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A64622 A body of divinitie, or, The summe and substance of Christian religion catechistically propounded, and explained, by way of question and answer : methodically and familiarly handled / composed long since by James Vsher B. of Armagh, and at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now printed and published ; whereunto is adjoyned a tract, intituled Immanvel, or, The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God heretofore writen [sic] and published by the same authour.; Body of divinity Ussher, James, 1581-1656.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1645 (1645) Wing U151; ESTC R19025 516,207 504

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9. Whether is grace properly attributed to God in the second sense or no Yea most properly for God doth justifie us that is he doth account us for just through his Sonne Jesus Christ and that of his free grace and favour without any desert of our parts or any thing in us Rom. 3. 20. 24. 4. 16. What be the causes of this grace or favour of God The efficient cause is his goodnesse and free will the finall cause cause thereof is the salvation of his chosen children and the glory of himselfe and of his Son Christ Jesus What be the effects of Gods grace to us wards In generall the grace of God whereof there is no cause in us but onely his own goodnesse and will is the first cause the middle cause and the the last cause and the onely cause of all that belongs to our salvation Rom. 9. 11. And particularly it is the cause of our Election of our Redemption of the sending of Christ into the world of our Calling of the preaching of the Gospell Eph. 1. 4. John 3. 11. 34. Rom. 5. 8. It was the cause why the Apostles were called to the preaching of the Gospell Gal. 1. 15 16. Eph. 3. 8. 9. It is the cause of our Faith of the forgivenesse of our sinnes of our whole justification of our regeneration of our renovation of our love to God and our neighbour of the Holy Ghost in us of our good works of our obedience of our perseverance of the feare of God of eternall life and of life it selfe 2 Tim. 1. 9. Phil. 2. 13. Rom. 12. 6. 1 Cor. 12. 9. Rom. 3. 24. Tit. 3. 5. 1 John 4. 9. Ezek. 36. 27. Jerem. 32. 40. and in a word the begining the continuance and the accomplishment of our whole salvation doth depend wholly upon the grace and favour of God and what good thing soever we have or have had or may have belonging either to this life or to the life to come is to be attributed wholly to the grace and favour of God What is the love of God It is an essentiall property in God whereby he loves himselfe above all and others for himselfe 1 John 4. 16. Rom. 5. 8. John 3. 16. Tit. 3. 4. Mal. 1. 2 3. What learn you from hence That wee should love him dearely and other things for him That we may the better know what the love of God is declare first what love is in our selves It is a passion of the mind whereby we are so affected towards the party whom we love that we are rather his then our own forgetting our selves to doe him good whom we so love And is love such a thing in God No the true love of God is not such as our love is What difference is there There is great difference two wayes First in time for love was in God before it was in us or in any thing created for he loved himselfe and us also before the world was John 17. 23. Secondly they differ in nature and quality for that love which is in God is most perfect and pure Rom. 9. 13. without passion but in us it is imperfect and matched with passions with impure affections and grief of the mind After what manner doth the Scripture expresse the love of God In the Scriptures God doth compare himselfe to a father and to a mother loving their children to a hen gathering her chickens together under her wings to a good shepherd seeking up his sheep and to divers other things And wherefore serve these comparisons They are for our profit two wayes First to shew us that Gods love towards us is most vehement and sincere Secondly to make us bold in coming to him and calling upon him so for this love Christ Jesus calleth us by all the names of love as his servants his kinsmen his friends his spouse his brethren and by many names moe to shew that he loveth us with all loves the fathers love the mothers love the masters love the husbands love the brothers love c. and if all loves were put together yet his love exceedeth them all for all could not doe so much for us as he alone hath done If love doth not signifie any affection or passion in God as it doth in us what then doth it signifie In God it signifieth three things most perfect first the eternall good will of God towards some body for the love of God supposed towards the Elect is his everlasting good will or his purpose and determination to shew them mercy to doe them good and to save them as in Rom. 9. 11. 13. Secondly the effects themselves of his love or good will whether they be temporall concerning this life or eternall concerning the life to come as in the 1 John 3. 1. Thirdly the pleasure and delight which he taketh in that which he loveth and so it is taken in Psal. 45. 7. 23. What things doth God love besides himselfe Besides himselfe God loveth all things else whatsoever he made but he loveth not sinne and iniquity for he never made it as Saint John saith 1 John 2. 16. Again he loveth his Son being manifested in the flesh and he loveth his chosen children for his Sons sake with whom he is well pleased Mat. 3. last verse Obj. 1. The Scripture saith that God doth hate all that work iniquity how then can God both hate and love one and the same man In every wicked man we must consider two things First His nature Secondly his sinne His nature is the work of God and that he loveth but his iniquity is not of God and that he hateth Obj. 2. God doth afflict his children therefore he doth not love them Whom he loveth he correcteth and therefore he correcteth them because he loveth them even as a gold-smith tryeth his gold in the fire because he loveth it Whether doth God love all alike or no No he preferreth mankind before all his other creatures for which cause God is called Philanthropos that is a lover of men and this appeareth by three effects of his love First he made him according to his own Image that is in righteousnesse and true holinesse Gen. 1. 26. Eph. 4. 24. Secondly he made him Lord over all his creatures Psal. 8. 5 6. Thirdly he gave his own Son to death for his ransom Doth God love all men alike No for he loveth his Elect better then the Reprobate for the Elect he calleth effectually by his Spirit in their hearts when he calleth others but by the outward voyce of the Gospell c. Again amongst the Elect themselves some are actually wicked and not yet reconciled nor called as was Paul before his conversion but the rest are called and already made holy by Faith in Christ as Paul was after his conversion and of these he loveth the latter sort with a greater measure of love then the former as the Scripture testifieth in Prov. 8. 17. What manner of love doth God beare
to his elect It hath three adjuncts or properties First it is free without desert Secondly it is great without comparison Thirdly it is constant without any end How is the love of God said to be free It is free two wayes first because nothing caused God to love us but his own goodnesse and grace and therefore Saint John saith that his love was before ours 1 John 4. 7. Secondly it is free because God in loving us did not regard any thing that belonged to his own commodity for as David saith he hath no need of our goods but onely to our owne salvation he loved us Psal. 162. Wherein doth the greatnesse of Gods love appear to his Elect It appeareth two wayes First by the meanes which God useth to save us by that is the death of his Son and so John setteth forth his love 1 John 3. 16. when he saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is as if he should say so vehemently so ardently so earnestly so wonderfully did he love us that for our salvation he spared not his own only begotten Son but gave him to the death of the Crosse for our salvation What else doth set forth the greatnesse of Gods love towards us The consideration of our own selves for he did not only give his only Son to death for us but it was for us being his enemies and this circumstance is used by the Apostle to expresse the same Rom. 5. 7 8. Where find you it written that Gods love is constant and perpetuall That is manifestly shewed in these Scriptures following Hos. 11. 9. John 13. 1. Rom. 11. 29. for God is unchangeable in his love which is his essence and nature and therefore is God called love in the Scriptures 1 John 4. 8. What use must we make of Gods love First it filleth our hearts with gladness when we understand that our God is so loving and love it self and what is this but the beginning of eternall life if eternall life consist in the true knowledge of God as our Saviour Christ saith John 17. 3 Secondly out of the knowledge of this love as out of a fountain springeth the love of God and our neighbour for S. John saith he that loveth not knoweth not God for God is love 1 Joh. 4. 8. Thirdly when we consider that God loveth all his creatures which he made it should teach us not to abuse any of the creatures to serve our lusts and beastly affections for God will punish them which abuse his beloved as he punished the rich glutton which abused the creatures of God Luk. 16. Fourthly we are taught to love all the creatures even the basest of all seeing that God loveth them and for the love he beareth to us he made them and we must if we love them for Gods sake use them sparingly moderately and equally or justly to this end we are commanded to let our cattell rest upon the Sabbath day as well as our selves to this end we are forbidden to kill the damme upon her nest and to this end we are forbidden to musle the mouth of the Oxe which treadeth out the Corn Deut. 25. 4. 1 Cor. 9. 9. Fiftly we are taught from hence to love mankind better then all other creatures because God doth so and therefore we must not spare any thing that we have that may make for the safety of his body and the salvation of his soul. And for this cause we are commanded to love our enemies and to do them good because our good God doth so Sixtly from Gods love we learn to preferre the godly brethren and those that professe sincerely the same religion that we professe before other men because Gods love is greater to his elect then to the reprobate and this doth the Apostle teach us Gal. 6. 10. Seventhly whereas Gods love is freely bestowed upon us this teacheth us to be humble and to attribute no part of our salvation to our selves but only to the free love of God Eightly from hence ariseth the certainty of our salvation for if Gods love was so free great when we were his enemies much more will it be so and constant also to us being reconciled to God by Jesus Christ Rom. 5. 10. What is the mercy of God It is his mind and will always most ready to succour him that is in misery or an essentiall property in God whereby he is meerly ready of himself to help his creatures in their miseries Esa. 30. 18. Lam. 3. 22. Exod. 33. 19. Why adde you this word meerly To put a difference between the mercy of God and the mercy that is in men for their mercy is not without some passion compassion or fellow-feeling of the miseries of others but the mercy of God is most perfect and effectuall ready to help at all needs of himself But seeing mercy is grief and sorrow of mind conceived at anothers miseries how can it be properly attributed to God in whom are no passions nor griefs Indeed in us mercy may be such a thing but not in God mercy was first in God and from him was derived to us and so he is called the Father of mercies 2 Cor. 1. 3. and when it came to us it was matched with many infirmities and passions but it is improperly attributed to God from our selves as though it were first in us Declare then briefly what things of perfection are signified by this word mercy in God By the name of mercy two things are signified in God properly First the mind and will ready to help and succour Secondly the help it self and succour or pity that is then shewed Where in the Scripture is mercy taken the first way Those places of Scripture are so to be understood wherein God doth call himself mercifull and saith that he is of much mercy that is he is of such a nature as is most ready to free us from our evils Where is it taken in the other sense for the effects of mercy In Rom. 9. 15. where it is said God will have mercy on whom hee will have mercy that is he will call whom he will call hee will justifie whom hee will hee will pardon whom he will and will deliver and save from all their miseries and evils whom he will and these be the effects of Gods mercies Again in Exod. 20. 6. it is so taken From whence springeth this mercy of God The essence and beeing of God is most simple without any mixture or composition and therefore in him there are not divers qualities and vertues as there be in us whereof one dependeth upon another or one differs from another but for our capacity and understanding the Scripture speaketh of God as though it were so that so we may the better perceive what manner of God and how good our God is Well then seeing the Scriptures doe speak so for our understanding let us hear whereof this mercy commeth The cause is not in us but only in God himself and
of the feare of God and contempt of his Majesty What sin is joyned with the want of the feare of God Carnall security whereby a man doth flatter himselfe in his owne estate be it never so bad What vertues arise from the feare of God Reverence and Humility What is the former The Reverence of the Majesty of God in regard whereof we should carry such an holy shamefastnesse in all our actions that no unseemely behaviour proceed from us that may any wayes be offensive unto him Heb. 12. 28. Of which if Men be so carefull in the presence of Princes who are but mortall Men how much more carefull ought wee to bee thereof in the presence of the Almighty and most glorious God How was this prefigured in the Ceremoniall Law That when Men would ease themselves according to the course of nature they should goe without the Hoast and carry a paddle with them to cover their filth because saith the Lord I am in the midest of you whereby the filthinesse and impurity of the minde was forbidden more then of the body and the equity hereof reacheth also unto us Deut. 23. 12 13 14. What is contrary to this Reverence of the Majesty of God Irreverence and Prophanenesse of Men to God-ward What is Humility That vertue whereby we account our selves vile and unworthy of the least of Gods mercies and casting our selves downe before his Majesty doe acknowledge our owne emptinesse of good and insufficiency in our selves for so all our behaviour should be seasoned with humility What sinnes are repugnant to this vertue 1 Counterfeit humility when a man would seeme more lowly then he is 2. Pride vaine glory and presumption whereby we boast and glory of our selves and our owne strength and goodnesse Who are to be accounted proud 1 They that would bee thought to have those good things in them which they want 2 They that having a little goodnes in them would have it seem greater then it is 3 They that having any goodnsse in them doe thinke that it commeth from themselves 4. They that thinke they can merit from GOD and deserve his favour VVhat is the godly sorrow which is required in this Commandement Spirituall griefe and indignation against our owne and others transgressions and also lamenting for the calamities of Gods people private and publique the want of both which is here condemned VVhat spirituall joy is there here injoyned Ioying in God rejoycing in all our afflictions with consideration of the joy prepared for us before the beginning of the world Luke 1. 47. Rom. 5. 3. James 1. 2. the defect of which spirituall joy is here condemned So much of the Affections what is required of us in respect of our Conscience That we live in all good conscience before God Acts 23. 1. Heb. 13. 8. What sins are here condemned 1. Hardnesse of heart and benummednesse of conscience 2. Hellish terros and accusations proceeding from doing things either without or against the rule of the Word So much of the first branch of this Commandement what is required in the second branch thereof Vnity in Religion because we are commanded to have but one God and no more What things are required of us that we may come to this unity Foure principally 1. An upright and single heart ready to embrace the true Religion and no other 2. Constancy and continuance in the truth 3. A godly courage to stand to the truth and withstand the enemy 4. An holy zeale of the glory of God What contrary vices are forbidden 1. Indifferency in Religion when a man is as ready to embrace one Religion as another 2. Inconstancy and wavering in Religion 3. Obstinate and wilfull continuance in any Religion without any good ground 4. Rash and blinde zeale when a man without knowledge or judgment will earnestly maintaine either falshood or truth by wicked meanes To what end doth God will us to have no other God but himselfe seeing no man can have any other God though he never so much desire it Because howsoever there be but one God yet many doe devise unto themselves divers things which they place in Gods stead and to which they give that honour which is proper to God 1 Cor. 8. 4 5. 10. 20. What sin then doth God condemne by forbidding us to have many gods All inward idolatry whereby men set up an Idoll in their heart in stead of God Ezek. 14. 3. ascribing thereunto that which is proper to him and giving it any part of spirituall adoration Shew how this is done in the Understanding When men doe thinke that other things have that which is proper unto God as Papists when they beleeve That the Sacrament is their maker That the Saints know their hearts That the Pope can forgive sins which none can doe but God How doth the Memory faile herein In remembering of evill things especially of those which most corrupt us and chiefly then when we should be most free from the thoughts of them What is the fault of the Will Readinesse unto and wilfulnesse in evill especially the worst Shew the like in the Affections first in sinfull confidence There is here condemned trust in the Creatures more then in God and all fleshly confidence in our selves or in our friends honour credit wit learning wisdome wealth c. thinking our selves the better or more safe simply for them Prov. 18. 11. Psa. 62. 10. Jer. 17. 5. 2 Chron. 16. 12. whence ariseth pride Acts 12. 23. and security VVhat is our duty concerning these things 1. To esteem of them only as good means given us of God whereby to glorifie him the better 2. To trust in God lesse when we have them then when we want them Job 13. 15. VVhat is further here condemned 1. To ascribe the glory of any good thing either to our selves or any other then the Lord. 2. To seeke for help of the Devill by Witches or Wise men VVherein standeth inordinate love In loving of evill or in loving of our selves or any other thing more then God of whose favour we ought more to esteem then of all the world besides Here therfore is condemned all carnall love of our selves our friends our pleasure profit credit or any worldly thing else for whose sake we leave those duties undone which God requireth of us 2 Tim. 3. 4. 1 John 2. 15. 1 Sam. 2. 29. whereas the true love of God will move us with Moses and Paul to wish our selves accursed rather then that the glory of God should any thing at all be stained by us Exod. 32. 32. Rom. 9. 3. VVhat feare is here condemned All carnall feares and especially the fearing of any thing more then God Isa. 7. 2. 8. 12 13. 51. 12 13. Mat. 10. 28. How may a man know that he is more afraid of God then of any other thing If he be more afraid to displease God then any other and this feare of
our hearts far from him Isa. 29. 13. 2. Shamelesse impiety when turning our eares from his precepts he turneth away his from our prayers Prov. 28. 9. 3. Senselesse impenitency when the cry of our sins unrepented of drownes the voice of our prayers that are offered Zach. 7. 13. 4. Mercilesse cruelty when we either cause or suffer the afflicted to cry without hearing the Lord hearing us cry in our affliction without helping Gen. 42. 22. What is the generall subiect of our requests Good or evill Good to obtaine it and evill to remove or prevent it Col. 1. 9. 2 Thes. 3. 1 2. That wherein we pray for good things is called supplication 1 Tim. 2. 1. That wherein we pray against evill is called Deprecation What doe you meane by Good or Evill Whatsoever is helpfull or hurtfull either for soule or body goods and graces sins and sorrowes mercies and judgements in spirituall or in carnall things Phil. 1. 9. Luke 18. 13. Dan. 9. What gather you hence 1. That as Prayer is the key of the heart to open all our necessities unto God Iames 2. 9. so it is also the key of his treasury to obtaine his mercies from him Mat. 7. 7. 2. That the gift of Prayer is a pledge and earnest penny of all other good gifts and graces whatsoever Rom. 8. 26 27 32. and that so long as we can pray the greatest evill cannot hurt us Ionah 2. 1. 2 Cor. 12. 7 8. nor the greatest good without Prayer can ever bee profitable unto us 1 Tim. 4. 5. Are we only bound to pray for our selves by request for good and against evill things No we are also bound to pray likewise for others which kinde of prayer is called Intercession 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. What is Intercession It is the sute of the heart unto God for the good of others As Abraham prayed for Abimelech Gen. 20. 17. Jacob for his sonnes Gen. 49. Paul for the people 1 Thes. 1. 2. and they for him Why doth the Lord require this duty of us 1. For communicating our gifts and his graces James 5 5. 14 15. 2. For nourishing our love 3. For increase of our comforts 4. For mutuall support and reliefe in all crosses What gather you hence That all such persons as are linked together in neerest bonds of societie are also mutually bound to discharge this duty 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. James 5. 10. As first in the houshold of Faith the stronger is to pray for the weaker that he faile not Phil. 1. 9. and the weaker for the stronger that hee fall not 2 Thes. 3. 1 2. Secondly the Soveraigne for the Subject that he may obey in piety and loyalty 2 Cor. 6. 13 14. The Subject for the Soveraigne that he may rule in righteousnesse and religious policy 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. and so in all societies whether of publick assemblies or private families Job 1. 5. Deut. 33. 6. 1 Chron. 29. 19. What followeth of all this Strong consolation that when we finde small power or comfort in our prayers the Lord hath ordained that we may seeke and finde both in the prayers of his Church and children James 5. 14 15. Acts 12. 5. 7. You have now spoken of the first part of Invocation namely Petition what followeth The second which is Praise and Thanksgiving 1 Thes. 5. 18. What is this Praise and Thanksgiving It is a reverent calling upon the name of God wherein the heart being cheared with some taste of his goodnesse acknowledgeth all from his mercy and purposeth all for his glory Luke 10. 21. 1 Chron. 29. 10 11 12 13. And it is either in praising all his goodnesse wisedome power and mercy and generally for the government of his Church or for those particular favours that by Petition wee have received from his mercifull hand Whence doth this duty of praise arise As Petition ariseth from the feeling of our miserie so praise from the feeling of Gods mercy Petition beggeth what we want and praise acknowledgeth what and whence we have it Rev. 15. 3. 1 Chron. 29. 12. What gather you hence That when the Lord hath granted unto us our Petitions we are forthwith bound to render unto him his due praises Exodus 15. 1 Psalme 66. 19 20. Wherein doth this duty of praise specially consist 1. In emptying our selves of all worthinesse Gen. 32. 10. 2. In acknowledging him the author of every good gift and fountaine of living waters James 1. 17. Jer. 2. 13. 3. In speaking good of his name unto others Psalme 40. 9 10. 4. In rejoycing before him in all his mercies Deut. 26. 11. 5. In resolving to bestow all for his honour and service 1 Chro. 29. 2 3. Wherefore doth the Lord require praise and thanksgiving at our hands First because it is the fairest and sweetest fruit of true Piety Psal. 92. 1. Secondly it entirely preserveth Gods glory Thirdly it boweth the heart to true humility Fourthly it is the condition of the Covenant when he gives and wee receive any mercy Psalme 50. 15. Fiftly it provoketh others to faithfulnesse and cheerefulnesse in Gods service Psalme 95. 1. Sixtly it maintaineth the intercourse of mercies and duties betwixt God and man What be the properties of true praise 1. It must be faithfull without glossing with a simple not with a double heart Psalme 145. 18. 2. It must be plentifull Psalme 18. 1 2. If God give his mercies by showers we may not yeeld our praises by drops 3. It must be cheerfull 1 Chron. 29. 14. hee gives freely and wee must offer willingly for he loves a cheerefull giver 2 Cor. 9. 7. 4. It must be powerfull with the best measure with the best member Psalme 81. 1 2. 5. It must be skilfull in the best manner suting his severall properties with their due praises according to the nature of the present blessings Ex. ●5 2. 3. Psal. 144. 1 2. 6. It must be continuall as long as his mercy endureth and life lasteth Psal. 146. 1 Thes. 5. 18. What meanes may we use to attaine unto this duty 1. Serious consideration of the great things hee hath done for us so vile creatures 1 Sam. 12. 24. 2. To desire to taste Gods love in the least of his mercies Genesis 28. 20 21. 3. To give him a taste of our love in the best of our services Psalme 116. 12. 4. To rest content with our allowance and estate wherein he hath set us Phil. 4. 11. 5. To compare our estates with many of Gods Saints who want many comforts which we enjoy and feele many sorrowes which wee feele not Psalme 147. 20. 6. To be faithfull in all Talents and fruitfull in all graces will be great meanes to make us praise God in all his mercies Matth. 25. 23. Phil. 1. 11. What motives have we to provoke us to this praise 1. It is a good comely and pleasant thing to praise God Psal. 147. 1. 2. It is his will thus
A BODY OF DIVINITIE OR THE SVMME AND SVBSTANCE OF Christian Religion Catechistically propounded and explained by way of Question and Answer Methodically and familiarly handled Composed long since by JAMES VSHER B. of ARMAGH And at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now Printed and Published VVhereunto is adjoyned a Tract intituled IMMANVEL OR THE MYSTERY OF THE Incarnation of the SON OF GOD Heretofore writen and published by the same Author JOHN 17. 3. This is life eternall that they might know thee the onely true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent LONDON Printed by M. F. for THO DOVVNES and GEO BADGER and are to be sold in S. Dunstans Church-yard in Fleetstreet MDCXLV To the Christian Reader CHristian Reader I doe here present and commend unto thee a booke of great worth and singular use which was written and finished about twenty years since the Author whereof is well knowne to bee so universally eminent in all Learning and of that deepe knowledge and judgement in sacred Divinity that he transcendeth all elogies and praises which I can give him I commend it unto the Christian Reader under a two-fold notion the first respecteth the subject matter of this whole Work which is of greatest excellency ad being The summe and substance of Christian Religion upon which as a most sure foundation we build our faith ground all our hopes and from which we reap and retain all our joy and comfort in the assurance of our salvation which as at all times it is most profitable to be read studied and known so now if ever most necessary in these our days wherein men never more neglected these fundamentall principles as being but common and ordinary truths and spend their whole time study and discourse about Discipline Ceremonies and circumstantiall points and herein also not contenting themselves with those common rules and that clear light which shineth in the Word they are onely led by their own phantasies daily creating unto themselves diversity of new opinions and so falling into sects and schismes they break the bond of love and fall off from the communion of Saints as though it were no Article of their Creed and being in love with their own new Tenets as being the conception and birth of their own brains they contend for them more then for any fundamentall truths and not onely so but also hate maligne and most bitterly and uncharitably censure all those that differ from them in their opinions though never so conscientious and religious as though they professed not the same faith yea served not the same God nor beleeved in the same Christ but remain still Aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel and in comparison of themselves no better then Papists or at the best but carnall Gospellers The second notion under which I commend it respecteth the Work it self or the manner of the Authors handling it which is done so soundly and solidly so judiciously and exactly so methodically and orderly and with that familiar plainnesse perspicuity and clearnesse that it giveth place to no other in this kind either ancient or modern either in our own or any other Language which ever yet came to my view in which regard I may say of it as it is said of the vertuous woman Many have done excellently but this our Author exceedeth them all I will adde no more in the deserved praises of this Worke but leave it Christian Reader to thy self to peruse and judge of it commending thee to the Word of Gods grace and the good guidance of his holy Spirit who is able to build thee up in fruitfull knowledge to lead thee into all truth to direct and support thee in the wayes of godliness and to give thee an everlasting inheritance amongst the blessed Thine in the Lord Jesus Christ JOHN DOWNAME The Connexion of these Points together and Dependence of them one upon another IN Christian Religion wee are to consider the Ground thereof contained in the Scripture Parts which treat of Gods Nature in his Essence considered absolutely in it selfe where the doctrine of divine Attributes which respect either His perfection in his Simplenesse whereby he is exempted from Composition and division Infinitenesse wherby he is exempted from all measure of Time by his eternity Place by his immensity Life whence he is called The living God Considered in his All-sufficiency Al-seeing wisdom Foreknowledge Counsell Almighty power Holy will wherein is seen his Goodnesse and therein his love unto his creatures mercy or grace shewed them in their misery Iustice in his word called his Truth deeds disposing of all things rightly rendring to the creatures according to their works Persons subsisting in one and the same undivided Essence Kingdome in his Eternall decree which men must not curiously prie into but content themselves with what is made manifest Execution thereof in the workes of Creation of things Invisible The highest Heavens Angels Visible Unreasonable Reasonable man consisting of Body Soule Providence Common unto all creatures Proper respecting the everlasting condition of principall Creatures Angels Good Bad. Men who are ordered in This life by the tenor of a two-fold Covenant Nature or Workes where we are to consider the Conditions and Events Shame Primary the fall of our first parents Secondary the corruption of Nature originall Actions actual of omission commission Death comprehending all the curses of the Law whereunto the nature of man standeth subject Grace wherein we are to consider the state of Christ the Mediator in his Person and there in his Natures and their Union where of his Conception Nativity Distinction Two fold state of Humiliation Exaltation Office with his Calling thereunto Execution thereof concerning God the party offended wherein his priestly office is exercised the parts whereof are Satisfaction giving contentment to Gods Iustice by his Obedience to the Law Suffering for our sinne Intercession soliciting Gods mercy for those he hath redeemed Man the party offending to whom he communicates the grace by him purchased by his Propheticall office Kingly office The rest of mankind who are called by participation of his grace where we are to consider 1. The company thus called out of the world The Catholike Church of Christ where such as obey this calling in Outward profession alone hold onely externall communion with it Inward affection also internall with the Head Christ Iesus there being a Mutuall donation whereby the Father gives Christ to them them to Christ. Mysticall union whereby they are knit together by Gods quickning Spirit The rest of mankind whence ariseth the Communion of Saints 2. Grace whereunto they are called Reconciliation Iustification where of Iustifying Faith Adoption and therein of Hope Sanctification and therein of Love here consider the Rule of Holines the morall law contained in the ten Commandements wherein are to be considered Generall rules to be observed in the exposition of them Distinction of them into two tables containing the duties we owe unto God namely Having the
mercy in God doth spring out of his free love towards us Why doe you say out of the free love of God are there more loves in God then one There are two kinds of love in God one is wherewith the Father loveth the Son and the Son the Father and which the holy Ghost beareth towards both the Father and the Son and this love I call the naturall love of God so that the one cannot but love the other but the love wherewith he loveth us is voluntary not being constrained thereunto and therefore is called the free love of God and thereof it commeth to passe that mercy is also wholly free that is without reward or hope of recompence and excludeth all merit How prove you that the mercy of God ariseth out of his love That the love of God is the cause of his mercy it is manifest in the Scriptures 1 Tim. 1. 2. Paul saluteth Timothy in this order Grace mercy and peace from God the Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ to shew that that peace which the world cannot give the mercy of God is the cause of it and the cause of his mercy is his grace and his grace is nothing else but his free favour and love towards us The same order doth Paul observe in Titus 3. 4 5. where he saith when the goodnesse and love of God our Saviour appeareth not by the works of righteousnesse which we had done but according to his mercy he saved us First he sets down the goodnesse of God as the cause of his love Secondly his love as the cause of his mercy And thirdly his mercy as the cause of our salvation and our salvation as the effect of all and therefore there is nothing in us which may move the Lord to shew mercy upon us but only because he is goodnesse it self by nature and to this doth the Psalmist bear witnesse Psal. 100. 5. saying that the Lord is good his mercy is everlasting and his truth is from generation to generation Towards whom is the mercy of God extended or shewed For the opening of this point we are to consider that the mercy of God is twofold First generall Secondly speciall God as a God doth shew mercy generally upon all his creatures being in misery and chiefly to men whether they be just or unjust Psal. 140. 147. and so doth succour them either immediately by himself or else mediately by creatures as by Angels or Men by the Heavens by the Elements and by other living creatures and this generall mercy of God is not extended to the eternall salvation of all but is only temporary and for a while Of this read Luk. 6. 36. What say you to the speciall mercy of God That I call the speciall mercy of God which God as a most free God hath shewed to whom he would and denyed to whom he would and this pertaineth only to the elect and those which fear him Psal. 103. 11. for he sheweth mercy upon them to their eternall salvation and that most constantly while he doth effectually call them unto himself while he doth freely and truly pardon their sins and justifie them in the bloud of the Lamb Jesus Christ while he doth sanctifie them with his grace and doth glorifie them in eternall life and of this speciall mercy we may read in Eph. 2. 4 5 6. How great is the mercy of God It is so great that it cannot be expressed nor conceived of us and that is proved by these Scriptures following Ps. 145. 9. James 2. 13. 1 Cor. 11. 32. Psal. 57 10. How long doth the mercy of God continue towards us Although the mercy of God be great and infinite in Christ yet for that mercy which pardoneth our sins and calleth us to faith and repentance by the Gospel there is no place after death but onely while we live in this world which is warranted by these places ensuing Gal. 6. 10. Let us doe good whilest we have time to shew that a time will come when we shall not be able to doe good Apoc. 7. 17. Be faithfull unto the death and I will give thee a Crown of life to shew that the time which is given unto death is a time of repentance and of exercising of faith and of works but after death there is no time but to receive either an immortall Crown if we have been faithfull or everlasting shame if we have been unfaithfull Besides these see Apoc. 14. 13. Mark 9. 45. Esa. ult 24. Luk. 16. 24 25 26. Mat. 15. 11 12. John 9. 4. What uses may we make of Gods mercies First it serveth to humble us for the greater mercy is in God the greater misery is in us Secondly we must attribute our whole salvation unto his mercy Thirdly we must flee to God in all our troubles with most sure confidence Fourthly we must not abuse it to the liberty of the flesh to sin although we might find mercy with God after death for the mercy of God specially appertains to those that fear him Psal. 103. 11. Fiftly the meditation of Gods mercies towards us should make us to love God Psa. 116. 1. Luk. 7. 47. fear God Psa. 130. 4. praise God Ps. 86. 12 13. 103. 2 3 4. Sixtly it must make us mercifull one to another Luk. 6. 36. Matth. 18. 32 33. What is the justice of God It is an essentiall property in God whereby he is infinitely just in himself of himself for from by himself alone and none other Psalm 11. 7. What is the rule of this justice His own free will and nothing else for whatsoever he willeth is just and because he willeth it therefore it is just not because it is just therefore he willeth it Eph. 1. 11. Psal. 115. 3. Mat. 20. 15. which also may be applied to the other properties of God Explain this more particularly I say that God doth not always a thing because it is just but therefore any thing is just that is just because God will have it so and yet his will is joyned with his wisdome as for example Abraham did judge it a most just and righteous thing to kill his innocent son not by the law for that did forbid him but only because he did understand it was the speciall will of God and he knew that the will of God was not only just but also the rule of all righteousnesse That wee may the better understand this attribute declare unto mee how many manner of wayes one may be just or righteous Three manner of ways either by nature or by grace or by perfect obedience How many ways may one be just by nature Two ways First by himself and of himself in his own essence and beeing thus we say that in respect of this essentiall righteousnesse there is none just but God onely as Christ saith none is good but God only Secondly derivatively by the benefit of another to be either made righteous or born just and in
the unity of the Godhead But doe you not beleeve the Godhead is to be divided whilst you beleeve that in one God are three persons No not divided into divers essences but distinguished unto divers persons for God cannot be divided into severall natures nor into severall parts and therefore must the persons which subsist in that one essence be onely distinct and not separate one from another as in the example of the Sun the beames and the heat What be those resemblances that are commonly brought to shadow out unto us the mystery of the Trinity First the Sun begetteth his own beams and from thence proceeds light and heat and yet is none of them before another otherwise then in consideration of order and relation that is to say that the beams are begotten of the body of the Sun and the light and heat proceed from both Secondly from one flame of fire proceed both light and heat and yet but one fire Thirdly in waters there is the well-head and the spring boyling out of it and the stream flowing from them both and all these are but one water and so there are there persons in one Godhead yet but one God Fourthly in man the understanding cometh from the soul and the will from both May it be collected by naturall reason that there is a Trinity of Persons in the Vnity of the God-head No for it is the highest mystery of Divinity and the knowledge thereof is most proper to Christians for the Turkes and Jewes doe confesse one God-head but no distinction of persons in the same How come we then by the knowledge of this mystery God hath revealed it in the holy Scriptures unto the faithfull What have we to learn of this That those are deceived who think this mystery is not sufficiently delivered in the Scripture but dependeth upon the tradition of the Church That sith this is a wonderfull mystery which the Angels doe adore we should not dare to speak any thing in it farther then we have warrant out of the word of God yea we must tye our selves almost to the very words of the Scripture lest in searching we exceed and goe too farre and so be overwhelmed with the glory How doth it appear in the holy Scripture that the three Persons are of that divine nature By the divine names that it giveth to them as Jehovah c. By ascribing divine attributes unto them as Eternity Almightinesse c. By attributing divine works unto them as creation sustentation and governing of all things By appointing divine worship to be given unto them What speciall proofes of the Trinity have you out of the old Testament First the Father is said by his word to have made the world the Holy Ghost working and maintaining them as it were sitting upon them as the hen doth on the egges she hatcheth Gen. 1. 2 3. Gen. 1. 26. The Trinity speaketh in the plurall number Let us make man in our Image after our likenesse Gen. 19. 24. Jehovah is said to rain upon Sodom from Jehovah out of heaven that is the Sonne from the Father or the Holy Ghost from both 2 Sam. 23. 2. The Spirit of Jehovah or the Lord spake by me and his Word by my tongue there is Jehovah the Father with his Word or Sonne and Spirit Prov. 30. 4. What is his name and what is his Sonnes name if thou canst tell Isa. 6. 3. The Angels in respect of the three Persons doe cry three times Holy Holy Holy Isa. 42. 1. Behold my servant whom I uphold mine elect in whom my soule delighteth I have put my Spirit up on him Hag. 2. 5. The Father with the Word and his Spirit make a Covenant What are the proofes out of the new Testament As all other doctrines so this is there more cleare as Matth. 3. 16. 17. at the Baptisme of Christ the Father from heaven witnesseth of the Sonne the Holy Ghost appearing in the likenesse of a Dove John Baptist saw the Sonne in his assumed nature going out of the water there is one Person he saw the Holy Ghost descending like a Dove upon him there is another Person and he heard a voyce from heaven saying This is my beloved Son there is a third Person Matth. 17. 5. At the transfiguration the Father in like manner speaketh of his Son Matth. 28. 19. We are baptized into the name of the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost John 14. 16. 26. 15. 26. 16. 13 14 15. The Father and Son promise to send the Holy Ghost Luke 1. 35. The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and the power of the Highest shall over-shadow thee therefore that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God Acts 2. 33. Therefore being by the right hand of God exalted and having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost he hath shed forth this which you now see and heare 2 Cor. 13 14. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the Holy Ghost be with you all Gal. 4. 6. God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts Tit. 3. 4 5 6. God saved us by the washing of the new birth and renewing of the Holy Ghost which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour What clear proof have you that these three are but one God and so that there is a Trinity in Vnity 1 Joh. 5. 7. It is expresly said there are three that bear Record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one What learn you of that the Apostle saith they are three Wee learne that the word Trinity although it bee not expresly set down in the word yet it hath certaine ground from thence What learn you of that that they are said to be three witnesses The singular fruit that is in the Trinity of persons in one unity of the Godhead whereby great assurance is brought unto us of all things that God speaketh in promise or threat seeing it is all confirmed by three witnesses against whom no exception lyeth What are they said here to witnesse That God hath given eternall life unto us and that this life is in that his Sonne 1 John 5. 11. How are these being three said to be but one They are one in substance beeing or essence but three persons distinct in subsistence Acts 20. 28. 1 Cor. 12. 4 5. Deut. 6. 4. Mark 12. 32. 1 Cor. 8. 4 5 6. Joh. 14. 16. 15. 26. 17. 1. If three persons among men be propounded whereof every one is a man can it be said that these three are but one man No but we must not measure Gods matters by the measure of reason much lesse this which of all others is a mystery of mysteries For the better understanding of this mystery declare unto me what a person is in generall and then what a person in the Trinity is
of spirituall strength the hearing of the Word the receiving of the Sacraments and Prayer Thirdly that shee was neere to the Tree of knowledge at the time he set on her which sheweth his watchfulnesse in taking advantage of all opportunities that might further his temptations VVhat was the manner of the temptation First he subtilly addressed himself to the woman and entred into conference with her Secondly he made her doubt whether the Word of God was true or not Thirdly he offered her an object Fourthly he used all the means he could to make her forsake God and yeeld unto him pretending greater love and care of mans well doing then was in God and bearing them in hand that they should be like unto God himselfe if they did eat of the forbidden fruit Gen. 3. 5. What was the Devils speech to the woman Is it even so that God hath said Yee shall not eat of all the fruit in the Garden Gen. 3. 1. What doe you note in this That it is likely there had been some communication before between the Serpent and the woman that Satan had asked why they did not eat of the forbidden fruit seeing it was so goodly and pleasant to behold and that the woman had answered that they were forbidden whereupon he inferreth this that Moses setteth downe wherein we may observe First the Devils sophistry who at first doth not flat contrary Gods command but to bring her to doubting and conference with him asketh this question whether God hath forbidden to eat of all the trees in the Garden Secondly the wicked spirits malicious and subtile suggestion in that passing by the great bountifulnesse of the Lord in the grant of the free use of all the fruits in the Garden he seeks to quarrell with the Lords liberality Thirdly we learn from hence to take heed lest for want of some one thing which God withholdeth from us which we gladly would have we be not unthankfull to the Lord for his great kindnesse and liberality and enter further into a mislike of him for that one want then into the love and liking of him for his innumerable benefits we enjoy especially it being for our good that he withholdeth it and that being not good which we desire What did follow upon this question of Satan The woman answering thereunto not as God had spoken that surely they should die if they did eat of the forbidden fruit but by a tearm of doubting lest ye die Satan by this conference and doubting taketh advantage and assureth them that they shall not die but have their eies open and receive knowledge What observe you in this reply of the Devill First his craft in applying himself to the woman whom he seeing to be in doubt of the punishment contents himself with it and abstaineth from a precise deniall whither he would willingly draw her because he deemed that the woman would not come so farre and that in a flat deniall he should have been bewrayed which notwithstanding in the latter end of this sentence he doth by implication flatly doe whence we learn that the Devill proceedeth by degrees and will not at the first move to the grossest as in Idolatry he laboureth to draw man first to be present after to kneel only with the knee keeping his conscience to himselfe lastly to the greatest worship In whoredome first to look then to dally c. and therefore wee must resist the evill in the beginning Secondly that hee is a calumniator or caviller whereof he hath his name Diabolus Devill and an Interpreter of all things to the worst and it is no marvell though he deprave the best actions of good men seeing hee dealeth so with God surmising that God had forbidden to eat of the fruits lest they should know as much as he Thirdly that knowing how desirous the nature of man especially they of best spirits is of knowledge he promiseth unto them a great encrease thereof whereas wee ought to remember that which Moses saith that the secrets of the Lord are to himself and that the things that he hath revealed are to us and to our children Deut. 29. 29. Hitherto of Satans temptation the cause of the fall without man What were the causes arising from our first parents themselves Not any of Gods creation but their carelesnesse to keep themselves intire to Gods command for though they were created good yet being left by God to the mutability of their own will they voluntarily enclined and yeelded unto that evill whereunto 〈◊〉 were tempted and so from one degree unto another were ●rought unto plain rebellion Gen. 3. 6. Eccl. 7. 29. What was their first and main sin In generall it was disobedience the degrees whereof were first infidelity then pride and lastly the dis●vowing of subjection by eating the forbidden fruit which they imagined to be the means whereby they should attain to an higher degree of blessednesse but proved to be the sin that procured their fall Gen. 2. 16 17. 3. 6 7. Did not Adam conferre with Satan and take the fruit from the tree No he received it from his wife and by her was deceived and she by Satan Gen. 3. 4. 17. 1 Tim. 2. 14. Satan indeed was the outward cause of Eves fall but what are the causes arising from her self They are either outward things of the body or the inward affections of the mind moved by them What are the outward things of the body They are the abuse of the tongue of the ears of the eyes and of the tast for in that she entertained conference with the Devill the tongue and ears in that it is said that the fruit was delectable to look on the eyes and in that it was said it was good to eat the tast is made to be an instrument of this sin What learn you from hence That which the Apostle warneth Rom. 6. 13. that we beware that we make not the parts of our bodies weapons of iniquitie for if without a circumspect use of them they were instruments of evill before there was any corruption or any inclination at all to sin how much more dangerous will they be now after the corruption unlesse they be wel looked unto What doe you observe in Eves conference with the Devill First her folly to enter into any conference with Satan for shee might have been amazed that a beast should speak unto her in a mans voice but her carelesnesse and curiosity moved her to it Secondly her boldnesse in daring to venture on such an adversary without her husbands help or advice Thirdly her wretchednesse in daring once to call in question the truth of Gods command or to dispute thereof or then to doubt of it What instruction gather you from her entertaining conference with Satan That it is dangerous to talk with the Devill so much as to bid him to depart if the Lord to try us should suffer him to tempt us visibly as he did Eve unlesse we have a speciall
man to deserve the true name of a citizen which is to use the place aright And therefore have no part in those rewards that are proposed for good and perfect citizens though they enjoy what outwardly belongeth to the city Are we then to acknowledge one Church or many One alone as there is but one Lord one Spirit one Baptisme one Faith Eph. 4. 4. Cant. 6. 8. Gal. 3. 28. Howsoever as hath been said there is a begun and a perfect Church For the Church of God is one in respect of that inward nature of it having one Head one Spirit and one finall state But outwardly there be as many Churches as there be congregations of Believers knit together by speciall bond of order for the religious expressing of that inward nature Rom. 1. 11. Yet though there be many visible Churches there is but one Catholick and Universall Church of which not one shall be lost and out of which not one shall be saved Acts 2. 47. Ephes. 5. 23. John 17. 12. 20. VVhat gather you hence That the Church of Rome is not the Catholick Church because it is particular not universall and because out of it many have been saved and in it some shall be damned Rev. 18. 4. 19. 20. 2 Th. 2. 11 12. What are the speciall prerogatives whereof all Gods children the true members of the Catholick Church are made partakers Joh. 1. 12. In the Creed there are some principall notes rehearsed 1. The Communion of Saints Heb. 12. 22 23. Eph. 2. 19. 2. The forgivenesse of sins Rom. 8. 33. 3. The Resurrection of the body 1 Cor. 15. 52. Act. 24. 15. 4. Life everlasting Rom 6. 23. There are four also recorded by the Apostle Paul in that golden sentence 1 Cor. 1. 30. Ye are of him in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us Wisdom and Righteousnes Sanctification and Redemption VVhy is Wisdome here set down by the Apostle as necessary to our salvation Because it was necessary that having absolutely lost all godly and saving wisdom wherein we were first created that it should be againe repaired ere we could be partakers of life eternall Why have we no true wisdome naturally able to bring us unto it No verily for although we have wisdome naturally ingraffed in us to provide for this present life and sufficient to bring us to condemnation in the life to come yet we have not one grain of saving wisdom able to save us or to make us step one foot forward unto eternall life Where is this wisdom to be found In the word of God How come we to it By Christ for God dwelleth in light which no man hath approached unto 1 Tim 6. 16. only the Sonne which was in the bosome of his Father he hath revealed him Joh. 1. 18. What doth the Apostle mean by Righteousnesse As by the chief part thereof our whole justification which consisteth of the remission of our sins and the imputation of Christs righteousnesse How doe you prove this righteousnesse here to be meant of the righteousnesse that is in Christ Because he speaketh afterward of sanctification which is the righteousnesse within us What is Sanctification It is freedome from the tyranny of sin into the liberty of righteousnesse begun here and increased dayly untill it be fully perfected in the life to come Rom. 6. 14. Psal. 19. 14. VVhat is Redemption It is the happy estate that the childrē of God shal have in the last day VVhat is the ground of all these spirituall blessings The whole work of our salvation must be ascribed to the grace of God alone VVhat is meant by the grace of God First and principally that free favour with God doth bear towards us 2. Those gifts and helps that are in us arising from that fountain Is man idle in this work of grace Man also worketh with Gods grace but first he receiveth from God not only the power to work but also the will and the deed it selfe Phil. 2. 13. Is this work of God only an offering of good things unto us God doth not only offer grace unto us but causeth us effectually to receive it and therefore is said not only to draw us Cant. 1. 3. Joh. 6. 44. but also to create a new heart in us whereby we follow him Ps. 51. 10. What profit hath every one of Gods elect in Christ the Mediatour by the application of the covenant of grace Union and communion both with Christ himselfe and with his whole Church whence ariseth the communion of Saints whereby nothing else is understood but that heavenly fellowship which all the faithfull have with Christ their head with the members of his body all true Christians the whole Church thus communicating with Christ and every member one with another Heb. 3. 14. 12. 22. 23. Eph. 2. 19 20. 4. 12. 1 John 1. 3. What are the bands of this fellowship and who is the author of it The Spirit knits the body to the head by faith and the members one unto another by love 1 Cor. 12. 11. 27. Col. 3. 14. 1 Cor. 6. 17. What comfort have we by this 1. That we are justified by that faith whereby Adam and Abraham were justified which is tyed to no time or place and excludeth no person 2. That we are made partakers of Christ and all his merits by faith and of all the blessings of the Church by love What are the speciall comforts of this communion with Christ That wee are sure to have all graces and all good things from him and that both our persons are beloved and our services accepted in him and for him John 1. 16. 17. 1 Cor. 1. 30. Eph. 2. 4 5 13. 1 Pet. 2. 5. And what especiall comforts doe arise out of our communion with Christians That we have a portion in their prayers Act. 1. 2. 15. a share in their comforts Rom. 12. 15. a room in their hearts 2 Thess. 1. 3. mutually bearing infirmities Gal. 6. 1 2. furthering duties Heb. 10. 24. and relieving necessities What duty doth this communion of Saints require of us Eph. 4. 3. To renounce all fellowship with sin and sinners 2 Cor. 6. 17 to edifie one another in faith and love Iude 5. 20. to delight in the society of the Saints Ps. 16. 3. and to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace Why are all Beleevers called Saints Because they are partakers of Christs holinesse dayly growing and increasing in the same and to let us know that none shall ever bee Saints in heaven but such as are first Saints on earth Heb. 12. 10. 2 Pet. 1. 14. 2 Cor. 7. 1. 2 Thess. 1. 10. Forasmuch as the point of our union and communion with Christ is of great importance and the very foundation of allour comfort it is more largely to be stood upon First therefore shew how the elect are united to Christ his person They are incorporated and made members of
part thereof unto idle and curious questions 2 Pet. 3. 16. 3. By abusing it to prophane mirth by framing jests out of it or against it Psal. 22. 13. Also by making Playes and Enterludes thereof 4. By maintaining Errour sinne and prophanenesse by it Mat. 4. 6. Isa. 66. 5. 5. By applying it to Superstition and unlawfull Arts to Magicall spels Sorceries and Charmes for the healing of diseases finding out of theft c. Deut. 18. 11. Acts 19. 13. How is Gods Name taken in vaine in regard of the Sacraments and other holy Mysteries and Ordinances of God When they are unworthily received and prophanely used Mal. 1. 11 12. 1 Cor. 11. 27. 29. Jer. 7. 4 10. So much of the chiefe particulars forbidden in this Commandement What are the helps or hinderances of the obedience thereof 1. That we both inure our hearts to feare and reverence the great and dreadfull Name of the Lord our God Deut. 28. 58. Eccles. 9. 2. and keep a carefull watch over our lips and lives lest by any meanes we dishonour him Psal. 39. 1. 2. That we avoid both the company of prophane persons who set their mouth against Heaven Psal. 73. 9. and all unnecessary dangers wherby divers have been occasioned to deny the Lord Mat. 26. 69 c. What is contained in the Reason annexed to the Commandement A dreadfull penalty That the Lord will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his Name in vaine What is the summe of this threat That God will not leave this sin unpunished 1 King 2. 9. but will grievously punish the breach of this Commandement whereby he threatneth extreme miseries and judgements to the Transgressors For it being our happinesse to have our sins covered and not imputed Psal. 32. 2. it must needs be extreame unhappinesse to have it reckoned and imputed unto us What is implyed herein A fit opposition That howsoever mans Lawes take not hold of offending in this kind yet God will not acquit them Psal. 1. 5. nor suffer them to escape his righteous and fearefull Iudgements Zach. 5. 3. Jer. 5. 12. Neither shall the Transgressor scape unpunished although the Magistrate and the Minister also would pronounce him innocent and although the Malefactor flatter himselfe as if all dangers were past nay the more free that usually he escapes the Iudgements and punishments of men the more heavy plagues and vengeance will surely light upon him from God except he repent Hitherto of the Commandements concerning that service which is to be performed to God at all times as occasion shall require which is that which concerneth the speciall time wholly to be bestowed in his Worship The fourth and last Commandement of the first Table which setteth forth a certain day especially appointed by the Lord himselfe to the practise of the Worship prescribed in the three former Commandements for therein consisteth the chiefe point of the sanctifying of that day What are the Words of this Commandement Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath day c. Exod. 20. 8 9 10 11. What are we to observe in these words First the Commandement and then the Reasons annexed thereunto What is the meaning of the Commandement It challengeth at the hand of every man one day of seven in every week to be set apart unto a holy rest and requireth all persons to separate themselves from their ordinary labour and all other exercises to his service on the same that so they being severed from their worldly businesses and all the works of their labour and callings concerning this life they may wholly attend to the worship of God alone Neh. 13. 15 16. Esa. 58. 13 14. Why doe you adde these words apart and separate To make a difference between the Sabbath dayes wherein wee must wholy and only serve God and the exercises of the other six days wherein every man must serve him in his lawfull calling What need is there of one whole day in every week to serve God seeing we may serve him every day That is not enough For 1. To the end that we should not plunge our selves so deeply into the affairs of the world as that we should not recover our selves the wisdome of God hath thought it fit that one day in seven there should be an intermission from them that we might wholly separate our selves to the service of God and with more freedome of spirit performe the same 2. A whole day is needfull for the performance of all the parts of Gods service and worship as hearing of publike Prayer and the Word preached Chatechising Administration of the Sacraments exercise of holy Discipline and consideration of the glory of God in the creatures 3. If Adam in his perfection had need of this holy day much more have we who are so grievously corrupted 4. If the Lord in love and wisedome considering our necessities both of soule and body hath set out a weeks time for both of provision that as every day we set apart some time for food and spend the rest in labour so we set one day in the week aside for our spirituall food and bestow the other dayes on our earthly affaires so as this day may in comparison be accounted the soules day wherein yet wee must have some care of our bodies as on the six dayes we must have some care of our soules What is forbidden in this Commandement The unhallowing or prophaning of the Sabbath either by doing the works of our calling and of the flesh or by leaving undone the works of the Spirit But is not this Commandement Ceremoniall and so taken away by the death of Christ No but is constantly and perpetually to be observed and never to cease till it bee perfectly consummated in the heavenly Sabbath Hebr. 4. 9 10. How prove you that 1. Because it is placed in the number of the perpetuall Commandements otherwise the Morall Law should consist but of nine words or Commandements which is contrary to Gods Word Deut. 4. 13. 2. Because this Commandement amongst the rest was written by the finger of God Exod. 31. 18. whereas no part of the Ceremoniall Law was 3. For that it was written in Tables of stone as well as the other Deut. 5. 22. As to signifie the hardnesse of our hearts so to signifie the continuance and perpetuity of this Commandement as well as the rest 4. Because it was before any Shadow or Ceremony of the Law yea before Christ was promised whom all Ceremonies of the Law have respect unto for the Sabbath was first instituted in Paradise before there was any use of Sacrifices and Ceremonies Gen. 2. 1 2 3. 5. The Ceremonies were as a Partition wall betwixt the Iews and the Gentiles but God doth here extend his Commandement not onely to the Iewes themselves but also to strangers Exod. 20. 10. Nehem. 13. 15 16 c. 6. Our Saviour Christ willing his followers which should live about forty yeares after his Ascension
〈…〉 benefits received How many Petitions are there in the Lords Prayer Six equally divided as it were into two Tables whereof 〈…〉 concerne God as doth the first Table of the Law three doe concern● our selves and our neighbours as doth the second Table For in the three first we make request for those things that concerne Gods Majesty whose glory and service we are to preferre before our owne good Iohn 12. 27 28. In the three latter for those things that concerne the necessity of man and our owne welfare which we must referre to the former Psalme 50. 15. So that by the very order of the Petitions we learne this instruction that we must and ought first to thinke upon Gods glory before any thing that appertaines or belongs to us and that we should seeke the service of God before our owne good John 12. 27 28. yea and preferre the glorifying of the name of God before our owne salvation Rom. 9. 3. As also by the order of the Commandements which being divided into two Tables the first concernes the Worship of God the second our selves What observe you from this Our hypocrisie for were it not for our selves and our wants we would not come to God at all in prayer As in Popery all their prayers are for themselves and their salvation c. whereas this word thy in all these Petitions doth shut forth the consideration of our selves to the end that we might have our minds altogether fastened upon the service of God What further observe you proper to those Petitions that concerne the glory of God That as they must be begged in the first place so must they likewise be performed with further zeale of spirit and earnestnesse of affection as may be gathered in that they are propounded without any band or coupling of one with another How are the three first Petitions divided Thus the first concerneth Gods glory it selfe the other two the things whereby God is glorified as when his Kingdome commeth and his will is done What are the words of the first Petition Hallowed be thy Name Mat. 6. 9. Luke 11. 2. What is the summe of this Petition That in all things God may be glorified That he who in himselfe his words and works is most glorious and holy may be acknowledged and honoured for such by us Psal. 46. 8. 1 Pet. 2. 9. Why is this Petition set before all Because it is that which ought to be dearest unto us and for that all things are to be referred unto it Prov. 16. 4. 1 Cor. 10. 31. What is to be considered for the further opening of this Petition First for the meaning of the words apart then of them together What is meant by the word Name By the name of God we are to understand God himselfe 1 King 5. 5. Isa. 26. 8. as he maketh knowne to us the fame and glory of his nature otherwise unconceivable Gen. 32. 29. For the name of God in the Scripture signifieth God himself because the nature of a thing is taken for that it is the name of as Acts 1. 15. his Essence and all things by which he is knowne unto us What are those Names whereby God is made knowne unto us First his Titles as Jehovah Elohim the Lord of Hosts and such like Exod. 3. 14. and 6. 3. Secondly his Attributes and Properties as his wisedome power love goodnesse mercy justice truth Exod. 33. 18 19 c. 34. 5 6 c. which being essentiall in him are for our capacity expressed under the name of such qualities in us and are called the names of God because as names serve to discerne things by so God is knowne by these things Thirdly also his memorials signified by his name because he getteth glory by them What are these Memorials First the works and actions of God as the Creation and government of the world Psal. 104. but especially the worke of redemption Psalme 19. 14. Secondly the things that belong unto God as his Worship Word Sacraments and disclipine but especially his Word Psalme 138. 2. 19. c. which is the booke of grace and the boxe of ointment out of which the sweet savour of his name is most effectually powred Cant. 1. 2 3. What is meant by the word Hallowed Sanctified and reverenced for to hallow is to set apart a thing from the common use to some proper end and therefore to hallow the name of God is to separate it from all profane and unholy abuse to a holy and reverend use Can any man adde any thing unto Gods holinesse No no we cannot adde any holinesse unto God or take any from him but as God is holy in his properties and actions and also in his Ordinance both in the Church and Common-wealth so wee desire they may be and that not onely by our selves but also by all men acknowledged and reputed as they are worthy in themselves to be reputed and accounted And in this respect onely are we said to hallow his name when we acknowledge it and honour it for such Psal. 96. 7 8. thereby as it were setting the Crowne of holinesse and honour upon the head of God contrariwise failing so to doe we are guilty of the profanation of Gods holy name not that he can receive any pollution from us but onely as a man that lusteth after a chast woman is said by our Saviour to be guilty of adultery with her though she remaineth in her self spotlesse and undefiled Matth. 5. 28. May none else be glorified but the name of God When it is said Hallowed be thy name thereby is noted that no glory or honour should be given to any thing in the world but to the name of God Esa. 42. 8. 48. 11. further then they are instruments whereby we may arise to the glorifying of it for God will not give his glory to any other thing no not to the manhood of our Saviour Christ. What is to be considered in the words together That it is a singular benefit of God to admit us to the sanctifying of his name and as it were to set the Crowne which is his glory upon his head and to hold it there especially seeing he is able himself alone to doe it and when he would use others thereto he hath so many Legions of Angels to doe it yea can raise up stones to doe it What doe you then aske of God in this Petition That as God is glorious in himselfe so he may be declared and made knowne unto men that therefore God would have himselfe known and acknowledged by all men but especially by my selfe to be most holy that whether we speak think or any way use his name properties works or Word we may doe it holily and with all reverence That his wisdome power goodnesse mercy truth righteousnesse and eternity may more and more be imparted unto me and other of Gods people That he may be acknowledged just wise c. in
sinnes and increase of faith Zach. 12. 10. Mark 9. 24. 5. An assurance of the forgivenesse of our sins by the testimony of the Spirit of Christ Rom. 8. 15 16. and exemplifying and applying the generall pardon of sins once for all granted unto us at our conversion unto the severall sins and debts of every day and moment of our life 6. We pray for remission of sin not as intending our selves to undergoe the punishment or any part thereof Jer. 14. 7. But contrariwise that the whole debt which is properly the punishment as hath been shewed may be accepted at the hands of Christ our Surety and we fully discharged and acquitted so that nothing may remaine on our account but the righteousnesse of Christ Psal. 3. 8 9. whereby the favour and kingdome of God is purchased for us So much of Petition What is set downe in the reason A true note to certifie us whether our sinnes are forgiven us or not by that we forgive or not forgive others that have offended us Doth this reason binde God to forgive us No otherwise then by his gracious and true promises this being a necessary consequent and fruit of the other and not a cause For when we say As we or for we also forgive c. we argue with the Lord not for merit but from the modell of Gods grace in us Matth. 6. 14 15. which being incomparably inferiour to the mercy and love of God and yet disposing us to forgive and let fall in regard of hatred or private revenge Rom. 12. 19. any wrongs and injuries of our brethren against us may both stirre up the compassion of the Lord towards us his children Neh. 5. 19. and assure us of the attaining of this our request Iames 2. 13. And therefore that we may not be destitute of so important an argument Marke 11. 25. 1 Iohn 3. 14. both to plead for mercy with God and to assure our selves of successe we desire of God a portion of that mercy which is so abundant in him that we may be tenderly affected one towards another forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake forgiveth us Eph. 4. 32. Col. 3. 13. But seeing God alone forgiveth sinnes Matth. 9. 2. Mar. 2. 7. Iob 14. 4. Esa. 43. 25. here understood by the word Debt How is it said that we forgive sinnes We forgive not the sinne so far as it is sinne against God but so far as it bringeth griefe and hinderance unto us we may forgive it Are we hereby bound to forgive all our Debts No verily we may both crave our debts of our debtors and if there be no other remedie goe to Law in a simple desire of Iustice yea in lawfull warre we may kill our enemies and yet forgive them being free from anger and revenge yet so that if our Debtors be not able to pay we are bound in a duty to forgive them or at least to have a conscionable regard of their inability How is this reason drawne From the lesse to the greater thus if we wretched sinners upon earth can forgive others how much more will the gracious God of heaven forgive us Matth. 5. 7. 6. 14 15. if we having but a drop of mercy can forgive others how much more will God who is a sea full of grace 1 Iohn 2. 10. 3. 14. especially when we by forgiving sometimes suffer losse whereas from God by forgiving us nothing falleth away Wherein appeareth the inequality between our debt unto God and mans debts unto us First in the number our debts to God being compared to ten thousand mens debts to us to one hundred Secondly in the weight our debts to God being compared to ten thousand Talents mens debts to us to an hundred pence How riseth this great inequality in the weight From the great inequality between God and man for if to strike a King be much more hainous then to strike a poore boy what is it then to strike God who is infinitely greater then all the Kings of the earth What is to be gathered out of this reason That we should daily pray unto God that he would mercifully worke in us a mercifull affection and give us loving and charitable hearts towards all men free from malice and revenge and desirous of their salvation And that as this is a testimony to our hearts that God will forgive us if we for his sake can heartily forgive such as have offended us so on the other side if we can shew no favour unto others we can look for none at the hands of God And therefore to pray without forgiving such as have offended us were not onely a meere babling but also a procuring of Gods wrath more heavily against us which condemneth the hypocrisie of many which assuring themselves in great confidence of the forgivenesse of their sinnes yet cannot finde in their hearts to forgive others end so by mocking the Lord bring a curse upon themselves in stead of a blessing seeing heart and hand and mouth should goe together What further learne we by this reason That as our forgivenesse is nothing unlesse the danger of imprisonment be taken away which inability of paying the debt doth draw with it so it availeth us nothing to have our sinnes forgiven us of God unlesse the punishment also bee forgiven Contrary to the Papists who teach that sinne and the guilt thereof is taken away by Christ but that we must satisfie for the punishment of it wherein they make God like unto those hypocrites here also condemned who will seem to forgive and yet keepe a prick and quarrell in their hands watching all occasions of advantage which say they will forgive but not forget So much of the former Petition belonging to the life to come What are the words of the latter which is the sixt and last Petition of the Lords Prayer And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evill Matth. 6. 13. Luke 11. 4. What is the summe of it In it we pray for sanctification and strength against our sinnes that sinne may not onely be pardoned unto us but daily mortified in us Rom. 6. 1 2. and we either kept by the providence of God from temptations Prov. 30. 8. 2 Cor. 12. 8. are preserved by his grace from being hurt thereby 1 Cor. 10. 13. 2 Cor. 12. 9. and as we pray that by the power of God we may be strengthened against all tentations so do we also pray that by the same power we may be raised up to new obedience For under one part of sanctification that is the avoyding and mortifying of sinne is implyed the other part also which is ability unto new obedience 2 Cor. 7. 1. Rom. 6. 11. What is here to be observed in regard of the order that this Petition consequently followeth upon the former That therefore to strengthen our faith for the obtaining of this Petition we must be assured of the former that seeing God hath
another 10. To preserve the publike Ministery of the Word and Prayer in Christian assemblies Who are to be partakers in this Sacrament All baptized who are of yeeres and sound judgement to discerne the Lords body ought to repaire to this Sacrament But those onely come worthily who professing the true faith have duely examined and prepared themselves Esa. 66. 23. 1 Cor. 11. 27 28. whereby all not of age and sound judgement are shut from his Sacrament which are not alwayes from the other of Baptisme May none be admitted by the Church to the Supper of the Lord but such as have these things in them which God requireth at their hands Yes those who having knowledge doe make profession of Religion and are found guilty of no great error or crime unrepented of What if any thrust themselves to the Lords Table who are ignorant or guilty of such crimes They are to be kept back by the discipline of the Church What is to be performed by every Christian that he may worthily partake of the Lords Supper There must be a carefull preparation before the action great heed in the whole action and a joyfull and thankfull cloze and shutting of it All which must be performed as well by the Minister as the people For there is great difference betwixt our Saviour Christ the first deliverer of this Sacrament and all other Ministers he having no battel of the Spirit and flesh in him but being always prepared unto every good worke had no need of these things but other Ministers have as much need thereof as the people How are we to prepare our selves to this Sacrament By due search and triall of our own soules whether we can finde in our selves the things which God doth require in worthy Communicants How may we performe that By fitting our mindes framing our hearts thereunto 1 Cor. 10. 15 16 11. 28 How may we sit our mindes By examining our wisdome and knowledge both of Gods will in generall and of the nature and use of this holy Sacrament in particular whether we can give a reason of the representation of Christ in bread and wine and bring the resemblance and difference of the proportion of the bread and wine with the body and bloud of Christ and of the eating and drinking of the elements with the partaking of the spirituall things Rom. 4. 11. 1 Cor. 10. 3. and 4. 16 17. How may our hearts be framed for the feeling of the vertue and power of this Sacrament 1. By weighing with our selves what need we have of it and what benefit we may reape by it 2. By examining of our faith 2 Cor. 13. 5. 1 Tim. 1. 15. and repentance Heb. 10. 22. Iames 4. 8. attended with true love of God Zach. 12. 10. and of our brethren 1 Cor. 16. 14. 3. By servent invocation praying for a blessing upon this Ordinance of God Matth. 26 26. How may we finde what need we have of this Sacrament Partly by our wretched estate by nature and partly by our weak estate by grace What may we finde by our estate by nature That being prone to all evill we had need of this Sacrament to nourish and preserve the life of grace new begun which otherwise by our own corruption might dye or decay in us 1 Cor. 10. 16. What need have we of this Sacrament for reliefe of our weak estate by grace That being weak in understanding and feeble in memory we may by the signes of Bread and Wine have our understanding bettered and memory confirmed in the death of Christ 1 Cor. 11. 24 26. What further need may we finde of it That being fraile in faith and cold in love we may by the same creatures as by seales and pledges have our faith further strengthned and our love more enflamed to God and Gods children What benefit then may we reape by the Lords Supper We see already that the benefit is great this Sacrament being as a glasse for the mind a monument for the memory a support of faith a provocation to love a quickning to obedience and a signe and seal of all the mercies of God in Christ Iesus How must the heart be prepared to finde the power of this Sacrament for supply of these wants and obteining of these benefits The heart must be purged by repentance and purified by faith 1 Cor. 10. 14 16. 21. Acts 15. 9. How may the heart be purified by faith If I have not only knowledge what Christ hath done for his chosen but a full assurance that whatsoever he hath done he hath done it for me as well as for any other 1 Cor. 2. 2. Iohn 17. 3. Gal. 2. 20. What gather you hence That they onely are to present themselves at the Lords Table who after their baptisme are able to make a profession of the true faith and can finde that they truly believe in Christ seeing ignorant and unbelieving persons do rather eat and drink their own judgement than reap any benefit by this Sacrament 1 Cor. 11. 29 30 31. How may thy heart be purged by repentance If from my heart I do repent of my particular sins past and judge my selfe for them bewailing and forsaking them and frame the rest of my life according to Gods will 1 Cor. 11. 30 31. Gal. 6. 16. What learne you hence That it is dangerous for such as remaine in their old sins or after the Sacrament return unto them once to offer themselves to the Lords Table forasmuch as by this means they procure the wrath of God against them and those that belong unto them although not in condemnation in the world to come which the faithfull notwithstanding their unworthy receiving cannot come unto yet to fearefull plagues and judgements in this world It is not meet that we be free from all malice in our hearts when we come to the Lords Supper Yes it is for this Sacrament is a seal both of our conjunction with Christ and of our society one with another 1 Cor. 10. 17. and we must know that true repentance purgeth out malice amongst other sins and a sound faith worketh by love towards God and out Brethren Mat. 5. 22 23. Iames 1. 19 20 21. 1 Pet. 2. 1. Gal. 5. 6. So much for examination and preparation required before the action What is to be done by the communicant in the present action 1. They are to use reverent attention the better to apply the whole action harkning to the doctrine of the Sacrament delivered by the Minister joyning with him in his prayers making use of all the sacramentall actions and so commemorating the Lords death for the comfort and refreshing of their own souls 1 Cor. 11. 17. 26. 2. According as it is commanded all must take the Bread and Wine into their hands contrary to the superstition of divers which will have it thrust either into their mouthes or else take it with their gloves as if the hand of a Christian which God