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A60361 The compleat Christian, and compleat armour and armoury of a Christian, fitting him with all necessary furniture for that his holy profession, or, The doctrine of salvation delivered in a plain and familiar explication of the common catechisme, for the benefit of the younger sort, and others : wherein summarily comprehended is generally represented the truly orthodox and constant doctrine of the Church of England, especially in all points necessary to salvation / by W.S., D.D. Slatyer, William, 1587-1647. 1643 (1643) Wing S3983; ESTC R38256 385,949 1,566

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yet imparity of sins may be and one offence greater then another in many respects as 1. Some lesse offences against the neighbour then others as lying then adultery and murder and so the smaller offences compared with bloudy and crying sins as Peters denyall or Eutiches sleeping with Davids adultery or Noahs drunkennesse with Cains murder 2. Sins against the second Table and against the creature lesse in regard of the object then those against the first being immediately against Gods infinite Majesty 3. Sins also of infirmity and ignorance and the like though not the lesse able to damne us yet lesse accounted then those of malice and contempt or presumptuous sins so all those other sins in comparison of those perverse haynous and stubborne sins against the holy Ghost whereby the difference and degrees of sin and offences is apparant 7. How is the fourth rule to be understood That though the sins against the first Table simply and absolutely in themselves considered as immediately against the infinite Majesty of God are more heynous then the sins against the second Table where the offence is but against the finite creature immediately though secondarily against the divine Majesty contemned yet such may the aggravation be on the one side by extreame malice perversnesse presumption supine negligence and the like and the extenuation on the other side by infirmity ignorance feare or other humane passion or frailty that may quite alter and weigh downe or over balance the former respect that as in the same first Tables offences compared among themselves there is no comparison of Sarahs infidelity when she laughed and for which she was reproved with Lots wives looking back Achans sacriledge or the gainsaying of Korah so neither in the second Tables offences compared with the first or first with the second that infidelity of Sarahs or Eutiches sleeping at Pauls Sermon both of infirmity though against God or such like negligence on the Sabbath to be thought equall to Cains murder Davids adultery backed with murder or such other crying sins of oppression and blood though against men onely immediately since so aggravated by perversnesse malice and presumption or security as well as secondarily also redounding to the dishonour of God and contempt of the divine Majesty 8. How the fifth rule explained That there is so near a tye and relation between the Commandements all of them having one rule the love of God one end the honour of God one author of them all God and one authority commanding all and so binding to every one of them in particular as to all of them and the whole Law in generall saying thou shalt observe all these Lawes to doe them and Cursed is he who walketh not in all these Lawes to doe them that one of them not performed the whole Law is broken and the disobedience manifest requiring punishment as the guilt also shewing it selfe 1. Against the Author of them all 2. Against the authority of his command 3. Against the royall Law of love 4 In contempt of that divine Majesty so that though there are degrees of offences and some are to be more earnestly and carefully avoyded as more haynous ones yet simply none are to bee chosen as inter mala culpae omnino non datur electio 9. What is the summe of the second Table To love thy neighbour as thy selfe Levit. 19. 18 Math. 22. 39. Rom 13. 8. 10. What is thereby expressed The duty love which in the first place God in the next place respectively the neighbour The object the neighbour as neare to us of the same flesh and blood viz. all mankinde The manner as thy selfe both in regard of the love First naturall whereby thou desirest the preservation of thy life goods c. Secondly spirituall whereby thou desirest thy soules good and salvation and expressed either I. To superiours in the 5. Commandement here expressed II. To allmen by not onely not hurting or wishing but even not consenting to the hurt of his 1. Person by murder 6. Commandement 2. Second selfe wife by adultery 7. Commandement 3. Goods by stealth 8. Commandement 4. Good name by lying 9. Commandement Or 11. even without consent by any concupiseence whatsoever in the 10. Commandement the first motions of sin forbidden 11. Why have all the Commandements of the first Table their reason annexed and so not the second 1. To shew how especiall care ought to be had of the honour of God whence all other duties depend 2. To shew that the first Table the foundation of the second and the duties therein contained thence depending 3. To shew our backwardnesse in the honour of God and ingratitude needing such spurres and remembrances as more prone to wrong God then men the Creator and giver of all good then the creature though too mischievous and malicious to all but in imitation of the first Table this first Commandement of the second and this onely hath a reason or promise annexed 12. Why hath this onely the promise Because as from the first Table the second and the duties thereof depend and from the first Commandement of the first Table the rest of the Commandements there so from this 1. Commandment of the second Table concerning duties to superiours the rest of the Commandements doe also seeme to depend in regard of the due observation of them by their authority and command and also in the superiours doth more especially shine the image of Divinity so as next to the first Table in place and first of the second graced also with a reason or promise 13. How is the image of the divine Majesty more particularly expressed in superiours 1. As in the King represented majestie power and soveraigne authority 2. As in the Magistrates the image of his government and justice 3. As in the ancient in yeares image of that Ancient of dayes in eternity 4. As in the Parents image of his goodnesse our Father and Creator 5. As in the Tutors Ministers and Teachers bearing the image of his divine Majestie wisdome and knowledge whose honour in his image is thus attended with the promise in this first Commandment with promise the first of the second Table 14. What is therein contained 1. The Commandement Honour thy father and mother 2. The promise That thy dayes may bee long c. What manner of Commandement is it An affirmative and thereby inferring his opposite negative viz. commanding to exhibit all love honour and obedience to our superiours and to avoid all unreverence disobedience and dishonour of them 15. What is the affirmative part Commanding respect of Inferiours their exhibition of 1. Honour and reverence 2. Duty and obedience 3. Love humility with the signes 4. Thereof to be exhibited to all superiours Superiours to be worthy of that honour by their 1. Gravity and good example 2. Mercy and bounty 3. Justice moderation and 4. Benevolence to all inferiours 16. What the negative part Forbidding in respect of Superiours their offences in shewing
Yes but not beyond the intent of the Law which willeth absolute righteousnesse both in our soules and bodies or actions and most inward affections and is hereby a Schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ and when wee are not able to doe it to send us to him that hath done it for us if wee shew our love and obedience by our willingnesse 23. How may our willingnesse be seene 1. By our hate of the things of the flesh 2. By our delight in the Law of the Lord Rom. 7. 16. 3. By our stirring or striving and moving in holy duties 4. By our desire to bee instructed and directed 5. By our growing up in godlinesse and these are also assigned as tokens of our new birth proceeding by degrees in grace directed by the Law profiting and perfected in Christ. 24. What generally commanded here Contentednesse with our estate in not covetting our neighbors goods but submitting our souls to the good will and pleasure of God and his holy Spirit and ordering our selves with thankfulnesse according to the direction of the same in which contentednesse all vertues seeme to shine forth and to be comprehended as Prudence justice temperance fortitude constancy c. both in generall and in particular of all vertues as in their severall kindes and branches is to bee seene as what Christian prudence and heavenly wisedome sheweth it selfe where wee are graciously contented with Gods providence over us and appointment of us in that our estate and condition to doe him such service as therein required what justice towards God and men shineth forth in our readinesse so contentedly to doe our duties what Christian moderation and temperance to be seene above all turbulent affections of vainglory pride or covetousnesse so to submit our selves to Gods will and command and our fortitude and constancy so to continue and persevere as indeed where any virtue is actually there habitually are all the rest virtues and graces goe concatenate there is such mutuall league of love and tye of affinity betweene and among them as no virtue without prudence to gurde it justice the soule and substance of it in the duty whether to God or man our selves or others temperance the mediocrity and moderation of it fortitude the strength of it and courage to proceed constancy the continuance and so the rest humility the ground continency the girdle love the comfort chastity the ornament piety the crowne of them all and each adding a lustre to other and where any deficient the rest blemished by it but in this one contentednesse all generally entertained and every one particularly illustrated by it 25. What are the fruits hereof True blessednesse here and hereafter the promise annexed to the performance of good duties 26. What the whole duty man To feare God and keepe his Commandements 27. VVhat the sum of the Commandements Love 28. VVhat followeth in the Catechisme The explication of that love the summe of the Commandements as it extendeth it selfe to the performance of duties both towards God and men and so to shew what we learne in them SECT 13. The ninth and next Questions Love the sum and substance or root and fountaine of the Law and all good duties therein comprised whether to God or man pertaining so called the royall law of love or fulfilling of the law whose degrees in our duty to God to superiours to equals and inferiors in their severall orders and kindes to be exercised how to love the neighbour as ones owne selfe and what by the Talion law to doe as we would be don● to is required our giving hon●● to superiours love of equalls all else shewn by hurting none by breach of any the Commandements as 〈…〉 or 〈…〉 incontinency picking and stealing evill speaking lying or slandering or coveting other mens goods and so consequently to use the honest meanes whereby to be better able to perform this to learne to labour in some lawfull calling as God appointeth us with thankefulnesse and contentednesse 1. VVHat doe you chiefly learne in these Commandements Two things my duty towards God and my duty towards my neighbour or the root and fountaine whence these duties doe slow love extending it selfe to God Men. 2. How is love the fountaine of these duties or sum of the Law 1. It is the summe of the Law as it is the whole scope of all good duties and intention of the law and inward forme of that spirituall life we live by grace ready to performe all good duties and so called the royall law of love 2. It is the fountaine and root of his double duty as the love of God produceth the zeale of his glory seeking his honour and so obedience to all the Commandements and thereby performance of duties both to God and men 3. What is thy duty towards God To beleeve in him To feare him and to love him with all my heart minde soule strength as Luke 10. 27. Deut. 6. 5. Mat. 22 28. Marke 12. 30. Whence sloweth the performance of all other services of his and honor done unto him as from the first Commandement all the rest 4. VVhat meane you by this A faith in God producing his feare in love and filiall observance the feare of God the beginning of wisedome performing obedience and love in hearty affection adhering unto him and trusting in him with minde unfainedly seeking knowing and remembring him and soule wholly addicted to his honour and service to the utmost strength and power of both bodily and spirituall faculties persevering therein the substance of the first Commandement and so performing all parts of his service in the rest of the Commandements 5. In what wanner 1. Both to worship him after his will 2. Give him thankes and praise him for his benefits 3. Put my trust in him in distresse 4. Call upon him in all my needs as in the second Commandement 5. Honour his holy name and his word as in the third Commandement 6. Serve him truly all the dayes of my life and especially his Sabbaths as the fourth Commandement 6. VVhat is love to these duties The very foundation of them for if I doe love Cod With all my heart sincerely With all my minde understandingly With all my soule affectionately With all my strength effectually I will assuredly also strive to perform these things and continue in them all the dayes of my life 7. VVhat is thy duty to thy neighbour I. In generall 1. As by our Saviour Christ is taught to love him as my selfe so reade Math. 22. 39. Luke 10. 27. Marke 12. 31. so Lev 19. 18. 2. According to talion Law to doe to all men as we would they should doe unto us by our Saviour taught Math. 7. 12. Luke 6. 31. so Tob. 4. 15. II. Speciall to First superiours as in the fifth Commandement to 1. To love honour and succour father c. 2. Honour and obey King and his c. 3. Submit my selfe to c. 4. Order my selfe lowly c. Secondly all
legere and preeando disces prccari so using this we may learne to pray and weepe for that wee cannot weepe or be sensible of these best things which shewing a good desire can never be far from the wished effect also in our mindes often to revolve and consider 1. The great mercies and goodnesse of God towards us to stir us up to thankfulnesse 2. The great wants and miseries we are in to move us to confession and prayer for reliefe 3. The great wants our poore brethren are in to move us to charity and compassion so to pray for them 4. The many dangers we have escaped by the gracious providence of God to move us to praise him 5. The many blessings we receive continually to urge us to thanksgiving that are continually preserved fed and nourished kept and sustained by him which only well thought on might move us effectually to this duty to pray continually 24. How or in what respect 1. As every minute day Sabbath houre and yeare are new blessings adding continuance to our life and being 2. As every minute day and houre bring new blessings or minister occasions to consider of the same and move us to thankes 3. As every creature may seem to put us in mind of their and our Creator 4. As every good creature yeelding us comfort may put us in minde of his goodnesse as the summe of his glory the Heaven his throne and residence the day his light and so every good thing sheweth some sparke of his grace and goodnesse 5. As every blessing a new memoriall of his love and bounty to us so to remember him the giver of life heat and comfort friends goods health and whatsover we enjoy to cloath feed helpe or releeve us and such pious arguments of praise might be continually present with us to move us to praise him that even while we live on earth we might herein lead an Angels life and be better prepared for glory and capable of it in greater measure the soule so adorned having so great a measure of grace 25. When and where are we to pray As often as conveniently we may and the oftner the better so with zeale and discretion or with the spirit and understanding 1. Both publicke on the Sabbath and solemne feast dayes in the Temple with the Saints in the great congregation 2. Privately on the weeke dayes in the family with the promise of the presence of God 3. Retiredly at any time in the closet where God that seeth in secret hath also promised to reward openly 4. Continually on every good occasion and blessings received and considered to remember and blesse the giver and send up some sigh or ejaculation towards heaven whence the gifts descend 5. Ordinarily for all those daily blessings received as at our First uprising that restored to a new day and light that might else have slept an endlesse night and sleep Secondly at our downelying that having passed the troubles of that day we have rest and in remembrance of our grave our bed and sleep of death Thirdly at our receiving our meat sanctifying the same by prayer and after giving praise for the same 6. Extraordinary as any necessities urge or extraordinary blessings or dangers present oftner and more incessantly so we finde first Daniel three times a day Dan 6. Secondly David seven times a day and at midnight and with great earnestnesse for the childe Thirdly Christ himselfe three times together at his agony 7. Whensoever we finde our selves best disposed to so holy a dutie and not to quench the Spirit or neglect his good motions of grace in the heart 26. What else to be noted for the circumstances of prayer 1. Such as the time the Sabbath most especially appointed for his solemne worship yet not neglecting other times but as often as conveniently may be 2. Such as the place the Temple especially thence called the house of prayer where many gathered together like many coales giving the greater heat many sticks the greater flame and many godly mens prayers joyntly more powerfully ascending to pull downe blessings from God as he signifieth Ezechiel the 14. by joyning Noah Daniel and Job together to shew powerfull prayer and not nelecting any other place on good occasion as the three children in the Furnace David on his bed and Daniel in the Lions den 3. Such as the persons the Minister especially in publicke but withall the whole company and communion of Saints so called as gathered together in so holy an excercise and therein associated with the Saints and Angells in heaven that joyntly with them and ever performe that spirituall and divine exercise 4. Such as the ceremonies such as appointed or most tending to comelinesse and edification 5. Such as the gesture the most humble and reverent by the outward position of the body signifying the inward reverence and humility of the soule 27. How is that In uniformity with the Church in publicke and according to the custome of the place and direction of Authority and so generally kneeling in praier used with us as the most humble gesture according to our Countries guises though prostration in the Easterne Countries and with the Jews but not simply to exclude any manner of gesture in humility presented in private though in publicke required uniformity most commendable and kneeling shewing most humility and so we may finde Daniel kneeling and David saying Come let us fall downe and kneele before the Lord our maker David prostrate before the Lord for the childe Isaac walking in the fields praying The poor Publican standing aloof and praying Jonah lying in the Whales belly praying and heard and so any gesture not in convenient in humility or it not stubbornely opposed to it or charity or uniformity which thereby loseth the praise of humility and groweth scandalous in the same 28. What other the rules or order in prayer Direction 1. To whom to pray to God alone not to Saint or Angel 2. In whose name in Christs the only Mediator and no other 3. By whose helpe the holy Spirit speaking in us and making us truly cry Abba Father 4. For what things for only good things not evill 5. By what rule according to Gods will 6. To what end to Gods glory the end of all 7. With what conditions and virtues to bee graced 29. What virtues required Chiefly 1. Humility wherein the poore Publican respected when the proud Pharisee rejected 2. Faith whereby only prayer is made powerfull and acceptable 3. Charity without which we can never aske a petition shall please God nor ever obtaine of him more for our selves then in charity we would desire for other 4. Repentance whereby we putting off our polluted garments of sinne when we come into the presence of God whose eyes try the children of men and who so hateth sinne that no impure thing shall come nigh him for if a King would not be served by filthy clownes or boores at his table how much lesse God
strength 35. How is the love of God seen By adhering to him so with all our minde seen in knowing beleeving in remembring him With all Our heart in trusting hoping fearing and rejoycing in him soule in humility and submission patience and obedience gratitude and thankfulnes to him Strength to the uttermost of body and soule in all good duties to his honour 36. How in generall is the love of God considered 1. For the measure 1. Simply without measure and as before with all heart minde soule and strength comparatè 2. Comparatè above all things else Matth. 10. 37. Luke 14 26. 2. The manner absolutely and first our friends in the Lord. Secondly our foes for the Lord. Hence rising zeale of Gods glory opposite to this 1. Either in the defect want of the love of God with all our hearts above all things Hatred of God and his graces encreased by sin 2. Disorder loving our selves above God and his Commandements the world in the riches pleasures pride and other carnall things 37. VVhat are wee to consider in the knowledge of God The matter God and his truth and goodnesse revealed The measure according to our calling meanes time alotted The manner spirituall and holy knowledge in humility and effectuall to grace and salvation Opposite to this in the excesse curiosity wise above sobriety The defect 1. exceedingly ignorance simply affected 2. In a sort a small measure of knowledge too little for the quantity and 3. For the quantity a literall or speculative knowledge without care or conscience of godlinesse or the power thereof 38. VVhat in beleeving to be considered In generall faith in God and assent to the word of God In speciall to the threatnings of the Law and promises of the Gospell and for the Quantity with full understanding consent and assent Quality lively and working by charity Opposite to this in excesse credulity to even vanity without Gods word In defect in understanding by ignorance Consent by doubting Assent by wavering In Quantity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quality idle and dead faith And that either legally infidelity working carnall security Or evangelically counterfeit faith of hypocrites heretiques c. 39. VVhat in remembring God to be considered The laying up and treasuring in our mindes the things concerning God and secondly often calling such things to minde especially his mercies and judgements opposite to which if wee forget him his holy word mercies or judgements or so partially or slenderly remembring them without care conscience or obedience 40. What is assiance or trust Adhering to God and depending on him in all our needs whether we have means or not as who can helpe without above meanes Opposite to which if On the contrary in Excesse we tempt God Defect wee carke and care or use unlawfull meanes leaving God In disorder we trust in instruments and meanes as wealth world men many mighty wizards or divels 41. What hope A kinde of trust with faith fixed on God and his goodnesse expecting from him deliverance from ill and exhibition of good things whether for this present life or the life to come opposite to which in excesse is presumption in defect is despaire and so as wee ought to trust and hope in him and him alone are we to take heed wee presume not nor despaire or in participation of both with Epicures grow carelesse and without hope 42. What is his feare An awfull and son-like feare which though the object be Gods anger against sinne yet is more loath to offend him so good a God and mercifull then for the danger of punishment effect of his anger opposite to which is carnall security senselesnesse and despaire 43. What is rejoycing in God Delighting in him as the supreme good in his word his mercies and promises and the heavenly and inestimable comfort wee receive by them with joy in the prosperity of his house his Church his servants and honour which filleth the heart with more content then any carnall and worldly things Psal. 4. opposite to which are miserable delights of sinfull worldly carnall and voluptuous men 44. What is humility and submission to God A removing of all conceit of our owne worthinesse and humble acknowledgement of our owne vilenesse in nature and defect of sinne and desert of punishments together with consideration of Gods mercies and bounties to us whereby to bee cast downe before him that hee may raise us up Opposite to which a high conceit of our owne selves our worth and merits to the robbing him of his honour and praise and our forgetfulnesse of duty 45. What is patience An humble subjection of our selves to the crosse or hand of God in his chastisements and tryalls which must needs bee for our good and so found to be as his children by Our Meekly Cheerfully and comfortably Constantly Enduring entertaining them Opposite to which rashnesse and senselesnesse in excesse in defect impatience murmuring fainting and despaire or seeking issue by unlawfull meanes whiles wee will endure much for the world nothing for God 46. VVhat obedience The submitting our wils to the will of God and that onely rightly if voluntarily not forced totally not by fits or in part sincerely without hypocrisie and continually to the end Opposite to which either Disobedience to him by sinnes of omission and commission and that by negligence or contempt Obedience to men or other things more then God yea to sinne the flesh the world and the divell Gods enemies Disorder in the manner not voluntarily or totally sincerely or continually 47. VVhat gratitude or thankefulnesse A testification both by word and deed of a thankfull minde for all his benefits in all estates whether prosperity or adversity acknowledging him and him alone the author of all good things Opposite to which is unthankfulnesse and not acknowledging this or ascribing it to our owne power wit worth worke fortune idols or instruments or meanes forgetting the prime fountain 48. How to love God with all our strength With all powers of body and soule and so in the whole man to exercise all these good duties to his honour 49. How his honour set forth Both by word and deed internally in the soule and externally in the body and whose life and conversation to expresse and advance the praise and glory of God and so to avoid all prophanenesse which is especially to his dishonour Hence springeth 1. Internally zeale of Gods glory 2. Externally holy life and behaviour 50. What is the zeale of Gods glory A servent desire of the advancement thereof both in our selves and others and cheerfully using of the meanes thereof together with removing all impediments of the same proceeding from sincere affection guided by knowledge and discretion seene in the moderation in respect of all circumstances and especially of the time and seasonablenesse 50. What opposite to this Either want of zeale in luke warmnesse Apoc 3. 15. coldnesse Zeph. 1. 12. Or corrupt zeale mixed with Maliciousnesse bitter zeale Covetousnesse
caring for the Lords body and comming but as Hogges swine these best things are to them an occasion of falling and they will be plagued for their presumption as making the Table of the Lord and feast of salvation a table of condemnation by their profanesse against which carelesnesse and contempt God hath threatned severe judgement and casting out of his presence to bee punished in utter darknesse with the Divell and his Angels for ever From which fearfull doome hee in his mercy deliver us SECT V. An Appendix concerning the summe and use of the Catechisme An Appendix shewing the sum and use of the Catechisme to be the foundation of our profession of Christianity in the laying thereby the grounds of religion specified In those rites of Our faith and good works the Creed and Command●nents and the rule and doctrine of Prayer and the Sacraments all taken out of holy Scripture and the expresse word of God whose bookes are in this order remembred the Chiefe of which as the Canon ●aith and rule of all godly obedience are received the others for good example and that History admitted and read though not so generally approved as many Pseud●graphe were by the Church utterly rejected but the true worth of the Canonicall proved by the most evident testimonies of Gods Spirit the Churches and Fathers as well Arguments drawne from the things themselves as the antiquity miraculous preservation matter handled confession of the very heathens of their excellency consent of themselves and with truth commonly wanting in other Writers and the like all o● them testifying to the ●●nscience the excellencie of the same and more commending the hearing reading and meditating of them to the t●uly devout and godly Christian to the eternall comfort of his soule which is more effectually wrought also from the same word of God by his owne ordinance of the right dividing p●●aching and expounding the same here explained whence the duty of hearers also touched who are the better prepared thereunto by the grounds of Religion thus said in the Catechisme and Gods blessing to be praied for the seconding the same 1. VVHat is the summe of all As saith the wise man the Preacher to feare God and keep his commandements this is the whole duty of man Eccles. 12. ult 2. What the summe of the Catechisme The very same being the explication of that du●y of ours to God 1. By fearing him according to that holy rule of faith expressed in the Creed 2. By keeping his Commandements in doing as in the Law appointed praying as hee hath taught us Receiving the Sacraments holy mysteries and pledges of his love seales of grace as he hath instituted and ordained 3. What the use of it To conforme us outwardly and inwardly in soule and body or whole course of life and conversation to that we make profession of the name and calling of a Christian. 4. How doth it this By laying these maine grounds and foundation of religion which howsoever they may seem few and little as comprised in so small a booke as the Catechisme are yet the substance of many large volumes and the best learning in the world as all that we should or need to beleeve by faith doe in all duty pray for from God or desire in the covenant of grace whereby fitted to serve God and else to behave our selves outwardly and inwardly according to that our most holy profession 5. How is that As we are taught hereby fitted and furnished Both in wardly with faith knowledge and graces and all such things which a Christian ought to know and beleeve for his soules health and to confirme us in the truth And outwardly to the acts of a Christian life being hereby enabled to make profession of our hope and render account of our faith in some measure to reprove or convince the gainsayers And to other acts mentioned and in ended in the Title and beginning of the Catechisme 6. Which are they To be thought sufficiently prepared and fit 1. To be confirmed of the Bishop so receiving such confirmation and approbation 2. To be admitted to receive the holy communion To be surety for others at baptisme as able to teach them to answer for themselves 3. To have their owne suretie released as they enabled to stand for others sureties 4. To heare Sermons and Scriptures read or expounded more profitably And 5. To read holy Scriptures more comfortably themselves And 6. To understand it better being thus grounded in these principles of Religion taken out of holy Scripture as being the chiefest and most substantiall parts of the same that primarily concern our blessed estate and salvation 7. How the Creed Concerning 1. God the Father I beleeve c. I beleeve Lord help my c. You beleeve in the Father beleeve in me also I and the Father are one Luke 14. 1. c. Ps. The eyes of all things c. Gen. 1. 1. In the beginning c. 2. God the Sonne the whole doctrine of the Evangelists and Apostles in every point expressed in the Gospel 3. God the holy Ghost Joh. 14. 15. Joh. 15. 26. and Joh. 16. 7. and 16. 13. Ioh. 20. 22. Luke 24. 49. Acts 2. c. As concerning the Church Matth 16. 16 17 18 c. Jo. 17. 15 16 17. Act. 2. 47. Holy cath Church Commun of Saints Mat. 16 19. Luk 18. 13. 15. 10 11. 24. 47. Joh. 20. 23. Act. 2. 38. forgivenesse of sins Joh. 5. 28 6. 40 11. 25. Luk. 14. 14. resurrection of the body and life c. with many places of holy Scripture more 8. How the rest Concerning The Commandmēts Exod. 20. 1. God spake c. Deut. 5. 6. I am the Lord c. The Lords Prayer Mat. 69. When ye pray say c. Luk. ●1 1. Our Father c. The Sacraments Baptis Mat. 28. 19 Mar. 16. 15 Acts 2. 41. Act. 10. 47 L. Sup. Mat. 26. 26. Mar. 14. Luk. 22. 19. 1 Cor. 11. 25. 9. What is the word of God The will or especially the promises and merc●es of God revealed 1. In the flesh Christ the incarnate word and truth and shewed both in the creation of the world and redemption of mankinde 2. In the characters of the voice the bookes of holy Scriptures the written word of God contained in the Bible or Book of God in the old and new Testament so called and the Bookes thereof 10. Which or how many are they The Canonicall Bookes of the old Testament so called by the Hebrews the 24. Genesis 2 Samuel Proverbes Exodus 2 Kings Ecclesiastes Levit. 2 Chron. Song of Solomon Numb Ezra Isaiah Deuter. Nehem. Jeremie with Lament Josua Hester Ezechiel Judges Job Daniel Ruth Psalmes The 12. small Prophets The new Testament all of them 21. or by dividing of the Epistles 27. viz. Gospels 4. Acts 1. The Epistles of Saint Paul 14. Peter 2. James 1. John 3. Jude 1. Revelation 1. Apocry phall Esdras Tobit Judith Hester Reliques of
saved There are surely many Hypocrites that take the badge of Christ but fight under the banner of Satan but commonly it is seen true by their works we may know them 32. Is it then easily to be discerned who shall be saved Nothing lesse for the most impenitent sinner for a while may at last finde mercy and be converted and as we are to judge none we are to hope well of all and to believe of our selves as we finde by our faith of others in charity 33. Then are we to account all members of Christ that are baptized Charity bindeth us so to it as who have beene washed in the same Lavar of regeneration received into the same fellowship and visible company of Saints and faithfull that wee are though God onely indeed knoweth who are his 34. What use of Baptisme The sacramentall assurance of the love of God and his graces to us and so admittance into his house and Church and by faith cooperating a step to our salvation which as in the use so in the remembrance may be very profitable 35. What profit in the remembrance thereof To confirme the grace well begun in a mans heart whereby to grow in grace and so forward to godlinesse 36. How may that be effected If he beleeve he shall bee hereby more confirmed in the faith so being a true Christian be hereby registred in the Catalogue of Saints that all the fiends in hell shall never be able to blot him out againe 37. How is this benefit here described By these excellent names and titles in the answer here expressed as the baptized is said to be made hereby 1. A member of Christ. 2. Childe of God and 3. Inheritor of the kingdome of heaven 38. How a member of Christ As ingrafted into him by Baptisme and received to bee a member of his body the Church of which he is the head and Spouse 39. How understand you the body of Christ Divers wayes and especially these three either his Naturall body united to his soule so borne and for us offered an oblation for redemption of our offences Or his Mysticall body and that understood either Politically of his Church the company of the faithfull Or Sacramentally and spiritually but verily in the Sacrament of the body and blood of Christ exhibited to his Church under the species and signes of bread and wine 40. Which of these here understood His mysticall and politicall body the Church whereof hee is the head the whole Church his Spouse and every good and faithfull Christian a member 41. How is he seene to be head By giving to the same and every member thereof Life Motion Direction 42. How is any of us known so to be a member of him By our receiving life motion and direction from him and as we feele our soules to be 1. Living in God 2. Moved by his Spirit 3. Directed by his holy Word 43. Is there any difference in the members of this mysticall body Yes according to the diverse gifts and graces of Gods holy Spirit working in them 44. In what manner Though secretly yet evidently by the gifts appearing in them as of prophesie tongues interpretation healing teaching and governing and the like whence some Apostles other Prophets Teachers Governours as the same Spirit giveth power and direction 45. How have these the names of members As in every well governed Commonwealth the Prince representeth the head the State a body his faithfull Councellours eyes the Law the life and soule the Teachers the understanding Governors the will and all Prelates Magistrates and Judges the shoulders whereon the head is borne and all weighty affaires of estate the Artificers Husbandman and Trades the hands which worke and the feet whereon the Commonwealth standeth So in the Church the like order and distinction of members seene 46. How is that showne By the Apostles owne words 1 Cor. 12. where the Prophets who are called Seers Apostles Teachers c. are showne members of that mysticall body of Christ the Church for the good and conveniency of the body in divers degrees yet all needfull even the meanest as well as the more honourable and in the charity and harmony of the whole every one one anothers members as all together members of Christ. 47. What commeth of being members of Christ We are thereby children of God and so consequently in the right of Sonnes inheritors of the Kingdome of Heaven 48. But were not we children of Godelse Not as beloved or in grace and favour with him for so we are onely as we are in Christ. 49. Who are then the children of God Either Generally all creatures men and Angels Particularly men sonnes of Adam who was the son of God Most specially the elect by adoption and grace in Christ who is most essentially intirely and supremely the Sonne of God 50. How is Christ the Son of God By nature of the same essence God of God begotten not made eternally before the world was created the wisedome truth image and beloved of God 51. How are Angels sonnes of God As the most excellent creatures spirits in light created for the service of God who is the Father of light and Father of Spirits the originall of them and all things and so Satan the disobedient spirit or one of them that fell from that excellent estate in which created is said Iob 1. 6. to come and stand before the Sons of God 52. How are men the sons of God Generally as Angels and all creatures else as created in an excellent estate in the first Adam but though disobedient in some measure by the subtilty and meanes of that Angell that fell Satan or the old Serpent yet particularly taken againe into favour and had a Saviour appointed the eternall sonne of God a meanes of their restauration 53. How are the elect the sons of God Most specially in his favour and grace for his love to Christ in whom they are accepted as his members and having put on his righteousnesse by faith and grace given them for his sake as it were accompanying that faith so made acceptable and their soules adorned 54. Why are not the falling Angels in like hope For that they in a more excellent estate created more was required of them in regard of their rare perfection whose sin and guilt was so much more heynous as their knowledge and estate more excellent and so they fell in eternity to eternity 55. How then should men lesse excellent be saved Even in that respect as 1. not so highly transgressing having not received so excellent gifts or so many and heavenly talents but as inferiour in gifts and graces inferiour in offence and who in time fell had in this world a time of returning and meanes of salvation appointed 2. In regard of the occasion and meanes of their fall 56. How is that Their guilt though heynous as against the infinite Majesty of God yet inferiour to that also of Angels in this as who fell of
the grievous torments that he suffered in his righteous soule beyond compare or that he descended or stooped so low in his humility and exinanition of himselfe to manifest his love extended to mankinde and glory now asserted and assumed to the very gates and into the dungeon of hell to the soules and spirits there desolate and deserted of the grace of God or out of his gracious presence there plunged in unspeakable griefe and torments by their wretched and wicked fall from God or prevarication against God and his Christ which though never so great joy to Saints Angels and soules of the Just onely served to them to increase their torments and so after his victory on the Crosse over sin and death this representing a triumph over hell and all that wicked rabble or all that is accounted evill and that hold of sinne and hell or the Prince of hell the Divell 24. But as is said in the story of Dives there is a great space set that none can goe from heaven to hell or returne thence to heaven Luke 16. It is true of any other but the Son of God hee only excepted and yet they also there saw and spake to one another but indeed there is so great a gulfe between them and their estates of despaire and other ugly hellish terror and griefe they can never come one at the other or to the joy and comfort or other estate one of the other such endlesse distance is there betweene their severall habitations and conditions the one injoying eternall blisse by the other quite forfeited and utterly desperate of all remedy and within himselfe as well as before God judged and condemned or this one having unrecoverably lost all grace and time of grace but the other made so good use of it and by grace and in the day of grace momentae unde pendit eternitas improved both that eternally and invincibly impossible to be cast out and possessed of glory which is the joy of the elect summe of all blisse and so the one of all things receiving joy and comfort as delighted in and pleased with the will of God the other in all things tormented that if in heaven as Satan came before God and among the children of God Job 1. yet no comfort in or joy from the glory of that place but rather griefe and torment to be or be accounted no more worthy of it having forfeited it and the price of it the time graces and what else once granted them for the gaine and obtaining that pearle or treasure and the very joy of the Saints a corrasive to them so this such a gulfe they can never passe and though see and speake can never come one at the other yet as these might see and speake as it were at enterview one to another and God is every where much more may Christ who is God how he please descend to shew his victorious conquest and triumph there and so truely divers wayes to be understood he descended into hell 25. But this phrase was left out in some Creeds It is true so it was in the Symbol of the Church of Rome and divers of the Easterne parts as appeareth by the Smyrnian Sardian Toletan Ephesine Constantinopolitan Chalcedon Councels and other ancient confessions but in some of them as the Roman since added is and may be well thus interpreted Whether Literally for his descent in triumph and manifestation of his glory Figuratively and parabolically for the pains of hell sustained in soule at and before his passion under the heavy wrath of God and curse due to us in body and soule Ruf. in Exposit. symb Jerom. Epist. 41. part 1. 26. But there are many and maine objections used against this his descent into hell Many but not so maine or indeed of any consequence to evince what they would or subject so plaine an Article of the faith so universally received and so fully confirmed by holy Scripture 27. They may be easily solved then They are and more pregnant places and proofs by farre produced to the contrary and in confirmation of the truth of the position evidently shewing them but in a manner falacies or captious and sophisticall argumentations 28. But many have infisted on them Yes and no point of doctrine almost never so sound but hath had many impugners no conceit so foolish but hath had many maintainers and upholders 29. It may be profitable to heare them Yes related and resolved since not once but so often stirred and agitated by uncircumspect and simple persons that have erred by them so to receive and have more full solution and to insist more firmly in the truth cleare foundation and though else it might seeme Camarinam movere to stirre up the stinke of some old heresie yet in this respect needfull to satisfie and recall the erring judgements of any missed by partiality or misinterpretation against the current and generally received doctrine of the Church and holy Scripture and such onely left to erre that are either 1. Lazie and will not seeke to know the truth and full satisfaction 2. Wilfull and bent to follow any by-way whatever evident proofe and reason able to satisfie any judicious evince the contrary of which overweening and wilfull spirits every age affording too much plenty and ours superabounding to the sowing and planting or replanting of many an ancient and later heresie 30. May we heare some of the principall objections then It is objected out of that Luke 23. 4. c. Father into thy hands I commend my spirit that therefore hee was not in hell but as a bare conceit scarce worth an answer as falling of it selfe for as by Gods hand his power and protection meant what place is free or out of the hand of God the Psalmist teacheth us as Psal. 139. 8. If I ascend to heaven thou art there if I goe downe to hell thou art there also if I take the wings of the morning and flye to the uttermost parts of the earth there also shall thy right hand hold me So our blessed Saviour in the words of the same Psalmist commendeth his Spirit into his Fathers hand or protection which he was also assured of whether in Heaven and Paradise and hell 31. How secondly It is objected out of that saying This day thou shalt be with me in Paradise spoken to the thiefe on the Crosse that therefore he was not in hell But the answer most plaine both that of Saint Augustine that he filleth all places Heaven Paradise and hell and no place free from his presence as before and so as he was God with him in Paradise or Heaven in regard of his divinity as in his Epistle 57. ad Dardanum Secondly his Soule and Spirit might both ascend into Paradise as was convenient and the same day to hell also for the manifestation of his glory or descending first and ascending after Ephes. 4. 9. as we see the excellent quick motions of the minde and soule and
shalt have no other Gods but me SECT 3. The first Commandement The division of the two Tables and how many Commandements comprised in the first Table and divers opinions concerning the same and foure Commandements proved properly to be in the first Table the first Commandement and full Analysis of it amply expounding the duties and opposite abuses therein literally or else intimated or expressed what it is to have the Lord for our God and the opposite Atheisme or having no God what also to have him alone and the opposite Polytheisme and Idolatry of divers sorts both among the Heathens and other carnall professors and false Christians making Religion but a cloake for their villany or maske for their sin and folly what it is to love know and honour God with the opposite thereof ignorance errors and prophanenes of all sorts springing from ignorance nothing rightly stiled the mother of devotion other malignant sins bordering on prophanenes And the love of God if with all the minde heart soule and strength seen in divers good Christians vertues and duties that with their opposites are here described as in knowledge beleeving 〈◊〉 and 〈…〉 feare and rejoycing in him humility and mecknesse patience and constancy with perseverance and without murmuring obedience and thankefulfulnesse with a zeale of his glory and holy and godly life the branches and fruits of his love the very ground-worke of all the rest of the Commandements 1. VVHat is contained in the first Table By all confessed our duty towards God as in the second our duty towards our neighbour 2. How many Commandements are there in the first Table Though by some controverted yet as may most plainly appeare both by the words of command as well as the substance of the matter foure Commandements 3. What difference then is there of opinions Some distinguishing the first Table into three the second into seven Commandements as Saint Augustine sometimes did the Lutherans and Church of Rome doe others as we and generally all the Fathers the Jews themselves and the matter it self shewes properly dividing the first Table into foure the second into six Commandements 4. What reasons had they for the first Saint Augustine as it seems in holy and reverend respect to the Trinity and that sacred number three so in that comprising the Commandements pertaining to the honour of the Trinity as in that other sacred number seven the rest of the Commandements comprehending the duties to men in this septimana or weeke of the world the others insisting in his steps and for private reasons of their owne and in defence or at least respect of Images 5. What pretence for leaving out a Commandment As in the first Commandement including the second and proposing the second but an exposition of the first so by the first Commandement understanding all Atheisme Idolatry both internall and externall forbidden and true worship commanded and the second Commandement an explication of the former concerning that part chiefly externall Idolatry and worship and so are faine to divide concupisence in the last Commandement according to the severall objects of lust or covetousnesse and make two Commandements out of one so to supply the defect of this second Commandement thus lost or imbezled 6. How prove you rather foure Commandements in the first Table 1. By the foure words of absolute command set downe as in the 1. Commandement Thou shalt have none c. 2. Thou shalt not make c. 3. Thou shalt not take c. 4. Remember that thou sanctifie c. 2. By the things therein commanded viz. Who is to be worshipped the Lord Jehovah in the first Commandement How his solemne worship his owne prescript not Idolatrously second Commandement How far in our lives to honour him to glorifie his name third Commandement When to worship him solemnly on his Sabbath fourth Commandement 7. What the first Commandement Thou shalt have no other Gods but me 8. What Commandement is it A negative Commandement under it according to the first rule comprehending an affirmative so to have no other or strange gods but Jehovah for our God and him alone 9. What the negative part In the prohibition of these five things as forbidding 1. All Atheisme having no God 2. All Polytheisme having many gods 3. All Idolatry having strange gods or idols 4. All Ignorance no knowledge of the true God in the mind 5. All Prophanenesse no honour or expression of it in the life 10. What the affirmative part In these three things commanded 1. To have Jehovah for our God 2. To have him alone for our Lord and God 3. To honour and love him by all meanes in soule and mind as we ought or as agreeable to our duty and his Majesty or in these five parts 1. To have Jehovah and 2. Him alone 3. To Abhorre Idolls 4. Seek to know him faith 5. Seeke to honour him love and duty 11. How are the positive and opposite parts seene or opposed To 1. To have Jehovah for our God 2. Have him alone 3. Honour and love him opposite to 1. Atheisme having no God 2. both 1. Polytheisme many gods 2. Idolatry idols and strange gods 3. both 1. Ignorāce not knowing or loving him 2. Prophanenesse not honouring him 12 How is this further demonstrated 1. As to have Jehovah opposite to having no God 2. As to have him alone so not many gods 3. As to have no other god or strange gods so no idols 4. And if we have him need must it be if in minde to know and love him 5. And so as internall love externall honour opposite to Ignorance and Prophanenesse 13. What is it to have the Lord for our God 1. To set him up in our hearts who is Jehovah the Lord. 2. To set our hearts on him to honour love and feare him as the Lord. 3. To set and apply our whole selves to his worship 14. What the opposite of this Atheisme the not having the Lord and in effect having no God 15. How many sorts of Atheisme 1. Either open Atheisme as of ungratious reprobates 2. Or secret heart Atheisme in any 1. Doubting and questioning the divine Majejesty and his truth by whom they are and subsist 2. Conceiving otherwise of God then wee ought either of his Essence or Persons as Infidels or Hereticks 3. Denying him by prophane life 16. What is it to have him alone Setting him onely and him alone in our hearts and his honour before our eyes denying both our selves and all other things that shall offer to put him out of our hearts or obscure his honour 17. What opposite to this 1. Both Polytheisme having many or any other gods with him or besides him to his dishonour 2. Idolatry setting up other gods Idols or vanities in our hearts to worship them in his stead 18. What Polytheisme With God to joyne any other as those that 1. Either made two Gods one the beginning of all good the other of all ill 2. With God
joyned Baal as the Idolatrous Israelites 3. Joyned with God Angels or other Powers Intelligences or the like Nature fate or such dreams of the old Philosophers or Heathen whereby in effect Atheisme and denying him and his truth without the true God setting up many gods as the Gentiles in generall their many gods recorded in the Scriptures Dagon Ashteroth Moloch Bel and the Dragon c. In the Heathen Stories their Jupiter Mars Mercury and where majores minores dii more in number then the Nations or the Cities and Countries The Egyptians in particular gods of all sorts of things Sunne and Moone and Stars Serpents Fowles Fishes Beasts and men as Osiris ibis c. 19. What Idolatry All setting up of Idolls whether in the heart or Temples to worship them and so of two sorts 1. In the heart internally set on them 2. In the Temples externally to worship them against which especially is the second Commandement 20. Is there no other Idolatry Yes all falling away from the Lord and trusting in or seeking to the creature in neglect of him is before him accounted Idolatry so to trust in or set our heart upon this world with worldlings Upon uncertain riches whence covetousnesse Upon Idolatry pleasures of the Epicures Upon glutony and drunkennesse with the voluptuous pride and vanities of life long life and the like to the forgetting of God and trampling his Commandements under foot is to set up Idols and setting our hearts upon these Idolls ' and fancies of our hearts set up above him in our esteem 21. Who then as thus Idolatrous Both the Covetous worldings Idolatrising to his god Mamon Epicures making their belly their god Ambitious that on aspiring to high places set all their devotion Proud that honor Lucifer for their god Cockering parents that as Eli did above God set their love or dotage on their children and generally all sinners that leave God to serve sin c. or put their trust in creatures leaving the Creator whether wholly or in part totall or partiall Idolatry 22. Who are they Such as against God trust in Princes or any childe of man In the arme of flesh and bloud In force of united Nations In their wit and policy In Ships or Castles or Munitions In great persons their favourites In horses and chariots yea Men Angells or Divells and flie to any other helpes forgetting and neglecting God cannot be said free from Idolatry not David numbring his people nor Achitophel with his plots or Haman with his policy more then Nebuchadnezzar with his arme of flesh and great Babell 23. Who doe idolatrize to Men Angels or the Divels Those who trust in or flie 1. To men and their helpe above God 2. To Angells or Saints to invocate them besides or contrary to Gods will and commandement 3. To Witches and Wizards to helpe them where God leaveth them 4. Evill and wicked arts and meanes that God hateth and condemneth as leaving him his providence and goodnesse 24. What is it to love and honour God Not only to have him or him alone in our hearts in exculsion of other vaine gods but also to exhibite our duties and devotions to him best expressed in those tearmes of his honour and love the exhibition of honour to him as our Lord ' and Master Of love as to our good God and Father 25. What is opposite to this Both Ignorance next door to Atheisme sowing error and bringing forth Sin and Idolatry opposite to his love neither seeking to know or love him Prophanenesse near kin also to Atheism or a kinde of Atheisme in the living and therein expressing it in lewdnesse and denying God by the life and deeds opposite to his honour which is set forth by a godly life 26. How many sorts of ignorance 1. Either purae negationis in such as cannot understand the truth naturall corruption or blindnesse 1 Cor. 2. 14. Rom. 3. 11. 2. Pravae dispositionis affected ignorance wanting knowledge Either 3. Carelessely a carelesse ignorance 4. Stubbornely refusing it a perverse ignorance 27. What the fruit thereof Error and so Atheisme Idolatry and all kinde of sinne and foolishnesse Whiles the foole saith in his heart there is no God and so shew little love trust or confidence in him and consequently poore service or honour of him but much wickednesse abomination and prophanenesse 28. But may not a small measure of knowledge bee pleasing unto God Yes if it be joyned with a desire to have more and study to serve him according to the same and not an affected carelesse or stubborne ignorance 29. But often seene the more knowledge the lesse grace The more is the malice of the Divell seene the fault not being the knowledge by which God is most honoured but in abuse of the gift as good things may be abused yea optimi corruptio pessima and so much the more lamentable if lost or abused but it is the Divells policy and he will take most paines so to pervert and corrupt the best things yea assaile even the Saints and their best grace that did not leave our Saviour unattempted but such as in seeming knowledge fall away shew indeed that they knew nothing as they ought to know 2 Cor. 8. 30. But ignorance is the mother of devotion Yea of blinde devotion but truest devotion will hearken to the voice of wisdome to be guided thereby 31. How is ignorance the mother of prophanenesse As by not knowing caring or remembring there is a God men rush into ill as a horse into the battell or upon destruction without all feare or understanding or as prophane Esau hated of God preferred a messe of pottage and earthly things through ignorance before heavenly blessings 32. How prophanenesse seen In 1. Brutish living that also without all practice of devotion prayer or other godly Meditation Exercises with an irkesomenesse of godlinesse and all good duties 2. Securely living in open and notorious sin or courses as without feare or care grace or shame without God before their eyes 3. Prostituting themselves to sin as slaves to Satan and children of Belial tumbling both themselves and their associates headlong into hel of such we ought to beware destruction and unhappinesse being in their waies and the way of peace have they not knowne and no feare of God before their eies this the fruit of their ignorance 33. Is this the greatest sin against this Commandement It might seeme so by the uglinesse of it but there are sinnes also of a higher nature and degree and monstrous in the perversenesse against knowledge and conscience such as sinne against the Holy Ghost and sacriledge in respect of the heart though alias ressectu Oris Operis actionum ad extra They may be referred to the third Commandement and so as other compounded sinnes may bee found in other or divers Commandements 34. How are we to love God With all our heart with all our minde with all our soule and with all our
and shadowes and so have already had their solemne funerals and obsequies as dead and buried and new in their roomes substituted but as the appointing other feasts and Sabbaths both by God himselfe as well as the Iewes Church besides this seventh the Lords Sabbath and other houses of prayer their Synagogues besides the Temple even whiles the Temple stood as well as since were held no breach of the Commandements concerning them rather inlargement and illustration of either in making the worship and duties more publique and generall or for satisfaction and recompence of the neglects in the due observation visiting and sanctification of them that was required so the Christian Sabbath and Churches thus substituted and succeeding the former and in place of them might well bee accounted no breach but enlargement of the Commandements with the dispensation and illustration of Gods graces in more ample manner and measure shewed and bestowed on the whole world the duties made more publique and illustrations and the morality more illustrated by it 37. How shew you this Cleerly and plainly enough both in the Temple where for a particular one or a few Synagogues besides now so great a multitude of Christian Churches over the whole world are seene with Gods solemne worship in them most religiously promoted and in this particular of the Sabbath where the creation and onely temporall deliverances were by it remembred though spirituall ones that were hoped shadowed in it now the spirituall ones that are performed in it and by it remembred and that great worke of redemption so graciously promised and performed on this day the new and Christan Sabbath consummate and shewn to the world in the glorious resurrection of our blessed Saviour and the comming of the holy Ghost and thereby as demonstrated and honoured as it were universally published and both duty and morality of it more illustriously declared And thus we see how the strict observances servitude and legall types doe not concerne us or our Sabbath nor in all respects and circumstances to bee pressed on us as some prone to Judaizing have done yet though not the ceremony the morality to us fully extended and the Commandement though not literally and punctually in all points by us to be observed nor our Christians Sabbath so in it expressed yet expresly included for the substance and all due observance virtually intended whence what is done is so done and on so good grounds by the Church that were it to doe again the order and change of what is therein changed the Church could well doe no other then as is therein already established so little reason have our Novellists in their clamours raised against it and study of contradiction and thus much of the scruples cast in the way concerning the same it followes how wee Christianly ought to celebrate it and conceive of it in the rest and true sanctification of it 38. How is it ordained a Sabbath or rest Not onely for the servants and cattell though for their sakes also ordained but much more for the rest of the soule to be thereby fitted for spirituall exercises of the day 39. How the rest 1. From sinne the best Sabbath and spirituall rest of the soule else in vaine to rest with the body and the soule busied in sinne or vanity 2. From perturbations of minde better to attend the Lords businesse and that dayes duties 3. From ordinary workes both we our selves and all that are ours Whether of Speciall times as sowing reaping c. Or speciall callings c. Or generall import for the Commonwealth that may be done other times 4. And from all disturbance of this as Fayres Markets Courts c. 5. From worldly speeches words and works better to attend heavenly things and Gods service 40. How the sanctification of this rest By holy duties such as besit the Lords day to be exercised and our duties thereon imployed 41. What duties are they The chiefest best and holiest that can bee done on earth so best beseeming that day viz. pertaining to I. Gods honour immediately 1. Prayer or speaking to God c. All such holy and common service 2. Reading and preaching and hearing it which is Gods speaking to us 3. Singing Psalmes and thanksgiving 4. Administration and receiving the Sacraments 5. Holy meditations conference c. II. Men and so Gods honour secondarily workes of 1. Mercy to releeve the poore 2. Peace charity and love to visit the sick comfort the distressed and to make peace c. 3. Necessity as of wars or in First helping the oxe or asse from perishing much more a soule or Christian in any deepe necessity or Secondly casualty as of fire and helping out of danger a woman in travaile and the Lord healing the sicke c. which are accounted sit Sabbath dayes workes and duties and not onely permitted but even commanded to be done and so as the Priests must labour in sacrifice the Ministers greatest taske this dayes exercise 42. Are there not other workes of necessity Yes but permitted onely for avoiding inconveniences as necessary workes that cannot bee shunned for natures necessity as dressing food setting things in order and such houshold businesse which not to doe with decency were to offend in the Jewes or Iewish superstition not considering the Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath 43. How are they then permitted For the better and more carefull celebration of the Sabbath with more decency and conveniency and so a Sabbath dayes journey 44. How is that Not for any worldly occasion at all allowed but for the performing of any the foresaid duties so to goe to Church or about any such godly workes and without disturbance of the greatest or best duties or as may best further them and the service and honour of God 45. May not the poore then be suffered to worke for necessity Nothing lesse for all are bound and they also must as labour the 6. dayes in the seventh rest in obedience expecting his blessing on their honest labours which shall thereby bee either sufficient for their content or his mercy will stirre up charity for their farther reliefe 46. Js the whole Sabbath to bee spent in such holy exercises Yes to our weake ability the best wee may especially the principall times allotted to Gods publique service and duties by the Church enjoyned not to be neglected and for the resting in godly sort as may beseeme Christians and the Lords day so in godly meditations singing Psalmes and other good exercises 47. But this may seeme burdensome and make the Lords day grievous It may be to the raw and unexercised Christian but to the best it will be most comfort the holiest and best spending of that day and most glad will they be of ability to performe both the best exercises and most of them as comming nearest Saints and Angels doing Gods will and the best things with willingnesse and alacrity 48. But is no relaxation of such exercises
others I. In generall being true and just c. II. In particular as in 6. Commandement to beare no malice c. 7. Commandement keeping body in c. 8. Commandement keepe hands from picking c. 9. Commandement tongue from evill c. 10. Commandement not to covet c. 8. How is that to love my neighbour as my selfe To love him as my selfe in that true sincere and hearty affection that I wish well unto my selfe withall and not hypocritically and fainedly and coldly or dissemblingly but truly for his good and unfainedly for his soules health 9. VVho can love his neighbour so Every good Christian that hath but learned what charity and the love of God is for if he doe not love his brother thus whom hee hath seene neither doth he love God whom he hath not seen but if he say he doth he is a lyar because the truth of God is not in him since truth of love is wanting and God is love and the truth and so hee loveth us in truth and commandeth us so to love one another and seeth the heart and by this showeth who are his children that in truth love him and their neighbour 10. But we see none doe love other so much as themselves Neither is it so set downe so great a love in the quantity but as true a love in the quality and a second in order my selfe the rule my neighbour as my selfe and both in God and for his love else all love of my selfe and others is vaine that is in any other respect such as worldly or carnall and fleshly love is 11 How meane you it then To love him even as my selfe for 1. The manner in true and hearty love though not in that measure and extent in every respect of it or Quoad qualitatem veritatis though not quoad quantitatem magnitudinis so true though not so great alone Quoad modum though not gradum to the utmost degree that I must care and provide for my selfe 12. How then shall this love be Sicut meipsum or as my selfe both in respect of 1. Quod in meipso my soul and his Gods Image 2. Ad quod meipsum for grace here and glory hereafter 3. Propter quod meipsum for Gods glory and the soules good 4. In quo meipsum in God and goodnesse 5. Quosque meipsum to the end and this to love him truly and Christianly as my selfe 13. What will the effect of this be That I will then wish no more hurt to him then to mine owne soule loving him so truly and sincerely as my selfe and for Gods sake and will wish to receive from all men as I would do unto them 14. How is that to doe to all men as I would c. According to the true effect of the Talion law in love not revenge but doing so well by them that I would not wish better from them and so wish as well to them as to my selfe or my owne soule which could not be amisse for who hateth or wisheth ill to himselfe that is but honest or in his right minde and so love the fulfilling of the law seene in all these particulars 15. How towards superiours By doing to them as I would wish them or others to doe by me if I were a superiour and in their place which is the summe and substance of the fifth Commandement whereby 1. To love honour and succour my father and mother 2. To honour and obey the King and his Ministers 3. To submit my selfe to all my governours c. 4 To order my selfe lowly and reverently to all my betters which is the love and effects thereof in honour and obedience and submission and well ordering my selfe in duty and humility that I owe 1. To my naturall parents father and mother 2. To politicall parents King and Magistrates 3. To spirituall parents Pastors and Ministers 4. Oeconomicall and other parents superiours or betters as Masters Teachers ancient rich or noble persons in any degree better or above my selfe and in modesty extended my very equalls 16. How towards others In generall to hurt no body by word nor deed but to be true and just in all my dealing the sum and substance of all the five last Commandments as not hurting any body I. By word contrary to the ninth Commandement by lying slandering false witnesse c. II. By deeds by 1. murder slander malice or the like contrary to the sixth Commandement 2. Adultery fornication or other uncleannesse in tempting others or attempting or wronging others chastity or mine owne contrary to the seventh Commandement 3. Stealing in oppressing fraud or the like contrary to the eight Commandement and so consequently being true and just in all my dealings in all these respects and even not contrary to truth or honesty to cover or desire other mens goods or make any lewd or evill pretences to the same so contrary to the tenth Commandement as more particularly expressed in the words following 17. What is it to bear nomclice or hatred in my To be free from murder and all inducements to the same since who hateth his brother is a man-slayer before God and of malice and hatred sprung contentions quarrells and unquietnesse and so consequently blood-sucking if not blood-shedding so this the effect and substance of the sixth Commandement on the contrary enjoyning and commanding love and the preservation of our neighbours life and person 18. What is it to keepe my body in temperance sobernesse and chastity The substance of the seventh Commandement where these vertues of temperance in our mindes affections and actions enjoyed sobriety in our speech gestures attires actions and behaviour and chastity both of body and soule though as most seen in the actions and body so for good example sake intimated and most required and on the contrary in that Commandement all adultery fornication and acts of uncleannesse with all intemperance and unchastity and signes or meanes of the same forbidden 19. What to keepe my hands from picking and stealing The plaine sense of the eight Commandement forbidding all stealth whether by covert fraud cousenage or secret purloyning or overt oppression in robbery and other unjust and ungodly courses getting others goods or encreasing our owne as on the contrary in that Commandement the preservation of our neighbours estate restoring of goods unlawfully gotten and lawfull getting and using yea laying out of our owne goods to pious and charitable uses enjoyned if as we are but stewards we will not be accounted theeves and usurpers before God 20. What by keeping the tongue from evill speaking lying and slandering The substance of the ninth Commandement where all untruth and uncharity by untrue and undue testimony publicke or private in place of judgement or else by lyes slanders or false reports to the wrong of the neighbour and his or our owne good name and breach of love and charity are forbidden and so on the contrary truth and charity in all these respects to the preservation
either our necessities require or Gods blessings invite every day houre minute of time yeelding some new blessing or it selfe a blessing in the enjoying a longer time of grace and so such imitation 6. Fideliter fidenter in true saith with love unsained and sure confidence reposing our trust in God without waving or doubting as Saint James speaketh 7. Presenter as knowing or considering with the Philosopher the present time is only ours and delay breeds danger and here is no delaying or dallying with God in this to be used for true it is Nescis quid serus vesper ferat qui non est hodie cras minus aptus erat as true in this 8. Perseveranter with all constancie and patienc waiting the Lords seisure and never weary of weldoing remembring the widow importunity prevailing with the unjust Judge as much more we with the most good God 9. Practice and thus as perseveringly even to pray continually not only the vicissitude of frequent confession in humility fervent prayer in true faith pious intercession in unfaigned charity and praise and thanksgiving in duty and gratitude a forcible kinde of prayer to pull downe new blessings each taking their turns in a constant and continued course but such gracious speech of the tongue seconding the humble desires of the heart and both seconded by a godly course of life best fitting a devout Christian as the good life of the Preacher may seeme a continuall Sermon so this godly life of a good Christian in this course may seeme a continuall prayer from which directions how great abundance of holy meditations and helpes to devotion all incentives to this divine duty will arise may plainly appeare What followeth in speciall to be considered The Lords prayer as an absolute platforme of true prayer the Preface and other parts of it SECT 3. Of the Lords Prayer in particular and the Preface thereof and that fitly in the words or forme of the Lords prayer or any part of its the Analysis of the same prayer and first of the Preface of it how is our Father and what sons he hath with the comfort that we have of such his being our Father more then in any other title or respect and what use we should make of it in our well living hom he is said ours and in what respect so by us in our prayers to be named viz. to minde us to pray for the generall good of all our brethren why it is said in heaven to minde us of our owne low estate and his excellent Majesty so to elevate our eyes and soules to his Throne of glory Whence we hope for and expect all our helps and supply from him who though on earth and in all places most gloriously there raigning with our greatest joy and comfort if we be truly his why we ought to pray and not neglect it how in this Preface the holy Trinity in m●●ed or to be understood 1. IS it fit to pray in the very words of the Lords Prayer It is very convenient and being rightly understood there cannot be conceived better that if all the wise men in the world had consented together a more absolute frame could not be contrived nor uttered with humane wisdome and therefore well worthy to be used and if God be pleased with us for his sake his words also may well be deemed acceptable especially when we present our selves in his merits and our minde in his words 2. But may we not alter them 3. Not in substance but in circumstance or manner to expresse more in particular our necessities or desires which there in generall are contained 3. May we not pray the effect of any one petition by it selfe Yes if our necessities so require and though in more ample illustration yet the same in effect for if opposite or besides the matter there expressed in briefe it cannot be right or accepted and so having used our best skill to expresse our wants or desires in any particular we usually close with this as in the most perfect and assured acceptable forme that can be uttered and more acceptable how much better understood for so we pray more truly in his words and with his Spirit wherefore we ought to take the best care we may rightly to understand the same 4. What is therein contained Three parts the Preface of confession Our Father which art in heaven The Petitions for our selves and other six in number Hallowed be thy name c. The conclusion of praise and thanksgiving For thine is thy Kingdome power and glory c. 5. What is contained in the Preface I. A confession of Gods great Majesty mercy and goodnesse in that a Father our Father in heaven his throne of glory II. A confession of our owne 1. humility 2. duty 3. wants and 4. hope As we are sonnes we say our Father as we are in earth looke up to heaven up to the hills from whence commeth our helpe even to our God in his holy habitation 6. Who is here understood called Father 1. Either God according to his essence the Father of lights and so the whole Trinity may bee understood as Father of spirits and as the Sonne is called Counsellour everlasting Father and Prince of peace Isaiah 9. 6. 2. Or first Person in Trinity in relation to the Sonne and Holy Ghost and so we pray to the Father in the name of the Sonne and by the help of the Holy Ghost 7. How is God our Father Not only by creation for so are all creatures also with men and Angels But first more particularly as made sonnes in Christ his naturall Son By redemption restored By adoption acknowledged 2. Manifested sonnes by our education in his house the Church Teaching by his word and doctrine Correction by his fatherly chastisements Sanctification by his holy Spirit Inheritance of Sons in his blessing 8. What Sons hath God Both 1. generally all creatures by creation 2. Specially Princes by participation of honour and authority children called of the most High and Gods Most especially and naturally Christ by eternall generation 3. Particularly and legally all Christians by adoption in Christ and though false restored to be the Sons of God 9. What are we put in minde of by this name Father 1. Of the means wherby we are restored to favour our elder brother Christ. 2. The confidence that we may come with before him being admitted Sons 3. The love that he beareth to us whom hee accounteth so as himselfe our Father 4. The dignity and what persons we ought to be so accounted his Sons 5. The indignity we offer if we be not Sonnes or faithfull to presume and so to be assured our prayer is but sinne and we deserve a curse and not a blessing 10. Why call we him Father rather then by any other name Because a name as most truly honourable so most arguing love for though King or Judge or Prince or the like seem in common eyes more honourable titles yet
supply of grace 23. How is he said to be in heaven As in his Throne and Palace of Glory and whence he is seen especially to manifest the same both in mercy and judgements 24 How his glory seen or manifested there 1. In the inferiour heavens by whose excellent creatures sunne and hoasts there as the heavens declare the glory c. Psal. 19. 2. In the third heaven where is manifest his blessed vision and fruition to the Saints and holy Angels 3. In the heaven of his Church where manifested to his Saints on earth and those that excell in vertue 25. How else is it manifested thence 1. As his Almighty power is chiefly seene by his great works and influence of goodnesse thence 2. As his Al-presence shadowed in the alcovering heavens universall architecture 3. As his al-sufficiency to himselfe and all his creatures signified by that universall covering 4. As his Al-seeing knowledge by that universall compasse of the curtaines or canopie and light of heaven and so 5. His Omniscence Omnisufficiencie Omnipresence and Omnipotence lively shadowed and represented in the heavens and as his purity holinesse represented in the purity and brightnesse of them and his mercies and judgements also from thence 26. How his mercies and judgements manifested thence 1. In the signes and wonders shewed thence to the terrour of the inhabitants of the earth 2. In the lightning and thunder storme and tempest causing feare and amazement and often distruction 3. In the clouds and raine as in Noahs flood sometimes bringing and threatning devastation 4. In the distinguishing dayes and nights times and seasons by the lights and revolution of heaven 5. In the influence of goodnesse into inferiour things as gracious dewes from heaven 27. How is he then by us conceived to be in heaven 1. In the heaven of sanctified soules by his grace 2. In the heaven of his Church by his mercy and goodnesse 3. In the heaven of visible heavens by his power and declarations of his glory 4. In the heaven of superiour heavens his Court and Palace in excellent glory with his heavenly Courtiers Saints and Angels 5. In the heaven of highest heavens dwelling in inaccessible light and glory 28. Is he not then on earth Not to be thought that he is absent any where that filleth all places by his powerfull presence in whom we live and move and have our being and though heaven his Throne yet earth his footstoole and both heaven and earth filled with his goodnesse and glory who both here and in heaven guideth and governeth all things 29. Why say we then so particularly in heaven Because that in most eminencie the heaven is his Throne or seat and Palace of glory and for our understanding as earthly Kings his image have Palaces of State to shew their magnificence so this heavenly Emperour hath that his celestiall Palace wherein is most perspicuously above all other places manifested his glorious Majesty 30. What more learne we hence 1. The greatnesse of comfort and considence that we should have in our heavenly Father 2. The height of our godly ambition to be worthy sonnes of this our heavenly heavens Father 3. The fulnesse of joy and gladnesse from consideration of the excellencies of this our heavenly father above all earthly fathers and this our King above all other earthly Kings and Emperours 31. How is this especiall comfort confidence or joy As our heavenly Father hath heavenly blessings and inheritance to give us and doth love his above all earthly fathers love who love but blindly ignorantly and imperfectly and he eternally without end or imperfection he hath all power and all Kings but wormes in comparison of him and like the dust under his feet yea Satan and all enemies tremble before him who is able to defend his from all adversaries and this our prayer is our speech to salute this our Father who is thereby assuredly knowne our God and Father as we more familiarly admitted into his presence to speake to him and so often to salute him in that heavenly language 32. But if we be his what need we often pray So much the more 1. To shew our duty and love to his honour 2. To approve our selves thereby in his favour so often and ordinarily even here admitted into his presence 3. To pay our duties that we owe of blessing praise and thankfulnesse the tribute of our soules 4. To renew the covenant of grace and cloath us in Christs garments and justice more fully 5. To reach out the hand of faith thereby continually to receive new blessings 33. What if we neglect it We not only shew our selves unworthy of blessings but to have no faith and not to be sonnes that desire not our fathers honour nor to receive blessings from him for if we will not 1. Offer our selves in his presence 2. Speake to him by confession 3. Aske him blessing by prayer 4. Salute him in praises 5. Reach out the hand of faith to receive blessings 6. Aske or speake for cloathing or meat Medicines or help Cordialls or other comforts in our fathers hand and gift shall we not shew our selves most unworthy of any blessings and worthy to be blotted out of his favour in consideration of which we ought often thus to pray as we are taught Our Father which art in heaven 34. What farther expositions may you make hereof In consideration how this Preface is applied to the whole Trinity not only in generall as one God in essence but in particular intimated according to their persons as by 1. Father remember the first Person in Trinity both to Christ and all us a Father 2. Our representing him in whom God is made our Father Christ our Brother Mediator Judge Saviour and redeemer 3. Which art in heaven intimating the holy Ghost inhabiting the Saints or Gods presence by his holy Spirit in his holy heaven both his 1. Saints and their soules by his graces Conscience by sanctification 2. His Church on earth by his mercies and consolations 3. His Church above by his glorious visitation and continuall comfort thus understanding particularly one God in three Persons Father Son and holy Ghost by these words Our Father which art in heaven 35. What followeth After this Preface in the second place the petitions of the Lords Prayer SECT 4. The three former Petitions of c. The Analysis and generall distinction of all the six petitions with the order of them and reason of the same this prayer is so excellent as in it comprehending the substance of all prayers and all the sorts and parts of them the number of the petitions and quality thereof the 1. petition for Gods glory why fittest so first to be paced The parts of this petition what meant by the name of God expressed in the third Commandement and what also by sanctifying his name and how to be performed by us in all our thoughts words and workes respectively all of them and so to be hallowed
Magistrates that set forth his honour 2. All faithfull Pastors Prelates and Teachers that set forth the true faith 3. All godly Elders that governe well and give good example 4. All holy Confessors and Saints that have so set forth his glory 5. All glorious Martyrs Apostles Prophets Patriarkes and good men that have done and do their best endeavours to set forth and witnesse the truth 24. What doe you then pray for in this respect That God will be pleased to enable them with his graces more readily and cheerfully to set forth his glory as that 1. The King and Magistrate may be Carefull and zealous Prudent and Religious Just c. 2. Pastors and Prelates may be Faithfull in their places Diligent in their duty Conscionable and carefull of their charge all others may be godlily disposed according to their severall offices and duties and so to praise God for any his excellencies and graces appearing in them to the advancement of his Kingdome 25. What is opposite to this Kingdome The Divell and all his wicked agents and instruments raised up against God and his truth such 1. All evill Princes and Lawes 2. All evill Magistrates and negligent Pastors and slothfull 3. All evill and false Prophets and Idolaters 4. All evill blasphemers and 5. Generally all ungodlinesse and vanity 26. What of these That God would be pleased to overthrow root out and destroy all such as the power of the kingdome of Satan and opposite to his Kingdome 27. What in summe is there then expressed or intimated in this Petition 1. The part expressed as before shewed the 1. Petition it selfe for our selves 2. Intercession for others let thy Kingdome come for all our good II. The part intimated both a First confession of a 1. due that Gods Kingdome ought to be advanced 2. Duty from us and others that we ought so much as in us lies to advance that Kingdome 3. Defect in us and others too common to be too negligent hereof Secondly deprecation against all oppugners and opposition thereof whether in our selves or others Thirdly thanksgiving and praise 1. For the graces in us or others tending to the propagation of his Kingdome 2. For his so gracious government of us and of all things 28. How sum you up this in order 1. Confession of a 1. Due that it is most holy and just that Gods Kingdome should come and his power thereof declared 2. Duty of our selves and others that O Lord it is our duty all of us to endeavour the same and wish and seeke by all meanes to advance it 3. Defect that there is even too supine a negligence in us and others in this as well as in many other good duties II. Our petition for 1. Gods power to be shewne in advancing it 2. For our owne well disposednesse that it may be such that we may doe our best to promote it and that his Kingdome may come in us III. Our intercession for others that others may be as well disposed as we our selves and that his Kingdome may come in their hearts IV. Our deprecation that God will be pleased to pull downe all enemies of his Kingdome and all opposition and opposers with their malice and envy V. Our thanksgiving that it hath pleased him 1. So graciously to governe all things as hee doth to a good end 2. To give us grace to desire the same and to seeke it as well as many others 3. Further to assure our selves and soules of that his Kingdome so to be encreased perfected and consummate in his due time in us and others to the glory of his grace and power 29. What the third petition That Gods will may be done as readily by mee and all Gods people upon earth as by those blessed Saints and Angels in heaven where it is to be done with all joy courage and alacrity 30. What is the order of it After the desire of sanctifying Gods name and of the advancement of his Kingdome that in that Kingdom his will may be done by us and all men whereby better to be assured we are his subjects as well as those willing and ready Ministers of his Saints and Angels in heaven that his illustrious Kingdome of glory 31. What the parts The 1. Object the will of God 2. Action to be done or performed 3. Collimation of the action after the sublimed rule of Angels obedience and duty 32. What is the will of God Understood to be either his 1. Secret will which we are not to search into but he will see in due time and manner performed 2. His revealed will which is for us and other children which is required of us to be knowne and performed and so for us and our instruction revealed in his holy Word Law and Gospel a most sure and true record written for our remembrance 33. What the doing or performance of it Our holinesse in the 1. Faith knowing and beleeving it 2. Practice of good workes and obedience answerably to be thought on and proposed by us to be done as it is required at our hands by God and so herein professed obedience generally to Gods holy will and commandements and that in speciall sense as not only the actions but the heart and cogitations submitted to the performance thereof as in the last Commandement the very inmost cogitations of soule and thought to be reduced to this obedience and the love of God and thither tendeth that following collimation and direction 34. How is this that rule of direction or imitation In earth as it is in heaven understood either I. Improperly in 1. Our bodies and members that are earthly as well as in our soules and mindes that are heavenly 2. The lower parts and powers of our affections as well as higher power of will 3. Those that are yet uncalled as well as those that are called and already in the heaven of the Churches bosome and Kingdome of grace 4. In our owne selves endeavouring as in Christ to perfect the same II. Properly in earth by us that dwell in this world in the midst of many temptations and provocations to sin as well as by the inhabitants of heaven Saints and Angels free from all temptations and discouragements 35. How is it so done If as by them usually performed so we strive to doe it obeying both 1. Voluntarily which is with all our hearts willingly freely cheerfully readily without hypocrisie grudging repining murmuring griefe or delay 2. Totally endeavouring to his whole will for the matter of it manner of it every part of it so his will and not ours to the denying of our selves 3. Continually so with Constancie in our good intention Perseverance to the end and thus striving to perfection of obedience we yeeld true and sincere obedience which though in us imperfect when thus regulated by this perfect obedience and aiming at that perfection of Angels though not attaining unto it is accepted of God and so to the proportion of our ability here
others good 9. Uncharitable that hate or love not their brother 10. Hard hearted and cruell or disdainfull that scorne or pitty not others 11. Malecontented that doe enjoy nothing as not content with any thing 12. Idle and sloathfull oppressors and theefe deceiver c. that get not their owne but others bread 13. Unthankfull and they that trust in riches or the arme of flesh and never truly depend upon God to aske or receive it of his gift and so in generall we see all ungodly and ungracious men faile in this as most of the other petitions 20. What pray we against Against both 1. Extreame poverty or want of necessaries 2. Want of quietnesse content peace and other comforts of life 3. Unseasonable weather 4. Invasion of enemies 5. Sicknesse and mortality whereby deprived or cannot comfortably enjoy Gods blessings 6. Idlenesse covetousnesse 7. Worldly care 8. Discontent uncharity whereby wee get not or use not our goods lawfully 9. Too much fulnesse whereby in pride or vanity and excesse we forget God and all moderation of daily bread and abuse his blessings and our selves 21. What in the letter hereof expressed 1. The petition for our selves to obtaine such our daily bread and a blessing upon it 2. The intercession for others for the same grace and gifts from God to bee granted there with us What intimated I. A confession of 1. God the giver of all goodnesse and so of his continuall graces to us in giving us c. 2. Our duty to beg it daily at his hand Our defect and neglect of this duty II. A deprecation against all extreame want and poverty or other hindrances of enjoying our daily bread III. Thanksgiving and praise for 1. For all benefits and blessings in generall or speciall received 2. Deliverance from adversities and want Hope of being heard in the continuance and comfortable enjoying c. 22. How summe you it up together in order I. Our confession of 1. Gods bounty that O Lord that every good gift and every perfect giving commeth downe from above c. and that thou clothest the Lilies and feedest the young Ravens that call upon thee 2. Next our duty the eyes of all things looke up and trust in thee O Lord for thou givest them meat in due season thou openest thy hand and fillest all things living with plenteousnesse 3. Defect too often O Lord wee have gone away from thee and have not looked up to the hils from whence commeth our helpe II. Petition Be mercifull unto us O Lord and give us this day our daily bread III. Intercession Shew us the light of thy countenance give thy blessing unto the people IV. Deprecation defend us O Lord from want and let there be no decay no leading into captivity and no complaining in our streets V. Thanksgiving and praise 1. Happy are the people that be in such a case yea blessed are the people that have the Lord for their God 2. We will also tell of thy mercies and sing of thy praise without ceasing 3. In assurance of thy grace we will trust in thy salvation yea Iacob shall rejoyce and Israel shall be right glad 23. What the second petition for our selves The fifth in order forgive us our trespasses as we forgive c. wherein we aske forgivenesse of all sinnes errors and offences against God or man as we are in charity affected and in repentance humbled and ready to forgive others without which condition of charity and repentance in faith it is impossible our sinnes should be forgiven 24. What the order of it After asking good things from God our daily bread we are hereby put in minde what is the hindrances of his blessings our sinnes and so taught to desire the impediments may be removed whereby his blessings may more freely descend for our sinnes are a separation of our soules from God and of him and of his favour from us which that it may be removed and we reconciled we pray forgive c. 25. What herein contained 1. The petition wherein the Action forgivenesse Object of our sins 2. The conditions as we forgive them that c. 26. What meant by forgivenesse Gods absolute remission of sin both in guilt and punishment and blotting it out of his booke and remembrance that it never rise up in judgement against us to shame or condemne us with the meanes whereby we desire it gratiously effected in us therein considered I. The giving of his graces of Faith and Repentance Humility Confession II. Forgiving the Guilt of sin spotting the soule Punishment deserved in his anger Death temporall and eternall III. Acquitting us by 1. Applying Christs merits to us 2. Accounting and acknowledging us just before him 3. Renewing our decayes by his Spirit by sanctification and holinesse 27. What meant by sin or our debts Our offences against God or man for which we owe satisfaction and so become debtors which debts we are never able to satisfie and so we pray for forgivenesse of those sinnes offences or debts of ours being so many and so grievous both against God and men 28. What sorts of these debts are there I. Against God many and infinite ones in number and greatnesse as 1. Errors 2. Ignorances negligences 3. All manner of breaches of his Law both in thought word and deed II. Against superiours in disobedience III. Against equalls in love and and charity IV. Against inferious in uncharity and want of mercy V. Against our selves by our intemperance error and rebellion Or we are debtors To God owing love and duty To all superious owing obedience To all men owing justice in love unicuique suum reddere To enemies to put away anger and forgive injury To our selves owing abstinency from ill that hurts the soule by which we are to be rightly ordered towards God our superiours our neighbours our enemies our selves and ought to render every one of these their due or we be else debtors to God and men and sinners against God especially in every of them as breakers of his Commandements 29. Why say we our trespasses As most sensible of our owne sinnes which doe in number passe the sands or the haires on our head in number and are innumerable as the Psalmist speaketh and which may be a motive to us both 1. To forgive others since we have so many sins to be forgiven at Gods hand 2. To pray also for the forgivenesse of others sins which we will if we have either charity or sense therein of ours or others misery 30. Why adde we that condition 〈◊〉 we forgive c. To teach us that without charity as well as saith it is impossible to please God or obtain our prayers to be heard or forgivenesse at his hand therefore if we ever hope to obtaine our prayers we must be in perfect charity and able truly to pray for our enemies perfecutors and slanderers and forgive them that trespasse against us 31. What if we doe not forgive them We may
and Anen 2. Verbe so his actions that are done in truth and his fiat or Amen was the foundation of all creatures 3. Adverbe so it signifies certainly or without end or doubt and so are all his words and truth and such and hence our confidence 21. How is Amen used Either for 1. Wishing as usually in prayer Amen fiat 2. Confirmation or ratification as Gal. 1. 20. 3. Usuall affirmation single in speech Amen I say c. 4. Asseveration doubled as Amen Amen dico vobis even almost to oath Jo. 16. 23. 5. Consent as in many prayers praises in the Church 1 Cor. 14. 16. c. used by the people 22. How here used In any of these present respects as in 1. Our confession of praise and consent to the praises of God 2. Our affirmation or asseveration of his glory and our duty 3. Our wishing and hearty desiring our prayers to be heard 4. Our ratification of our vowes and thanksgiving and confirmation of our faith 23. For what may it serve us then 1. To confirme us in the faith and confidence we should pray with 2. To comfort us in assurance of the promises of God and truth of them 3. To Convince and 4. To condemne us if as gracelesse ones we pray unfaithfully Hypocrites wee pray but dissemblingly 24. In what may we then be assured or confirmed in this faith and confidence 1. In God who hath commanded us to pray and offer this sacrifice of praise 2. In the promises of God assuring us to bee heard if we pray faithfully 3. In the testimony of a good conscience that we pray as we ought faithfully and charitably 4. In the holy Spirit who witnesseth with our spirits and maketh us truly say Abba Father 5. In Christ in whom the promises of God are Yea and Amen and in whom as we say Father at first we may here also most confidently say Amen 25. What followeth in the Catechisme The question concerning the sum and substance of the Lords Prayer SECT 8. The thirteenth Question The summe of the Lords Prayer and all the parts thereof and petitions before rehearsed epitomized and hereby paralelled with the answer to the thirteenth Question As else the preface both severally and other petitions explained In the first petition hallowing Gods name The second petition thy Kingdome come in all the parts and branches thereof and 3. Petition Thy will be done in earth as it is in Heaven so likewise explicated as the fourth petition for our daily bread and ● Petition for forgivenesse of our sinnes as we forgive others and the 6. Petition for deliverance from temptation and all evill as those before with the conclusion and the whole doctrine in them comprised thus epitomized and explaned An other manner of exposition of the same by some propounded wherein the seven deadly sins in the seven Petitions so by them numbred prayed against and the opposite virtues desired though rather in very deed in every of the petitions are all the said vices and vertues and all others whatsoever plainly deprecated or desired 1. VVHat desirest thou of God in this Prayer I desire my Lord God our heavenly Father who is c. 2. What is here in these words contained An exposition by way of paraphrase of the Lords Prayer and so if we marke it we may find all the parts and petitions of it delivered and expressed in other words a little more at large for our better understanding of the sense and meaning of the same 3. How then shew you the parts and petitions of it particularly 1. The Preface of our Father which art in heaven in these words I desire my Lord God our heavenly Father who is the giver of all goodnesse 2. The first Petition Hallowed be thy name The second Petition Thy Kingdome come The third Petition Thy will be done c. That he will send his grace to me and to all people that we may worship him hallowing his name Serve him in his Kingdome Obey him as we ought according to his will 3. The fourth petition And give us this day our daily bread in these words That he will send us all things necessary both for our soules and bodies 4. The fifth petition To forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them c. in this That he will be mercifull unto us and forgive us our sinnes 5. The sixth petition Not to lead us into temptation but to deliver us from evill in these words That it may please him to save and defend us from all dangers ghostly and bodily and from all sin and wickednesse from our ghostly enemy and from everlasting death 6. The conclusion For thine is the Kingdome power and glory for ever and ever Amen in these words And this I trust hee will doe of his mercy and goodnesse in Jesus Christ our Lord and therefore I say Amen So be it 4. And how doe you more particularly shew the full exposition thereof By considering the substance of what is intimated or expressed in the severall parts and petitions aforesaid 5. How in the Preface In the confession of the great mercy love and compassion of our Father as well as his Majesty and glory in the heavens whither we are to elevate our soules and eyes considering our wants and miseries here on earth and so we say and confesse Him 1. Father of mercy and consolation and fountain of goodnesse Light and Spirits and so of our spirits 2. Our father in Jesus Christ and our loving and mercifull God 3. Who is now and for ever the same Alpha and Omega the first and last 4. In heaven the Throne of his glory by his powerfull presence glorious Majesty The Kingdome of his Church by his graces The hearts of the faithfull by his holy Spirit And thus wee confesse him giver of all goodnesse and elevating our eyes and mindes to heaven say Wee have lifted up our eyes unto the hills from whence commeth our help and to thee that dwellest in the heavens in majesty power and glory most gracious God and our loving father which art in heaven 6. How in the first Petition 1. In our confession of Gods goodnesse Thy name is worthy to receive all honour O thou holy one of Israel and holiest of all holies Our duty and it is fit O Lord wee should set forth thy praise and ever be telling of thy glory and sanctifying thy name Our neglect yet O Lord we have not honoured thee as we ought but rather many wayes prophaned thy most holy name and word and other means of our good Lord we bewaile and give us grace truly to lament our sinnes negligences and offences 2. In our requests our petition and intercessions Lord let thy name bee hallowed by us and all people more conscionably in our lives and all our actions that our tongues may shew forth thy praise and wondrous works and that we may ever be doing good and giving of thankes 3. In our deprecation
to be continued here and consummate in glory where all teares shall be wiped from our eies and in token of full forgivenesse all misery done away 9. How in the sixt Petition I. In our confession of 1. Gods graces first preventing to preserve us from evill and temptation to sin Subsequent to defend and keepe us in temptations from contagion of sin and to deliver us from evill or turne it to our good 2. Our weaknesse how apt to fall unable to resist evill or doe good how ready to faile in temptation 3. Our sufficiency in any measure from thee O Lord so O Lord we confesse our weaknesse without thy graces and that all our sufficiencie is from thee II. Our request or petition for our selves and intercession for others O Lord not lead nor suffer us to fall or leave us in any temptation whether of sin or calamity to despaire or forsake thee but relieve us with thy saving graces and turne the temptations to our good and give a happy issue III. In our deprecation of all evill included and infolded in the petition the chiefe part of it Lord remove all evill of temptation sin guilt or punishment asswage the power and malice of the Divell and deliver thy chosen and Israel from all their sins and infirmities and feare of the enemy Thanksgiving for all our temporall and spirituall deliverances from all calamities sinne and temptations to sinne and happy issue given to such temptations or misfortunes Thanksgiving for his graces continually infused and present with us in our distresses and miseries whereby we are enabled to passe through or beare them Thanksgiving for our hope and assurance of such further graces and the continuance of them that O Lord thou hast beene so powerfully present with us in all our needs and necessities and wilt so continue as having promised to be with thine to the end Our father 's trusted in thee and were delivered and thou O Lord wilt deliver Israel from all her sinnes as thou hast delivered thy Saints and we will therefore praise thee with joyfull lips 10. How in the conclusion In the voice of joy and thanksgiving ascribing all praise to him and magnifying him and his holy name shewing that he only is worthy of all honour and to whom wee are so particularly bound for his blessings and so we and all creatures do acknowledge the might of the Majesty of his glory the ground of our confidence whereby we are assured to be heard drawne from 1. Matter acknowledged his due all Kingdome and dominion Power and might Glory and Majesty 2. Manner originally absolutely and eternally his and at his dispose Circumstances of 1. Person thine O gracious God and loving Father in Jesus Christ. 2. Time and eternity they are thine for ever and ever 3. Certainty in truth and indeed as thou art true and thy word Yea and Amen And thus in this confidence we conclude with the ascribing all praise and honour to him in the way of thanksgiving for his mercies and manifestation thereof saying For thine is Kingdome power and glory for ever and ever Amen 11. What other exposition of this Prayer can you briefly shew As some expound these six Petitions by them to be divided into seven to be understood in particular so many deprecations against the seven deadly sins and prayer for the vertues to them opposed both in the generall and in the branches 12. In what manner The first Petition Hallowed be thy name that all pollution and luxury may be removed and chastity and temperance given that so both our bodies and soules may be fit and spotlesse temples of the Holy Ghost and his holy name neither in us or by our words lives or actions dishonoured or blasphemed The second Petition Thy Kingdome come that covetousnesse and so the dominion of earthly things as serving Mammon may be removed and contentednesse peace and poverty of spirit in humility may be given us because Blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the Kingdome of heaven The third Petition Thy will be done c. that idlenesse and loathing of goodnesse removed and devotion and divine love given us that inflamed therewith we may be willing to perform obedience both in body and soule and so Gods will done in earth as it is in heaven The fourth Petition Give us this day our daily bread that gluttony and drunkennesse may be removed and sobriety and temperance given us that having moderate necessaries to relieve and comfort us we may there with be content and possesse our soules and the gaine of godlinesse The fifth Petition Forgive us c. that all anger and rancour or malice removed charity and patience may be given us that we forgiving others in love and mercy may be forgiven The sixt Petition Lead us not into temptation that pride whereby we seem especially to tempt God and to be tempted to leave God in all sin may be removed and humility given us that not trusting in our owne strength but in Gods wee may be defended The seventh Petition But deliver us from evill that envie the malicious root of mischiefe whereby the Divell enoying at Adam as man his God and his obedience and felicity neglected sin so entred may be removed and love the fountaine and grace the beginning of all good may be given whereby we delivered from evill 13. How is this exposition approved Though well and conveniently used for the morall application and tending to the planting of vertue and supplanting of vice in all these capitall heads the seven deadly sins and their Lernean poyson where with they infect the soule yet not so fully accommodate to the textuall explication whether in the letter or genuine sense and meaning of the Text. 14. Wherefore say you so Because not only one of the same sinnes in such severall petition but in each petition rather every one of the same seven deadly sins in the generall and most of them and their branches are desired to be removed and the opposite vertues planted as may be seen manifested in particular 15. How is this seen or shewne 1. As in the first Petition Hallowed be thy name all sinne is an unhallowing or prophaning of Gods Image and name and so prayed to be removed and virtue in generall planted 2. As in the second Petition Thy Kingdome come all sinnes are the power and kingdome of Satan which wee desire removed and Gods Kingdome in virtues and graces to be planted 3. As in the third Petition Thy will be done c. as all virtue and grace in us is Gods will and al sin against it both in generall and in particular we consequently desire done or removed 4. As in the fourth Petition Give us c. as we desire moderation of contentednesse in godlinesse which can never be but in the forsaking of all sin and desire of grace and vertue 5. As in the fifth Petition Forgive us c. we pray expresly against all sinnes
heart 2. To set at liberty in the spirituall bondage of sinne 3. To inflame us with a kinde of heat of devotion 4. To give patience in adversity and trouble 5. To nourish us in health and prosperity 6. To restore us in sicknesse or extremity 7. To unite us to God in peace and charity 8. To Communicate his graces to us in necessitie 9. To make us whole if weak and lame 10. To preserve us being made whole 11. To strengthen us in all our life 12. To conduct us to glory in our death And according to this is Saint Bernards meditation on the same 12. How is that That this heavenly Manna and divine mystery 1. Is physicke to the body 2. Way to the traveller 3. Strength to the weak 4. Joy to the whole 5. Refuge to the poore 6. Counsell to the rich 7. Help to them in danger 8. Heavenly comfort to the departing soule According to that which saith a reverend moderne Divine 1. If that I am sicke here I may cure me 2. If whole here I may keep me 3. If living here I may comfort me 4. If dead in sin here I may raise me 5. If I desire to burn with the love of God here I may inflame me 6. If I am cold in devotion here I may warme mee 7. If blind here I may enlighten me 8. If spotted here I may cleanse me 9. I will not flie from God as Adam did since here I shall finde grace to strengthen me 13. What sentences of holy Scripture concerning it For our comforts we may remember That 1. To Adam was said that day thou eatest of that tree thou shalt die but of this here to us eat and live for ever Joh. 6. 58. 2. Of mount Sinai it was said he that toucheth the hill Exod. 19. shall die but who commeth to this hill and feast described Esa. 25. 6. shall live 3. In Sampsons Riddle De forte dulcedo and out of this Lion of the Tribe of Juda the sweetnesse of this heavenly Manna in the Eucharist 4. Jacob said surely God is in this place though I was not ware of it Gen. 28. 16. so may we say God is here though we see him not 5. David saith Memoriam fecit mirabilium suorum Psal. 111. true of this holy mystery his memoriall and Tues magnus faciens mirabilia Psal. 86. 9. 6. Abraham weaning Isaac made a feast Gen. 21. 8. Christ to weane us from the love of the world maketh us this heavenly feast 7. To Zacheus was said This day is salvation come unto thy house Luke 19. this is said to our soules by Christs comming 8 Adam cast out of Paradise must eat the bread of carefulnesse man received to grace in Christ doth thus eat the bread of life Angels food 9. The Spouse in the Canticles saith Cant. 5. 1 I have gathered my myrrhe with my spice I have eaten my honey-combe with my honey I have drunk my wine with my milk eat O my friends drink c. so speaketh Christ to our soules in the Eucharist 10. Christ teacheth this salutation Peace be to this house Luke 10. 5. he saith so to us in this and if we open to him he promiseth to sup and rest with us Rev. 3. 21. 14. What should the soule say in this respect It may well answer in the words of the Spouse 1. Ecce Sponsus as the wise Virgins Mat. 25. 6. and go forth to meet him 2. Ecce Ancilla Domini with the blessed Virgin Luke 1. 18. 3. Dic verbum vivet anima with the Centurion Matth. 8 29. 4. Lift up your heads ye gates and be you lift up you everlasting doors and the king of glory shall come in Psal 24. 5. Taste and see how gracious the Lord is c. Psal. 34. 7. 6. Give us Lord this water of life with the woman of Samaria John 4. 7. As the Hart longeth for the water-brookes c. Psal. 42. 15. What other comfortable sayings of the Fathers of this In that reverent stile they use of it as aforesaid and as St. Chrysostome saith it is a miracle of mysteries Saint Cyprian a joyfull solemnity Thomas Aquinas a precious banquet admirable wholesome and full of all sweetnesse as by the ancient Christians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 feast of charity and so generally a great divine venerable inestimable and most noble mystery 16. What is our necessity of it or how discovered By considering 1. Our want and nakednesse without it and what need of refreshing we have in our earthly journey 2. What comfort it bringeth with it bringing Christ and his graces into our houses 3. What is our work our land our people as was demanded of Jonah Jon. 1. 9. 4. Whither our journey tendeth in this our pilgrimage of life 5. Heaven our home and haven and this the onely or chiefe viand we can have for our refreshing on the way 17. How may we be confirmed or farther enflamed with the love and desire of this holy mystery By serious considering and ruminating with thy selfe these or the like holy meditations of the necessity greatnesse worthinesse of this divine and heavenly Sacrament or thy duty in the same and blessednesse by it As 1. How it is Manna Angels food Bread of life the Seale of the Covenant Pledge of Grace c. Marriage feast 2. How in regard of it all earthly honours and substance are vaine And hereby peace is come to thy soule and salvation 3. How whilest thou dost communicate thou art a temple of the holy Ghost and thy soule a house of prayer 4. How by it thou art become a living and new sepulchre for thy Saviours body or which more his graces to reside in 5. How he is thus taken down from the Crosse by thee and lodged in this new Sepulchre in thy garden 6. How hereby myrrhe and pure spices shall flow and distill into that Garden thy Soule 7. How it is the heavenly viand of the soule and onely best refection in thy journey towards heaven and eternity 8. How hereby thou mayest be cured of thy sicknesse of sin blindnes issue of bloud lamenesse or other infirmity 9. How thou art bid to this feast bring but faith and have it and all blessings Pray Lord increase my faith 10. How if Napkins brought from the body of the Apostles wrought cures and miracles how much more this body of the Lord in thee and to thy soule 11. How Christ in his conception tooke our nature and we in this spirituall reception and conception of him partake of his Divine nature 12. How as we receive him here in this state of grace he will hereafter receive us in glory 17. How is our preparation by repentance The examination of the truth of our repe●tance by the consideration of the time past and former sins Present weaknesses and infirmities To come our purpose of amendment by leaving our former courses and study to amend our present imperfections by our striving and
seeking to procure and 1. Have a sense of feeling and so a knowledge and an acknowledgement of sin 2. To have a loathing leaving and forsaking of the same 3. To have a resolution and firme prosecution of it and a new course of l●fe and holy living as was before declared in the Sacrament of Baptisme and the Godfathers vow and promise at the Font. 18. How is a son●e of sin wrought in us By grace given of God obtained by prayer and consideration of the will of God which is our holinesse and so we may proceed thence 1. To the knowledge of sin which is looking into the glasse of the Law wherein is seen God ● purity Our sanctity required Our sin and so ugly deformity 2. To the acknowledgement of that hatefull monster sin thereby to obtaine remission and forgivenesse and deliverance from the same 19. How is the lo●thing of sin best wrought in us By considering 1. The uglinesse and deformity thereof in Gods sight 2. The uglinesse and deformity of our soules thereby made abominable in Gods sight and like the Divell 3. The losse wosustaine thereby as the blotting out the image of God in our ●oules 4. The impurity of sin and the soule defiled by sin made a cage of uncleane birds 5. The ●ate of God against sin whose eies can behold no evill 6. The loathing wherewith God loatheth a sinner and his actions that are so contra●y to his pure nature polluted and unclean 7. The end of sin shame misery and confusion which may well move ●s to the leaving loathing hating and forsaking the same as so ●oule a monster that God much hateth 20. How may that godly resolution be best wrought and confirmed in us By considering 1. The promises of God to the penitent and godly persons 2. The goodnesse of God requiring it 3. The mercy of God alluring us to him 4. The examples of mercy in sinners received to grace to their comfort and felicity as of Mary Magdel●ne penitent thiefe David Peter c. 5. The judgements of God against impenitent sinners denounced 6. All the actions and workes of God as i● were perswading us to a new obedience 7. The unprofitablenesse shortnesse and contemptiblenesse yea endlesse shame of sin 8. The fruits of conversion to God holinesse and honour joy comfort and peace hereby and here obtained endlesse glory and eternity of reward hereafter in the love favour and presence of God which may move us to a constant resolution yea prosecution of so happy a new a course intended and perseve●ance to the end 21. How is the preparation by faith By examining the truth and lively operation thereof to the saving and adoring the soule by 1. The ground thereof the Rocke Christ. 2. The stedfastnesse there of without wavering 3. The fruits and ●ff●cts thereof in our repentance begun and perfected Love to God in praise and thankfulnesse Love to men in charity and forgivenesse 22. What is faith The evidence and assurance of things not seen but hoped for and so in particular of the mercies and promises of God made to us in Christ expressed in his word and confirmed in the Sacrament the seale of grace the ground whereof is Christ the rock and head corner stone on which the Church is built and whence it is so firme that the gates of hell shall not be able to prevaile against it and as the Apostle saith Neither heighth nor depth principalities nor powers life nor death things present nor things to come is able to remove us from it or the love of God the fruit and effect of the same 23. How is repentance the fruit of it As that is indeed the root and beginning of all goodnesse in us and also yeelding at last perfection to the same as the feare of God the beginning of wisdome is founded in faith the doctrine of salvation apprehended by faith mercy and graces received by faith repentance so begun continued and perfected by the working of faith and so also the fulfilling of the Law begun in faith of God for whose sake we love our neighbour and in the same faith yeeld him our Lord his honour and obedience thus faith formeth in us all vertues and graces as the same testifie the truth of our faith 24. How is this excellency of faith seen Excellently described in ninth and tenth to the Hebrewes where shewn to be the root and foundation of all the excellent graces of God as the power of God in all holy men and Saints on earth the ornament of the soule and to us even all in all for godlinesse so by 1. The eie of faith 1. The Fathers saw the promises afar off 2. We see God and 3. Looke up towards heaven 2. The hand of faith we apprehend Christ and his mercy and merits and apply them to the soul and are ready and prompt to all good works 3. The heart of faith we beleeve and conceive Christ lay hold on the promises 4. The tongue of faith we praise God and make a godly confession 5. The feet of faith Enoch walked with God and we come to his holy Temple and walke the waies of righteousnesse and by this faith as by a hand receive Christ in the Sacrament and a mouth feeding on him and a stomach or digestive faculty taking him to our soules we are nourished by him and turned by his power into one substance body flesh and bloud with him made flesh of his flesh bone of his bones and in him acceptable to God 25. How is this faith seen working by love In our yeelding all honour and praise to God with thanks for his benefits and obedience to his will and Commandements In our yeelding due respect to our neighbour according to the will of God in perfect charity and peace with all men 26. How then in respect of God In generall To yeeld all honour love obedience and duty as it is expressed in the Commandments and first Table especially In particular In respect had to this Sacrament and the receiving thereof 1. To have an humble and thankfull heart 2. To have holy remembrance of this so great benefit and blessing 3. To have reverent commemoration thereof with mouth and lips ready to set forth the praises and goodnesse of God with thanksgiving for the same 27. How in respect of men To be rightly disposed in charity towards them Both generally As it is the will of God and commanded in the Law and Gospel And particularly In regard of this holy action where is so especially required 1. Forgivenesse We desire forgivenesse as in the Lords Prayer 2. And here And perfect peace with all men As we desire to be at peace with God and to have union with him and communion with the Saints whereof this Sacrament is a token and symbole received to the soule 28. How if we sinde not our selves so well prepared We are not to leave the Sacrament but rather labour to be better prepared which if we
arguments retorted on themselves and other scisenatiques and Heretiques or misbeleevers but showne more strengthning and confirming our present assertion with the use to be made of the same 1. VVHat is the last degree of Christs humiliation His descent into Hell expressed in these words He descended into Hell which some annex to the former as included in them others to the following words as a preparation to the consideration of his resurrection from the dead some repute it a distinct Article 2. How is it then interpreted After divers manners and so consequently as diversly understood so variously referred 3. Whence growes this difference From the divers significations and interpretations of this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used in the Hebrew and more Easterne Churches as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greeke Church 4. What is the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It signifieth either the Grave or Hell and so divers times either way accepted and used 5. What is the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By it also signified the Grave and Hell and no lesse the estate of the departed indifferently whether good or bad to joy or torment 6. How many severall interpretations are there then Six at the least deduced from this ground or difference 7. Which are they The first figuratively understood for the torments of soule and in his soule suffered at in and before his death the heavy anger of God against our sins which caused his agony and bloudy sweat and crying out Eli Eli c. even as it were the paines of hell being depraved of that solace which he was wont to finde in God as learned Doctor Field speakes l. 5. de Eccles. c. 18. 8. Which the second Literally understood of the place of the damned whither he is said to descend not to suffer any torments for consummatum est was said before and the worke finished of redemption and he assured the penitent thiefe This day thou shalt bee with me in Paradise but to triumph over the Divell and Hell conquered and for manifestation of his glory there and to the disobedient spirits to their greater torments and confusion 1 Pet. 3. 19. 9. Which the third Understood the lower parts or some places neare hell but not the hell of the damned where the Patriarchs or Saints before were supposed to abide not having full sight and fruition of God 10. Which the fourth Literally by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 understanding the grave to which his body descended 11. Which is the fifth Figuratively thereby understood in the phrase of the Greeke the estate of the dead 12. Which the sixth Figuratively also to signifie his stay in that state or the grave three dayes as it were the duration or permanency thereof 13. Which is the most approved interpretation The first and second as most consonant to the analogy of faith and expressed or allowed in the doctrine of our Church the others either exploded or impertinent 14. How the first approved For that it is most assuredly true that our Saviour felt most extreame torments in his soule that even the paines of hell after a sort gat hold upon him as the Psalmist and Prophet David speaketh when he sweat drops of bloud and that there needed an Angell from heaven to comfort him as Luc. 22. 34. and after cryed Eli Eli c. by the dismall apprehension of the heavie wrath of God and sorrowes endlesse due to us and lying so heavy on his soule which may further bee illustrated and proved by these reasons following 15. Which be they That such and so great sorrowes did seize on his soule appeareth in that 1. That with onely consideration of them hee was so troubled that he confessed My soule is heavie even unto the death and prayed those three times with that fervency Father if it be possible c. Mat. 26. 28. c. 2. His apprehension of the sorrowes caused these drops bloudy sweat and agony and so terrible griefe and trouble of soule that needed the Angell from heaven Luke 22. 42. c. 3. The feare of death so terrible was so apprehended that it wrested those prayers and supplications from him with strong cryings and tears to him that was able to save from death whereby he was heard in that hee feared Heb. 5. 7. which shewes the greatnesse of the trouble of his soule 4. So wonderfull was that feare he was surprised withall when he suffered that hee cryed Eli Eli c. and a second time and gave up the ghost that offering for sin 5. As he was more powerfull then all the Martyrs so he suffered more then all if all were put together from righteous Abel to this day 6. His soule being an offering for sin and soules having sinned and all the faithfull in him and their sins in his soule to be expiated and everlasting death due heavy indeed and grievous paines must needs take hold on him by which we delivered in his power though with extreame paines and sufferings 16. But what is the end thereof That howsoever insupportable by men and Angels or unutterable yet thereby perfectly redeemed both body and soule by passions both of body and soule in the power of his divinity that never left him not even in that agony passion and death when hee seemed to bee overcome whereby yet he became conqueror 17. This interpretation then of his descent into hell is approved of Yes though perabolically interpreting it yet as agreeable to Scriptures and the analogy of faith 18. How the second interpretation Literally true also as consorting with the plain text of Scripture words of the Creed and testimony of Fathers and expounded by our Church so in regard of his triumph over hell and Satan and manifestation of his glory there and to them to their greater terror torments and confusion as Saint Peter seemeth to intimate saying in the spirit hee went and preached to the spirits in prison which were disobedient in the dayes of Noah 1 Pet. 3. 19. 19. How of the third Exploded by our Church and holy Scriptures as that acknowledge no third place or state of soules departed but Heaven or Paradise the place of joy and hell the state of the damned 20. How the fourth As lesse pertinent or proper since thereby is only signified what was before expressed by hee was buried and so a tautology of buriall as to say He was buried and descended to the grave in effect but he was buried and he was buried 21. How the fifth A like impertinent interpretation and inferring A tautologie of death before expressed in that he was dead for what difference betweene he was dead and descended into the state of the dead 22. How the sixth Little other then the former for being in that state it importeth some stay and how long that was is declared in the words following The third day he rose againe from the dead 23. What then Catholiquely understood by his descent Either