater pangs then any of this kind can be our sins deserue greater then these Wherefore as a poore prisoner in for some capitall crime but againe released for his life and onely chastized with some few stripes will reioyce in the middest of these his petty sufferings remembring what hee hath escaped So wee being in misery in this world but deliuered from the euerlasting torments due vnto vs for our offences cannot but reioyce in the middest heereof seeing wee haue escaped that misery ten thousand times greater Yet I sincerely confesse that though these reasons and motiues bee yeelded vnto as prouing the truth of this doctrine namely that Christ did thus suffer in soule yet they inforce not that this must be the sense of this Article There are many true positions in Diuinity concerning the actions and passions of our sauiour which are not euident Articles of faith nor directly intended by any parcell of the Creed So then I neither presse vpon any mans iudgement heerein nor obtrude mine owne but rather referre both my selfe and my Reader to the iudgement of the more learned in our Church Quest 27. Is this all the humiliation of the Sonne of God for our redemption Did hee no way else abase himselfe for vs Answ Yes hee became obedient to the Law also that by his obedience and righteousnesse wee might stand righteous in the sight of God Christ obedient to the Law Explan Howsoeuer this bee not expressed in the Creede yet is it implicitely set downe in that he is said to bee made man borne of the Virgin Mary and to haue suffered that is to haue beene obedient to sufferings for being man hee is vnder the Law Gal. 4. ● as witnesseth the Apostle God sent his Sonne made of a woman and made vnder the Law that hee might redeeme those that were vnder the Law and becomming obedient euen vnto the death of the Crosse his obedience to the will of his Father cannot but be admirable and S. Paul seemeth hence to extoll it Phil. 2.8 saying Hee became obedient to the death euen to the death of the Crosse And that which may thus be gathered from the words of this confession is plainely testified in sundry places First that hee obeyed the whole Law of God and then that hee did this for vs that wee might be accepted for obedient and righteous That hee obeyed the whole Law of God is testified both generally Math. 5.17 I came not saith hee to dissolue the Law and the Prophets but to fulfill them And againe as hath beene already shewed in that he was vnblameable and without spot and no man could accuse him of sinne and particularly for that no duty required by the law morall or ceremoniall was omitted by him The loue of God required by the morall Law did shew it selfe in him when hee whipt those out that bought and sold in his house and when hee verified that Prophesie The zeale of thy house hath eaten me vp The loue of man in him aboundantly appeared in his vnweariable going about to doe good in his free healing of diseases and casting of Diuels out and in his compassionate feeding of thousands sundry times in the wildernesse being like otherwise to perish Againe for the ceremoniall Law He was circumcised the eighth day and his name called Iesus Luc. 2.21.22 c. when the dayes of his mothers purification were accomplished he was presented in the Temple an oblation offered for him according to the Law When hee had clensed the ten Leapers hee bad them goe Luc. 5.12 and offer their guift which was commanded by the Law of Moses and so he did euer when hee had clensed any Hee kept the Sabboths of the Iewes Math 26. Heb. 9.28 hee frequented the Temple and kept the Passeouer and lastly being an high Priest hee sacrificed himselfe vpon the Altar of the Crosse for the sinnes of his people All this hee did and that necessarily because the first Tabernacle was yet standing nothing ceremoniall was disanulled vntill the rent of the vaile in the Temple at his death and therefore hee could not haue beene perfectly righteous had hee omitted any of these things Christ fulfils the law for vs. 1 Cor. ● 20 Secondly hee did all this for vs that wee sinfull creatures might become righteous through him according to that Hee is made of God vnto vs wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption And in another place 2 Cor 5. That wee might bee made the righteousnesse of God through him And more largely to the Romanes That which was impossible to the Law Rom. 8 3. in as much as it was weake because of the flesh God sending his owne Sonne in the similitude of sinfull flesh condemned sin in the flesh that that righteousnes of the Law might be fulfilled in vs that is that Iesus Christ his freedome from sinne and perfect righteousnesse in keeping the Law might turne vnto vs to righteousnesse We could not keepe the Law neither can we perfectly as is declared at large in the seuenth to the Romanes and many other places Now it is not enough then for vs to obtaine eternall life that the Lord Iesus should beare the punishments due to our sinnes but he must also fulfill the Law for vs according to that Doe this and liue 1. Duty Cheerefulnes in striuing to keepe the Law The duties which we must performe to shew our faith in this are these First cheerefulnesse in striuing to fulfill the will and Law of God in all things for though we be vnprofitable seruants when we haue done what we can yet this is our comfort that through our Lord Iesus wee are good seruants that wherein we are wanting he hath fulfilled for vs. A scholler is commanded to make such an exercise as hee is no way able to doe a seruant is bidden to carry such a burthen as he hath no strength or power vnto Now this may vtterly discomfort both the one and the other and because they knowe they shall vndergoe stripes what paines soeuer they take it may iustly harden their hearts against al paines but admit that the scholler hath a friend to helpe him that the seruant knowes how otherwise to prouide for his carriage they will readily and with a good cheere goe about their taskes appointed vnto them We are the Lords schollers we are the Lords seruants the exercises appointed vs bee too hard our burthens too heauy but we haue here a sufficient friend that helpes vs one whose shoulders are ready to be put vnder euery burthen that ouerlodes vs Oh then how readily should we goe about our taskes how cheerefully should wee striue to doe whatsoeuer the Lord hath appointed vs seeing that in so doing we shall assuredly please him and haue a
Law is also a Schoolemaster when we are come to Christ euer checking and correcting vs when wee walke not according to the straight rule thereof but the Gospel vpon our humiliation comforteth vs and assureth vs that al our aberrations and going astray are remitted so that there be an heart vnfainedly hating that euill which we doe Rom. 7. Now as there be differences betwixt the Law and the Gosspell so there be some things wherein they agree The agreement of the old Testament and the new Heb. ● 1 Mat 3. 1. In the author God not as the mad Manichees taught the bad God to be the author of the law and the good God the author of the Gospell for the same God which spake by his Son Iesus Christ in these last daies spake also at diuers times and in diuers maners in times past he that said from heauen this is my beloued Son heare ye him the same God spake all these words said from heauen I am thy Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt out of the house of bondage c. 2. They agree in the threatning of sin and vrging obedience vnto the Lord in all things but the Law vrgeth it for feare the Gospel for loue If ye loue me keepe my Commandements the Law as the meritorious cause of life the Gospell as most necessary signes of the life of faith and the way that God hath appointed vs to walke in vnto life the Law giueth no hope in the case of swaruing from the strict rule thereof the Gospell giueth hope to the penitent and where the like hope is giuen by the Prophets they doe rather play Euangelists then Preachers of the Law 3. They agree in this that howsoeuer the Gospell giueth hope to the penitent yet it denieth all hope to those that liue and die in transgression of the Law for against such most common are the threatnings contained in the Gospell They that doe such things Gal. 5.17 shall neuer inherit the Kingdome of Heauen 4. They agree in this that there is no contradiction betwixt them but as they come from one and the same spirit so there is a sweet harmony consent between thē the one only sheweth what God doth strictly require in his iustice the other how his iustice is satisfied and yet his mercy to sinfull man appeareth the one saith he that breaketh the Commandements shall die the other saith that because man through the weaknes of his nature could not but breake them one man that neuer brake any the least of them died in the stead of sinfull man and thus freed him that was the son of death from death and damnation 5. They agree in the Ministers of them both for they of the Law were to be without blemish their lipps were to preserue knowledge they were to liue of their seruice they were diuers sorts both Priests Leuits they were watchmen c. so ought the ministers of the Gospell they must be vnblameable apt to teach they that preach the Gospell are to liue of the Gospell 1. Tim 3. 1. Cor. 9.24 Ephes 4.12 2. Pet. 5.2 some are Doctours some Pastours c. they are Pastours watching and keeping their flockes as those that must giue accounts for them And thus much of the third generall The manner how this law was giuen Exod. 19.20 The next thing to be spoken of in generall is the manner how this Law was giuen and that is described in the nineteenth and twentieth of Exodus 1. First there was great preparation three dayes together the people were sanctified according to the manner of those times by washings and purifyings shewing both what need wee haue by prayer and reading of the holy Scriptures which may bring vs from worldly to heauenly meditations to prepare our selues euer before that we come to heare the Lord speaking vnto vs in the Ministery of his holy word and also how wee must euer be more and more doing away by the Spirit of Sanctification the blots and blemishes of our natures that we may be the fitter to come into the presence of the Holyest 2. Secondly a straight charge was giuen that neither man nor beast vnder paine of death should come neere the Mount whence the Law was to be deliuered but certaine marks were set beyond which none might dare to passe shewing as the Apostle hence noteth 2. Cor. 3.6.7 Heb. 12.19 how glorious was the Law now to bee deliuered and if such as passed the markes set them were without mercy to die the death that much more the transgressours of any of these precepts should die and find no mercy Heb. 12 2● Thirdly the Lord descended with great terrour the Trumpet sounding the earth shaking and Lightnings flying abroad insomuch as that the people are noted to haue run away and Moses himselfe to haue said I tremble and quake shewing that the things here vttered were graue and waightie and to be receiued into the heart with a feare of offending against them and also that when the time shall bee of calling the offenders to account with what wonderfull terrour the Lord will then come against them 4. Almighty God himself spake al these words in the hearing of al the people but whē they were too weak to beare his words and desired that the Lord would not speake any more for so they should die but promised obedience if Moses should speak two tables of stone were giuen vnto him written with Gods own finger that he might carry them to the people shewing hereby how stony-hard our hearts be and that Gods finger alone is able to imprint them there his speech from Heauen must worke in vs a reuerence of them otherwise we shal all be too negligent of his Lawes 5. When Moses had broken these Tables through zeale seeing how God was dishonoured in his absence by golden Calues which they had set vp and worshipped the Lord bad him hew two other Tables and therein he wrote all the words that were in the first shewing hereby that mans heart by Gods creation had all the lawes ready written in it as the Tables prepared by God himselfe had but the heart which he had gotten vnto himselfe by falling away from God is without any letter hereof in effect vntill that the Lord wrote them anew as it was with the Tables prepared by Moses 6. Lastly when Moses had been long with the Lord and came with these Lawes vnto the people his face shone so as they were not able to looke vpon him for which cause he vsed a vaile when hee came vnto them and put it off when hee returned vnto the Lord shewing hereby as S. Paul noteth 2. Cor 3.13 ●4 that the Iewes should not be able to see into the end of the Law Christ Iesus vntill the vale of blindnesse and hardnesse of heart were taken away by the Lord neither yet could any of the Gentiles without the same
not thinke ill Now according to the greatnesse of the person offended the offence is to be estimated if it be against a temporall King it is a temporall death if against the eternall King it is eternall death in hell For it is not with God as with man whose lawes if they bee broken yet being of diuers sorts onely such as concerns the Kings person are reckoned to be against his Maiesty others against this or that subiect onely but the lawes of God doe all concerne his royall person and any breach is rebellion as Samuel called the sinne of Saul sparing the Amalekites 1. Sam. 15.23 Rebellions is as the sinne of witchcraft and therefore worthy of death and damnation Quest 109. If no man can perfectly keepe the Law wherefore then serueth it The vse of the Law Answ Of excellent vse notwithstanding is the law of God 1. To humble vs in regard of our miserable estate hereby discouered 2. To beare rule of good life vnto vs. 3. To bee a Schoole-master to bring vs to Christ Explan Seeing the end of the Law now is not the perfect obseruing of it in all things without any faile that the doer might so be counted worthy to liue which is impossible it is needefull to bee considered to what end it now serueth Rom. 7.9 And the first is to beate downe pride and to humble the most holy and best men liuing For I was once aliue saith the Apostle without the Law but when the Commandement came sinne reuiued and being more reformed by Gods grace seeing what by the Law he ought to doe and what through infirmitie hee did Verse 24. he crieth out O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death And as the Apostle so euery man that hath his eyes open to see into the glasse of the Law and thereby his miserable estate seeth himselfe so wretched sinne being about him to defile him the threatnings of the law before him the flesh behind still putting him forward to sinne aboue him the Lord ready to take vengeance on him and vnder him hell fire the bottomlesse gulfe ready to swallow him vp with the mouth wide open as that hee cannot but ioyne in an holy despaire with the Apostle and condemne himselfe for a most vnworthy wretched sinner And being thus humbled shall he condemne the Law and cast off all care of obedience because it requireth so much more then hee can any way performe Nay hee will the more loue it and admire the perfection of it saying with the same holy Apostle The Law is holy Rom. 7.12.22 and the Commandement is iust and holy and good and I delight in the Law of God concerning the inner man Euen as a student in any Art to the perfection whereof hee cannot attaine such bee the mysteries thereof yet hee is the more rauisht with the loue of it and striueth hard after the perfect knowledge of it and neuer ceaseth He saith not with Esau what is this birth-right vnto mee because hee is tied to an hard taske hereby but with Saint Paul he presseth towards the marke walking that way of good workes which God hath appointed vsing for a rule this holy Law of God Rom. 8. And lastly finding that when he hath done whatsoeuer hee is able he is an vnprofitable seruant worthy of Gods eternall displeasure he is driuen to seeke both meanes of satisfaction for his delinquencies and failes and helpe to doe this hard task vnto which of himselfe he is so vnsufficient and this satisfaction and helpe is the Lord Iesus Christ alone For that which was impossible to the Law in as much as it was weake because of the flesh God sending his owne Sonne in the similitude of sinfull flesh and for sinne condemned sinne in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in vs. Gal. 3.24 And thus doe we see the third and last end of the Law viz. to bee a schoolemaster to bring vs vnto Christ and this schoolemaster is both the Ceremoniall law tutoring and teaching by rudiments and figures as little children those that were not come to full age vnder the Gospell and to vs more principally the Morall Law shewing the great neede which wee haue of a Sauiour and driuing vs vnto him as our onely refuge to be made righteous according to that The law was our Schoole-master to bring vs vnto Christ that we might bee made righteous by faith Quest 110 How may wee bee saued from our sinnes Answ Onely by the bloud of Iesus Christ laid hold vpon by a true and liuely faith 1. Iohn 1.7 Explan Being brought to despaire by the sight of our sinnes in the glasse of the Law and of the horrible punishments due therefore it is necessary that wee now looke for a remedy against so great danger as the cunning Chirurgion when he hath searched a festered soare to the bottom applieth himselfe to the Cure And our onely remedie is the bloud of Iesus Christ according to that comfortable speech The bloud of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth from all sinne If all Angels and men should haue done their vttermost to deliuer and saue one soule it were altogether vaine they being all finite the punishment by sinne deserued infinite and therfore such as could neuer bee satisfied for by creatures finite but in an infinite time It pleased the Lord for this cause to send his onely begotten Sonne into the world that whosoeuer belieueth in him should not perish Iohn 3 16. but haue life euerlasting And his bloud doth saue from all sinne 1. By expiation 2. By sanctification Expiation Expiation is the satisfying of Gods wrath due to sin by bearing the heauy burthen thereof and this did the Lord Iesus Phil. 2.8 when he abased himselfe and became obedient to the death euen to the death of the crosse when he redeemed vs from the curse of the Law Gal. 3.13 1. Iohn 3.16 being made a curse for vs for it is written Cursed is euery one that hangeth on the tree when in loue he laid downe his life for vs. And thus we are by his bloud saued from sin and damnation hereby deserued euen as a condemned person is saued by some other man dying in his stead If it be demanded whether Christ being the Son of God could not haue saued vs by some lesse suffering than death seeing whatsoeuer he endured was of infinite worth I answer that I take it not to be safe affirming or denying this for if we shal say that he could not we should limit his Almightie power if that he could we should call in question his diuine wisdome wherefore I say that he could not so abundantly haue manifested his loue towards vs any other way but by dying for vs and therefore let it suffice to know that hee ha●h voluntarily and of his owne accord suffered death to deliuer vs from death and damnation
estate of the whole world and to the Communion of his most honourable Saints we cannot vse too much curiositie in decking our hearts and looking out diligently in the glasse of the Law our blemishes by sin that we may reforme them For we come not only to this meeting as ordinary guests but as the spouse of the great King of heauen of whom it is expected that she should exceed in ornaments according to that Shee is all glorious within Psalm 45.13 her clothing is of broydred gold Indeed if we were euery day such this speciall decking and preparing were not needfull but alas we doe all daily in many things offend and so haue vpon vs staines and spots and are so raggedly cloathed as that our filthy nakednes doth appeare and who dares come so into the feasting roome of so great a maiesty 2. Because of the great grace and fauour of God heerein towards vs inuiting vs vnto whom hee is not tied by any bond of friendship or desert that might moue him to vse this respect towards vs no more then the Father of the prodigall sonne to take him home with him and with such ioy to feast him When Haman was inuited by Queene Hester to a feast which hee tooke as a speciall fauour towards him how did it reioyce him how duely and early sitting himselfe in the best manner as hee thought did he repaire thither How much more should we be glad of Gods inuiting vs and with all diligence against the time make vs ready to come to this heauenly banquet Galat 3.1 3. Because of the great benefit which we behold here and receiue Christ being crucified as it were before our eyes by whom wee conquer sinne and Satan and haue entrance into heauen the way being thus made open vnto vs. If a rich dole be dealt amongst the poore al will make them ready to come vnto it and if there be any thing that may make them to bee sent empty away they will vse diligence to remooue it if the Phisitian hath any receite which a man being prepared and taking shall vndoubtedly haue his health confirmed and his life prolonged hee will speedily with all care vse this preparatiue But here is a most rich dole dealt out to euery one a soueraigne most excellent receipt for the soule making it vndoubtedly to liue for euer Oh let euerie man then dispose himselfe so as that hee may not bee sent emptie away and prepare himselfe so as that this receipt may kindly worke vpon him for his preseruation to euerlasting life Ephes 3.27 Now the thing wherewith wee are to be decked and by which the onely preparation is made is faith in Iesus Christ of which it hath been already spoken Faith apparrelieth the soule with rich clothing the wedding garment for such as are baptized into Christ haue put on Christ their nakednesse is all hidden and none appeareth euen as when Aaron had on the cloathing of the high Priest hee appeared a most goodly person Faith behangeth the soule with most rich iewels and pearles of inestimable worth Matth 13 45. of which the Merchant that seeth the value will giue all that hee hath for one Of this it is said Prou. 3 15. It is more precious then pearles and all things that thou canst desire are not to bee compared vnto her Faith is the hand of the soule reaching out vnto Christ for as the woman touched him and was healed of her bloudy issue so the faithfull touch him handle and receiue him to the healing of al their spirituall all diseases Faith is the mouth of the soule feeding vpon Christ for when the Lord had taught that his body must bee eaten and that he which eateth hath euerlasting life he affirmeth the same of the belieuer He that belieueth in me Iohn ● 47 hath euerlasting life Faith is the digesting facultie of the stomacke of the soule working so effectually that Christ becommeth here by our nourishment and wee are flesh of his flesh Ephes 53. ● and bone of his bones as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 5.1 Heb 11.13 Heb. 11.5 Lastly whatsoeuer may bee more desired a person pleasing vnto God an eye to see God feete to come vnto God faith giueth all for being iustified by faith we haue peace with God by faith the ancient Fathers saw the promises a farre off that is Christ and by faith Enoch as with feete walked with God He therefore that examining his owne heart findeth faith needeth not to feare to stand in doubt he is hereby made worthy of this blessed Sacrament Quest 136. How may a man know whether he hath this faith or no Answ By two speciall fruits thereof Repentance for all his sinnes and Loue towards his neighbour Explan The heart of man which is deceitfull aboue measure doth deceiue him in nothing more then in falsely perswading him that hee hath true and right faith for if a man putteth his trust in Gods mercy through Iesus Christ to bee saued it telleth him that this faith neuer suffering him to come to a true triall whether this trust be the faith that instifieth before God or no. Wherefore that we might not be herein beguiled the Lord hath set forth this faith to bee liuely so that as a man liuing may be knowne from a man dead by breath and motion so he that listeth to take paines in the tryall of his faith may know the true iustifying and sauing from all counterfeits and false faiths Iames 2.20 It breatheth and moueth by Repentance and Loue which who so findeth not in himselfe hee is a vaine man his faith is dead and vnprofitable euen as a dead tree as Saint ●ame● teacheth For that the faith is vaine which is without these is plaine from many euidences First from the comparing of Paul and Iames together who seeme to speake one against the other Paul saying that wee are iustified by faith without the workes of the Law Iames that we are iustified by workes and not by faith onely both bringing for example the father of the faithfull Abraham From whence we may reason thus Such as was Abrahams faith such ought the faith of euery man to bee that hee may bee iustified and saued But Abrahams faith was a liuing faith expressing it self by the leauing of his Idolatrous Country when God called him and by sacrificing his sonne Isaac in admirable obedience when God commanded that is by forsaking sinne though most deare and performing obedience euen in that which was hardest Therefore such must our faith also bee Prou. 28.13 Secondly faith that doth not thus liue appeareth to bee vaine because it is a building without a foundation the only foundation of faith being Gods promises which belong not to any but such as haue and do by true repentance turne from sinne For you shall find none other promise of God but such as this Hee that confesseth and forsaketh his sinnes shall haue mercy
and this Whensoeuer a sinner doth repent him of his sinne from the bottome of his heart I will put all his wickednesse out of my remembrance Now such as is the ground whereupon any mans faith is built such is his faith if the ground be none his faith is vaine but the ground of his faith that continueth in sinne without repentance is none God hauing made no promise vnto him therefore his faith is vaine If hee shall say but I meane to repent before my death Ah strange delusion of Satan thou art content then in the meane season to be without faith and without interest in the merits of Christ to be vnder the dominion of the Deuill and in a Reprobate estate A thousand to one when thou intendest to repent thy God the Prince of the ayre that ruleth in the Children of disobedience will not suffer thee and it shall be iust with God for so grosse neglect of his grace to giue thee ouer effectually vnto him to be finally hardned vnto damnation Thirdly faith that is not liuing is vaine because the true faith doth establish the Law but this disannulleth it seeing it looketh for saluation and yet doth contrary to the Law by liuing in sinne 1. Cor. 13. Lastly faith must expresse it selfe as by repentance so also by loue otherwise it is vaine for if J haue all faith saith the Apostle and haue not loue it is vaine and faith worketh by loue and God is loue wherefore the true faithfull man must needs haue loue and he that is without it is without God and doth vtterly deceiue his owne soule 1 Cor. 12.13 Againe by the true faith wee are made members one of another according to that of the Apostle By one spirit wee are all baptized into one body and if members one of another we must needes be likewise affected being knit together by the bond of loue Quest 137. Wherein standeth true Christian Loue Answ Jn affection when it is the same towards our neighbour that it is towards our selues void of malice hatred and enuy and desirous of our neighbours good as of our owne and in action when we are ready to doe good vnto others as vnto ourselues and to keepe away hurt as from ourselues 1. Cor. 13.13 Explan Hauing already spoken of repentance the first whereby faith that is liuing manifesteth it selfe viz. in the Tractate of baptisme wee haue now left onely to consider of loue which is highly commended aboue all other speciall graces as being the fulfilling of the Law the seasoning of all duties in Gods seruice and the principall amongst the chiefe graces for there bee these three saith the Apostle Faith Hope and Loue and the chiefe of these is Loue. And this Loue is both in affection and in action First in affection where the heart is malicious or enuious there can bee no loue For what loue was there in Cain towards Abel what loue in Esau towards Iacob or in Iosephs brethren towards him So in whomsoeuer these vild affections rest there is no loue Publicans may bee friendly to Publicans and sinners vnto sinners but if our loue be none other it is naturall and corrupt and not the loue by which faith liueth seeing this directeth to loue our enemies and those that hate vs. If there be malice and enuy in vs we are altogether indisposed to the word by which faith commeth for the right disposition hereunto is as Saint Peter sheweth to lay aside all maliciousnesse 1. Pet 2.2 1. Iohn ● 15 and dissimulation and enuy And whosoeuer hateth his brother is a manslayer Wherefore they which are thus can haue no faith but they come before the Lord with hands full of bloud and all iniquitie Rom. 12.15 Againe loue desireth the good and welfare of a mans neighbour as well as his owne it maketh a man liue affected to his neighbour as vnto himselfe and so to reioyce with them that reioyce and to weepe with them that weepe 1 Iohn 3.18 Verse 17. Lastly it is not faint and contained with●n the desire of the heart but breaketh forth into action doing good vnto others as vnto our selues and keeping away hurt as from our selues My little Children saith Iohn let vs loue not in word nor in tongue but indeed and in truth Whosoeuer hath this worlds goods and shutteth vp his compassion towards his brother how dwelleth the loue of God in him Iame● 1.27 It is a vaine Religion that is in word the pure Religion and vndefiled before God euen the Father is this to visite the fatherles and widdowes in their aduersitie and to keepe a mans selfe vnspotted of the world The deeds of loue shall beare all the weight at the last day Matth 25. J was hungry and ye fed me c. where these are wanting the Lord saith Goe yee cursed into hell fire prepared for the Diuell and his Angels In briefe therefore to giue you a view of perfect loue by the parts thereof 2. Cor. 13.5 The first is gentlenesse and not without iust cause to bee moued to anger Secondly patience and long suffering when iust cause of anger is offered Thirdly goodnesse not admit-tinking enuy or the like against any enemy but louing him Fourthly tendernesse and being affected with griefe at the sight of other mens miseries Fifthly freedome from euill thing against thy neighbour interpreting all things to the best if it may be Sixthly yeelding rather then contend from some thing of a mans owne right as Abraham did to Lot Seauenthly humblenesse of mind seeking reconciliation where offences haue bin Eighthly bountifulnes towards the poore Ninthly care to saue a neighbour from hurt or hindrance in his cattell corne or any danger towards him Tenthly abstinence from priuate reuenge in speech or in deed Quest. 138. What shall he doe that after examination findeth not these things in himselfe Answ He may not keepe away from the Lords supper for this were a prouoking of God to wrath neither can he come vnto it without offending the Lord in a higher degree Matth. 22. Explan It is not enough that a man examine himselfe but hee must by examination find true faith liuing by loue and repentance in him and if hee findeth it not hee must not then thinke that hee shal doe well enough by abstaining as is the manner of the most but it lieth vpon him as a dutie required at his hands the neglect of which prouoketh the Lord to wrath as wee may see by the parable in those that refused to come and excused themselues when they were bidden to the feast The Lord of the feast is wroth against them and sendeth forth his warriours to destroy them And as this is a great offence so it is much greater to come vnpreparedly for such a man is without a wedding garment and commanded to be bound hand and foot and to be cast into vtter darknesse where shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth so that
long before both imediately after Adams sinning and punishment Gen. 3. The seede of the woman shall break the Serpents head and againe by the Euangelicall Prophet Esay Behold a Virgin shall conceiue and bring forth a Sonne Psal 7.14 And though the Scriptures doe not plainly teach thus much yet the Church of God doth constantly hold that Mary the mother of God was semper virgo alwayes a pure Virgin both because she neuer had childe after and Ioseph her husband was a man that feared God and therefore in all likelihood would not presume to knowe her whom the Lord had as it were appropriated vnto himselfe Now for so much as we read of his brethren Iudas Iames and Iohn it will not be amisse a litle to digresse to set downe the pedigree of Iesus Christ as it is registred by Epiphanius He had to his grand-mother one Ann● Christ his brethren who had three husbands First ●oachim by whom she had Mary the mother of Christ who were both of the same tribe of Iudah according to Dam●scene but according to Epiphanius she was of the tribe of Leuy then hee being dead shee was wife vnto Cleophas by whom shee had a second Mary who was afterwards wife to Alpheus and bare him Iames surnamed the sonne of Alpheus and Simon Cananeus and Iudas Thaddaeus Lastly shee was wife vnto Salome who begat of her another Mary which was wife to Zebedeus and bare vnto him Iames who was specially called the brother of the Lord because most like vnto him if it be true which is written vnder the name of Aege●ppus that liued next to the Apostles times where it is also added that because hee was like vnto the Lord they sent Iudas before to shewe the one from the other she bare also Iohn the Euangelist So that all these were but his couzen germans and called his brethren onely according to the Hebrew phrase by which Abraham who was Lots Vncle Gen. 13.8 tells him We are brethren To returne againe vnto that from which we haue digressed this birth of the sonne of God is the chiefe and most stupifying wonder of the world The wonderful birth of Christ First in that a Virgin is a mother that she beares a Sonne who neuer knew man all the Historians in the world could neuer tell of the like all the Philosophers cannot finde out how this may be Another and farre more vnsearchable and venerable wonder is that the infinite God whom the Heauens cannot containe is borne of a woman the Creator of all becomes a creature hee that comprehends the world in his fist is comprehended in the steight compasse of a silly womans wombe hee that giues foode and raiment to all becomes naked and destitute of all things hee that is ruler of all is made obedient to poore man he that is eternall without beginning and end of his dayes is made mortall and subiect to the arrest of violent death nay of the most reproachfull and ignominious punishment And in this admirable birth of the Sonne of God of a woman there is a wonderfull correspondence to the fall which came by a woman Eue the first woman drew the curse vpon man Mary the best-beloued of women brought the saluation vnto man she gaue the fruit to man by which hee loseth Gods fauour becomes a sinner and subiect to death and damnation but this woman giues him fruit whereby he comes into Gods fauour is made righteous and inheritor of life and saluation And thus much for this that he was borne of the Virgin Mary Math. 1 21. He is Iesus viz. a Sauiour of his people for this name was Ioseph instructed in by the Angel before his birth saying Thou shalt call his name Iesus for he shall saue his people from their sins and in the Epistle to the Hebrewes Heb. 7.25 He is able perfectly to saue them that come vnto God through him and besides him there is none that can saue vs Act. 4.12 according to that There is no name giuen amongst men whereby we may be saued but the name Iesus and that of the Prophet Esa 43.11 I am the Lord and besides me there is no Sauiour And for the fur●●er proofe hereof see what hee hath done Was it necessa●● that to ransome vs hee should empty the treasures of his riches and become euen poore and of no reputation Philip. 2.7 He did thus He made himselfe of no reputation Must hee endure the fiercenesse of Gods wrath against sinne his very curse due thereunto He did thus also Gal. 3.13 He hath redeemed vs from the curse of the law being made a curse for vs. Must hee performe absolute obedience to the law which we could not doe he did this also I came not therefore saith he to dissolue the law Mat. 5.19 but to fulfill it Lastly must he liue euer to prouide that what he hath done may be effectuall for our saluation Loe He still euer liues Rom. 8.34 and stands at the right hand of God making intercession for vs. So that he is truely another Iosua bringing vs out of the wildernesse of our miserable estate by sinne trampling our spirituall enemies vnder our feete and victoriously putting vs in possession of our heauenly Canaan Psal 2.2 He is also Christus Domini the Christ or annointed of the Lord for this name is commonly annexed vnto the other Christ Iesus In Hebrew he is called Messiah by a word of the same signification The Princes are assembled together against the Lord and against his Messiah or annointed and againe it is said of him God hath annointed thee with the oyle of gladnesse aboue thy fellowes Psal 45.7 and more peculiarly of Christ saith Daniel Dan. 9.26 After threescore and two weekes shall Messiah be slaine though one of our owne men lately commenting vpon this hath fowlely defaced this most pregnant testimony interpreting this Messiah the Kings and gouernors of the Iewes And this name Messiah Christ or annointed was familiarly knowne vnto the Iewes before his comming witnesse that speech of the woman of Samaria who could say I know well that the Messias shall come who is Christ Ioh. 4 25. and he will teach vs all things Now he is Christ that is annointed vnto a threefold office First of a King that he might bee King of his Church ruling in it by his lawes and in the hearts of beleeuers by his Spirit and defending it against all enemies for this is he said partly to be after the order of Melchisedeck that is the king of righteousnesse and he is also called Melchi Salem Heb 7. that is King of peace according to the last title giuen him by the Prophet Prince of Peace Secondly Esa 9.6 he is annointed to the office of a Priest that he might sacrifice for the sinnes of his people euen one all-worthy sacrifice that is himselfe vpon the altar of the crosse as a large
Church of God against which our aduersaries may onely barke but not be able to vtter one word with reason more specially for our ministery howsoeuer perhaps we might answere that when an ordinary calling cannot be had there is place for an extraordinary yet we can truly maintaine that wee can deriue canonically our ordination from the successors of the Apostles as Master Mason hath learnedly declared Proofe Beleeuers onely the true Church Now it followeth to be proued that they onely are the true Church before God who are beleeuers And this appeareth plainly first for that many of the visible Church are reprobates and without part in Gods Kingdome as our Sauiour Christ teacheth by many parables both of the sower that went forth to sowe some of his seede falling vpon the thorny ground Math. 13 some vpon stony and some vpon the high way and so bringing forth no fruit and in the parable of the drawnet Math. 25. of the good corne and the tares of the Virgins of the seruants with their talents c. all which tend to set forth the state of Gods Church to be such as that therein there be many castawayes Moreouer hee teacheth the same plainely Math. 7.21 wherein he saith They shall cry Lord Lord open vnto vs we haue prophesied in thy name and c. and in another place Thou hast eaten and drunke in our streetes Luk. 13.25 and taught in our Synagogues but I will say vnto you depart from me yee workers of iniquity Which being so it must needes follow that all the visible Church is not Gods true Church but onely the company of true beleeuers Secondly this is further manifest because faith onely setteth vs into Iesus Christ and maketh vs members of his body Eph 4.12 which onely is the true Church for to this effect speaketh the Apostle They were broken off by vnbeliefe and thou sta●dest by faith Rom. 11.20 viz Ingrafted into the Oliue tree Iesus Christ out of whom the Iewes were broken by vnbeliefe Faith onely maketh vs the children of Abraham Gal. 3. and heires by promise Thirdly the same appeareth from the description of the true Church to the Ephesians which hee calling them and magnifying Gods mercy in calling them to this estate he saith Eph. 2.8 By grace yee are saued through faith in Iesus Christ and againe through him yee are Citizens w●th the Saints Vers 19.20.21 and of the household of God and are built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Iesus Christ himselfe being the chiefe corner stone in whom all the building coupled together groweth to an holy Temple in the Lord. Here faith onely is that which makes vs grow to this Temple and to be thus neere vnto the Lord. No man therefore can beleeue himselfe to be a member of the true Church before God by reason of any outward priuiledge entring him into the visible company of Gods people vnlesse he be inwardly before God through sauing faith made a member of the same Fourthly The Church to be beleeued and not beleeued in Jeron part S. Epist 41. Non dicimus credo in sed credo ecclesiam that the Church is only to be beleeued thas is acknowledged where it is found to be and to be cleued vnto but not to be beleeued in that is to be made the foundation of our faith This point as it consisteth of seuerall members so are they distinctly and seuerally to be laid open First it is to be acknowledged wheresoeuer it is found out by the markes before spoken of thus the Church at Rome was once famous all ouer the world and Peter indeauoured much after that he had once beene with Cornelius and the Gentiles Rom. 1 8 Act 12.5.6 to bring the Church of the Iewes to acknowledge them to bee the Church of God also and indeed how otherwise can I say I beleeue the Church Which is firmely to hold and constantly to acknowledge it Secondly it is also to be cleaued vnto for when the Church began first to flourish vnder the Gospell it is said Act. 2 that God added vnto the Church daily such as should be saued he prouided that they should be ioyned vnto the assemblies of his people so that as Peter saide vnto the Lord whether should we goe thou hast the wordes of eternall life Ioh. 6.68 so saith euery faithfull man and woman of his spouse the Church Eternall life is no where else to be obtained all the creatures out of the Arke perished so doe all that keepe out of the Church The word preached therefore is by all to be attended the Sacraments are reuerently to be receiued the assemblies of Gods people to be frequented Cantic 1.8 Thus the Lord directeth all his to doe in that mysticall song Get thee forth by the steppes of the flockes and feede their Kids by the tents of the shepheards Thirdly it is not to bee made the foundation of our faith because so the spouse should be set in the roome of the husband Christ and because that so we might erre and fall from true Christianity as any visible Church may doe and many haue done For the first it was before shewed that there can be none other foundation for the next it is manifest that the Church of the Iewes did often times erre and chiefly in crucifying the Lords Messiah The Church of Galatia did erre so farre that the Apostle professeth himselfe to bee afraid that hee had laboured in vaine amongst them hee was afraide also of the Church of Rome for the same errour which maketh him so long in prouing iustification by faith without the workes of the Law Reuel 3.3 The Church of Sardis was so farre gone that the Lord saith it had onely a name to be aliue but was indeede dead and the Church of Laodicea was spiritually miserable poore blind and naked and ecclesiasticall history doth shew that scarce any Church hath beene free but at sometime infected with heresie which though it was not in former times noted in the Church of Rome yet I take it it could not be farre from heresie Jerom Damasus when the head thereof Liberius subscribed vnto Arianisme and Honorius vnto the errour of the Monothelites when Marcellinus sacrificed to Idols and Siluester the second sold himselfe to the Diuell and became a Coniurour and Negromancer But say it was free a long time doth that proue that it must needs be so euer nay rather it is likely that as other Churches had their time of infection formerly so the Romans turne came more lately Againe that the visible Church may fall into heresie is plaine because it hath sometimes made decrees and afterwards the contrary hereunto Of the supremacy Con Nic Can. 6. euen in matters of great moment As about the supremacy of Bishops In the counsell of Nice it is decreed that as the Bishop of Alexandria had authority ouer all Egypt
his helping hand There remaineth yet one thing more in generall and that is the vse of this Law in these times of the Gospell The vse of the Law in these times of the Gospell for howsoeuer other Lawes be done away as hath been shewed yet this still euer remaineth as it hath euer been in the hart yea euen before mans fall And this appeareth now to vse more proofes from our often being vrged vnto an holy and new life from the many caueats giuen against sinne and from the threatnings that they which doe such things shall neuer enter into life euen in the new Testament Ephes 4.24 For when the Apostle willeth vs to put off the old man and to put on the new which after Christ Iesus is in holines to put of the workes of darkenesse Rom. 13. Leuit. 11.44 and to put on the armour of light what doth he else but reuiue the Law Bee yee holy as J am holy Iohn 2.1 saith the Lord. When S. Iohn saith These things write I vnto you Iames 2.10 that yee sinne not And S. Iames Hee that keepeth the whole Law and yet saileth in one point is guilty of all what do they else but preach the continuance of the Law Deut. 5 32. Thou shalt keepe all these Commandements not declining to the right hand nor to the left Lastly when all the writings of the new Testament are full of sweet promises to such as constantly go forward in a Christian course of life and that bring forth the fruits of the Spirit but on the other side ful of terrible threatnings to the disobedient and such as bring forth the fruits of the flesh what other thing do they tend vnto but to make another Deuteronomy for that they repeate as there it is repeated out of Leuiticus Leuit. 26. Deut. 28. If thou shalt diligently obserue all these lawes then shalt thou be blessed at home and abroad c. but if thou break them Cursed shalt thou bee in euery thing that thou puttest thine hand vnto And to make it out of doubt our Sauiour Christ when it was suspected that he would giue liberty from the Law saith I am not come to destroy the Law Mat. 5.19 and the Prophets but to fulfill them But it will here be obiected then If it be thus how can those places of the new Testament stand where it is often said Wee are not vnder the Law Gal 4.18 Rom. 7. but vnder grace Euen as a woman when her husband is dead is freed from the law of her husband so are wee freed from the Law vnder the Gospell and Christ was made of a woman and made vnder the Law Gal. 4.4 to free those that were vnder the Law with many like places What is all this to make a shew only of libertie we being still bound to keepe the Law as we were before Christs comming I answere that most of these and the like places are to bee vnderstood of the ceremoniall Law against which occasion was then daily offerd to write by reason of the Iewes which were turned to the faith of Christ and yet held it necessary to keepe this law by circumcising c. there was little or none occasion to write so earnestly about the disanulling of the Morall but onely to shew how vnable it was to iustifie for then Christs comming had been needlesse Let the Epistle to the Galathians bee well lookt ouer and this will easily appeare to be the Apostles scope there for that he telleth them with wonderfull vehemencie If ye be circumcised Christ will profit you nothing Gal. 5.2 and he maketh this the occasion of prosecuting this matter of immunitie from the Law so earnestly for that Peter being at Antioch seemed to bee too cold in this doctrine when at the comming of the Iewes hee abstained from meates forbidden by the Ceremoniall Law for which he saith that he reproued him to his face for that iustification before God was not thus attained but hindred Chap. 2.11 which is the only thing he laboureth in throughout the residue of that Epistle But it cannot bee denied but that some liberty also from the Morall Law is here published it will be worth the while therefore to see what this is Liberty from the Law Gal. 3.24 Iohn 1.18 And first this is in regard of the time before Christs comming we were vnder the law as vnder our only schoolemaster to teach and to direct vs but now we haue another Schoolemaster Christ Iesus who came more lately out of the bosome of God the Father to declare him and his waies vnto vs. Now both Moses the mediator of the Law and Christ Iesus teach one and the same thing only as he that goeth from a countrie Schoole to the Vniuersity changeth his Tutor and is no more vnder him that taught him in his younger yeares but vnder another so at the comming to Christ we are no more vnder the old tutor the Law but vnder him who doth deale more gently with vs teaching vs more familiarly helping vs towards more perfection and where we faile pardoning and forgiuing vs and because of his mercifull dealing wee are said not to be vnder the Law but vnder grace and for this it is that the Lord himselfe said that the law and Prophets were vntill Iohn Heb 2.14 Secondly in r●gard of the power and authority of the Law being now put downe by exercising of which it did tiranize ouer mens consciences and put them into a slauish feare all their liues long before Christs comming but now hauing another master to admonish to reproue to threaten and to correct vs the lawes threatnings neede not to terrifie vs it hath none authority ouer vs no more then a master whose seruant is dismissed and gone from him hath ouer the same seruant and for this cause is it that the Apostle saith Gal. 3 19. The Law was added because of the transgressions vntill the seede came Matth. 11. Thirdly in regard of the seasoning which hath come to our hearts by Gods Spirit ruling and reigning in vs so as that the things of the Law which were before difficult hard and burthensome are now become sweet light and easie according to that of our Sauiour My yoake is easie and burthen light And hence is it that as an Apprentice when his time is out taketh the same or greater paines in his Trade then hee did before yet is a free man although hee serueth his old Master still for it is a delight vnto him so to doe especially remembring in what feare hee was before but now without feare how rigorously compelled vnto his taske but now doing it voluntarily and by reason of his rudenesse and ignorance how hard it was but now by reason of his experience how easie so our time of Apprentiship to the Law being as it were out at the sending of Gods Spirit vnto vs wee are free from it
the sinnes though most loud crying of that people And for this is it that the maine sinnes against euery precept of the first Table were censured with death but it is not so with all those of the second Table Yet doe I not so rigorously presse this rule as to inferre that the least sinne against the first Table must needs bee more heynous then the greatest against the second which hath beene rashly concluded by some Can any Christian perswade mee that I commit a more damnable sinne in being ouertaken with a nap at a long Sermon or comming once late to Church then if I had murthered my owne Father Let me be throwne out of a window if I thinke that Eutychus Act. 20.9 sinned more grieuously then Cain Gen. 4 8. In gathering a proportion betweene one sin and another all respect is not to be had to the obiect against whom the offence is done but regard must bee had also of the kinde of the action committed of the malice or infirmity of the committer c. These bee sometime so superlatiue that they ouerbalance the generall respect to the obiect The comparison therefore betweene the two Tables is to receiue modification and moderation by restraints as caeteris paribus or where there is not ouermuch imparity otherwise in eodem gradu aut specie wherein affections intentions malices presumptions infirmities neglects c. are to bee counterbalanced among themselues and one against another The sixt Rule is this there is so neere a relation betwixt all the commandements of the morall law Rule 6. that whosoeuer obserueth all failing onely in one poynt is guilty of all because as S. Iames teacheth there is one and the same the Author of them all And hence it is that Of two euils Iam. 2. ●0 being mala culpae not penae not the lesser but neither is to bee chosen And hitherto of the first thing now followeth the second Rule 2. Of the singularity of these Commandements of the singularity of these commandements which is in this that euery of these foure hath both the commandement and the reason which is plaine in the three latter and is only called in question in the former because it is not placed as a reason but as a preface to all the commandements before any charge giuen Whence it is The first commandement hath a speciall reason that some haue made it a generall preparatiue perswading to the obedience of all these lawes But it will appeare I take it to bee a speciall reason of the first also and more properly belonging vnto it if we consider first that the other three being subordinate haue their speciall reasons and much more then should this being chiefest and ground of all Secondly the identity of the reason heere vsed and in the second I am the Lord thy God and I the Lord thy God am a iealous God both being alike fit to strike terrour into the offenders as the precepts are alike the one forbidding inward the other outward Idolatry so that if this of the first bee made only generall for the same cause may that of the second and neither shall haue their speciall reason Thirdly if it bee further considered how this reason doth specially fit the precept I am the Lord therefore thou shalt acknowledge me and none other I brought thee out of the Land of Egypt c. therefore thou shalt be vngratefull if thou deny me or ioyne any fellowes with me Quest 54. In which wordes is the first Commandement contained and in which is the reason Answ The Commandemennt is in these words Thou shalt haue none other Gods but me The reason in these I am the Lord thy God which hath brought thee out of the Land of Aegypt out of the house of bondage Quest 55. What are wee heere commanded Answ To haue the Lord for our God which is to loue him aboue all to feare him aboue all to put our whole trust and confidence in him and to make our prayers vnto him alone The manner obserued in handling the Commandements Explan The method which I intend generally to follow in opening the commandements is first to handle the commandement it selfe and then the reason and in euery commandement these two parts the duty inioyned and vice forbidden where the commandement is affirmatiue and contrariwise first the vice forbidden and then the duty when it is negatiue This first commandement is mixt or compounded of both thou shalt haue me for thy God and none other 1. Duty Inioyned Touching the duty it is to haue and to set vp in our hearts and practices the Lord Iehouah who only raigneth in Heauen and in earth for our God which is the maine and principall scope of the whole Law euen as the maine duty of a Subiect towards his Prince is to acknowledge him and to sweare allegeance vnto him which if it be not what will all other Lawes and Statutes auaile What likelihood is there of being contained in obedience in other things Surely none at all but that the person which is vnconformable in the first will liue like a disorderly Riotour and dangerous Traytor So if we refuse to set vp the true God in our hearts which is our vowing allegiance what other account can the Lord make of vs but as of a company of Out-lawes and vnworthy to liue in the Common-wealth of his Church and to bee fellow-Citizens with his Saints Now the Lord is not then acknowledged this duty is not then performed when we make profession in word and outwardly of seruing the true God but when wee loue him in the highest degree when we feare him trust in him and seeke vnto him in all our necessities Wherefore Almighty God in commenting vpon this precept in other places of his holy Word hath shewed expressly how earnestly hee requireth all these things 1 Duty To loue God First for loue he vrgeth it with such a Preface and straineth himselfe to so many varieties in pressing it as if hee would make knowne that all else were nothing without it Heare O Israel Deut. 6.3 saith he by his seruant Moses and take heed to doe it that it may goe well with thee and that thou maist increase mightily c. And againe Heare O Israel the Lord is God only Verse 4. Verse 5. thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thine heart with all thy soule and with all thy might 2. For feare he calleth for it by his Prophet 2. Duty To feare God Mal. 1.6 as they would haue him to account them for his seruants and children If I be a father where is mine honour if J bee a master where is my feare saith the Lord of Hosts And our Sauiour Christ so preferreth this feare as hee putteth downe all feare of great ones in this world in regard of it saying Feare not him which can kill the body but is not able to kill the soule but feare
vowing things impossible or vnlawfull The fourth way of abusing Gods holy name is by vowing things impossible or vnlawful or by neglecting of our vows which vowes be either generall in the time of our baptisme or speciall vpon any speciall occasion of danger or benefit whereupon some speciall promise is made vnto the Lord or without any such occasion onely vpon a free resolution the rather hereby to glorifie God The first kind of vow wee all make both before God and his people to forsake the Deuill and all his workes c. not that wee are not thus to doe without a promise for it is our duty by the Law of nature but the rather to stir vp our dull hearts and to pricke forward our vnwilling wils when as by a double band wee shall bee tyed hereunto The other vowes are made to moue the Lord the rather to moderate our chastizements and the more speedily to remoue them when in the time of sicknesse or danger wee promise to dedicate our selues vnto the Lords seruice if wee recouer againe or els they are more speciall of giuing this or that vnto the Lord or of abstaining from or doing this or that particular dutie for the preuenting of sin and the furtherance of grace Thus Iacob vowed in the time of his danger to make the place of his rest Bethel Gods house Gen. 28.22 Thus Iob made a couenant with his eyes that they should not looke vpon a maid Thus were they wont freely to dedicate some thing of their substance Iob 31.1 to the maintenance of Gods seruice Acts 5. Now to neglect any of these vowes or the like is a great indignity offered vnto God and a dishonour of his name which he will not endure as may appeare by that which befel Ananias after hee had vowed his lands vnto the Lord but would haue kept away part of the price he was smitten with sudden death and it is destruction to a man saith Salomon to deuoure that which is hallowed and after the vowes to enquire And truly great reason for that God is hereby deluded and mocked a light account is made what is said or promised vnto him as if a man had to doe with some person of no worth and if hee onely that promiseth vnto man and performeth shall dwell in the Tabernacle of the most High but they which breake their promises bee excluded much more shall they only that performe their vowes vnto the Lord inhabit there and they which make no conscience to doe as they haue vowed be excluded and for euer shut out Oh that this would enter into the hearts of carelesse Christians that liue as though they were the deuils sworne seruants howsoeuer they haue solemnly in their baptisme vowed their seruice vnto God and that with the Israelites only promise and expresse some good resolutions vnder the terrour of Gods rodde but in being remooued are as licentious as before 2. Sam 21. Mal. 3.8 And as ill doe they prouide for their owne good which denie things vowed to the Lord by whomsoeuer or vpon what occasion soeuer for this brought a famine vpon Israel and destruction vpon Sauls house viz his slaying of the Gibeonites vnto whom was vowed immunity and freedome from danger it is a robbing of God See more afterwards touching sacriledge Hauing thus explained first the last member of the answer the first yet remaineth of vowing things impossible or vnlawful which cannot be without great impiety and dishonor vnto the Lord. Things impossible are either so vnto al men as to restore the dead to life to heale incurable diseases c. or though not vnto all yet to the party that voweth as if a poore man should vow that hee would be a King a man burning in the disposition of his mind and body that he wil euer liue chaste a single life or a lame Creeple that hee will goe a foote forty miles in a day Of this kind is the vow commonly made by the Romish Priests and Votaries that enter into any religious order seeing that most of them doe daily shew by wofull experience that it is as possible to liue pure and free from all sinne as from sinning against that speciall vow Witnesse the frequent adulteries and fornications the rapes and murthers of infants committed to couer these vncleane copulations It is well knowne that the Monkes at Spira of Saint Germans did so lewdly abuse the daughters and wiues of the Citizens vnder a colour of religion that they were vtterly expelled thence and their Monastery pulled downe I can goe on in more lewd examples of the most eminent in the Romish Church euen in the vnerring demi-gods but modesty bids me forbeare If it should bee obiected that these haue been but the faults of some speciall men it appeareth to be most false by Popes tollerations Decrees of Counsels and iustifications of Popish Writers See Article 9. vnder the Title The Church of Rome vnholy Acts ●3 12 And thus much for vowing things impossible Things vnlawfull are either against the Lawes of God or against the wholesome Lawes of the Countrie wherein a man liueth Of this sort was the vow made by those forty conspirators against Paul who bound themselues neither to eat nor drinke vntill they had slaine him Thus Russians and Swaggerers do vpon any disgrace receiued vow the death of one another and if any wrong bee done to be reuenged once in seauen yeares which besides that it is a cursed fruite of malice is an intollerable indignity done vnto the most iust God for hee that is called as it were to be a party and a fauourer heereof Of this sort also bee the vowes of women who are tyed by the law of their husbands euen in things otherwise lawfull and honest Rom. 7. if against the liking and consent of their husbands For if a woman voweth a vow which her husband disaloweth it must not stand Numb ●0 And the like is to bee said of children being in their parents house that is vnder their gouernment And yet these vowes are common well approued of in the Church of Rome Wherefore one hath said well that they are for many causes to bee reproued They impugne the law of God they are oftentimes impossible to bee performed they are against Christian liberty they are a renewing of Iudaisme Idolatry Hypocrisie Pi●k Armil Aur. cap. 21. Wherefore to conclude this point let vs in our vowes obserue these things First let them not bee against Gods word Secondly nor against Christian liberty Thirdly with the consent of superiours Fourthly agreeable to our calling Fiftly of things not impossible Sixtly with good deliberation Seuenthly with a good end and intention Breach 6 Light vsing of Gods holy name The sixth abuse of Gods name is the light vsing thereof by saying O Lord or Oh God vpon euery light occasion without hauing the heart lifted vp vnto him or by way of admiration crying out good Lord
of that which grew then of it owne accord Deut. 10.12 because they were in times past seruants and poore and had the liberty of tilling and sowing and reaping six yeares for themselues And he must needs be iudged an vnreasonable seruant who if he serueth so kind a master as that will allow him two or three dayes in a weeke for his own busines doth not willingly go about his masters worke the other dayes Reason 3 1. Sam. 2. The third reason infolded is taken from these wordes The seauenth is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God As if the Lord should haue said I haue specially marked the seuenth for mine owne holy and peculiar so that hee which shall presume to take that or any part of it and make it common by doing worldly workes or following vanitie is a thiefe and a robber vnto me euen as he which being an hired seruant taketh the time to follow his owne businesses wherein his master appointeth him to doe his worke Therefore as no honest seruant will thus vse his Master so no honest seruant of God will thus abuse the Lord for if a lewd seruant thus abusing his master cannot endure his presence though hee bee but a man how shall hee that presumeth thus to abuse the Lord indure when hee commeth seeing that if one man sinneth against another the Iudge shall iudge it but if a man sinne against the Lord there is none that dares plead for him Quest. 85. What are the reasons expressed Answ Two first from the Lords example who rested vpon the seauenth from all his workes of creation Secondly from his blessing inseparably linked vnto the hallowing of this day so that he that keepeth it holy shall finde it vnto his comfort a blessed day also The Reasons expressed Explan The Lord not content to haue interlaced the reasons of which it hath beene already spoken addeth further weight of reason For in sixe dayes the Lord made heauen and earth and rested the seauenth c. Reason 1 Ioh. 13. First from his owne example who hauing finished the great worke of the creation vpon the sixe dayes rested the seauenth and for a memoriall heereof hath commended the care of this rest to all his louing subiects euery seauenth day throughout all generations As if hee should haue said I command you O people nothing but what I your Soueraigne Lord haue done before you who when I had made the Heauens the earth the Seas and all creatures rested from this my labour and recreated my selfe in the beholdiog of that I had done follow me therefore and doe likewise after the labour of sixe dayes rest and refresh your selues by sweet and heaueely contemplations and exercises that so in all ages to come ye may be knowne by your holy rests as by my cognizance to be my people and true subiects This reason Christ vseth to his Disciples to perswade humility saying If I your Lord and Master haue washed your feet then ought ye also to wash one anothers feet And very apt are all men to bee led by examples especially of great ones according to that Regis ad exemplar totus componitur orbis After the Kings example the whole world is framed If the King were maimed in any member Fu. Solin Pompen Mela. or had but one eye amongst the Aethiopians they would all willingly make themselues herein like vnto him though to their great paine how much more should all the people of the Lord bee led by his example be like vnto him in keeping holy rests wherin he rested Reason 2 Esa 58.13 ●4 Secondly from the blessing annexed vnto this day being hallowed and kept holy The Lord blessed the seauenth day and hallowed it So that if thou be faithful in the obseruatiō of this day thou shalt not lose thy labour for hallowing this time hath alwayes Gods blessing accompanying it according as more fully it is promised by the Prophet Esay If thou turne away thy foot from the Sabaoth c. Thou shalt thou delight in the Lord and I wil cause thee to mount vpon the high places Chap. 56.2 And againe Blessed is the man that doth this and the Son of man that layeth hold on it that keepeth the Sabaoth and poluteth it not And it is commonly seene that such are blessed men blessed with diuine knowledge and blessed with all the fruites of sauing faith Iustice innocencie and true mercy and blessed with a diligent endeauour about all holy exercises and this is to those that see it the greatest blessing for blessed is that man that exerciseth himselfe in the Law of God Psal 1.1 and meditateth therein day and night If then this Law be so ancient and such as hath beene obserued from the first beginning if it be most equall and indifferent if it bee an entring vpon Gods peculiar right to breake it if the Lord hath gone before vs in the rest of this day in his owne example and if it bee a blessed day also to such as keepe it aright and redounding to their exceeding great good and comfort then rouze vp your dull hearts cast off the clog of worldly thoughts and businesses and lift vp your spirits to the highest Spirit in the due keeping of this holy day Quest. 86. Which is the first Commandement of the second Table or the fifth of the Law Answ Honour thy father and mother that thy dayes may bee long in the land which the Lord thy God giueth thee Quest 87. In which Commandements doe you learne your duty towards your neighbour Answ In the sixe latter Commandements which be of the second Table Quest What is thy duetie towards thy neighbour Answ My duty towards my neighbour is to loue him as myselfe to doe to all men as I would they should doe to me to loue honour and succour my father and my mother to honour and obey the King and his Ministers to submit my selfe to all my goueenours teachers spirituall pastors and masters to order my selfe lowly and reuerently to all my betters To hurt no body by word nor deed To be true and iust in all my dealing To beare no malice nor hatred in my heart To keepe my hands from picking and stealing my tongue from euill speaking lying and slandering To keepe my body in temperance chastitie and sobernes Not to couet nor desire other mens goods but to learne and labour truly to get mine owne liuing and to doe my dutie in that estate of life vnto which it hath pleased God to call me Explan All these recited particular duties are by me to be prosecuted hereafter in the explication of the seueral cōmandements of the second table I shall not need therefore to adioyne any literall comment vpon them here but rather remit the Reader to obserue thē in the branches of streams wherto they seuerally belong Now for the methodicall handling of the second Table I will invert these three questions thus the last
any one of which sheweth this sinne to bee abominable to all Christians that are not of feared consciences and altogether without feeling of Gods grace towards them Gen. 38. And it is to be noted that whatsoeuer difference hath been put betwixt the punishment of this and adultery yet it appeareth euen before Moses his Law this sin was death for when Thamar Iudahs daughter in law had played the harlot Iudah hearing of it commanded that shee should bee brought forth and be burnt to death Gal. 5.19 And amongst the Turkes they are punished with eighty stripes and how slightly soeuer these sinnes of fornication and adultery bee passed ouer amongst men in these miserable times there is a greater punishment then a thousand bodily deaths expressly threatned heereagainst viz eternall death for he that doth these things saith S. Paul shall neuer enter into the Kingdome of Heauen Gen. 6. Secondly this ranketh them with men of the old world who are said to haue taken wiues of al that they liked that is by bruitish and inordinate comming together with them before they tooke them and with vncircumcised Shechem who first defloured Dinah and then would haue married her Gen. 34. but he smarted for it hee and all the men of the City being slaine therefore Thirdly this is a continuall heart-smart and griefe vnto them euen when they behold that which otherwise would be one of their greatest worldly comforts viz. their first-borne or any other in what number soeuer being the fruit of the body whom when they behold they hehold their sinne and if contrariwise it be a ioy as it is to many woe is vnto them the guilt of their sinne is yet vpon them Against Incest Or the Act of vncleannesse is committed with a neere kinswoman viz. the Aunt the Sister or the Wiues Sister c. and this is Incest Leu 20.10.11 whether it be in marriage or out of marriage and so heinous is this that death is appointed for a punishment heereof 1. Cor. 5.1 When Saint Paul heard that one among the Corinthians had taken his Fathers wife he detested it as abominable and so abominable as that the like was not heard of among the Gentles and ceaseth not till he had caused him to bee excommunicated and cast out of the Church of Gods people How is it a sinne of Incest in a man to marry his brothers wife whereas the Iewes were commanded to rayse vp seed to their childesse brethren how shall these two Lawes bee reconciled The law against Incest is generall binding all people of all countries Answ and perpetuall for euer the law of the brothers taking the brothers wife wanting issue was a speciall exception to this law peculiar to the Israelites and to last but for a time whilst there was a speciall reckoning made of the first borne and of his seed still continuing him as it were aliue thus typifying the first borne amongst many brethren who without hauing any seed further raised vp vnto him doth himselfe remaine aliue for euer Wherefore in no case may the like now be tollerated for it is a foule sinne Polygamy Or the act of vncleanesse is with a second wife in the time of the first for howsoeuer it may seem that there is no direct law against this and because the most holy Patriarchs had many wiues that it is no sinne to haue more wiues together yet now certainely it is no lesse sinne then Adultery in continuall practise to take a second wife Le●it 18.18 during the life of the first For first there is a direct Law against it made by God himselfe Thou shalt not take vnto a wife her sister during her life which may also be read one wife vnto another that is a second whilest the first is liuing Otherwise it might be lawfull the wife being dead to marry her sister which is against all equity of these lawes For whatsoeuer woman becommeth any way thy sister Leuit. 18.11.16 thou mayst not marry if she be but the daughter of thy fathers wife begotten by thy father or thy brothers wife and the reason is because she is thy sister onely such an one as is called sister but is not viz. the daughter of thy fathers wife begotten by another husband mayst thou marry But thy wiues sister is thy sister and therefore it is vnlawfull to marry her though thy wife be dead whence it followeth that this law must be vnderstood as being against Bygamie which is hauing two wiues together though they be not sisters but strangers one to the other 2. The first institution is against it God making but one man and one woman and why did he make but one saith Malachy because he sought a godly seed 3. There is no expresse and positiue tolleration throughout al the book of God for hauing more wiues together then one Malac. 2 15. but much to the contrary They twaine saith Christ shall be one flesh Matth. 19.5 1. Cor. 7.1 not three or more And To auoyd fornication saith Paul let euery man haue his owne wife and euery woman her owne husband not wiues or husbands And Lamech is branded to be the first that had two wiues Obiect It is not a toleration when Abraham doth hearken to Sarahs voyce willing him to goe in to his maid Hagar and when she being with child by him hath an Angell sent to comfort her in regard of that she went withall And when Nathan telleth Dauid that the Lord had giuen him Sauls wiues and concubines And when Iacob obtained so much fauour in the middest of his wiues and concubines Sol. It seemeth to haue been a secret and implicite toleration to them in particular and so for others of those times but what is that to vs vnder the new Testament The Lord who made the Law can dispense with his Law as it pleaseth him for ends best knowne to himselfe Though it were no sinne in Abraham taking Hagar vpon his wiues motion Socrat. lib. 4. cap. 26. yet it was a sin in the Emperour Talentinian to take Iustina vpon the commendations of his wife Seuera and to make a law to tolerate it in others Though it were no sin in Iacob to take foure wiues and concubines yet it was a sin in the Emperor Charles the Great Whence it appeareth how grosse the impudency of the Pope is who hath taken vpon him to dispense with these sins as with incest in Emanuel King of Portugall who married two sisters and Katherine Queene of England had two brethren and Ferdinand King of Naples married his aunt by the dispensation of Pope Alexander the sixth and Pope Martin the fifth gaue leaue for a man to marry with his owne sister The same may be said of fornication and whoredome the Popes of Rome do generally tolerate it taking tribute of the stewes Lastly there is an act of vncleannes committed without a companion namely by wilfull
vnto such thou deniest vnto the Lord from whom thou receiuest al and vnto whom thou owest all who will also require at the last day saying I was hungry and thou didst not feede me naked and thou diddest not cloath mee sicke and in prison and thou visitedst me not 3 Against sacriledge Lastly robbing of God which is called sacriledge is in things dedicate when they are taken away and in tithes and offerings when they are vniustly paid and without conscience of the right For as the Lord hath forbidden stealing from men so and much more strictly hath hee forbidden stealing from himselfe and appointed more precisely the duties to bee paid to his Ministers in his stead Now that wee may say something of this sinne to moue the consciences of all such as make conscience of any stealing it shall first be shewed Tithes due by Gods Law that tithes are due by Gods Law vnder the new Testament secondly wherein it is offended about the payment of tithes and thirdly how God is robbed in things dedicate Arg. 1 Leuit. 27.30 1. That tithes are due euen in these dayes appeareth from direct Scripture All the tithes of the seed of the ground and of the fruit of the trees are the Lords they are wholy to the Lord he saith not shall be or let them be as Origen hath well obserued of other ceremoniall Lawes which were to last but for a time as of the Passouer This shall be a Law or an ordinance vnto thee and so of other ceremonies But as it is said of the seuenth day it is the Lords Sabbath so of tithes Exod 12.24 they are the Lords Whence ariseth this sound reason That which is the Lords peculiarly perpetually not by any new ordination for a time that is to be paid alwaies without al difference of times of the old and new Testament but such are tithes they are the Lords not made so by any such ordination therefore they are to be paid euen vnder the new Testament also It cannot be maintained that tithes are ceremonial or appurtenances of the Leuiticall Priesthood for God though he gaue them to the Leuites yet did he not first found them in that encorporation but only transferred his owne right to that Order of Priest-hood quousque so long as it should endure and after the ceasing of that Priest-hood the same right descended as it were by entaile to the succeeding Ministery of the Gospell In a word Tythes were due to the Leuiticall Ministers not as Leuiticall but as Ministers and so are successiuely due to the Euangelicall Pastors as Pastors and not formally as Euangelicall And if per impossibile the Gospell could cease yet should not tythes cease but be rendred to whatsoeuer Ministery could be feigned to succeed in place thereof 2. This appeareth further by Scripture 1. Cor. 9.14 concluding the Arg. 2 same by consequence It is ordained saith the Apostle that they should liue of the Gospell that preach the Gospell euen as they did liue of the Altar that did wait at the Altar Whence I reason thus That is due now and to bee paid vnder the Gospell without the paiment of which the preachers cannot be maintained according to Gods ordinance but such are Tithes God hauing ordained them onely and not other meanes for if none other meanes can be shewed to haue been ordained by God to maintaine preachers then tythes only are of his ordinance Therefore tythes are due now in these dayes of the Gospell 3. This appeareth further because that as vnto Aaron Arg. 3 and vnto men after his order tythes were to bee payed so they were payed vnto Melchisedeck after whose order is Christ in whose name and representing whose person are the ministers of the Gospell according to the Apostles reasoning to the Hebrewes Here men receiue tythes that die Heb. 7.8 and there he is said to haue receiued tythes that liueth for euer c. Hence I reason thus That which is Christs due as he is a meanes of Gods blessing vnto the people that is the due of his ministers seruing in the same office but tythes are Christs due seeing they were Melchisedecks euen as they were due to the Priests after Aaron because due to Aaron and they are Christs and Melchisedecks as they were a meanes of blessing for Eonomine in this respect Abraham is noted to haue paied tythes to Melchisedeck when he met him and blessed him Therefore they are due to the Ministers of the Gospell And to such as will vnderstand the Apostle Paul is most plaine for tithes Let him that is instructed make him that hath instructed him partaker of all his goods Cal 6.6 What must hee make his goods common vnto him that he may vse any of them as himselfe none will grant this I am sure Must he only giue him some small matter as an almes at his discretion Ah forced construction to make part of all some gratuitie only out of the money Thus there remaineth no way else to make him partaker of al thy goods but by the due paying of thy tithes from all sorts of thy encreased goods namely which arise from thy Corne from thy Fruite from thy Cattell c. which are called all thy goods Arg. 4 Gen. 14. Gen. 28.22 A fourth argument may be taken from the custome of the Church of God in all ages Abel and Cain acknowledge something due to the Lord when they bring vnto him part of their increase Abraham more particularly payeth the tithe of all Iacob voweth to giue the tenth to the Lord. Vnder the new Testament there was a community of things amongst Christians for 200. yeares according to Tertullian which being dissolued by Vrlan Bishop of Rome tithes came againe into vse according to Origin Ciprian and Gregory long before the Laterane Counsell by which the Popes of Rome maketh them ceremoniall tooke aduantage of impropriations for their owne gaine Who so would be further instructed herein may reade the learned Treatises written of this subiect by Doctor Carlion now Bishop of Chichester by Master Roberts Minister of Norwich and others It is to be renounced therefore as an error to hold that tithes are not now due by Gods law and the Ministery should liue vpon the beneuolence of people as Wickliffe being deceiued in his iudgement did It is not enough to say it was a ceremony and so belonged only to the time of the Law for though a figure might be found herein as Athanasin hath obserued ● an Hebrew letter expressing ten setting forth the first letter of Iesus yet it was not meerely ceremoniall as other things that had no further vse but to prefigure Iesus this being a maintenance for Gods ministers such as hee hath ordained alwaies to bee in his Church though not after the same order yet such as hath been shewed as vnto which tithes are also paid 2 The right paying of tythes It followeth now therefore that
Sanctification Secondly sanctification is the vertuall diffusing of his bloud in our hearts and in euery corner thereof by the working of his holy Spirit to the cleansing of them from sinne so as that it hath no more dominion ouer vs Rom. 6.3.4 For all wee that are baptized into Christ are baptized into his death Wee are buried then with him by baptisme into his death that as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father so we also should walke in newnes of life Rom. 8. ● 2. Cor. 5.77 And such as are in Christ are described thus Which walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit Jf any bee in Christ hee is a new creature old things are passed away all things are become new It is a vaine thing therefore for any man to perswade himselfe of deliuerance from sinne and death by Christ his bloud vnlesse his conscience bee heereby purged from dead workes of sin in newnesse of life to serue God No price paid for the ransome of a flaue can set him at liberty if he stil beareth a slauish mind that he will serue his old master alwaies neither can any friend though he will die for him that deserueth death saue him if he will still desperately cast himselfe vpon mortall danger nor yet can any water of Iordan clense from the foule leprosie if the precepts of the Prophet bee not obeyed No more can that man be any better then a slaue of the Deuill though Christs precious bloud hath been paid for ransome if hee will still liue the seruant of sinne and of the Deuill neither can he be saued from death though our dearest friend Christ hath once died for man that stil by sinning runneth vpon the danger of death Nor lastly can any be cleansed from the leprosie of sin vnlesse his precepts bee obeyed who onely can and doth direct rightly to vse the streames of his bloud for this end and purpose Oh mad men then that hope for deliuerance from sin but haue sinne ruling and raigning in them How happeneth it that being so wise for things worldly and temporall yee haue no more vnderstanding for things spirituall and eternall How is it that yee looke for deliuerance from death by Christs bloud when no power of this death is seene to mortifie and kill sinne in you What word haue yee What promise of God to build this confidence vpon As verily as God is truth yee haue none at all from God Whence then is the ground of your hope What doe you build your comfort vpon vpon a shadow vpon nothing Bee ashamed in time of this your folly flatter not your selues in vaine yee sinners but lay hold vpon saluation whilest it is offered being sanctified and washed by vertue of Christ his bloud in your hearts so that all iniquity being expelled thence it may by power of the same bloud be expiated and neuer appeare to your condemnation at the day of account Now as Christ his bloud alone purgeth from sinne so it of 〈…〉 must be applied by the sinner vnto his own soule by the hand of faith All the water of all riuers will not make a man cleane vnlesse with hands he bee washed with the water no more will Christ his bloud make cleane the soule vnles with the hand of faith it be applied vnto it For this cause as the bloud of Christ is said to clense from all sinne so faith is said to purge the heart from sinne and to iustifie a sinner That precious bloud purgeth 1. Iohn 3.3 Rom. 3.28 and iustifieth as the cause materiall faith as the cause instrumentall Q. 111. How is faith first begun wrought in the hart Meanes of working Faith Answ Ordinarily by the preaching of the Gospell of Christ the holy spirit inwardly opening the heart to belieue those things that are outwardly preached to the eare Rom. 10.17 Explan Finding that Faith is the instrument of our iustification and saluation it is necessary to consider how or by what meanes this instrument is purchased that if it be wanting it may bee sought here if it bee already attained the meanes and giuer hereof may bee magnified and honoured The meanes therfore I say is the Gospell published and made knowne vnto vs which the spirit opening the heart it beleeueth For Faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the word of God and this word thus working faith is the Gospell the Law driueth to despaire the Gospell erecteth by hope the Law threatneth and filleth with feare the Gospell promiseth and filleth with comfort the Law sheweth our miserable estate and what need we haue of a Sauiour the Gospell sheweth a remedy against this misery and pointeth out vnto vs our Sauiour Then must be a kind of faith or assent to belieue the Law also but this is not the Faith by which wee are saued from the Law but when this is and the Gospell is preached euen as a man at deaths dore through extreame sicknesse at the newes of some soueraigne remedy lifteth vp himselfe taketh it and is recouered So the sinner euen dead by the Law at the newes brought in the Gospell of a remedy lifteth vp himselfe with hope and by faith taketh it and is recouered out of his danger And being so sicke of sinne and weake as that he cannot of himselfe doe it the holy spirit is ready holding vp the hand and opening the mouth of the soule to enable it to receiue this wholsom medicine as in the case of Lydia of whō it is said that A certaine woman named Lydia Acts 16.14 a seller of purple of the City of the Tbyatirians which worshipped God heard whose hart the Lord opened that she attēded to such things as Paul spake Q●●st 112. How is faith encreased Ans Chiefly by prayer reading preaching and hearing of the word and receiuing the Sacraments for if these be well attended we will not be wanting in workes of mercy and righteousnesse Exercises of Faith Rom. 10.14 Explan Of Prayer the Apostle speaketh as of a chiefe fruit and exercise of Faith for How shall they call vpon him saith he in whom they haue not belieued So that if there be faith that setteth a worke presently to pray When the disciples belieued a chiefe care which they had was to be taught to pray wherfore they come to Christ saying Lord teach vs to pray as Iohn also taught his disciples And great reason is there Luke 11.1 that faithfull people should pray often prayer being a proper worke of faith euen as to speake is proper vnto man whence it is that the Kingly Prophet saith I belieued and therefore I spake or prayed as if he should say I had vtterance and therefore I vttered for what difference betwixt the tongue of man and beast but in the speech and what difference betwixt the beleeuer and the atheist if he prayeth not 1. Tim. 4.5 Againe as faith purgeth man so
fore-knowledge of God and against his disposing will it is not possible that wicked men and wicked Angels should do any thing But in this there is little comfort as to the gally-slaues of the Turkes being compelled to their taske the comfort onely is when from the heart willingly and chearefully Gods will is done namely his reuealed will and Law To doe Gods will Heb. 11.6 Esay 1. Now for this it is necessary that a man be first of this kingdome Without faith it is impossible to please God All duties done by the vnsanctified Iewes liuing in sinne are reiected as abominable Their new Moones their Sabbaths their incense their sacrifices without these a man cannot so much as thinke any thing pleasing vnto God 2. Cor. 3.5 euen as they that yeeld alleageance to the Pope or to the Turke or any enemy of our King cannot please him their lawfull Soueraigne how officious soeuer they bee So they in whom the power of darkenesse is not yet shaken off but are still through infidelity and the loue of sinne vnder the Prince of the ayre and not subiects of the kingoome of heauen cannot please God what duties soeuer they seeme to the world to performe with zeale and deuotion This then serueth first to shew vs the fountaine of all our goodnes the grace of God the mercy of our heauenly King who maketh vs able to serue him and crowneth our seruice with glory t●at for no seruice which wee doe we presume to challenge ought at his hands as the merit of our worke but reiect this as Popish arrogancy and acknowledge when wee haue done al that we can we are vnprofitable seruants which is Christian simplicitie 2. Not to rest in any outward act or duty which we doe but labour for true faith for hearts rightly seasoned as hearts of the subiects of his kingdome otherwise it is lost labour whatsoeuer we doe in vaine are ye iust mercifull or deuout vnlesse the seruice of Satan be in heart renounced vnlesse there be faith purging inwardly 2. The Kingdome of God For the sense of the words Thy kingdome the obiect of this desire is first to bee considered and then the act let it come Gods kingdome is the rule that hee doth exercise ouer his creatures and is generall ouer all and speciall ouer the elect Generally his kingdome doth comprehend the whole world with all things therein which he ruleth and gouerneth by his prouidence making one to be for the preseruation or punishment of the other thus vpholding things in order euer since the first creation Psal 48.2 Psal 93.1 In this sense God is called by the Psalmist the great King and God is King be the Heathen neuer so impatient and againe the Lord reigneth c. and vnto his First-borne Christ the Heathen are giuen for inheritance Psal 2. and the vttermost ends of the earth for a possession Specially Gods Kingdome is ouer the Church howsoeuer dispersed into many places yet making but one Kingdome and this Kingdome is partly in Heauen partly vpon earth till the last great day when in Heauen onely it shall flourish That part of his Kingdome which is vpon earth is the whole multitude of all such people as outwardly embrace the Christian religion though many be prophane or hypocrites and this part is called the Kingdome of Heauen Matth. 13. both in the Parable of the Sower of the Draw-net and of the Field wherein the enuious man sowed tares c. Wicked men being for a time mixt amongst the godly but at the last day to bee seuered and singled out and left the godly onely being taken and this is Gods speciall outward Kingdome which in speciall manner he defend●th from Infidels holding vp the Scepter of his Word and giuing them lawes whereby to be gouerned Now besides this there is an inward spirituall Kingdome of God which is ouer all those in whose hearts these lawes are written to doe them and the holy Spirit ruleth and beareth sway and happy is that man which is thus of his Kingdome for when Christ did highly extoll Iohn the Baptist saying that a greater then he was not borne of women hee affirmeth yet that the least in the Kingdome of Heauen is greater then hee the least of those that are inwardly called greater then hee by his most excellent office euen as they which doe the will of God in Heauen are more then mother brethren and sisters of Christ then Mary as shee was dignified to be his mother according to the flesh That part of the Kingdome which is really in Heauen consisteth of Angels and Saints and is imperfect till the last day when in a more speciall manner the Kingdome shall bee deliuerd vp to God the Father that he may bee all in all 1. Cor. 15.24 And thus much for the meaning of the obiect The act Let it come This is first of the generall Kingdome whereby the world is most prouidently ruled let it stand let wickednesse be punished and godlinesse rewarded 1. The Kingdome of grace commeth by foure degrees Secondly of the speciall Kingdome the comming whereof is in foure degrees 1. Let it be erected where it is not send thy word send Labourers to worke in thy haruest let thy Word sound to all parts of the earth to the Iew to the Turke to Infidels in all places plant a Church there this specially is the praying for al men vnto which Saint Paul exhorteth that the Gospell may shine amongst them that it may shine to their hearts who are yet in darknesse 2. Let it be confirmed and continued where it is let it not be abolished by persecution corrupted by heresie vanish by hypocrisie or degenerate and grow into the contrarie by prophanenesse 3. Let it be restored where it is decaied or corrupted in doctrine or manners restore such as are falne by weaknesse purge the errours of such as are seduced 4. Let it be perfected made compleat by hastening the marriage day wherein the new Ierusalem may bee in all points as a Bride trimmed for her husband which shall onely bee at the last day when death and the Deuill and euerie enemie shall be destroyed and God alone shall absolutely raigne ouer his people guiding them in and out euerlastingly and communicating his heauenly most glorious Kingdome vnto them 3. For the scope The supplication is 2. The scope of the words 1. For Gods generall Kingdome not that it shall faile whilst the world endureth bur because it is Gods will that we should pray for such things as make for his glory wee are directed to aske here the exercising of Gods soueraigntie and dominion ouer the world whereby his power wisedome and goodnesse may appeare to the sonnes of men of the great creatures the irrationall the Heauens Earth and Seas being still contained in their proper places properties and operations of the rationall the obstinate and rebellious being by his iust iudgement punished and the