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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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of God for they are his Image differing onely in degrees The sincerity of our love to the Lord may be known these two ways 1. By our even carriage towards him not sometimes for him and sometimes for our lusts 2. By our constant carriage by our continuance and holding out in his service yet daily infirmities break not the Covenant so long as our hearts are sincere and we take not another husband that is love not any lust more then Christ Reasons or Motives perswasive to love the Lord viz. 1. The Commandment of God The Exhortations of the Prophets and Apostles Deut. 6.5 Mat. 22.37 Mark 12.30 2. The Examples of the holy men of God Prophets Apostles Martyrs c. as Abraham Gen. 12. Josh 23. Peter Joh. 21. 3. The Excellency of it for it knitteth and bindeth all other Vertues together yea he that loves is in God and God in him 4. The Profit of it for all things work together for the best to those that love God Rom. 8.28 5. The Necessity of it for without love all other Vertues and rare Perfections profit us nothing 1 Cor. 13. 6. It sets a Price on all we do be it never so small be it but a Cup of cold water given in love 7. We lose not by this love which is contrary to all other loves even in that 8. The Lord is Worthy of our love for all Excellency is in God and he is wholly delectable 9. The consideration of the Greatness of God might command our love yea seeing this great and mighty God is a suiter to us for it 10. The easie Conditions he requires of us for he might have commanded us to offer our children in Sacrifice and our bodies to be burned in being our Soveraign Creator and we his Creatures 11. God hath planted this very Affection of Love in us for this very end and doth he then call for more then his own 12. We have engaged our selves to love the Lord being Baptized in his Name nay he hath bought us too and loves us yea so as he gave even himself for us Doth not this deserve Love O consider this all ye Adulterers that divorce your selves from Heaven to be enamored with Hell and your own Damnation What lieth in the understanding between God and us that hinders Love for Love uniteth 1. Temptations to Atheism 2. Temptations to think that the Scriptures are not true 3. Temptations to think amiss of God in any thing 4. Temptations to doubt of the favor of God The two main Impediments of our love to Christ 1. Strangeness for it dissolveth Love breeding Ignorance and Fearfulness but a truly grounded holy Boldness is the Parent and Nurse of Love 2. Uncircumcision of heart or worldly-mindedness Deut. 30.6 that is worldly Lusts worldly Cares worldly Desires when they abound in the heart The Means to enable us to Love the Lord viz. 1. Labor to know him Beseech the Lord to shew himself to thee for till then thou wilt never love him 2. We must labor to know our selves We must consider our sins what we are what hearts we have what lives we have led 3. We must labor to get the Assurance of Gods special Love to us the two notes whereof are these 1. The Love of our Brethren for then we love God and then he loves us 2. Our love of God for whom God loves to them he gives his grace to love him again 4. Prayer for it is a lovely Suit and think you that if we request to love him he will deny it us surely no Jam. 1.17 5. A careful and diligent Hearing of Gods Word with continual Meditation on the same whereby we attain to Faith which inflames us with Gods love towards us and thereby stirs up again our love towards God 6. We must labor earnestly that the Spirit of God may dwell in our hearts Love is a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 7. The continual Meditation of Gods wonderful works and of his infinite benefits which by the death of his onely begotten Son he bestowed so freely on us The love of our Neighbor is said to be like unto our love to God for these Reasons 1. Because that Commandment of loving our Neighbor is opposed unto the Ceremonies 2. Because the Obedience of the First Table is the cause of the Second 3. Because the breach of the Second Table doth as well deserve eternal punishments as the breach of the First 4. Because it appertaineth to the Moral Worship which is described in the First and Second Table 5. Because of the Coherence of both for that neither can be observed without the other 6. Because one is the Author of both 7. Because both of them contain our whole Obedience The maner how we must love men viz. 1. It must be as Christ hath loved us Eph. 5.2 not in equality but resemblance and conformity 2. We must love our Neighbor as our selves Mat. 22.39 3. We must love them as the same Members of the same body love one another Rom. 12.4 5. Our love must be conformable to Christs love The maner whereof was this viz. 1. Christs love was Free without constraint not for any Merit in us 1 Joh. 4.19 2. His love was a right and True love he loved us not to profit or benefit himself but onely us 3. His love was Discreet he loved our persons not our sins 1 Cor. 13.5 6. 4. His love was Vehement he gave himself to the death for us 1 Joh. 3.16 5. His love was Fruitful shewing it self in the effects thereof Jam. 2.15 16. 6. His love was Constant Joh. 13.1 True love doth never fall away 1 Cor. 13.8 7. His love was General to the Poor as to the Rich to his Friends to his Foes Mat. 5.44 That we may know how to love our Neighbor as our selves we must know that Self-love is twofold 1. General which is Natural Love whereby every one seeketh his own good and preservation This kinde of love in it self is not evil the order thereof being rightly observed 2. Special which is 1. Carnal whereby a man preferreth the benefit of his Body and Flesh before the good of his Soul and Spirit 2 Tim. 3.2 This is a Mother-sin 2. Spiritual whereby a man preferreth the good of his Soul before all things in the world That we may know how to love our Neighbors as fellow-members we must know That 1. One Member of the Humane Body doth not envy another which hath not the same office with it 1 Cor. 12. 2. One Member doth not appropriate his Office to it self but communicateth it to the good of all 3. One Member of the Body being hurt of the other doth not revenge it self upon the other Members 4. One Member suffereth with another and rejoyceth with another Rom. 12.15 5. One Member of the Body exposeth it self to danger for the defence of another The Properties of true love to our Brethren 1. It must be in Adversity as well as
we obeying the will of God do what he commandeth us 4. Give us c. that is all things which pertain to our sustentation in this life 5. Forgive us c. that is our sins and infirmities and here note That our forgiving others is not the cause but the consequence or effect of Gods forgiving us and the sign of our remission 6. Lead us not into Temptation that is 1. That God would not suffer us to be invaded or set upon by the wicked suggestions of Satan 2. Nor be drowned in the pleasures of sin 3. Nor by consent fall into the snares of Temptation But deliver us from evil that is generally all things hurtful to our selves the Church or State 3. The Conclusion For thine is the Kingdom c. which is added as a Reason of all the Petitions to strengthen our faith and therefore we adde a note of confidence and say Amen which particle is not as a part of the Prayer but as a note of our desire wherewith we wish we may be heard and of our faith whereby we believe we shall be heard The Lord used this kinde of Proeme because he will be called upon with due honor which consisteth 1. In the true knowledge of God 2. In true confidence in him 3. In obedience to him which compriseth 1. True love 2. True fear 3. Hope 4. Humiliation 5. Patience Again of the six Petitions in the Lords Prayer 1. The three former concern Gods glory 1. Hallowed be thy Name that is that the Name of God may be glorified in his Titles words and works 2. Thy Kingdom come that is that the number of true Believers may be daily encreased that Gods Kingdom of Grace being enlarged his Kingdom of Glory may be hastned 3. Thy will be done that is that all the people of God may upon earth as readily obey Gods will as the Angels and Saints in heaven 2. The three latter concern our selves 1. Give us c. that is all temporal things necessary for this life 2. Forgive us c. that is that God would freely forgive us all our sins as we do from our hearts forgive the offences of men against us 3. Lead us not c. that is that the Lord would not suffer us to be carried away by the Temptations of the World the Flesh or the Devil The excellency of the Lords prayer stands in these things 1. In the pithy shortness of it for in few words it comprehendeth endless matter 2. In the perfection of it for it containeth in it whatsoever is to be asked in prayer in which respect it is properly called the Abridgement of the whole Gospel 3. In the order thereof which is most exquisite 4. In the acceptation it hath with God the Father for it containeth the words of Christ his Son in whom the Father is well pleased The excellency of this Prayer sheweth 1. That if any set form of prayer may be used then this may being indited by the Mediator of the Church therefore let such as deny the use of it better consider hereof when as for the space of One thousand five hundred years after Christ there were never any that disallowed it 2. That the practice of such who conclude their prayers with this is commendable for hereby as by a most perfect and excellent prayer the wants and imperfections of our prayers are supplyed 3. That such who gather from the perfection and excellency of this prayer that it alone is to be used are deceived for Christs intent was rather to commend this prayer unto us for matter and maner then for the words 4. That though it be a most perfect prayer yet is it onely general but every true Believer needs particular prayers whereby in special form and maner his particular state and condition may be sent up unto the Lord yet so as they be always suitable unto this form here prescribed Two extremes are here to be taken heed of 1. Too much confidence in the words of this Prayer often repeated as some Popes of Rome have granted great Pardons to seven Pater-nosters and as many Ave-Maries said over every day or on some days and in some places which is gross and superstitious 2. Too much detracting from this Prayer by accounting it no better or not so worthy as a mans own conceived prayer which is derogatory and arrogant Our Saviour Christ having forbidden his Disciples all carnal and superstitious kinde of praying prescribed them this holy form Matth. 6.9 c. The use whereof is a form of Direction learning thereby what to ask what first and chiefly with what affections and assurance for if we were left unto our selves we should greatly erre in praying asking oft-times those things that are not good for us and against the will of God out of a fleshly minde therefore hath the Lord reduced all things which we may ask into these few short Petitions and out of any carnal presumption to transgress these bounds is not to offer a pleasing Sacrifice but as it were with strange fire to provoke him as did Nadab and Abihu Lev. 10. Some in a superstitious notion Suppose this Patern of Devotion Stands chiefly in the words and can expell Poyson and Counter-charm the Powers of Hell Blinde Idolist unless th' heart language shall The words the words are ineffectual Since thou hast giv'n us Lord compactly choyce Words and matter both give us too thy voyce Thy Spirits voyce in ours that so we may With Faith Love Zeal as thou hast taught us Pray §. 3. Our Father CHrist Jesus onely is the Son of God by Nature for which cause he is called the onely begotten Son of the Father Joh. 1.18 And we are Sons onely by Adoption and Grace and therefore when we call God Father we must not think any thing singularly of our selves as if he were our Father specially but the common Father of us all that believe And we say Our Father not My Father because we ought to pray for all the children of God as well as for our selves And here observe That here and always the Name of Father as also the Name of God when it is opposed to the Creatures is taken essentially not personally but when it is put with another person of the Godhead it is taken personally Our Father that is O Lord God thou art the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and in him our most merciful Father by Adoption and Grace yet here again observe That we do not here pray to the Father onely but to the whole Trinity yet as the first Person is the eternal Fountain of the Deity we pray to the Father by the Son through the Holy Ghost nor may it seem strange that Christ who as he is Man is our Brother and is not ashamed to call us his Brethren Heb. 2.11 is called our Father for as he is God he is our Father and therefore called The Father of Eternity Isa 9.6 Christ by this word Our
on him and that Christ will take him when this is done then a man receives Christ by Faith and from this Faith issues this Love These two great radical Vertues Faith and Love are the two Pillars as it were upon which the Fabrick of our Salvation is built for nothing makes us the Sons of God but such Faith as is accompanied with Love and good Works It is Gods pleasure to save us in this maner that it may be of grace To love any man because he is a Christian and a childe of God is a sensible and certain note that he is partaker of the true Love of God in Christ And it is much easier to love Holiness in the Saints then in God himself because he is far remote from us and they amongst us are visibly seen therefore unless we finde our hearts inwardly moved to love them yea with a natural affection as it were we but pretend to love God Love is a commanding Affection yea Love and Hatred are as it were the great Lords and Masters that divide the Affections between them Now the Reason why we hate God naturally is by reason of that opposition and contrariety which is between God and every Man by Nature for all Love comes from similitude and agreeableness therefore this sinful Nature of ours must be broken in pieces and subdued again new-molded and framed before it can ever be fit to love God Hence it is that any natural man that hath the most impure heart may to escape Hell and get Heaven do all the works the Papists require and for the same end that they require them but to do it out of love to God that is a thing no Hypocrite can reach to and therefore the giving a cup of cold water proceeding from Love is a better work then a Martyrdom the giving ones body to be burned and all that he hath to feed the poor if it come not from Love yea then all this coming not from Love is to God more acceptable the very will of doing the least good though the deed be never done so the Will arise from this affection of Love But when a man loves not he breaks the whole Law for as Love is the keeping of the whole Law so the want of Love is the breach of the whole Law Now true love looks first to Christs person next to the Promises and benefits we have by him And this love to God doth not so restrain us but we may love the Creature also yet so that if this Love to the Creature doth over-ballance or any away lessen our love to God by the inordinateness of it to the Creature then is it an adulterous love Nor doth it restrain our liberty for he that gives his heart to God hath as much liberty as he that followeth his lusts all the difference is the one is an unjust owner the other the Lord hath made the steward of his own heart so that he hath it as before onely now he doth use it at Gods appointment before it was at his own What it is to love God 1. To acknowledge God to be exceeding good bountiful and merciful not onely in himself but also in us and towards us and that therefore he doth imploy his Power Wisdom Justice Mercy and Goodness to our Salvation and so through the acknowledging of this his infinite goodness towards us to love God as that we more covet and desire our conjoyning and conformity with him and the execution of his Will then all other things whatsoever 2. To leave and relinquish all things rather then to be bereaved of his communion and fellowship or to offend him in any thing and to be ready to part with all other things which we love for his sake and to care for nothing more then how we may do things acceptable and grateful to him There are five kindes of Love viz. 1. Love of Piety when we desire the preservation of any thing 2. A Love of Concupisence that is to love a thing meerly for our use 3. A Love of Complacency so the Master loves a towardly Schollar 4. A Love of Friendship that is a Reciprocation of affection 5. A Love of Dependance that is to love one on whom all good depends so we are said to Love God yea with the three last kindes of Love Love is threefold 1. Natural wherewith we love our selves children wealth c. 2. Sinful that carries natural love the wrong way to love sinful things 3. Spiritual which sets limits to this Natural love yea elevates it and makes it an holy love Love to God is twofold 1. General or Natural which is in every one by Nature Thus the wicked love God as he is Summum Bonum and doing good to all touching outward affairs This is not true Love 2. Special when a man upon true evidences perswading himself of Gods Love to himself in particular doth upon this sensible feeling and perceiving of Gods goodness return unto God all his Heart all his Soul all his Stength in Love and Thankfulness The right order of Love 1. God in the first place must be loved for that is the cause of love to our Neighbor 2. We must love in Man onely those things which are to be loved not those things which are to be abhorred 3. We must not love those more or less who are equally to be loved nor those equally who are more or less to be loved 4. We must love the Creator for himself but the Creature for Gods sake The right order of Love as touching the degrees thereof 1. We must love those that belong to the Church in general before a private Member thereof 2. Those of the houshold of Faith before those which are not for they are Sons with us as well by Adoption as Creation 3. Those to whom we are bound by any bond of duty nearer to us then other men 4. Not strangers so much as acquaintance not enemies so much as friends 5. For equals we must proportion our affection to them more or less as they are more or less profitable to the Church of God The love of God is wrought in us two ways 1. By breaking our Nature in pieces as it were that is by Humiliation and the Law 2. By moulding it anew which is done by Faith and the Gospel A man may also be assured of his love to God 2 ways 1. By his conformity to him in Holiness not in equality and perfection but in similitude and conformity 2. By the weaning of his affection from the things of this world so far forth as they are severed from the Fear and Love of God The Reasons why he that loves not Christ shall not be saved 1. Because there is a Curse on him and a woe due to him for to serve God and not to love him is but Hypocrisie which is to do the outward action without the inward sincerity that is without Love 2. Because he breaks the Evangelical Law now
he that breaks the Law hath a curse due to him 3. Because he is an Adulterer now in the Law of God an Adulterer ought to dye and he that loves not the Lord is an Adulterer that is he is false to the Lord that should be his husband and loves somewhat else 4. Because he slights and rejects the Lords gracious offer The Disposition of all those that love God is To have their hearts after Gods own heart and this is proper to the Saints And the way to know whether our hearts be so or not is by doing these two things viz. 1. By hating what God hates for our actions are effects of our affections 2. By loving those that fear the Lord and hating those that are enemies to him The difference between the love of God and fear of God viz. 1. The love of God ariseth from a Knowledge of Gods goodness The fear of God ariseth from a Knowledge of Gods Justice and of his Power to punish sins and of that Right which he hath over all Creatures 2. Love pursueth good as God and our conjunction with him but Fear flieth evil or the displeasure and wrath of God and our separation from him The right maner of love to God 1. It must be with all the heart that is the whole stream of our affections desires intentions and endeavors 2. It must be with all our might that is according to the Talent that God in any kinde hath given us 3. It must be with the whole man with all the faculties and powers both of soul and body Deut. 6.5 4. We must love God above all that is incomparably above all absolutely for himself and all good things for his sake Mat. 10.17 5. We must be rooted and grounded in love that is not by fits and starts but to be permanent in love 6. It must be diligent and operative not an idle and negligent love 7. It must be free without constraint sound not in hypocrisie total without division continual without end Why we must love the Lord above all 1. Because he is most Excellent and the most amiable of all 2. Otherwise we love him not as God 3. Else we should not love him constantly 4. Because he hath done for us more then all 5. Because he is the uttermost end of all Natures The way to be rooted in Love is 1. To be rooted and grounded in Faith 2. To pitch our love on Christs person not to love him for by-respects Wherein our love must be diligent 1. In preparing for Christs coming 2. In adorning and beautifying the Soul for the approach of her Lover 3. In keeping his Commandments God dealeth not hardly with us in requiring love and that for these Reasons 1. It is that which every one may do 2. He might have required far harder things 3. It is for our own benefit The effect of love in the heart 1. It makes the heart to cleave unto God and to be well pleased with him simply for himself 2. It moves the heart to seek by all means possible to have true worship with God in Christ The signs of our love to God 1. Obedience both Active and Passive to Gods Commandments Joh. 14.15 2. A careful hearing conscionable keeping continual meditating and effectual practising of Gods Word Joh. 14.23 3. A true love towards our Brethren 1 Joh. 4.20 5.1 The signs of hatred of God viz. 1. If we desire that he were not that there were no God to call us to Accompt 2. If we look on him as upon a Judge onely and not also as a loving Father 3. When we look on God and his ways as contrary to our hearts 4. If we love any thing as Wealth and Pleasure more then God The Tryals of our love to God in Christ 1. By the quickness and activeness of the heart after Christ 2. By the Affections as grief when he is absent joy when he is present 3. By hating sin and loving the Saints 4. By doing for his sake yea matters of greatest difficulty 5. By the Bounty as to part with Credit Liberty yea all for Christ 6. By walking with the Lord that is by observing his dealing to us and ours to him again 7. By the Diligence of our love by the pains we take for his glory 8. By our Desire of the present enjoyment of the thing beloved without deferring 9. By the Wages thereof for love desires no wages but the thing loved so that he that loves the Lord indeed would serve him for his own sake were there no Reward here nor Heaven hereafter for Love is its own wages 10. By its Constraining us to please God for if we love the Lord it will put such necessity upon us to please him to obey him in all things to do what he requires whatsoever is for his advantage that we cannot chuse but do it 2 Cor. 5. The Tryal of the Bounty of our love 1. When it crosseth Advantages to our selves 2. When it crosseth Self-love for every man hath some particular Temptation 3. When it is done chearfully and willingly not grudgingly and niggardly Tryals of our love to holy men 1. To love all the Saints to love all grace all holiness in all the Saints 2. To love none but the Saints with the love of Complacency indeed the love of Pity reaches to all Mankinde 3. To love them as they excel in grace in holiness as they are more strict c. 4. By delighting in their Company and by the fruits of love to them The Properties of Love mentioned in the Holy Scripture whereby we may examine whether we have true love or no 1. Love is Bountiful 1 Cor. 13. God observeth what his service doth cost us 2. Love is contented with nothing but love again the sanctified are not content with Mercy without Grace 3. Love desireth the second coming of Christ 2 Tim. 4.8 It loves his Appearance here also in the beauty and purity of his Ordinances 4. Love delighteth to be always speaking of the party loved Do we make the Lord Jesus our Discourse 5. Love will do much and suffer much and both willingly for the party beloved 6. Love is like Fire in four respects 1. It is Active it will set all thy faculties awork for Gods service 2. It is Quick it will not delay from day to day what God requires of thee 3. It is Vehement it will bestow the height of your intentions about holy things 4. It is Powerful it overcomes all impediments still aspiring towards Heaven 7. Love commandeth all the Affections especially Anger when impediments cross us This is Zeal Fear to tremble at Gods Word at his Judgements 8. Love doth things freely and not looks for an exact Recompence which is manifest in these two things 1. It will not limit it self in Duties 2. It will not indent with God for Reward 9. Love to God hateth sin many are angry with sin but hate it not 10. Love loveth the Saints
the pursuit whereof 3 things are to be observed 1. The gathering of the Doctrine 1. Out of the Coherence 3. Out of the drift 3. Out of the Division 4. Out of the words themselves 1. In the Sense 2. In the Meditating of them 2. The proof of the Doctrine which is either by 1. Reason taken out of the word 2. The Text it self 3. The use of the Doctrine which is 1. For Knowledge 1. To confute Falshood 2. To confirm Truth 2. For Conscience 1. To comfort the afflicted 2. To humble the proud The word of God must be preached with boldness Eph. 6.19 which is manifested 1. By an equal and impartial preaching of the word without respect of persons 2. By a declaration of the whole truth of God as occasion requireth concealing no part thereof for any by-respects of favor fear reward or danger Acts 20.27 3. By a grave plain free delivery of Gods word without affectation or popular applause Gal. 1.10 4. By reproving sin and that with authority Tit. 2.15 that transgressors may be ashamed and tremble 5. By despising all shame fear reproach and disgrace which by prophane and wicked persons may be brought upon the Ministers for performing their Calling as they ought Repetition of the same points that have been formerly handled is very expedient for these Reasons 1. Because men are commonly dull in hearing slack in coming weak in remembring and fow in practising 2. Because it is safe and sure for all hearers to have often repetitions many witnesses make sure work and confirm strongly and stedfastly the things taught Phil. 3.1 3. Because repetitions work a deeper impression in us and serve to beat it into the Conscience as well as into the understanding but the best repetition is when we make repetition of it to our selves by practising it The end and purpose of Gods instituting the Ministery of the word was 1. That God may be invocated and magnified in this life by mankinde not onely privately but also by the publike voyce of the Church 2. That the publike and ordinary preaching of the Doctrine the pouring out of prayers and giving of thanks and the use of the Sacraments may be an exercise to stir up and cherish faith and godliness as which without exercise doth easily through our infirmity wax cold 3. That men may provoke one another by their example unto godliness and to the magnifying and praising of God Psa 22.22 4. That there may be preserved and maintained a consent and agreement in the Church in the Doctrine and Worship of God Eph. 4.11 12 13. 5. That the Church may be seen and heard among men and may be discerned from the other Blasphemous and Idolatrous multitude of men and that the Elect may be gathered to the true Church and the Reprobate be left the more excuseless Rom. 10.18 6. That God may apply himself unto our infirmity by teaching men by men 7. That God may shew his love towards men in that he vouchsafes to admit them to be Ministers of that great and weighty work which also the Son of God himself did administer 8. That by this exceeding love of God to us sons of men we might be won in all humility and thankfulness to receive the word and in obedience to practise the same in our life and conversation Our obedience towards the Ministery comprehendeth 1. Reverence that is an acknowledging of Gods Order and Will in the ordaining and maintaining of the Ministery and in the gathering of his Church by it that is a declaration both in words and deeds of this our acknowledgement and judgement of the Ministery 1 Cor. 4.7 2. Love whereby we gladly both frequent divine Assemblies and hear and learn the Doctrine of the Church and wish well unto the faithful Ministers of the Church not onely in respect of that duty of charity which we owe but also in respect of the Ministery which they discharge 3. Obedience in those things which are belonging to the Ministery whereunto belong the works of love towards God and our Neighbor even the whole life of a Christian which is that Spiritual and Moral Sabbath 4. Thankfulness that is such duties as tend to the preservation and maintenance of the Ministery that it may be honestly provided for for God will have his ministery to be maintained to the end of the world 5. Lenity and moderation in bearing with such infirmities of the Ministers as do not enormously or manifestly corrupt or hinder the Ministery and hurt the Church by offence 1 Tim. 5.19 It is the duty of all men to further the work of the Ministery and by all means to promote it which may be done by these means 1. By commending to God by Prayer the Ministery of his own Ordinance and that he would send able Ministers where they are wanting Matth. 9.38 and continue them where they are and by our thankfulness to him for bestowing this gift on us which he hath denyed to many places and people 2. By repenting of those sins which may hinder either the obtaining or continuing of it Isa 62.7 3. By making a reverend use of this gift of God in being subject unto it governed and reformed by it Heb. 13.7 4. By lamenting the state of the Church which is destitute or deprived of this gift Psal 74.9 5. By providing in time of vacancy sufficient men whom God must chuse before we make choyce of Patrons shall one day answer to God for the souls of such as perish through their default 6. By acknowledging our selves unworthy of so great a blessing and by giving up our whole selves unto God for it To despise and resist the Ministry of the word or the Ministers therein is to despise and resist even God himself 1. Because they come not in their own name neither do they discharge their own Message they are no other then the mouth of God they come not from themselves neither for themselves their Authority and Calling is from God 1 Cor. 3.5 2. God doth account all things done to them in the execution of their Ministery as done to himself Matth. 10.40 Let their prophane Persecutors of these Times seriously consider hereof The greater our means are to prevent sin the more we offend if we reject those means 1. Because such sin against knowledge having the word to instruct them and their own consciences to convince them knowledge maketh every sin the greater Luk. 2.47 Joh. 15.22 2. Because it argueth obstinacy and hardness of heart and wilfulness which maketh the sinner the more sinful The parallel of the Ministery of the word and Salt as it is comparatively set down in Mat. 5.13 1. Salt will bite and fret being applyed the nature thereof being hot and dry so the Law being applyed doth rip up mens hearts to make them see their sins it doth fret and bite them by the curse thereof to cause them to renounce themselves 2. Salt makes meat savory unto our taste so the
our natural estate we have no ability to pray 2 Cor. 3.5 2. In our regenerate estate we are no longer able to do any good thing then the Spirit helpeth and assisteth us we have still need of the present effectual and continual work of Gods holy Spirit Phil. 1.6 3. Though we knew how to pray yet would not our prayers be acceptable to God except they came from his Spirit for as God knoweth the meaning of the Spirit so the Spirit knoweth the will of God Rom. 8.27 The means to pray aright in the Spirit 1. Labor for Gods sanctifying Spirit which is gotten by the Ministery of the word 2 Cor. 3.8 2. Having the Spirit we must go along with him and follow his good motions pouring forth those desires which he suggesteth unto us giving unto God that which is Gods Mat. 22. 3. We must take heed that at any time we grieve not the holy Spirit of God which may be done two ways 1. By quenching the good motions thereof through carelesness 1 Thess 5.19 2. By resisting the Spirit through our rebellion Acts 7.51 Prayer must be alway accompanied with thanksgiving the matter whereof may be thus distinguished viz. 1. In regard of the nature and kinde of benefits and they are either Good things bestowed or Evil things removed 2. In regard of the quality of them viz. 1. Spiritual blessings which are 1. Bestowed here on earth in the rank whereof must be accounted these four 1. The ground of them which is Election 2. The meritorious cause of them that is our Redemption under which must be comprised 1. The price of our Redemption which is Christs Blood 2. The special fruits thereof as Reconciliation Adoption Remission Imputation of Righteousness c. 3. The means of applying the benefits of our Election and Redemption namely the effectual operation of Gods Spirit under which are comptised Vocation Regeneration Sanctification and such sanctifying Graces as we finde and feel in our selves wrought as Knowledge Faith Hope Love Repentance Patience New-Obedience c. together with the blessed fruits of them as Peace in Conscience Joy in the Spirit holy security c. 4. The means which he Spirit useth to work encrease all these Graces are to be remembred as The Ministery of the Word and Sacraments and other holy Ordinances of God together with liberty of the Sabbaths of good and faithful Ministers of publike Assemblies and the like 2. Reserved in heaven such as eye hath not seen nor ear heard nor hath entred into the heart of man 2. Temporal therein such as concern 1. Mankinde in general 2. The whole Church 3. The Common-wealth 4. Families 5. Our own persons 3. In regard of the maner of bestowing them 1. Already given 2. Promised to be given 4. In regard of the persons on whom they are bestowed viz. Our selves Others Evils removed for which thanks is to be given are Publike Both Spiritual Private Both Temporal In like maner thanksgiving is Publike For Good things bestowed Private For Evil things removed Proofs of Scripture applied to particular occasions of thanksgiving viz. 1. For all maner of Spiritual blessings in general Eph. 1.3 c. 2. For the Author of them all Christ Jesus Luke 2.13 14. 3. For the outward means of working these Spiritual blessings Coloss 1.3 4 c. 4. For the inward efficacy of Gods Spirit 1 Thess 1.2 5. 5. For Temporal blessings Christ gave thanks for food Joh. 6.11 Hannah for a childe 1 Sam. 2.1 Jacob for riches Gen. 32.10 and Abrahams servant for prospering his journey Gen. 24.48 6. For blessings on others thus the Queen of Sheba praised God for his blessings on Israel 1 Kings 10.9 and the Christian Jews for the Gospel revealed to the Gentiles Acts 11.18 7. For publike blessings concerning the Church Col. 1.3 6. Acts 2.47 4.24 8. For the Commonwealth 1 Kings 1.40 8.62 66. 9. For general blessings on mankinde Psal 8.1 6. 10. For blessings on ones Family thus is Jacob thankful Gen. 35.7 11. For private blessings Leah praised God for a son Gen. 29.3 and Hezekiah for his health Isa 38.19 12. For evils removed Exod. 15.1 c. Psal 124.6 13. For publike Spiritual evils removed as Idolatry in Hezekiahs time 2 Chron. 29.30 14. For private Spiritual evils prevented 1 Sam. 25.32 15. For adversity Job blessed God and the Apostles rejoyce for suffering Acts 5.41 16. For good things promised and not enjoyed Heb. 11.13 General directions for thanksgiving viz. 1. That we lift up our eyes unto the Author of all blessings being perswaded that they are brought unto us by Gods good guiding Providence and not by chance or fortune 2. That we be well instructed in the ground or cause which moveth God to do the good which he doth even his own Free-grace Ezek. 33.19 A gift the more free it is the more praise-worthy 3. That we take particular distinct notice of Gods blessings and so particularly acknowledge them and accordingly give thanks unto the Lord for them 4. That we accept Gods blessings as tokens of his love and favor and accordingly rejoyce in them Psal 138.2 5. That we observe what God hath bestowed on us above others and what others want that we have Psal 147.19 20. 6. That we duly weigh how unworthy we are of the very least of Gods favors even the least crumb we eat or drop we drink Thus did Jacob Gen. 32.10 Particular directions for extraordinary and solemn thanksgiving viz. 1. A day must be set apart and sanctified thereto Thus was it in Esthers time Esth 9.17 c. 2. Assemblies must meet together Thus Jehoshaphat assembled the people on a day set apart to praise God solemnly 2 Chron. 20.26 3. The solemn worship must on that day be performed to God 4. The sanctification of that day must be helped by preaching the Word which help the people of God desired and obtained in Ezra's time Neh. 8.1 c. 5. A solemn Vow and Covenant must then be made with God to binde us more carefully and more conscionably to testifie the truth of our thankfulness by our constant and faithful subjection to his will 2 Chron. 15.12 c. 6. Psalms of praise must then be sung This help the Psalmist doth much press Psal 81.1 2 c. 7. It is meet that feasts be then made in time of Rejoycing the creatures may be more liberally used then at other times but with respect to sobriety and charity By prayer is love wrought four ways 1. It obtaineth it for when we cry earnestly God will not deny us 2. It brings us to communion with God to converse and be familiar with him which breeds love 3. In prayer God shews himself when we are much in calling upon and praising God he delights to shew himself to such a man yea at such a time for the most part 4. It exerciseth love if thou wouldst be abundant in love be fervent and frequent in prayer The properties
is a free and full discharge from sin and the punishment thereof without any satisfaction on our part and this God doth when he is content for Christs sake not to impute sin unto us but to account it as not committed and the punishment as not due unto us being fully and freely contented with the All-sufficient satisfaction made by Christ in his Death and Passion Vs who are grievous sinners and are for ever forlorn without this mercy Vs that by faith do believe our sins are pardoned helping us against doubting and confirming our faith Vs who believe continuing to us this thy grace unto the end whereby we may daily have sin expiated and done away as by our weakness we are daily prone to sin Our Trespasses that is The infinite sins which proceed properly and naturally from us as from a most corrupt fountain and are no way to be imputed to thy Majesty as the Author thereof or to Fate or Constellation or to the Devil onely though he seeketh to bring us thereto for every man is drawn away by his own concupiscence Jam. 1.14 As we forgive c. This is the condition upon which we desire mercy at the Lords hands which chiefly consists in the reconciliation of the minde for though we demand satisfaction where there is ability yet remitting the malice the Lord requireth no more at our hands unless in the case of extreme poverty so that a Trespasser may be forgiven and yet lawful satisfaction required and a Debt may be forgiven and yet the Condition here set down not performed viz. if the minde be not reconciled but continueth still offended Now though a trespass be forgiven by man yet may it be retained before God and though not forgiven by man yet may it be by God upon the unfained humiliation and repentance of the Trespasser And although this forgiving of others is set as a condition required that we may be forgiven yet it is not for our forgiving of others that God will forgive us but this condition is put to teach us That when we come to God in prayer we should not come in wrath or hatred against other men or with a desire of revenge for this is contrary to the good Spirit of Prayer So then we must here observe That our forgiving of others is not a cause of our forgiveness but one effect of our Justification and a token of the Image of God in us For this condition imports That we must exercise mercy towards our brethren and so break off the course of our sins if we look for mercy at Gods hands for the words in this Petition are comparative betokening a likeness and similitude between Gods forgiving and ours which must be rightly understood because our forgiveness is mingled with much corruption through want of mercy and therefore we must not understand it of the measure of forgiveness nor yet of the maner simply but especially of the very act of forgiving And the force of the Reason stands thus If we who have but a drop of mercy forgive others then do thou who art the Fountain of Mercy forgive us Understand further That a man forgives a trespass onely as it is a damage unto man but as it is a sin against God in the transgression of the Moral Law so God onely pardons it These words thus understood must be conceived as a Reason drawn not from the cause or like example but from the sign or pledge of Gods forgiveness for God hath made a Promise to forgive us if we forgive our brethren their trespasses Mat. 11.25 Lastly the order of this Petition followeth That wherein we crave the needful good things of this life teaching that the main hindrance thereof is sin which till it be removed hindreth that we cannot enjoy the good we desire nor be freed from the evil we decline and that by having our daily bread we should lift up our mindes for Spiritual blessings unto God Luke 11.13 and that it is nothing at all to have our daily bread unless God give us also the pardon of our sins In this Petition we pray 1. That God would forgive us all our sins in thought word and deed both Actual and Original 2. That he would remit unto us the punishment that is due unto us for sin both here and hereafter In this Petition Christ willeth 1. That we acknowledge our sins 2. That we thirst earnestly after the remission of our sins 3. That our faith be exercised because this Petition confirmeth our faith yea and floweth from faith For what Reasons we are to pray for remission of sins viz. 1. That we may be saved because without remission of sins we cannot be saved for it is the very nature of sin to hinder us from all good things here Lev. 26. and of Gods Kingdom hereafter Psal 15.2 3. Rev. 21. 2. That we may be put in remembrance of the remnants of sin which are even in the holiest men and that to this end that Repentance may evermore encrease 3. That we may desire and receive the blessings prayed for in the former Petitions 4. That Gods goodness may be manifested and we moved to meditate of his infinite mercy to man when even the Angel● that sinned he spared not 2 Pet. 2. and also assured that though 〈◊〉 by sin forget to perform the obedience of Sons yet God still 〈◊〉 the compassion of a Father How sins are said to be discharged 1. When they are discharged by the person which co●●itted them so the devils and damned discharge their debts by suffering Mat. 18.34 25.41 2. When they are paid by another and so are our sins discharg'd by Christ Gal. 3.14 which satisfaction may be called forgiveness in a threefold respect 1. In respect of us who n●ther do nor can confer any thing to this satisfaction Luk. 17.10 2. In regard of Christ who alone doth forgive them Mat. 9.2 and we no way are able to requite him Psal 103.1 3. In respect of God the Father who in love giveth his Son and accepteth his obedience as our satisfaction Joh. 3.16 From these words Forgive us we may learn 1. That as we sue for our own pardon so must we with the ●●ints sue for others Exod. 38.32 2. That we must be sorry when men do sin Psal 119.136 3. That we may not uncharitably discover mens sins Gal. 6.1 2. 4. That we must not cause any man to sin Prov. 7.18 Gen. 39.8 5. That we must not delight in any sin Psal 119.104 6. That we must forgive our brethren Gen. 50.21 There are three kindes of debts in sin viz. 1. A debt of Obedience which we owe to God but have not paid it through our transgression of the Law Gen. 2.17 3.6 2. debt of Punishment because we have transgressed Rom. 6.23 3. A debt of Purity which we owe by reason of our corruption after our transgression Rom. 8.12 And against all these debts we must seek that we may get
our discharge in this life that we be not tormented in the life to come The Reasons why sin is called a Debt to man 1. Because we owe love which is thereby broken Rom. 13.8 2. Because we owe punishment for doing wrong Judg. 1.8 3. Because we owe satisfaction for the wrong done Lev. 6.4 These words As we forgive our debtors are added for these Reasons 1. That we may rightly desire remission of sins that is with faith and repentance a sign and token whereof is the love of our Neighbor 2. That when we finde in our selves true faith and repentance we may so have a certain argument and comfort in us that we are of the number of them to whom remission of sins is promised and that therefore we shall doubtless obtain the same All offences that are done to us of others may be reduced to these three Heads 1. Such as do onely displease us but bring no loss or hurt to us 2. Small injuries such as do not onely displease us but withal bring some little hurt to us either in our life goods or good-name 3. Greater injuries such as are not onely offensive to our persons but withal do prejudice our life and bring a ruine upon our estates both in goods and good-name The forgiveness between man and man is fourfold viz. 1. Of Revenge that is when we requite not evil for evil either by thought word or deed This belongeth to all men 2. Of private Punishments when men return not punishments for injuries done by way of requital though we cannot forgive wholly and perfectly yet we may truly and sincerely 3. Of Judgement when we judge not an injury done to be an injury 4. Of Satisfaction when it is due for some hurt done Now man is said to forgive man when he doth pardon either the wrong done Gen. 50.21 or the punishment appointed for the wrong 2 Sam. 19.23 or the satisfaction which the offender is bound to make Luke 7.4 or all of them as occasion is offered Mat. 18.32 The conditional words of this Petition are useful to us many ways viz. 1. To inform us that asking of pardon and testimony of Repentance go together he that receives the one must express the other for where God gives pardon there also he gives grace to repent and mercy is not granted but on condition of repentance Acts 2.37 38. 2. To teach us to forgive our brethren every day to renew our repentance and to humble our selves and to let us know That we are bound to forgive all persons Gol. 3.12 all sins Prov. 10. and at all times Mat. 17.22 when men offend us and that fully 3. To afford us a notable sign of pardon of sin namely our forgiving of and mercy to our brethren 4. To admonish us to beware of the common sin of this Age which is desire of revenge spite and grudging for if we forgive not we pray in effect that God would not forgive us yea we curse our selves 5. To discover unto us the gross hypocrisie of our Nature for so oft as we make this Petition we make profession of reformation of life in new obedience for this one branch of brotherly Reconciliation here professed doth presuppose our Conversion from all sin since true Repentance for one sin cannot stand with a purpose to live in any other 6. To stir us up to hunger after love mercy gentleness meekness and to endeavor to practice the same continually living in peace 2 Cor. 13.11 laboring to make peace Mat. 5.9 and shewing all tokens of love to our adversaries that they may assure themselves we have wholly forgiven them 7. To shew us the way how to keep true peace of conscience for ever for when we are at one with God and man we have a blessed peace and this is by calling upon God for the pardon of our sins every day and by following after peace with men in the practice of forgiveness and reconciliation which is never sincere without repentance 8. To acquaint us That no man living in malice can say the Lords Prayer as he ought to do Mat. 5.24 and that is a sign of grace to forgive Mat. 17.32 9. To exclude from pardon all such as persecute the Saints of God till they repent and practice as they pray in this Petition By this Petition we are taught 1. To bewail our carnal security going on from day to day in sin without thought of the debt thereby 2. To relye and settle our hearts in all estates in affliction temptation and death it self on the meer mercy of God in Christ by faith in his Blood for the pardon of our sins 3. Not to lie down in the sins we daily commit but renew our estate by true humiliation and repentance which consists in daily examination confession contrition supplication and conversion 4. To use this Petition as a remedy against despair which must not embolden any to sin presumptuously for the Lord hath said he will not be merciful to that man Deut. 29.19 5. That no man possibly can fulfil the Law for the Apostles themselves were commanded to ask pardon for sin every day whereby it is plain they could not fulfil the Law much less can we 6. In all godly maner to endeavor after what we pray for for it is gross also hypocrisie daily to ask the pardon of sin and still to continue in the daily practice thereof 7. Not onely to pray for the pardon of our own sins but of our brethrens also whereby we are taught that the good estate of their souls should be dear and precious to us In the Supplication of this Petition we pray for what soever tendeth to the forgiveness of our sins as 1. The knowledge of our sins without which the tongue may pray for pardon but the heart cannot Thus many poor and miserable souls ignorantly deceive themselves 2. Grace to acknowledge our sins for he that hides them shall not prosper Prov. 28.13 and all that know them do not confess them or else some way justifie themselves 3. Grace to be truly humbled for sin and that in the sense of Gods curse due for it else we are still in our sins and cannot pray to speed 4. Justification through the death and blood-shedding of Christ Rom. 4.25 That Christs righteousness may be made ours and our sins laid upon him for his mercies sake 5. Love and charity towards our brethren that God would give us a heart to be reconciled to them pardoning their offences against us The Deprecation of this Petition is against all things that may shut up Gods mercy and goodness from us as 1. Blindeness of minde and ignorance of our inward estate which is through ignorance of the Law 2. Hardness of heart which keepeth from repentance 3. Despair of Gods mercy and goodness which driveth from God to the Devil 4. Presumption which is the promising of happiness to ones self on false ground 5. Continuance in sin and the least opinion of
our Mediator is a Pacifier and Reconciler of God and Men as well by merit and desert as also by efficacy and forcible operation that is a middle person between God offended and angry with and for sin and mankinde offending and subject to the wrath of God To reconcile men unto God restoring them into favor causing men to love God and God men and that by making intreaty and satisfaction to Gods Justice for them and applying forcibly and effectually unto them his Satisfaction or Merit Regenerating them that they may cease from sinning and hearing their groans and petitions when they call upon him And it was necessary that our Mediator and Deliverer should be such a one as was very Man and that perfectly just too because the Justice of God requireth that the same Humane Nature which hath sinned do it self likewise make recompence for sin and because he that is himself a sinner cannot make recompence for others 1 Pet. 3.18 And that he should be also very God that he might by the power of his Godhead sustain in his flesh the burthen of Gods wrath Isa 53.3 and might recover and restore unto us that Righteousness and life which we lost 1 Joh. 1.2 You that Believe in Merits of your own And Sacrifice unto the God Vnknown That think a Pardon sent from Rome can make A Sin no Sin even for Saint Peters sake That do believe in Antichrist and hope To finde or make a Savior of the Pope Fall down before your Dagon But let all That profess one Faith Apostolical Believe in God and by one Faith accord In Jesus Christ his onely Son our Lord. § 4. Who was conceived by the Holy Ghost Born of the Virgin Mary CHrists flesh was conceived by the Holy Ghost not that he transfused or passed his substance into the flesh begotten but because in miraculous sort he formed in the Virgins womb of her substance the body of Christ so that it should not be contaminated or polluted with Original sin for he could not be conceived in such sort by the Holy Ghost that his flesh should issue from the Spirits substance And this blessed Virgin descended of the Linage of David to answer to the Divine Oracles as also for that our Faith might be the mor● confirmed to believe he was the very Messias promised to descend from the loyns of Abraham and David And in that this hapned in the Reign of Augustus very observable is the completion of the Divine Oracles and justly to be condemned the blindeness of the Jews Nor less deceived are they which hold the Virgin Mary to have been conceived without Original sin contrary to the tenor of the Scriptures and her own confession who acknowledged her self to have needed a Savior Luke 1.47 for she was born after the common course of the Nature of man and what need was there that Christ Jesus should be conceived by the Holy Ghost if he might have a pure conception free from Original sin without it Neither is it necessary to Salvation to believe it as an Article of Faith That Mary the Mother of Christ lived always a Virgin In the Humanity of Christ six things are principally considerable viz. 1. His Conception and Nativity 2. His Death and Passion 3. His Burial and Descension into Hell 4. His Resurrection 5. His Ascension into Heaven and his sitting there at the right hand of the Father 6. His coming again to Judgement Touching the conception or Nativity of Christ these six things are to be observed 1. That the News thereof was brought by an Angel 2. That he was conceived by the Holy Ghost that is by the power and vertue of it 3. That he was Born of a Virgin 4. That the Mother of our Lord was espoused to a man 5. That the blessed Virgin was of the Linage of David 6. That he was born in the time of the Reign of Augustus In the Angels Annunciation observe these three things 1. The Salutation which declared the free love of God to the Virgin 2. The delivery of the Message That of her should be born the Son of God 3. That she should be overshadowed by the Divine Power of the Holy Ghost Christs conception by the Holy Ghost signifieth three things viz. 1. That the mass of his Humane Nature was created or formed in the womb of the Virgin miraculously and beside the order of things disposed of God in Nature by the immediate operation of the Holy Ghost without the substance of man 2. That the Holy Ghost did in the same moment and by the same operation cleanse this mass and from the very point of the conception sanctifie it that is he caused that Original sin should not issue into it 3. The Union of the Humane Nature with the Word or the uniting of his flesh unto his Godhead Christ was conceived by the holy Ghost for these Reasons 1. Lest being born of flesh he should not be clean 2. That he might be a pure Sacrifice and sufficient Ransom for our Redemption 2 Cor. 5.12 3. That being pure and holy he might purifie us of all sin that he might also sanctifie us by his sanctity and holiness 4. That we may know he spake the very will of his Father that whatsoever this Son speaketh is the will of God and the Truth Christ was born of the Virgins substance chiefly for these Reasons 1. That we may know Christ our Mediator to be the true seed of David 2. That the Prophesies might be fulfilled Gen. 3. 49. Isa 7. That it may certainly appear unto us That this Jesus born of the Virgin is that Messias promised to the Fathers 3. That this Christs birth of a Virgin might be a Testimony that he is pure and without sin sanctified in the womb of the Virgin by the vertue of the Holy Ghost 4. That it might be a sign or figure of our Spiritual Regeneration which is not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Joh. 1.13 For what Reasons the Mother of our Lord was espoused to a man 1. That hence the honor of marriage might be commended unto us 2. That the chastity and good name of the Virgin might be provided for 3. That Joseph might be as a Guardian to the Virgin as a Foster-father to the childe 4. Lest the blasphemous enemies should say That the Christ of the Christians was unlawfully born To believe in the Son of God conceived by the Holy Ghost is to believe 1. That he was made man after a marvellous maner and that he was made one Christ of a Divine and Humane Nature 2. That he being so holily conceived and born doth purchase for us the right and power to be the Sons of God In this Article of the Creed we believe 1. That there be two Natures in Christ our Mediator that in one and the same Christ are Properties diverse and contrary Divine and Humane Finite and Infinite Passible
3. That we might be advertised of the fulfilling of the Prophesie Gen. 49.10 The Scepter shall not depart from Judah c. 4. For that his innocency might appear he was not to be privily taken away by the Jews nor to be drawn to death by tumult or disorderly In the sufferings Death Passion of Christ these things are specially to be considered 1. The History it self of Christs Passion agreeing with Gods Sacred Oracles and Prophesies 2. The cause of his Sufferings 3. The fruit or effects of Christs Passion 4. His example that we are also to enter into eternal life and heavenly glory by death as did Christ 5. The due Meditation in the whole The History of Christs passion runs thus 1. They apprehend him as they would a Varlet that had done some outrage coming unto him with swords and staves in the night time 2. They carry him first to one High Priest then to another then to Pilate then to Herod and back again to Pilate amongst whom he is mocked laughed at scornfully intreated and buffeted questioned withal spitted on and crowned with Thorns 3. They compel him to carry his heavy Cross till he nigh fainted under the burthen being without all pity and compassion towards him 4. Though they could not charge him justly with any fault at all worthy the least punishment insomuch as Pilate that Heathen Judge would have acquitted him yet they cryed out Crucifie him Crucifie him and had rather one Barabbas a Traytor and a Murtherer should be released then he 5. They hung him up between two Thieves the most harmless and innocent man in the world is numbred amongst the wicked and evil doers 6. Not content to pierce his hands and feet with nails by fastning him to the Cross but like hard-hearted wretches they gave him vinegar mingled with gall to drink in his great heat and thirst and upbraided him with scoffs when he was on departure 7. Not astonished at the wonderful darkness The renting of the Temples vail The opening of Graves The coming forth of the Dead their malice expired not with him but even after he was dead they pierced him with a spear even to the heart Joh. 19.34 In the cause of Christs Death and Passion consider these four 1. The object moving that is Mans Misery and the Devils Tyranny 2. The efficient cause 1. Impellent Internal being the love of God towards his creatures 2. The Obedient which was the very Son of God obedient to his Father 3. The Instrumental as the Devil the Scribes Pharisees and the rest 3. The Formal cause being the Passion it self historized by the Evangelists 4. The Final cause 1. That God might be glorified for his Justice and Mercy 2. That Salvation might be purchased for Man who was lost by reason of sin 3. That Christ might destroy the works of the Devil 1 Joh. 3. The fruit or effect of Christs Death is twofold 1. General Christ by his Passion conquered The Devil whom he hath bound Hell which he hath spoiled Death which he overcame The World which he despised The Punishment which he hath suffered Heaven which he hath opened 2. Special 1. Obedience is performed to God 2. The Devil is vanquished 3. Man is freed from sin and justified 4. An Equalification of Jew and Gentile 5. Death is disannulled The Meditation of our Saviors Passion consists chiefly in these six particulars viz. 1. How great was the Wrath of God for sin which could not be appeased but by the death of his onely begotten Son 2. How infinite was the Mercy of God the Father who would rather his Son should undergo the most ignominious death then that Man his creature should perish 3. How unconceiveable was the Love of the Son of God who for Mans sake took upon himself the wrath of his Father 4. We must apply the Merit of Christs Passion to our selves by faith his Obedience being made our Righteousness whereby through faith we appear to God not as sinners but justified 5. What the Lot of the Righteous is in this world who must suffer with him that they may be glorified with him Rom. 6. 6. That our future life may be formed into a better mould Rom. 6. being dead unto sin by the power and efficacy of his death The Reasons why Christ suffered so ignominious a death 1. That we might know the curse due for our sins to have layen upon him and so should be stirred up to the greater thankfulness considering how detestable a thing sin is that it should call for so ignominious a death 2. That it might be an exasperating of the punishment and so we so much the more confirmed in a true faith 3. That the Truth might answer to the Types and Figures and so we might know that they are all fulfilled in Christ The causes of Christs Burial viz. 1. That we might know that he was dead indeed 2. That the last part of his Humiliation whereby he did debase himself for our sakes might be accomplished 3. A certain Type was thereby to be fulfilled it was foretold by the Type of Jonas 4. He would be Buried that we might not be afraid of the grave but might know that our Head Christ Jesus had laid open the way unto us by Death and the Grave to celestial Glory 5. That we might know how we are indeed delivered from death for in his Death a testimony and record whereof is his Burial consisteth our Salvation 6. That it might be manifest That he was able indeed to rise again and that his Resurrection was not imaginary but the real and true Resurrection of a reviving corps 7. That we being Spiritually dead that is to sin might rest from sin The duties required of us to set forth our Faith in Christ crucified are these viz. 1. Godly sorrow in bewailing our sins the onely cause of these great sufferings of our dear Savior 2. The mortification of our fleshly members and sinful concupiscences and that for three special causes 1. By continuing in sin we make our selves accessary's of Christs death 2. Because all such as unto whom Christs death is effectual to do away their sins are conformable unto him in his Death and Burial 3. Because no man following the trade of sin can be Christs Disciple 3. Patience and joy in suffering any thing for Christs sake and the Gospel and that chiefly for two causes 1. By suffering we are made like unto him Mat. 10.25 2. Because in suffering for his Truth he doth grace us forasmuch as he doth take us for his Martyrs and Witnesses 4. To remain unterrified with the pangs and approaching of death unto us because Christ in dying overcame death and took away the sting thereof 5. For this infinite love of Christ toward us to love him most earnestly again and all his members the Faithful for his sake That Christ descended into Hell all found Christians acknowledge but in the interpretation of this Article there is not that
consisteth partly in the duties of Superiors towards their Inferiors and so of the contrary of which duties as also of Civil order comprised under them is spoken in the Fifth Commandment partly in the duties of one Neighbor towards another which are ratified in the rest of the Commandments 2. Internal which consisteth in the internal affection of the heart being the very uprightness of mens affections towards their Neighbor which is to be included and understood in all the former Commandments and is prescribed in the Tenth and last Commandment In what respect the Second Table is said to be like unto the First viz. 1. As touching the kinde of the chief Worship also in respect of the Ceremonial which are not the chief Worship of God 2. As touching the kindes of Eternal Punishment because the transgression of both Tables meriteth eternal punishment 3. As touching the unseparable coherence of the Love of God and our Neighbor which love of God is declared and exercised by our love to our Neighbor The Reasons for which obedience is to be yielded to the Second Table 1. That in this Obedience God himself may be worshipped and our love towards him shewed by our love towards our Neighbor for his sake 2. That by the love of our Neighbor our conformity with God may appear 3. That the Society of Mankinde may be preserved which was ordained of God for the celebration and magnifying of his Name Certain Rules concerning the substance and meaning of the Decalogue in general and for Expounding the Commandments viz. 1. The Moral Law or Decalogue is to be understood according to the Interpretation of Scripture not according to the sense or judgement of man onely or of Moral Philosophy 2. The Decalogue requireth in all the Commandments obedience both external and internal chargeth the understanding heart and affection commandeth perfect obedience not in parts onely but also in degrees not onely in all the duties but also in the degrees of these duties 3. The obedience of the First Commandment must be the motive or final Cause of our obedience towards the rest of the Commandments otherwise it is not the Worship of God but hypocrisie whatsoever we do 4. We must above all things consider the drift or end of each Commandment for the end of the Law sheweth the meaning thereof and by the end we shall judge aright and easily of the means 5. We must know that the same vertue is often in a diverse respect commanded in diverse Commandments that is the same vertue is required for performing of obedience unto many Commandments 6. In Affirmative Commandments commanding Vertues are comprehended the Negative forbidding the contrary Vices so likewise in Negative Commandments are comprehended the Affirmative Vertues 7. We must take heed that we restrain not the Commandments and take them too straitly for in the General all the Specials and in the chief Special the next allyed Specials and in the Effect the Causes be contained So that under one kinde manifest are all of like sort whether commanded or forbidden yea and the Means whereby the things are done are also commanded or forbidden 8. The Obedience or Commandments of the Second Table yield or give place to the Obedience or Commandments of the First Table The Commandments of the First Table are absolutely to be kept and for themselves the other of the Second Table are to be kept for the First Though they are alike as concerning the kinde of Moral Worship the kinde of punishment and as concerning their coherence or connexion 9. Every Negative Commandment doth binde always and at and unto all times Every Affirmative Commandment doth onely binde always but not at and unto all times also 10. Howsoever the least Commandment is not so small but the breach thereof deserveth Eternal Death yet the breaches of some Commandments are greater and more heinous then of others 11. There is so near a relation betwixt all the Commandments of the Moral Law that whosoever observeth all saving onely in one point is guilty of all James 2.10 Because one and the same is the Author of them all 12. To the breach of every Commandment there is annexed a curse although it be not expressed The use of the Commandments 1. To lay open our Miseries Rom. 7.7 9 13 14 18. 2. To whip us to Christ Gal. 3.24 3. To be our Guide in all things that we are to do when we are come to him Mat. 19.17 18. There are certain Libertine Antinomies who contend That the Law is not to be taught in the Church of Christ misinterpreting the Sacred Text to cloke their Rebellion against the Law of God with a pretence of Obedience to the Spirit of Regeneration But this Heresie was long since refuted Mat. 5.17 Rom. 3.31 The Law 's voyce was Thunder the Tables Stone Break one and all who keeps not all keeps none Most sweetly tun'd they to each other are In Practice then thou may'st not make them jar Obedience they do for each other call A joynt Obedience is requir'd in all But who can keep the Law Who 's just an hour Frail Man hadst thou a Will where is thy Power Though since the Fall this is thy power above Yet is the Law fulfill'd by Christ and Love The First COMMANDMENT §. 1. I am the Lord thy God Thou shalt have no other gods but me THerefore thou shalt have Me that Jehovah which have manifested my self in the World by my Creation Preservation and Government thereof that Jehovah which have declared my self in my Church by the Participation and Manifestation of my self to be the true God that God alone Therefore Thou shalt have none other gods that is beside me the onely true God neither shalt thou have them before me that is in my sight that is in thy heart or elswhere Now not to have the true God is either to have no God or to have more Gods or another then the known God or not to acknowledge God to be such unto us as he is manifested Likewise not to trust in God and to subject and submit our selves unto God in true humility and patience not to hope for all good things from him alone not to love and fear him for we are here commanded to have the Lord for our God that is to love him above all to fear him above all to put our whole trust in him and to make our prayers to him alone And he onely hath no other gods who is so dead to the world and doth so adhere to God that he is neither puffed up with Riches nor cast down with Poverty nor swelled with Honor nor pined with Ignominy nor made joyful by Life nor afraid of Death but this sufficeth him That he hath God knowing his Savior disdain'd both Riches and Glory and Pleasure and Life The Preface of this Commandment belongeth to the whole Decalogue and the Commandment it self is mixed with a Negative Prohibition and an Affirmative Command The Duty
and so was it with Pauls Viper Faiths double Act 1. The Direct Act of Faith by which we apprehend and take Christ 2. The Reflect Act by which we know and are assured that we have apprehended and taken Christ Faith hath also this double Quality 1. To lay hold of Christ offered 2. To empty a man of all things else whatsoever especially 1. Of all opinion of Righteousness in himself 2. Of all opinion of strength and ability to help himself Faith admits Degrees in four respects viz. 1. In Perswasion That Christ is offered that he is ours that he is given by God the Father 2. In regard of the difficulty and hardness of the things to be believed 3. In regard of the Extent of it when there are more things revealed to us 4. In regard of the Proof and here as the Evidence of Sanctification is more so is the Assurance Opinion is but an Assent to the Truth with a fear lest the contrary may be true So that Faith and Opinion differ in these three things 1. In the Object which is something in its own nature uncertain but Faith pitcheth upon the Word of God which is in its own nature infallible and cannot deceive 2. In the working Opinion being a matter of Speculation and no more Faith a matter of Practice but that is not all 3. In overcoming Doubts for Opinion goeth no farther but stays in a Doubt but Faith proceeds to full Assurance To be rooted and grounded in Faith is To have the first ground right and so to proceed from one to another As thus 1. Stedfastly to believe the Scriptures in general 2. All the Promises therein contained in particular 3. To apply and appropriate them to our selves justly and upon good ground No man knoweth what Justifying Faith is but he that hath it whose true Properties are these 1. He being convicted thereof in his Conscience knoweth that whatsoever things are spoken in the Scriptures are true and Divine 2. He findeth himself bound to believe them 3. He is certain That through Christs Satisfaction he is received of God into favor and is endowed with the Holy Ghost and is by him regenerated and directed 4. He applyeth to himself all those things concluding that they belong unto him 5. He rejoyceth in the present Blessings which he hath but most of all in the certain and perfect Salvation to come And this is that peace of Conscience which passeth all Understanding 6. He hath a Will to obey the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles without any exception in doing or suffering whatsoever is therein commanded 7. He is certain that his Faith though it be in this life imperfect and languishing and often very much eclipsed yet being builded upon the Promise of God which is unchangeable doth never altogether fail or dye Faith is said to work four ways viz. Towards 1. God by a quiet and peaceable Conscience grounded on Gods love Rom. 5.1 2. Our Neighbor by mutual concord especially in matters of Religion Acts 1.14 3. Our selves by Patience with joy and thankfulness in Afflictions Rom. 5.3 4. 4. The Devil and the World by victory over their Assaults and Temptations 2 Joh. 5.4 5. 1 Pet. 5.8 9. The work of Faith towards God 1. Peace in Conscience from our Reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 2. Love towards God and Christ Luke 7.47 3. Hope of the Glory of the Sons of God in the world to come and joy in troubles Rom. 5.3 4. Boldness to speak unto God grounded on a sure confidence in him Eph. 3.12 5. A Confession of the Truth 2 Cor. 4.13 Rom. 10.10 6. Obedience to God Rom. 1.5 for which Abraham is chronicled as the Father of the Faithful 7. A Perseverance and Constancy in the Truth of Christ Joh. 6.68 And a commending of our Souls to God Acts 7.59 The work of Faith towards our neighbors 1. A knitting of the mindes of men one towards another Acts 1.14 2. It extendeth Brotherly love even to our Enemies 1 Tim. 1.6 The work of Faith towards our selves viz. 1. It makes us entertain with joy and thankfulness Gods loving Chastisements Rom. 5.3 4. 2. A Resting upon his Providence and Promises for Blessings Temporal and Spiritual Mat. 6.25 3. It affects our hearts with comfort strengthning them against all troubles Joh. 14.1 4. It worketh in us a hatred of sin and of our former ways with shame and grief Joh. 12.46 A thing may be said not to be done of Faith three ways viz. 1. Conscientia Dubitante when a thing is done with a doubting or unresolved Conscience as in those that are weak in knowledge 2. Conscientia Errante thus the Mass-Priest sinneth in saying Mass though in his Conscience he think it the Ordinance of God 3. Conscientia Repugnante though upon Error and false judgement of the Conscience it is in the doer a sin Thus an Anabaptist that holds it unlawful to Swear sinneth if he take an Oath In what sense Faith is called Effectual 1. When it does its proper Office or Function namely To Take Christ 2. When it is true real and substantial when it is opposed to vain Faith 3. When it is an operative lively stirring and a fruitful Faith 4. When it goes thorough with the work in hand that is when it Sanctifieth the heart throughout in respect of parts and throughout in regard of time when it brings a man to the end of his Salvation when it carries a man through all impediments when it leaps over all difficulties a growing pervailing overcoming Faith Wherein the Effectualness of Faith consists viz. 1. In being well built that is when the preparation is sound and full by Humiliation 2. When a man believes the Promises on sure infallible grounds and sees them distinctly 3. When the Will takes Christ out of love to him not his not out of fear nor out of mistake 4. When it turns not onely the Will but all the Affections when it turns the whole man when it shoots it self into life and practice The Causes of Uneffectual Faith viz. 1. The Taking of Christ upon misinformation without due consideration 2. The Taking Christ out of fear not out of true love to him as men in sickness 3. The taking Christ for the love of the good things by him not of his person 4. Want of Humiliation that should go before it 5. Because Faith is not grounded aright when men falsly take to themselves a perswasion of the Remission of their sins upon an uncertain and wrong ground The Reasons why God accepts no Faith but such as is Effectual 1. Because otherwise it is not Faith for it is dead 2. Other Faith hath no Love which condition is required 3. Other Faith the Devils have for they believe and tremble 4. Else it works no Mortification for we must deny our selves 5. Else Christ should lose the end of his coming into the world 6. Because good Works are the way to Salvation The usual means that
Prosperity 2. It must be sincere and sound not feigned or hypocritical Rom. 12.9 3. It must be fervent increasing inwardly and shewing it self in the fruits thereof outwardly 1 Pet. 4.8 4. It must be constant holding out unto the end Heb. 13.1 5. It must not be for any private by-respects 6. We must love those that are our enemies and hate us Mat. 5.46 47. The signs of true Christian Brotherly love 1. If we love God unfeignedly with our hearts and labor to keep his Commandments 1 Joh. 5.2 2. If we love without servile and slavish fear for there is no such fear in love 1 Joh. 4.18 3. If we can forgive wrongs forget to revenge them and pray for them that did them 1 Cor. 13. 4. If it be not onely in time of Prosperity but when he stands in most need of our love if it be more manifest to our Brother in his adversity then in his prosperity Prov. 17.17 5. If it be not for outward respects but because they are the Sons of God 6. If it be not outward in shew onely but inward in the heart Motives perswasive or Reasons to inforce our love to our Brethren 1. Except we love our Brethren we do not love God and if not God he not us 1 Joh. 4.20 2. Except we have this love we know not God for God is love 1 Joh. 4.8 3. If we love not our Brethren we abide in death 1 Joh. 3.14 are none of Gods children 1 Joh. 3.10 but the Devils 4. He that loveth not his Brother is a manslayer neither shall he be saved 1 Joh. 3.15 5. Because God so commandeth us to love one another yea on pain of eternal death Heb. 2.2 The Vices repugnant unto the love of God viz. 1. The casting away of Gods love or the contempt and hatred of God which is through the alienation of our Nature from God and Gods Justice and by reason of an inclination thereof to sin therefore to flie and shun God accusing and punishing Sin 2. Inordinate love of our selves and of other creatures which is to prefer our Lusts or Pleasures or Life or Glory or any other thing before God and his Will and Glory and to be willing rather to neglect and offend him then to part from those things which we love 3. A feigned love of God an hypocritical counterfeit or self-respecting love whereby also we may here offend Now we cannot here ever offend in the excess because we never love God so much as we should Hail O thou lovely Grace whose rare feature When Faith and Hope vanish from the Creature Shall ever Lustre forth in Heaven be As now of Sweetness full of Majesty By thee the Graces all enamell'd are 'Mongst whom thou shin'st the Heart Attractive Star By thee the Saints are ever so inflam'd To be but warm th' are holily asham'd Sweet Flame perfume my Soul and in thy fire Ravish'd let me from whence thou cam'st aspire §. 7. Of the Fear of God THe last Vertue required in this First Commandment is the Fear of God which being formerly touch'd and though taken in a strict consideration was yet found to be a great part of the Worship of God and an infallible Sign of the true Religion We shall therefore in this place speak a word more of it onely in reference thereto Now whereas it is said to be a great part of the Worship of God it is understood chiefly and principally of the Inward Worship which alone is properly simply and of it self the Worship of God the Outward is not simply the Worship of God but onely so far forth as it is quickned by the Inward and grounded on it God is a Spirit his Worship is Spiritual This is the Worship of the Minde the Heart the Conscience the Will and Affections for Man by all these joyntly and severally performeth Worship and Service to his Creator and this is the Spiritual Worship of the Inward Man the Foundation of all true Worship of God whereas the Outward Worship is onely that whereby the Inward is testified outwardly by the speech and actions The Worship of God according to his Word consisteth in things which God either giveth us as his Titles and Works or requireth of us as Hearing his Word Prayer Sacraments Vows and Swearing in all which thou shalt fear the Lord thy God because he is the Lord Levit. 14.19 To which may be added Outward Adoration Confession not ordinary or Ecclesiastical Confession but such as is made before the Adversary and Fasting in all which the Fear of God which is taken for the whole Worship of God or for the general Obedience according to all Gods Commandments Prov. 1.7 This Fear which ariseth from a knowledge of Gods Justice and of his Power to punish sins from a consideration of of that Right and Dominion which he hath over all Creatures This Fear which is an acknowledging of sin and the wrath of God keeps the whole Man in a Religious Respect a holy Dreadfulness and in an awful Reverence of the great and mighty Majesty of Heaven and Earth commands him to walk as in the Presence of God that even his whole Conversation seems one undiscontinued holy and Religious Adoration The whole Worship of God may stand in these five particulars viz. 1. To Fear and Love him above all 2. To Believe in all his Promises without doubting 3. To Call upon him in all our necessities 4. To be Thankful unto him for all his Benefits which shews it self in these 2 things viz. 1. An Acknowledgement of the heart That our Souls and whatsoever we have is Gods and proceedeth from his Blessing alone 2. In a Consecration of our Bodies Souls Lives Callings and Labors to the honor and service of God 5. To be Obedient to all his Commandments The Worship of God consisteth in things that are 1. Perpetual which are 1. Confidence in God Prov. 3.5 22.19 2 Chron. 20.20 Psal 37.3 5. 2. Love of God Deut. 6.5 Joh. 22.5 25.11 Mat. 22.37 3. Reverence of God Mat. 4.10 Heb. 12.28 Deut. 6.33 10.20 2. Belonging to this life as 1. Hope in God Psal 37.7 62.5 6 7. Isa 38.18 1 Pet. 1.21 2. Fear of God Deut. 4.10 6.2 13. 10.12 20. 14.13 Rev. 14.7 The Heads of Inward Worship are two 1. Adoration whereby a man upon a vile and base estimation of himself subjects himself his Soul to the Glory and Majesty of God 2. A cleaving to God which is by Faith Love Hope and Inward Invocation Adoration is twofold 1. Religious in which Religion and godliness is exercised wherein are these two The Intention of the Minde The outward prostrating of the Body 2. Civil which fellow-Creatures give one to the other and this pertaineth onely to the Second Table Two principal grounds of Adoration in the heart 1. Abnegation or denyal of our selves when we esteem our selves to be meer nothing 2. Exaltation of Gods Majesty above all the things in
Revenge when a man hath carried a grudge in his heart long before 2. Without Deliberation when a man without all former malice is suddenly carried by fury and anger to slay another This kind is distinguish'd from the other by the name of Manslaughter 2. Casual killing commonly called Chance Medley when a man killeth another having no purpose to hurt him Now this Commandment is not to be understood of Casual but Voluntary killing And the Presumptions of this Casual killing may by these viz. 1. If a man kill another having no ill-will or anger towards him nor to any other for his sake neither is moved thereto by Covetousness or any Affection 2. If he be doing the lawful duties of his particular Calling 3. If he be well occupied doing some lawful work beside his Calling 4. If he be doing a thing which he ordinarily practiseth keeping his usual place and time Killing is not always Murther for God gives a man power to kill three ways viz. 1. By the written Word Thus Princes and Governors and under them Executioners are allowed to kill Malefactors that deserve death and thus Soldiers are warranted to kill in a lawful War 2. By an extraordinary Commandment and so Abraham might lawfully have killed his Son if the Angel of the Lord had not staid his hand Gen. 22. 3. By an extraordinary instinct which is answerable to a special Commandment and so Phineas slew Zimri and Cozbi without guilt of Murther Psal 106.30 31. Murther is either 1. In the Minde onely as Anger Hatred Envying Malice c. 2. By Action 1. In the Gestures onely by our outward Members 2. In the Deed it self And this may be either By the Tongue in speech By the hand or otherwise Murther is a most grievous sin for these Reasons viz. 1. Because it is the Destruction of a Little World as Man is rightly called wherein the wonderful Wildom Power Providence and Mercy of God doth as much appear 2. Because it is the Defacing of Gods Image which is in every man This Reason is rendred in the first Law against Murther Gen. 9.6 David might not build the Temple because he had shed blood 3. Because it is an Encroaching upon Gods Office to whom alone it belongeth to call men when it pleaseth him out of this world And God hath not made man with such offensive parts as he hath done other Creatures 4. Because it is the greatest breach of Love and Peace and so the greatest sin against man Joh. 8.44 Therefore the sin of Murther singularly is said to desile the Land Numb 35.37 To avoid this horrible sin of Murther let us sly these sins especially 1. Pride the very Fountain of Contention which Murther followeth for Pride will endure nothing and is so wasteful upon it self that the Poor may starve and perish without relief 2. Covetousness for he that is greedy of gain will hunt after the precious life of man Prov. 1. 3. Riotness Drunkenness and Whoredom whereon much bloodshed hath followed and Self-murther 4. Hard heartedness when we have objects of pity for we make our selves accessary of their death who perish whom our relief might have preserved Prov. 21.13 Cruelty is one main Breach of this Commandment The Properties whereof are these viz. 1. In the very look and countenance Such was Cains towards Abel Gen. 4. and Labans against Jacob Gen. 31.2 2. In the behavior when it is harsh and churlish Such was Nabals 1 Sam. 23.3 3. When any way too much severity is used by the Rich towards the Poor by Officers towards Malefactors or by Governors towards such as are under them expressing a hateful minde towards them 4. In the unmerciful usage of the dumb Creatures working them without Reason pinching them in things necessary beating or killing them without mercy or otherwise using them so as they grow diseased thereby All these shew a cruel minde Prov. 12.10 5. In revenging Injuries for we must not revenge our own wrongs but leave that to God to whom it properly belongeth Rom. 12.19 Motives to perswade us to lay aside all private Revenge viz. 1. Let us lay before us the Example of Christ the Author and Finisher of our Salvation 1 Pet. 2.21 2. Let us set before us the Example of the faithful Servants that have lived in all Ages in the time of the Law and under the Gospel 3. It is Gods proper Right Office and Royalty it belongeth to him peculiarly to take vengeance and therefore is called The Lord God the Avenger Psal 94.1 4. God hath graciously passed his Promise to us That himself will take our cases into his hands and pay them home that do oppress us Rom. 12.29 It were now a fruit of infidelity to revenge our selves and not believe him at his Word 5. The consideration of the forgiveness that our selves receive at the hands of God Col. 3.13 6. It is against all good Law Right Reason and common Sense that any one man should be both Accuser Witness Judge and Executioner but every one that taketh upon him to right his own cause and to revenge himself doth all these Murther may be committed as wel against the Soul 1 Cor. 8.11 as the body of a man even when he is an occasion of his stumbling and falling into sin As thus 1. Ministers murther or at least make themselves guilty of murthering the Souls of the people committed to their charge when as through their default any of them perish Ezek. 3. 2. Parents and Masters and all private Governors are Murtherers if by their neglect or bad example their Children Servants or Pupils perish by Ignorance Prophaneness or any other sinful course of life which they might have amended in them by teaching charging reproving requiring and by good example 3. Every one that maketh his Neighbor drunk Hab. 2.15 stirreth him up to strife inticeth him to any sin or doth countenance favor and defend it to the heartening of a man on therein to his destruction shall answer as a Soul-murtherer As the very act of murther is a most odious sin so also are the degrees thereof as Railing Anger and the like For 1. The heart and tongue is hereby set on fire of the fire of Hell Jam. 3. 2. To sin thus is to be a Murtherer before God for He that hateth his brother is a Man-slayer 1 Joh. 3.15 3. It is the proper Brand of the Wicked His throat is an open Sepulchre the poison of Asps is under his lips his mouth is full of cursing and bitterness Helps to avoid Rash Anger and all such murtherous Affections may be such as these viz. 1. To consider our own weaknesses and sins Gal. 6.1 2. Tit. 3.2 2. To consider wisely the Providence of God in all indignities that are by any man offered to us as David did when Shimei cursed him 2 Sam. 16.10 3. To avoid the company of froward and hasty persons by whom thou mightest be provoked Prov. 22.24 even as a man keepeth Gunpowder
worse sense 24. To defend an evil Cause and impugn the contrary 25. To write or spread abroad infamous Libels 26. To raze Deeds or any Testimonial Evidences 27. To counterfeit another mans hand or to forge any thing 28. To suppress the Truth whether by fraud violence favor or by any other means 29. By delivering our judgement of any person or thing in words of a double sense 30. To refuse to give Testimony when we can and ought being lawfully thereto required by the Magistrate 31. To deny to give an account of our Faith when Error stands in competition with Truth 32. To lye though it be for never so good an end Zech. 13.3 The Vertues required in this Commandment viz. 1. A Rejoycing for the Credit and good Estimation of our Neighbor Gal. 5.22 2. Willingly to acknowledge that goodness we see in any man whatsoever and onely to speak of the same Tit. 3.2 Moreover we must withal desire receive and believe Reports of our Neighbors good Acts 16.1 2 3. Notwithstanding this must be so performed by us that in no wise we approve or allow of the vices and faults of men 2 Chron. 25.2 27.2 3. Fairness of Minde being a vertue taking well things well or doubtfully spoken or done and interpreting them in the better part as far as there are any reasonable causes to induce thereto and doth not easily conceive suspitions neither sticketh upon suspitions though they be such as are just and have reasonable causes nor determineth ought by them unless the Honor of God be interested therein yea to interpret a doubtful evil to the better part 1 Cor. 13.5 7. Gen. 37.31 32 33. 4. Not to believe an evil Report running abroad amongst the Common People by the whispering of Talebearers as it were by Conduit-pipes Psal 15.3 Jer. 40.14 16. Prov. 25.23 5. Taciturnity or Silentness which withholdeth in silence things secret and unnecessary to be spoken where when and as far as is needful and avoiding overmuch babling and talkativeness to keep secret the offence of our Neighbor except it must of necessity be revealed Prov. 10.12 Mat 1.19 18.16 Contrary hereto is prating and foolish pratling also Peevishness and Morosity 6. To get a good Name and Estimation among men and to keep the same when we have gotten it Phil. 4.8 Now a good Name is gotten thus viz. 1. If we seek the Kingdom of God before all things repenting us of our sins and with an earnest desire embrace and follow after Righteousness Prov. 10.7 Mark 14.9 2. We must have a care both to judge and speak well of others Mat. 7.2 Eccl. 7.13 3. We must abstain from all kinde of wickedness for one onely vice or sin doth obscure and darken a mans good Name Eccl. 10.1 4. We must in all things earnestly seek for the Glory of God onely and not our own Mat. 6.5 6. 7. Truth which is a firm Election in the Will whereby we constantly embrace true Sentences and Opinions speak that which is true keep Covenants and Promises and avoid all deceitful dissembling both in speech and outward gesture and all to the Glory of God and the Safety of our Neighbor Repugnant to this vertue are all Lyes as well Lyes of courtesie called Officious Lyes as others also vanity or levity and the like 8. Simplicity which is open Truth without wrinkles or circumlocutions a vertue which doth properly and plainly speak and do such things as are true right and honest with a single heart To this is repugnant Doubleness in Maners and Conversation 9. Constancy being a vertue not departing from the known Truth neither altering purpose without good and necessary causes but constantly speaking and doing such things as are True Just and Necessary Contrary whereto is Lightness and Pertinacy 10. Affability or Readiness of speaking which is a vertue gladly and with signification of good will hearing answering speaking where need is upon a necessary cause Rash Censure of men being a high breach of this Commandment may be committed these many ways viz. 1. When things are well done to carp and cavil at them without cause that is just 2. When actions and speeches indifferent are taken in the worse sense 3. When upon light occasion and uncertain Reports we suspect and surmise evil of our Neighbor 4. When we see any want in our Neighbors speech or behavior to make it worse then it was or indeed it is 5. When we spread abroad and publish the wants of men to defame them which might better be concealed and in Conscience and Charity ought so to be 6. When we speak nothing but the Truth of another yet withal do insinuate thereby some evil of the party in the hearts of the hearers This is a pestilent practice and too much used 7. When in hearing the Word Preached and sins reproved in the Congregation some misapply the same with spight against the Ministers person or his Ministery Reasons against Rash Judgement viz. 1. The practice of it cannot stand with Christian Charity for Charity bindes us to walk in Love and Love suspecteth not evil but thinks the best always 2. When thou seest a man erre consider thy self art or may be guilty of the like or worse 3. Consider That God the Father hath committed all Judgement unto his Son who now judgeth by his Ministers 4. Consider That thou art unable to judge aright of other mens actions being ignorant of many circumstances thereof for thou knowest not haply with what minde or to what end the action was done nor the cause why he did it nor the state of his person nor the maner of his temptation thereto 5. He that gives rash Judgement of another is worse then a Thief that steals away a mans goods for he robs him of his good Name which Solomon saith is to be chosen above great riches Prov. 22.1 Three things Required in judging of others aright viz. 1. We must have recourse to the cause of our Judgement for if the Cause be insufficient then our Judgement is Rash and unlawful 2. We must have Authority and Warrant by lawful calling to give Judgement or else some thing which is answerable thereto though the Judgement be private for private men in private Judgement though they want this Authority by a lawful calling yet if they have that which is answerable thereto that is the Affection of Christian Love then they may judge 3. We must alway have a good end of our Judgement that is the Reformation and amendment not the defarning of our Brother Since Truth is the chief and principal thing required in this Commandment consider in the last place that there is a fourfold Truth viz. 1. Of Judgement when a mans Judgement agreeth with Gods Word which is the Touchstone of Truth So as the Principles of that Religion which he professeth and his opinion concerning the same are ground thereon and may be warranted thereby This is the ground of all the rest to which must
whereof are not quite extinct in us by sin for every man thinks reverently of God by Nature 3. At the first conceiving of them the party is smitten with an extraordinary fear his flesh is troubled and oftentimes sickness and faintings do follow Unclean thoughts which have their residence in the minde of man are of two sorts viz. 1. Inward and such as have their Original from the flesh and arise of the corruption of mans Nature though stirred up by the Devil These at the very first conceiving are our sins though they have no long abode in the heart 2. Outward and are such as have relation to an outward cause or beginning Of which sort are those evil thoughts that are conveyed into the minde by the Devil and if we take no pleasure in them nor yield consent unto them they are not to be accounted our sins but the Devils by whom they were suggested Divers are the kindes of wicked Thoughts These three are the most common viz. 1. Voluptuous set upon Vanities Pleasures Delights Sports and such like 2. Ambitious set upon Pride aspiring after Honor who shall be greatest 3. Malicious enviously bent towards others seeking to do Mischief The Conditions required in Wishing Evil against others that our Thoughts may not be evil viz. 1. All Imprecations or evil Wishings which are made absolutely without some Prophesie or special Revelation are Sins 2. They must be done without private hatred and desire of Revenge 3. They must be done in respect of Gods glory onely and the preservation of the true Church 4. We must not imprecate or wish evil as it is an evil as it is the Destruction of them against whom we wish it Two special Rules to guard and keep the heart safe from evil thoughts 1. That the Word of God dwell plentifully in us by daily meditation of the Commandments Promises and Threatnings revealed in the same 2. To establish our Thoughts by counsel Prov. 20.18 that is not once to think or conceive so much as a thought but upon advice and direction taken at God and his Word This Rule we must practice in the use of our Senses Speeches and Actions Can man be when the Heart gives not consent Guilly the Breach of this Commandment 'T is so for since our Parents fell we all Are subject to this Sin Original ●et so as first we must take pleasure in This new conceived Embryo of Sin ●r if we hate the Thought strive to reject The Motions that do on our Hearts reflect The Sin is Satans and not ours for we Not tickled with this thought of Sin are free CHAP. VI. Of Gods Love to Man of Election Creation Redemption Vocation Justification Sanctification Adoption Regeneration Conversion from Sin to Good Works Repentance and New-Obedience I. THe greatest Evidence of Gods Love that could be given consisteth in the Forgiveness of Sin which is well known to all that know the end of Christs coming which was to save Sinners 1 Tim. 1.15 and the extent of this Love of God reacheth to all Sins except that against the Holy Ghost which neither is unremissable in its own nature as it is sin but as the party so sinning is uncapable of Repentance and consequently of Mercy so that there is no sin that excepted but cometh within the compass of Gods Mercy and Pardon upon Repentance The Reason is because the Mercy of God is greater then all sins whatsoever and the Sacrifice of Christ is a sufficient Price of Redemption for all his blood cleanseth from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 From this extent of Gods Love it may be well inferred That Mans destruction is of himself either because he maliciously despights the Spirit of Grace or wilfully rejects the offer of Pardon In the order of Redemption God hath made mans sin pardonable but man by his impenitency makes it not to be pardoned for God excludeth none from the participation of his Mercy his Pardon being offered to all which yet must be understood of Gods outward Dispensation and Manifestation of his Mercy by the Ministery of the Word wherein no difference is made betwixt persons nor exemption of any So as it calleth not into question the Secret Counsel and Eternal Decree of God Again it must be known That it is to be referred to the several degrees sorts and conditions of men betwixt which God maketh no difference as Honorable Mean Rich Poor Learned Unlearned Old Yong Free Bond Male Female Magistrate Subject c. Lastly it is to be applied to the All sufficiency of Christs Sacrifice which is available to take away the sins of the most notorious sinners that can be as well as any other sinners Gods love to Man appears both 1. In this life 1. Before the Fall in making us after his own Image 2. After the Fall by repairing his Image again in us which we had lost 2. In the World to come by crowning us with Immortality for the Goodness of God endureth for ever Psal 103.17 Gods love to Man opened in the Scripture by these degrees viz. 1. God hath no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turn from his way and live Ezek. 33.11 2. That he deferreth mitigateth and taketh away punishments inviting all men to Repentance 3. That he debaseth himself to relieve our infirmities by his Spirit Word Sacraments and Miracles 4. That he embraceth with singular love his Chosen so that he saveth and delivereth them for ever from sin and all Evils and comforteth all in Afflictions Rev. 7.21 5. That he chose rather to bring to pass this our Delivery even by the Incarnation and Death of his onely begotten Son then that all Mankinde should perish Joh. 3. 6. That he promiseth and performeth all those things of his own free goodness Exod. 34.19 7. That he doth those things towards sinners not onely unworthy of them but even his Enemies Rom. 5.10 Two things which highly commend Gods love viz. 1. The Freeness of his Grace which is every way so free that the Goodness which he sheweth to his creature is altogether of himself and from himself Joh. 3.16 Rom. 5.10 when there was none to mediate for us Gen. 3.15 God offered Grace and freely gave his Son to be a Mediator This is to be opposed against mans unworthiness 2. The Riches of his Mercy which are unutterable unconceiveable according to Gods Greatness so is his Mercy Infinite and reacheth above the Heavens so as he may be said to be Rich in Mercy Eph. 2.4 Abundant in Goodness Exod. 34.6 This is to be opposed to the Multitude and the Heinousness of our Sins God is Rich in Love and Mercy to Man divers ways viz. 1. Because he doth perform more effects of his Love in regard of himself then we have need of or our misery require for to the Remission of sins a simple Pardon had been sufficient but hereto he addes the gift of his Son by his death to satisfie for us by his
proceed not from Faith Yet shall the common actions of our Calling be reckoned Good Works if they come from Faith and Love if they be done as to the Lord and so he will accept them and for this cause the good purposes in many are naught because they have not Faith for their ground Good Works are the Fruit of Sanctification they go not before Justification but they follow after a man is justified For first by Grace we are justified and being justified we perform Good Works for man cannot do any work that is good and godly being not yet Regenerate but when he is prevented by the Grace of Christ and the Inspiration of his Spirit by the Holy Ghost then he may do good Works and the best Works before the Grace of Christ and the Inspiration of his Spirit are not pleasing to God forasmuch as they spring not of Faith yea before Justification they have the Nature of Sin Now here we must know that good Works are in a kinde necessary to Salvation yet not as Causes thereof either efficient or helping any way but onely as an evidence whereby we may know that we are in the way to Salvation For Faith is necessary and good Works are the Tokens and Fruits of Faith and so are necessary also In a Good Work 1. The End thereof must be the glory of God which chiefly consists in Fear Obedience Thankfulness 2. The Action it self in its own Nature must be just and warrantable 3. The Circumstances honest and seasonable proportioned to the justness of the Work it self 4. The Means direct and lawful and approveable in the sight of God 5. The Fountain the Heart sincere and sanctified In the doing of every good Work acceptable to God these Rules are to be observed viz. 1. The person of the Doer must be acceptable to God by a justifying Faith 2. The Word of God must be thy warrant for the doing of the Work 3. The Actions end must be Gods glory 4. The Work must be done in Faith because in wel-doing a man must testifie his Fidelity to God we must be sure perswaded out of Gods Word that the things we do are approved of God for whatsoever is not of Faith is Sin 5. Love is necessary in every good Work we go about for Faith worketh by Love 6. Service to man is required in our good Works for the end of mans Life is in his Calling to serve man and by that to serve God Col. 3.24 7. Our good Works must be done within the compass of Callings 8. Patience is necessary in every good Work that we faint not in wel-doing In every good Work there must beatwofold Faith viz. 1. Justifying Faith whereby the person doing the Work must be reconciled to God and stand before God a true Member of Christ without which it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 and therefore is chiefly necessary 2. General Faith whereby a man believes that the Work he doth is pleasing unto God Whatsoever is not of Faith is sin Rom. 14.23 Whereunto are required both the Word of God commanding the Work and prescribing the maner of doing it and also a promise of Blessing upon the doing of it As things may be said to be good in a double respect 1. Good in themselves alone as Almsdeeds done by a wicked man 2. Good in themselves and the Doer as the Prayers of any true Believers So there are two sorts of good Works viz. 1. Those which God in his Word hath directly commanded as parts of his Worship such as are Prayer Thanksgiving receiving the Sacraments hearing the Word c. 2. Actions indifferent sanctified by the Word and Prayer and done to Gods glory being performed after the maner and to the end God hath commanded them The Ends of a good Work are manifold viz. 1. The honor and glory of God the Work being done in Humility whereby a man esteemeth himself to be but a voluntary and reasonable Instrument of God therein and also done in simplicity or singleness of Heart whereby a man in doing a good Work intendeth simply and directly to honor and please God without all by-respects to his own praise or the pleasing of men 2. The testification of our Thankfulness to God who hath redeemed us by Christ 3. To edifie our Brethren thereby and that they also may glorifie God 4. To exercise and increase our Faith and Repentance 5. To escape the destruction of the wicked and to obtain the reward of the Righteous 6. To be answerable to our Calling in doing the duties thereof 7. To pay the Debt which we owe unto God for we are his Debtors as we are his Creatures his Servants his Children and his Redeemed by Christ God accepts of good works in us divers ways 1. In that he pardons the faults thereof 2. In that he approves his own good Work in us 3. In that he doth give unto us the Doers of them a Crown of Righteousness Provided 1. That before the Work go Reconciliation of the Person to God in Christ 2. That in doing the Work the right Matter and Maner be observed 3. That after the Work is done we beg pardon for the defects thereof There be three Opinions touching the Necessity of good Works viz. 1. Of the Papists who hold them necessary as causes of our Salvation and Justification This is most false and a preposterous Opinion 2. Of some Protestants who hold them necessary though not as principal causes yet as conservant causes of our Salvation but the truth is they are no causes of Salvation neither Efficient Principal nor Conservant nor yet Material Formal or Final 3. That good Works are necessary not as causes of Salvation or Justification but as inseparable consequents of saving Faith in Christ whereby we are justified and saved or as a way is necessary to the going to a place And this Opinion is the truth for Works any way made causes of Salvation or Justification do nullifie Grace The Motives which cause wicked men sometimes to do Works fair in shew and outwardly good and to abstain from evil Actions viz. 1. Because some naturally be not given to the vices which they leave 2. Others because they be restrained by a slavish fear of Gods Justice or else for that they dream to deserve something at the hands of God 3. Others for fear of Laws or lest they should hinder thereby their prosperity 4. Because their Lusts do sometimes strive as the winds so as that which is the stronger prevaileth over the rest and bridleth them from breaking into action No man can do a work properly meritorious as the bold Papists affirm and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the doer of a Work that may be meritorious must do it by himself and not by another for the praise is his by whom he doth it and not his own but man in himself hath not power to will that which is good much less to do it least of
liberty to sin afterward or at least to suppose that we have thereby merited at Gods hands what we fasted for Take heed of this a rightly grounded assurance of Gods mercy is highly commendable but a self-opinionating conceit of merit for the Works sake done is uncreaturely presumption a flat contradiction to the very end of Fasting which should be Self-unworthiness Self-denial true Humiliation This Fasting must never be without Prayer for Prayer and Fasting were joyned together Ezra 9.5 Neh. 1.4 Dan. 9.3 Judg. 20.26 Luke 2.37 5.33 1 Cor. 7.7 True indeed it is that Prayer is available without Fasting but Fasting never without Prayer for Fasting is not the worship of God but onely a help to it and the most principal end of a Religious Fast is Supplication or extraordinary Prayer whereunto as subordinate may be added Examination Humiliation and Mortification As touching the time of a Religious Fast it is now free in regard of Conscience indeed in the Old Testament they had a set time of Fasting as the tenth day of the seventh Moneth Levit. 16.29 But in the New Testament there is no set time which bindes the Conscience onely men must Fast as just occasion is offered and as for Civil-Politick Fasts they are set for orders sake and not to binde the Conscience Fasting was once Ceremonial when the Lord commanded by Moses that every Soul once in the year should humble it self in Fasting before the Lord in one of the great Assemblies of his people Levit. 16.29 c. 23.27 c. And though the Ceremony of the day be taken away by the coming of Christ Gal. 4. yet the thing it self continueth and remaineth in force The circumstances of Moral Duties may be changed but the substance may not be abrogated for where the same causes continue there the thing it self abideth Therefore this holy Exercise is of as great and necessary use as ever it was and remaineth in as full force and strength as ever it did Joel 2.12 Luke 5.33 c. 1 Cor. 7.5 Acts 13.2 3. The seasons of Publike Fasts being the times of any general Affliction upon our selves or our Brethren whether of Sword Pestilence or Famine or any other just judgement whether threatned feared begun or executed For Private Fasts the same rule holds in private Afflictions neither is any time unseasonable when the Religious Soul sequesters it self for this Spiritual Physick of private Humiliation Holy Feasting is a time of Solemn Thanksgiving for Benefits received or Evils removed wherein the Creatures of God may be more liberally used then at any other time For this is a day of Rejoycing wherein it was once said to the people of God Eat the fat and drink the sweet Neh. 8.10 Wherein we must be very careful to preserve the fear of God within our hearts Exod. 18.12 Jobs fear was lest his sons should cast this fear of God out of their hearts in their Feasting and so offend God In every bit we eat and every drop we drink we must remember the caveat our Saviour gives Luke 21.24 Take heed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfetting and drunkenness yea in this time of Holy Feasting there is also enjoyned us a certain kinde of fear of man Prov. 23.1 2. When thou sittest to eat before a Ruler put thy Knife to thy throat that is Bridle thine Appetite have respect not to pass the limits of Sobriety Temperance and Moderation The lawfulness of these Feasts may be derived from the Primitive Church so as the poor be regarded superfluity and riot avoided and the right end intended which is the praise and glory of God expressed in Thankfulness for the abundance of his Blessings Thus after the Sacrifices and Offerings Aaron and the Elders of Israel came to Feast with Jethro before God Exod. 18.12 So Ezra the eight Go your ways eat the fat and drink the sweet and send part to them for whom none is provided for this is the day of the Lord. In the Primitive Church it was a Custom to have a Feast before the Lords Supper made by the Communicants unto which some brought Honey some Bread some Wine some Milk and every one according to their ability contributing something thereunto These were called Love Feasts because they were herein to testifie their mutual Love among themselves as also to the poor who hereby were relieved and to the Ministery it self which was by these Feasts partly sustained But in these Feasts there were many spots Jude v. 12. who were eye-sores and disgraces to these holy Feasts pampering and feeding themselves and riotously wasting the Goods of the Church in stead of taking care for the poor and the Ministery for whose this Contribution was made It were to be wished there were no such spots in our Feasts at this day that neither blemish them by Surfetting Drunkenness or Wantonness nor by excluding the poor from having an interest therein Three things required for the right observation of a Religious Fast viz. 1. That the Causes be just and weighty such as these viz. 1. When we our selves are faln into any grievous sin whereof our Conscience accuseth us and whereby we procure the wrath of God against us So did the Israelites 1 Sam. 7.6 2. When some among us fall into any grievous sin though we our selves be free from it because for the sins of others Gods judgements may justly fall upon us For this Paul blamed the Corinthians 1 Cor. 5.2 3. When the hand of God in any judgement lies upon us Thus did the Israelites Judg. 20.26 4. When the hand of God in any fearful judgement lies heavy on others among whom we live though we our selves be free So David 2 Sam. 12.16 Psal 35.13 5. When Gods judgements are imminent and as it were hang over our heads So did Jehosaphat 2 Chro. 20.2 3. 6. When we stand in need of some needful Blessing of God especially such as concerns Salvation Thus did Cornelius Acts 10.30 7. For Gods blessing and good success on the Ministery of the Gospel So did the Church for Paul and Barnabas when they sent them to Preach Acts 13.3 And so ought we to do at this day 2. That the right maner of Fasting be observed which stands in these particulars viz. 1. Abstinence from meat and drink and all maner of nourishment of the Body 2. Abstinence from all maner of sin whether in thought word or deed 3. Abstinence from sleep such as thereby the body may be the more humbled and afflicted with the want of food 2 Sam. 12.16 4. Abstinence from soft and rich apparel Exod. 33.4 6. Jon. 3.6 2 Sam. 12.20 5. Abstinence from Matrimonial benevolence 1 Cor. 7.5 Joel 2.16 6. From the ordinary Works of our Calling Levit. 16.29 31. 23.28 32. 7. Abstinence from all pleasant and delightsom things which may any way refresh Nature 2 Sam. 12.20 Dan. 10.3 8. Abstinence from all maner of Sports Pastimes and
370 c. 371 a b. 372 c. Popish Fasting abominable proved 372 c. 373 a. Father how understood in the Lords Prayer 79 b. why Our Father 78 c. 79 a. Fear of God what 176 215 Doctrine thereof ibid. to 218. Signs and Evidences thereof 217 b. how the Fear of Gods Worship differs from all other Fears ibid. a. Feasting holy Feasting what 370 a. Rules touching the same 373 c. why permitted 370 a. 373 b. Flesh and Spirit the War betwixt them 330 c the Weapons of that Warfare and the Nature of it 331. Fornication Motives and Reasons against it 287 b c. Forgiveness of Sins what 160 b. Doctrine of it ibid. to 163 Signs thereof 161 b. Forgiveness 'twixt Man and Man fourfold 105 c. G GAmes threefold 375 a. what Games lawful to be used ibid. Ghost Holy Ghost third Person in the Trinity 1 to 5. Gifts of the Spirit twofold 328 b c. Gluttony Remedies against it 111 a. God his Attributes and Properties 120 c. 121 122. Godhead what 2 a c. Gospel what 23 c. Doctrine of it ibid. to 25. Why called the Gospel of Peace 24 c. the Effects thereof 25 a. Grace twofold 329. The operations and properties of Saving Graces 332 b. Tryals of Sound Grace 50 a. Grace distinguished from Hypocrisie 329 a. Grace Vniversal Grace Erroneous 24 a b. H HAllowing how many ways taken in Scripture 84 c. 85 b. Hallowing Gods Name what it signifies 83 b. how many ways Gods Name may be Hallowed 85 c. Hearing the Word aright what 33 a. Requisites to hear profitably ibid. c. Rules of Preparation ibid. the impediments of Effectual Hearing 34 a. 35 b. Preparative Helps before Hearing 34 b. Rules in time of Hearing ibid. c. Duties required after Hearing 35 c. Heaven how many ways taken in Scripture 81 a. Holy Ghost the Doctrine of Faith therein 145 to 149. why called the Spirit of Revelation 146 a. he is to be prayed unto as God ibid. his Godhead proved ibid. c. why distinct from the Father and the Son 147 a. his Equality with the Father proved ibid. why called a Spirit ibid. b. the Titles given to the Holy Ghost in Scripture ibid. c. his Operations twofold 148 a. his peculiar Offices ibid. b. how he is given retained and eclipsed ibid. c. the Duties of Faith in the Holy Ghost 149 a. Honor to Parents wherein it consists 265 b c. why Civil Honor is due to man 267 b. how many ways this is transgressed 268 b. Hope what 175 a. Doctrine thereof 203 to 207. how many ways taken in Scripture ibid. a. Hope twofold ibid. b. the Grounds of Hope ibid. c. the Exercise of it 204 a. why it must be stedfast ibid. c. why called the Helmet of Salvation ibid. The special Properties thereof 204 c. The way to get keep and use Hope ibid. the Necessity of Hope 205 a. how it is wrought ibid. b. how Hope and Faith differ ibid. c. how Hope and Presumption differ 206 a. Signs of Sound Hope ibid. b. Motives to Hope ibid. Means to attain it ibid. Vices repugnant to it ibid. c. Housholders Duties 269 c. Humanity of Christ 133 a. Humility what 174 c. the Doctrine thereof 194 195. Husbands Duties to the Wife 269 b. Hypocrisie what 236. Kindes thereof 237 b. Fruits thereof ibid. b c. why not always invisible 238 b. why sometimes charged upon the children of God 239 c. Marks to know an Hypocrite by 240 b. I IDolatry what 233 a. alway the destruction of the Idolater and why 234 a. Caveats to avoid it 235 b. Idolaters not to be Consorted with 234 b. Ignorance what 219. Kindes thereof 221 c. the Mother of what sins ibid. the Causes thereof ibid. c. Image of God in Man what 318 c. why God preserves the Remnants thereof 319 a. Images made to be Worshipped most abominable 231 a. why to be Abolished in all Christian Churches ibid. b. Incest wherein it consists 286 b. Infants to be Baptized 41 b. Infirmities of the Saints why recorded in Scripture 348 c. Intercession to the Father why proper onely to the Son 130 b. Joy of the Spirit how known from Carnal Joy 330 c. Judgement corrupted four ways 296 a. Reasons against Rash Judgement 305 b. Caveats in judging others ibid. Judgement-Day what it is 143 b c. Last Judgement twofold 144 a. how Christ shall come to Judgement ibid. Doctrine hereof 143 to 145 the Day hereof why concealed from us 145 a. why deferred ibid. Errors touching the last Judgement ibid. Justification what 324 b. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 326. Kindes thereof 325. Signs and Effects thereof 326 a. K KIlling lawful three ways 277 Kingdom of God what 88 89 a. Threefold ibid. c. Kingdom of Satan what Knowledge of God what 173 c. 177 a b. the parts thereof 176 c. wherein it consists 177 c. Tryals thereof 50 a. Means to attain it 178 a. Signs thereof ibid. b. Vices repugnant to it ibid. c. 179 a. L LAw what 15 b. threefold 16 c. 17. How the Moral Ceremonial and Judicial Law differs each from other 18. How the Moral Law the Natural Law and the Decalogue differ ibid. c. how the Law was given 170 b. why the Ceremonial and Judicial Laws are now ceased and how far 17 b. the use of them against Anabaptists ibid. c. Laws Judicial not necessary for any Common-wealth 16 a. Moral Law binding to all ibid. The use of the Law under the Gospel 19 c. how it differs from the Gospel 16 b. 19 a. how the Law is fulfilled by Christ 20 b. 130 a. Law written in Mans Heart 169 c. 170 a. how the performance of the Law may be said to be possible to the Regenerate 20 b. The use and ends of the Law 20 c. 21 a. how the whole Law is Abrogated 21 b. Errors touching the Law 23 a. The Error of the false Church of Rome touching the Law 22 c. Lending twofold 295 b. Life threefold 167 b. how many ways it may be said to be preserved ibid. c. Life Everlasting what 166 b. the Doctrine thereof ibid. to 168. Degrees thereof 167 b. why called a Rest 168 a. The Duties of Faith herein ibid. b. Love Gods Love to Man the Doctrine thereof 311 to 313. Degrees thereof 311 c. kindes thereof 312 b. the Commendation of Gods Love ibid. a. Duties from the Consideration thereof ibid. c. 313 a. Love Mans Love to God what 207 the Doctrine thereof ibid. to 215 the kindes of it 208 the parts of it 52 b. wherein it consists 175 c. Tryals thereof 52 a. The right order of Love 209 a. Assurance thereof ibid. b. how Love differs from Fear ibid. c. the right maner of Love 210 a. 213 b c. the Effects and Signs of Love ibid. c. 211 a b. The Properties of true Love ibid. 214 a. the Resemblance betwixt our Love to God and that to our Neighbor 213 b. Motives to love the Lord 212 b. 214 c. the main impediments to Love ibid. c. without Love no Salvation 209 b.
in the very Proeme of his prayer doth admonish us of mutual love 1. Because there is no true praying without the true love of our Neighbor neither can we be perswaded that God heareth us 2. Because without the love of our Neighbor there is no true faith and without faith there is no true prayer Christ willeth us to say Our Father not My Father for these Reasons 1. Thereby to raise in us a confidence and full perswasion that we shall be heard for because the whole Church doth with one consent pray unto him he doth not reject her for his Promise sake 2. To teach us that we hold each member of the Church as our brother Gen. 13.8 3. That in prayer we must consider Christ and his Church as one body and make him our Father who is the Father of Christ our elder brother his by generation ours by regeneration his by Nature ours by Grace 4. That we must pray as well in charity for others as for our selves James 5.16 Now they whom we are to pray for may be distinguished into this rank or order 1. All such as are effectually called by the preaching of the word 2. For all such as God in his eternal secret Counsel hath appointed unto life but are not yet called from their wandrings to be of one sheepfold under one Shepherd Joh. 17.20 3. For particular persons of whom we have received benefit under whose Government we live or which be more dear or near unto us in the flesh 2 Cor. 9.12 4. For such as whose necessity is more specially made known unto us as of danger or distress Jam. 5.14 5. For men generally of all estates and conditions 1 Tim. 2.3 as Jews Turks Heathen and seduced Papists 6. For our Enemies and those that hate us Matth. 5.41 God the Father is the Father 1. Of Christ 1. By Nature begetting him as he is the Son of his own Substance before all worlds by communicating unto him his whole Essence or Godhead 2. By the Grace of personal Union as Christ is Man for the Manhood of Christ doth wholly subsist in the Godhead of the second Person and therefore Christ as he is Man not his Manhood which is a Nature not a Person may well be called the Son of God 2. Of us not by Nature or in regard of personal Union but by the Grace of Adoption in Christ Gal. 4.4 5. And this Grace we receive when we truly believe in his Name Joh. 3.12 Gal. 3.26 The Name of Father in this place is taken Essentially for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the Name of Father is not here put with another person of the Godhead but with the Creature of whom he is invocated 2. The invocating of one person doth not exclude the others when mention is made of their eternal and outward works 3. We cannot consider God the Father but in the Son the Mediator 4. Christ hath taught us to invocate him also and he giveth the Holy Ghost For we have received not the spirit of bondage to fear again but the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father And the same Spirit beareth witness with our spirits that we are the children of God Rom. 8.15 16. Again God is called Our Father 1. In respect of our Creation Luke 3.38 2. In respect of our Redemption and receiving into favor by his Son our Mediator for whose sake we are adopted 3. In respect of our Sanctification or Regeneration by the Holy Ghost in Christ The Instructions arising from this Title Father here given to God 1. We must hence learn whom to direct our prayers unto not to Saints Angels or any other creature but to God alone for these Reasons 1. Because this is a perfect patern of true prayer wanting no direction for the right performance of this part of God worship 2. Because God onely is the Author and giver of all good things Jam. 1.16 therefore we must ask them of him alone 3. Because the Lord onely who is Infinite and Omnipotent can hear all mens prayers at all times and in all places 2. We may hereby see in what order we must direct our prayers unto God the Father in the Mediation of the Son by the Assistance of the Holy Ghost neither severing the persons from the Godhead nor the Godhead from the Persons whereof the Father is first the Son is the second the Holy Ghost the third in order though not in time or greatness Thus must we worship him even one God in three Persons and three Persons in one God 3. In this Title Father we see the true ground of that boldness wherewith Gods children come before God in prayer namely that interest in the Covenant of Grace in Christ in whom God is become their Father 4. We are hereby taught how to dispose our selves towards God when we come before him in prayer namely as children and this stands especially in four things 1. In due reverence both of heart and gesture 2. In true humility from our hearts renouncing our own merit and our own wills and relying wholly on Christs Righteousness and on the will of God in him 3. In true contrition and sorrow of heart for our own sins whereby we have offended God who hath been so gracious and merciful a Father unto us in Christ 4. In a sound purpose of heart to break off the course of all sin and to walk before God in new obedience to all his Commandments The Instructions arising from the words Our Father 1. We must apply to our selves all the Promises of God in Christ touching Righteousness and life everlasting for he that makes them is our Father therefore they belong to us that be his children 2. This teacheth us when we pray to be mindeful of Gods whole Militant Church and People 3. Hence we learn how we must come affected towards our Brethren when we pray to God namely lovingly and peaceably as to children of the same Father 4. Here we see that all true Believers whether high or low poor or rich are in equal condition in regard of God for here Christ teacheth every one to say Our Father Hence it followeth That wicked men living in sin cannot pray all their supposed praying is but a vain beating of the Air with a sound of words neither shall they speed otherwise then Esau did though they cry aloud with strong and bitter cryes yet pray they ought it being a common duty required of all men but pray they cannot yea they sin if they pray such a maze or labyrinth doth sin bring them into but true Believers with confidence approach the Throne of Grace and in an holy boldness say Our Father Father a word of Faith doth seem to be And Our no less importing Charity The one proclaims If thou wilt live Do this The other says Believe and thou hast bliss The Law and Gospel both comprised be In this most happy short Epitomy Bless'd Savior in two words thou hast taught us
of those sins which go before 2. In the immoveable and perpetual Order of Gods Judgement an Evil Conscience 3. Temporal and Spiritual Evils as Temporal Death and indeed all the Calamities of this life 4. Eternal Death which is the Effect of all sins as they are sins Two Helps to withstand Sin 1. Labor for Spiritual Wisdom to be able to discern the Policy of Satan 2. Labor for Spiritual Strength to withstand all his Provocations Three degrees of curing the Disease of Sin in us 1. To know our Sickness the dangerous Malady of Sin 2. To know the Remedy for it which is Christ 3. To apply the Remedy as we ought by Faith Of the contagious Infection of Sin we are to make this wholesom Use as an Antidote against it viz. 1. We must labor to come to the knowledge of our sins and to be touched with a feeling of them for till then we can never pray for Mercy as we ought from the great Soul-Physitian 2. We are put in minde to confess our sins and uncleanness that so we may be washed by him that purgeth us for If we acknowledge our sins he is merciful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.9 3. We must know by what means God useth to sanctifie us it is by the Blood of his own Son for the Blood of Christ purgeth us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 Heb. 9.14 4. We must seek Mercy while it is offered unto us when our hearts are terrified for sin Let us have recourse to the Fountain of his Blood which can never be drawn dry Isaiah 55.6 7. Psal 51.1 2. 5. We must buy of Christ White Garments to clothe us and to cover our deformity Rev. 3.18 that the filthiness of our nakedness may not appear 6. We must forsake our sins and walk in the statutes of God Isa 1.16 17. Ezek. 20.18 19. if we bring not forth the fruit of obedience we wallow in our mire 7. If God hath given us Grace to stand we must pray him to give us also Grace to continue and persevere unto the end 8. We must walk circumspectly and forsake the Company of the Wicked and society with them 2 Cor. 6.16 Avoid all occasions and inducements to sin to abstain even from the appearances of evil Again to be preserv'd from Sin use these Remedies viz. 1. With thy Eyes ever behold God present and ever have his fear before thee 2. With thy Ears ever hear that terrible voyce sounding Arise ye Dead and come to Judgement 3. With thy Hands be ever exercising that which is good 4. In thy Heart ever hide the Word of God and meditate continually thereon 5. With thy Tongue and Lips ever bring some honor to God and Edification to the hearer in all that proceedeth from them knowing God hears even our Thoughts 6. With thy Feet stand in the Courts of Gods House but offer not the Sacrifice of Fools 7. With thy whole Man render thy self serviceable to thy Creator and see thou keep thy Body holy as becometh the Temple of the Holy Ghost For forsaking of Sin observe these Rules viz. 1. It must not be for a short time for a fit or a season but for ever renouncing all Right Title Interest and Propriety therein 2. We must alienate our selves for ever not onely from some but all our sins the most pleasant the most dear the most profitable sins 3. It must be a forsaking in deed and not an exchanging of one sin for another Means sanctified of God to keep us from Sin viz. 1. The Ministery of the Word Thus he sent Jonah to the Ninevites Jon. 3.4 Nathan to David 2 Sam. 12.1 And the Prophets to the Israelites continually 2 Chro. 36.14 15. Acts 2.37 38. 2. The Benefits and Blessings of God many and great daily and continual This should be an Argument prevalent to disswade us from sin and invite us to serve the Living God Prov. 10.12 3. He hath bestowed upon us his own Son the greatest Blessing in Heaven or Earth for a greater cannot be promised of God or comprehended of Man Rom. 8.31 John 3.16 If the serious Consideration of this will not move us to repent of sin nothing in the World will 4. The Corrections and Chastisements which are laid upon us Psal 89.31 32. Job 33.16 Yea upon others also which should be as so many warning pieces to call us to Repentance Isai 26.9 5. Private Admonitions and Exhortations yea Reproofs and Threatnings of Judgement when the former will not serve Levit. 19.17 Prov. 9.8 6. The inward Motions and Inspirations of the Holy Spirit which he stirreth up in our Hearts 2 Sam. 24.10 Psal 16.7 Let us make much of them lest he withdraw them and give us over to our selves The Use of the Doctrine of Sin viz. 1. That seeing sin is so great an Evil we praise the Justice of God who so severely punisheth it and not think to extenuate it but endeavor to avoid the least 2. That acknowledging the remnant of sin in us we despair not but flie to the Mediator 3. That we may discern our selves from those in whom sin reigneth and that sin against the Holy Ghost 4. That we lay not the cause and fault of our sins on God when it is and ever was in our selves 5. That seeing there are degrees of sins and punishments we take heed of adding sin to sin 6. Let us return perpetual praise to God and his Son our Lord Jesus Christ who from sin and the fearful punishment thereof hath ransomed all penitent Believers by his Spirit converting them from Sin to Good Works which follow XII A Good Work is a Duty commanded of God performed by a Regenerate person and done in Faith aiming therein at the Glory of God and the good of Men I mean not the Popish meritorious Works but such as are the Fruits and Effects of a Living and Effectual Faith so called not that they are without imperfection even the best of them but because from the true Believer God is pleased to accept of them as good yet he accepts them not seem they never so good no farther then he findes Faith in them and yet accepts he the gift be it never so small for the givers sake if he believe in him Thus Works of Justice Temperance and the like cannot be called Godliness or good Works except they rise from Faith because indeed it is not done to God for further then a man doth a thing out of Faith he doth it not to God For to do a thing out of Faith is nothing else but when out of perswasion of Gods love to me I do this thing meerly for his sake whom I have chosen to whom I give my self one that I know loves me and therefore though there were no reward for it I would serve him This is a Work of Faith insomuch as that Almsdeeds Martyrdom or the like may not be called Good Works if they