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

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Law is also a Schoolemaster when we are come to Christ euer checking and correcting vs when wee walke not according to the straight rule thereof but the Gospel vpon our humiliation comforteth vs and assureth vs that al our aberrations and going astray are remitted so that there be an heart vnfainedly hating that euill which we doe Rom. 7. Now as there be differences betwixt the Law and the Gosspell so there be some things wherein they agree The agreement of the old Testament and the new Heb. ● 1 Mat 3. 1. In the author God not as the mad Manichees taught the bad God to be the author of the law and the good God the author of the Gospell for the same God which spake by his Son Iesus Christ in these last daies spake also at diuers times and in diuers maners in times past he that said from heauen this is my beloued Son heare ye him the same God spake all these words said from heauen I am thy Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt out of the house of bondage c. 2. They agree in the threatning of sin and vrging obedience vnto the Lord in all things but the Law vrgeth it for feare the Gospel for loue If ye loue me keepe my Commandements the Law as the meritorious cause of life the Gospell as most necessary signes of the life of faith and the way that God hath appointed vs to walke in vnto life the Law giueth no hope in the case of swaruing from the strict rule thereof the Gospell giueth hope to the penitent and where the like hope is giuen by the Prophets they doe rather play Euangelists then Preachers of the Law 3. They agree in this that howsoeuer the Gospell giueth hope to the penitent yet it denieth all hope to those that liue and die in transgression of the Law for against such most common are the threatnings contained in the Gospell They that doe such things Gal. 5.17 shall neuer inherit the Kingdome of Heauen 4. They agree in this that there is no contradiction betwixt them but as they come from one and the same spirit so there is a sweet harmony consent between thē the one only sheweth what God doth strictly require in his iustice the other how his iustice is satisfied and yet his mercy to sinfull man appeareth the one saith he that breaketh the Commandements shall die the other saith that because man through the weaknes of his nature could not but breake them one man that neuer brake any the least of them died in the stead of sinfull man and thus freed him that was the son of death from death and damnation 5. They agree in the Ministers of them both for they of the Law were to be without blemish their lipps were to preserue knowledge they were to liue of their seruice they were diuers sorts both Priests Leuits they were watchmen c. so ought the ministers of the Gospell they must be vnblameable apt to teach they that preach the Gospell are to liue of the Gospell 1. Tim 3. 1. Cor. 9.24 Ephes 4.12 2. Pet. 5.2 some are Doctours some Pastours c. they are Pastours watching and keeping their flockes as those that must giue accounts for them And thus much of the third generall The manner how this law was giuen Exod. 19.20 The next thing to be spoken of in generall is the manner how this Law was giuen and that is described in the nineteenth and twentieth of Exodus 1. First there was great preparation three dayes together the people were sanctified according to the manner of those times by washings and purifyings shewing both what need wee haue by prayer and reading of the holy Scriptures which may bring vs from worldly to heauenly meditations to prepare our selues euer before that we come to heare the Lord speaking vnto vs in the Ministery of his holy word and also how wee must euer be more and more doing away by the Spirit of Sanctification the blots and blemishes of our natures that we may be the fitter to come into the presence of the Holyest 2. Secondly a straight charge was giuen that neither man nor beast vnder paine of death should come neere the Mount whence the Law was to be deliuered but certaine marks were set beyond which none might dare to passe shewing as the Apostle hence noteth 2. Cor. 3.6.7 Heb. 12.19 how glorious was the Law now to bee deliuered and if such as passed the markes set them were without mercy to die the death that much more the transgressours of any of these precepts should die and find no mercy Heb. 12 2● Thirdly the Lord descended with great terrour the Trumpet sounding the earth shaking and Lightnings flying abroad insomuch as that the people are noted to haue run away and Moses himselfe to haue said I tremble and quake shewing that the things here vttered were graue and waightie and to be receiued into the heart with a feare of offending against them and also that when the time shall bee of calling the offenders to account with what wonderfull terrour the Lord will then come against them 4. Almighty God himself spake al these words in the hearing of al the people but whē they were too weak to beare his words and desired that the Lord would not speake any more for so they should die but promised obedience if Moses should speak two tables of stone were giuen vnto him written with Gods own finger that he might carry them to the people shewing hereby how stony-hard our hearts be and that Gods finger alone is able to imprint them there his speech from Heauen must worke in vs a reuerence of them otherwise we shal all be too negligent of his Lawes 5. When Moses had broken these Tables through zeale seeing how God was dishonoured in his absence by golden Calues which they had set vp and worshipped the Lord bad him hew two other Tables and therein he wrote all the words that were in the first shewing hereby that mans heart by Gods creation had all the lawes ready written in it as the Tables prepared by God himselfe had but the heart which he had gotten vnto himselfe by falling away from God is without any letter hereof in effect vntill that the Lord wrote them anew as it was with the Tables prepared by Moses 6. Lastly when Moses had been long with the Lord and came with these Lawes vnto the people his face shone so as they were not able to looke vpon him for which cause he vsed a vaile when hee came vnto them and put it off when hee returned vnto the Lord shewing hereby as S. Paul noteth 2. Cor 3.13 ●4 that the Iewes should not be able to see into the end of the Law Christ Iesus vntill the vale of blindnesse and hardnesse of heart were taken away by the Lord neither yet could any of the Gentiles without the same
there bee three persons and euery one be very God how say you then that there is but one God Answ Although there be three persons yet is there but one onley God in substance one infinite power and one eternity Explan This point is very mysticall and therefore hath bred many heresies in some denying the Sonne to bee God and some the holy Ghost because they would not subiect humane reason to diuine misteries But the Scriptures are most plaine for it First because they teach but one God only Secondly because they teach this very point in so many words These three are one Thirdly Job 5.7 because that euer when they expresse the Lord God it is by these words Iehouah Elohim properly englished The Lord Gods that is God in more persons which is but one Lord. Augustine sheweth by a comparison that this may be in naturall reason The light of the Sun the light of the moone and the light enlightening the ayre are three lights and yet but one Sunne But what should we enter comparison betwixt things finite and made and the infinite Creator of all betwixt terrestriall generations and supercelestiall Why should we seeke to tye him to the law of nature who is aboue nature It is no argument man cannot beget a sonne sibi Contemporaneum which begins to bee so soone as himselfe and of whom it can bee said he makes but one man together with him therefore neither can the Lord for so the Lord should bee like man when as in respect of him not men onely but euen all the world is as a droppe of water It is farre more absurd Esay 40.15 Mark 12.18 then that of the Saduces comparing our present fraile estate with the spirituall and eternall to come Serm. 15. ad frat in eremo Aristodemus a Philosopher saith Augustine laboured many yeares in finding out the nature of a Bee neither finally could hee and how then should wee comprehend the Trinity See more in my Tractate vpon the sixth to the Romanes lib. 2. cap. 5. Sect. 3. cap. 6. Sect. 1. Quest 10. What doe you learne heere to beleeue concerning God the Father and in which words Answ I learne to beleeue that God is my Father able to doe all things the Creator of the whole world and the Lord and gouernour of the same In these words I beleeue in God the Father Almighty maker of heauen and earth Explan In the handling of these Articles of our Faith particularly my purpose is to followe one and the same method throughout viz. First to shewe the meaning of the words then the ground of holy Scriptures out of which they are taken and lastly how wee are to expresse in our liues our faith in euery Article First therefore touching the sense of this Article I beleeue that is I my selfe doe particularly know and beleeue whatsoeuer is here set down and acknowledge it my duty so to doe and not to rest contented with a generall faith beleeuing as the Church beleeueth without knowing the things beleeued or with a generall faith beleeuing these things generally to be true without applying them to my selfe Jam. 2.19 For there is one kinde of faith which doth onely beleeue these things to bee true such as is the faith of the Diuell who is said to beleeue and tremble and this faith is naturall and historicall reprobates doe attaine vnto it there is another which beleeueth these things to be true but yet in the application is altogether doubtfull and onely hoping well in regard of Gods mercy which is the vncomfortable faith of the Church of Rome and this can neuer speed at the hands of God if that common speech of Christ be true According to thy faith be vnto thee that of Iames If any man want wisedome let him aske it of God Jam. 1.5.6 The right Christian faith and let him aske in faith without wauering The true sauing faith exceeds all this and certainely resolues the beleeuer though in regard of sinne there doe oftentimes arise doubtings but these are only weakenesses in beleeuers not of the essence or nature of faith To proceed I beleeue that God is my Father that is I doe not onely beleeue that God is the Father of the Lord Iesus Christ nor that he is onely the Father of all things by creation but that he is my Father by adoption and grace and that I am his childe though by nature I be the child of wrath so that he is a Father by generation by creation and by regeneration or adoption My Father able to doe all things that is all things which it pleaseth him all things that are arguments of infinite power without exclusion of the Sonne or holy Ghost for the Sonne also is able to doe all things and so is the holy Ghost and thus I beleeue him to bee the creator of the world also and the gouernour for that this is ascribed vnto the Father as his proper worke as the proper worke of the Sonne is the redemption of his people and the proper worke of the holy Ghost their sanctification neither of them being excluded from hauing to doe in the worke of creation redemption and sanctification According to that maxim in diuinitie Opera trinitatis quoad extra sunt indiuisa The workes of the Trinitie without are all indiuisible And onely within haue the seuerall persons their peculiar workes heere the Father onely begets the Sonne onely is begotten and the holy Ghost onely proceedes and thus much for the meaning Proofe God is Father Psal 2.7 Heb. 1.6 Math. 3.16 Secondly for the grounds of this Article and first that God is a Father and first by generation Hence it is that he calleth Iesus Christ his Sonne Thou art my sonne this day haue I begotten thee and his first borne When hee bringeth in his first begotten hee saith Let all the Angels worship him and This is my beloued Sonne And in this generation doe three wonders concurre First he that is begotten is equall in time with him that begat him for hee is the Eternall God without beginning The generation of God Secondly hee that begat communicates to him that is begotten his whole essence for the essence of the God-head cannot bee diuided part being communicated to the Sonne and part retained still to the Father Thirdly the Father begets the Sonne within himselfe not without for there is no place without him he containes all places within himselfe Secondly that he is a Father by creation is plaine For Hee created the heauens Gen. 1. Psal 104. and the earth Hee laide the beames of his chambers in the waters hee set the earth vpon her foundations c. And this his worke of creation was wonderfull and far surpassing all other workes of the greatest in the world besides First in regard of the matter out of which the world was made viz. Nothing for all was made of nothing Secondly in regard of litle or
altogether erred For if one or some may what more priuiledge can they haue altogether Obict 1 If it be said that this is a doctrine tending to Atheisme for if the Church may erre there is no certainety of truth to be had if no certainty of truth to be had then is there iust cause of suspition giuen that there is no certaine truth at all and then saith the Atheist all is fabulous I answere that this consequence is most false for though all the Churches visible in the world were in an error yet there is certainty of truth to be had viz in the holy Scriptures to which Gods people taking heed may be saued from following Baal 1. Kin. 19.18 with the seuen thousands in Israel in Elijahs time who complained of the common reuolt of all but himselfe alone but was comforted with this that the Lord had left vnto him seuen thousand whose knees had not bowed to Baal nor their mouthes kissed himselfe For thus taking heede vnto the holy writings of the Prophets 2. Pet. 1.19 Saint Peter commends them of his time calling it a sure word and a light shining in a darke place and telling them that they doe well and Saint Paul would haue the Galatians not to regard the very Apostles in comparison of the Gospell which they had receiued saying If we our selues Galat. 1.8 or an Angell from Heauen teach any other wise let him be accursed Obict 2 The truth knowne without the Pope Iudge If it be said further All Heretiques doe paint ouer their heresies with allegations out of the Scriptures how therefore shall we know them Can euery simple man barely by the Scriptures discouer their craft and keepe himselfe from their poyson they are rather thus in the way of being peruerted to their ineuitable damnation 2. Pet. 3.16 as S. Peter teacheth I answer that this is a maruell seeing S. 1. Iohn 4.1 1. Thessal 5.21 Iohn biddeth euery man trie the Spirits Whether they be of God or no and giueth a generall rule to know them by and S. Paul saith Try all things and cleaue to that which is good and the men of Beraea are commended Acts 17.11 for searching the Scriptures to finde whether those things were so which were taught them by chiefe Pillers in the Church of God What impudencie then is it to count this the high way of errour How did the people of God of olde Esay 8.20 that had none but the Law and the Testimony with the help of Gods Priests to direct them What were those of the Primitiue Church more slenderly appoynted then we of these last times Or is there any now superiour to the very Apostles who submitted their teaching to the triall of this rule Let the Romanists then be a ●amed of this shamefull aduancing their Pope as infallible Iudg of all poynts of religion For this is indeede the way to Atheisme the way to all errour when one Pope shall contradict another or any shall fall into heresie as they haue done and yet be held for infallible 2. Cor. 8. Our rule is more certaine and neuer deceiueth but when fickle-headed persons will wrest it to their owne wills not bring their conceipts into subiection to it which is S. Peters meaning For here holdeth the promise of Christ concerning the Spirit to leade vs into all truth viz. if with humble hearts thinking that we know nothing as we ought to know we come to reade and heare the word of God and compare places more hard and obscure with plaine and easie places praying heartily in the name of Christ to be directed aright and no way belongeth to the Bishop of Rome as head of the Church as his flatterers vainely pretend Obict 3 Of Points maintained by Papists from plaine Scriptures Iam. 2.24 If any man will further obiect that this cannot yet make any Church appeare to be a true Church to them that are without For thus also the Roman Church will rather be iustified for that many points there helde different from vs are plainly set down which without glozing or paraphrasing is not so in the Church of the Protestants For example Saint Iames hath taught plainly We are not iustified by faith without workes It is not so of iustification by faith alone Our Sauiour Christ hath sayd plainly This is my body but not so of the signe of his body Saint Paul hath sayd Worke out your saluation with feare and trembling Saint Iames againe sayth If any be sicke let him be annointed in the name of the Lord Iesus c and expresse mention is made of traditions c. I answer It is good for the Roman Catholiques to deale heerein but with some lighter poynts of their religion for feare if they should proceed further to their grand doctrines of inuocation of Saints of Image-worshipping of worshipping the bread in the Sacrament of withdrawing the Cup from the Laitie of their Latine Seruice and ridiculous ceremonies and works of Supererrogation c. of being altogether grauelled heere A man would not thinke that they had the face to bring their stubble to the Scriptures without blushing for if they haue one sentence of Scripture in words speaking with them we haue ten for the Protestants Exod. 20.4 We haue an expresse command forbidding Images and their worship and a further commentary hereupon made by the Lord himselfe Deut. 4.5 Take heede for you saw no image in the day that the Lord spake vnto you Esa 63.16 c. against inuocation of Saints it is sayd Abraham knowes not of vs Jsaac is ignorant of vs and Angels and Saints haue refused this honour against the Popes Supremacy They that are great amongst the Gentiles haue dominion ouer them but it shall not be so with you Against the adoration of the Hoste They worshipped the creature Rom. 1 in stead of the Creator Against the merit of Workes We are vnprofitable seruants wee haue done but our duty when we haue done all 2 Cor. 3.5 Against free-will We cannot thinke a good thought of our selues With infinite places more of which very children are not ignorant For the places by them alledged they are but meere shewes Iames must be compared with Paul who is more large in the poynt of Iustification and so his meaning will appeare that we are iustified that is declared to be iust before men by our attentiue and vnpartial workes the rest are eiusd●m farinae easie to be answered as no Reader is ignorant And therefore if the Scriptures be acknowledged the rule of truth the Church will soone be made manifest euen to the vnconuerted Obict 4 The Scriptures translated Gods Word If it be further obiected that plaine people cannot know which be the Scriptures because the languages wherin they were first written is hidden from them now there be diuers translations indeede but much differing one from another how then can they know the
direction vnto vs For neuer more guides in euery corner poynting and haling men as it were to the right way yet neuer were they so little regarded which bringeth our profession into a suspition amongst the enemies as teaching good workes to be needlesse vnto life but they shall answer for it who are an occasion of this blasphemy 3. Duty To remember euerlasting life in all tro●bles The third duty is to vse the remembrance of eternall life as a salue against all sores as a cordiall to comfort our hearts against our greatest heauinesse Are we in misery in pouerty in pangs in disgrace in danger in the middest of continuall crosses What are all these to dismay vs the Lord hath prouided an excellent estate for vs euer enduring our suffering of these things is but momentany the Lord hath assured his seruants of Heauen and of Crownes of glory how can he then but giue vs deliuerance from these things supply our temporall wants in his good time Nay which is more the Lord hath sweetned the bitter pils of the troubles of this world by working through them the health of the soule by making them meanes of further assurance that wee are his children and that hee is our Father and by leading vs through them as through the right way vnto the euerlasting life 1. Cor. 11.28 Heb. 18. Iam. 1. If a begger might haue twenty pounds for trauelling in the wet and cold one night or for some few stripes to be giuen vnto him with a rod hee would not bee much grieued hereat no more would we at our crosses if wee had faith to be assured that instead of these wee shall haue an other day so great glory and the lesse would wee murmure at it because our stripes be vpon vs worthily as if a poore prisoner that had deserued death should bee set free and rewarded with a great summe of money for willingly submitting himselfe vnto some light chastisement Rom. 5.1 Let vs therefore not onely be content to beare our crosses but with the Apostle through faith reioyce in our tribulations and praise the Lord for them as Iob did saying Iob. 1. 4. Duty To pray for the ●astening of glory The Lord giueth and the Lord taketh away blessed be the name of the Lord. The fourth duty is to pray that this time might bee hastened 4. Duty To pray for the hastening of glory wherein we shal enter into life and euen to reioyce when we see it approach to any of vs in particular because it will be so happy a change for vs of mortall for immortall of weakenesse for strength of dishonour for glory and as one dying said of tinne for siluer of copper for gold Wee must learne therefore to be like vnto the Brides which saith Come Reuel 22.17 Vers 20 2. Cor. 5.1 and vnto St. Iohn who when he had had some sight of these things said Euen so come Lord Iesus Wee sigh saith Paul desiring to be cloathed vpon that is to goe out of this clay house and to ascend to our house in heauen What faith haue they then that by the course of nature or by the danger of sicknes being brought almost home to this house desire to be farre away from it againe How vnseemely a speech is it in olde men to say I would I were young againe how lamentable a feare in sicke men to heare that they shall die let vs be more strengthened in these things that at our departing hence we may truly beleeue and haue euerlasting life Standing vp at the Creed There be two circumstances further vsed in the rehearsing of these Articles the first is the rising and standing vp which is a ceremony neither vaine nor superstitious as some suppose but they thinke amisse that more reuerence is hereby done to the Creed which is no Scripture then to the written word of God For first of all it is not vaine because it serueth to testifie our consent to the points rehearsed and is a silent confession of the same faith by all the Congregation as in the time of prayer all kneele by this gesture manifesting their consent with the Minister in this heauenly action In other duties done at Church in publique there is not the like reason of following the Minister in his gesture whether hee readeth expoundeth or preacheth because that in all these the Hearers are Patients and he onely an Agent Read more of this aboue at the end of the fift Question Whereto may also be added that this gesture of standing vpright is the most sutable and conuenient as being the posture of soldiers and champions ready to fight vnto the death for that faith which they then proclaime by recitall Amen Why added The second circumstance is the addition of this word Amen signifying verely or certainly or vndoubtedly It is added 1. To shew that we doe not in word only beleeue these things but from our very hearts 2. Not waueringly but certainly and without doubting 3. Not as though it were in our power as if we were secure for our firme and stedfast beleefe of these things but earnestly crauing this faith at the hands of God and thus it is as much as So be it The abuse of the Creede All which shewes the wonderfull abuse of this Creed first first amongst heretikes which say these words with their mouthes but the contrary in their hearts some denying beleefe in the Sonne of God for that they hold him to be meere man and God onely in name as Princes are called Gods vpon earth as the Arians Some in the Holy Ghost as the Macedonians for that they affirme him to be seruant and inferiour to the Father Sonne some deny beleefe in the holy Trinity for that they beleeue only in one God holding the distinction of persons a monstrous fiction of man as the Anttrinitaries And some againe denying Christs bodie 's reall being in heauen because they hold it to be present in euery Masse his Office of mediation sitting at the right hand of God because they appoint other Mediators to commend vs vnto God and the beleefe of the remission of sins with the life euerlasting because they teach doubting till the last gaspe The Creed abused by the Papists 1. Cor. 13.13 Secondly this Creed is further abused amongst the Papists because when they pretend to make a confession of their faith they doe onely confesse their hope which is a distinct thing from faith according to the Apostle There remaine these three things Faith Hope and Loue Now besides that they teach Faith to be a beleeuing in generall of all the Scriptures to be true they make it to be all one with hope through the mercy of God of being saued Thirdly it is further abused by all infidell-like Christians which say with their mouthes I beleeue in God c. But like Parrets not regarding what they say not considering the fearefull estate of such as want
in the Scripture the Lords day or the first day of the weeke is thus to bee kept without alteration to the end of the world Explan We enter now vpon one of the most controuersall questions of these times wherein I will notwithstanding plainly proceed as is fittest for this Treatise making Gods Word my only rule of direction to set downe the truth herein as by his grace I shall be inabled Reasons of the Sabbath vnder the Gospel First then I say that we vnder the new Testament are tied to the obseruation of a Sabbath as well as the Iewes were of old and by as great authoritie Reason 1 Rom. 5. And this appeareth first from the time of the Institution of the Sabbath which was when man liued in Paradise immediately after his creation when hee was free from sinne when hee had the substance of true holinesse and needed no figuring Ceremonie for his comfort his present estate being all comfortable For if a Sabbath was to bee obserued in Paradise and came not first in with any ceremonies which were to haue an end at Christes comming in the flesh how can it enter into any man to thinke that this obseruation should cease as they did at this his comming And not rather after a new sort be reuiued vnder this second Adam to the likenesse of that it was in the time of the first Adam For by the second Adam who is Christ we are restored to that estate which we lost in the first Adam and why then should it differ by the cessation of the Sabbath Some thinke that the words of Moses Genes 2.3 were set downe there by way of anticipation and not to bee meant of that beginning of times but of succeeding times afterward about the giuing of the law But this lieth vpon them to proue In the meane time we are in good possession of this argument Reason 2 2. From the moralitie of this Commaundement of the Sabbath for it is heere placed amongst the rest of the morrall Lawes which are to continue in force for euer according to that saying One iot or title of the Law shall not faile Math. 5.20 though heauen and earth perish Now if this law bee morall as the ranging of it doth imply and all other morall Lawes bee of force to binde to the obedience thereof as before Christs comming what rashnesse is it in any to denie the like force vnto this law Reason 3 3. From the reasons of the Commandement which are all morall and perpetuall 1. Because it is to be remembred that of old it was kept in Paradise which doth alike bind vs as it did the Iewes 2. Because of the equity it being but one day of seauen and therefore as freely to be dedicated vnto God by vs as by the Iewes 3. Because of the ease of seruants and cattell of which there is as much need amongst vs as amongst the Iewes 4. Because they were to meditate vpon the great work of creation from which the Lord rested vnto which is now added a greater worke of redemption vnto the meditation of both which wee should much rather separate our selues then the Iewes Reason 4 4. From the caueat giuen by our Sauiour Christ speaking of the destruction of Ierusalem Pray that your flight be not in the W●nter Mat. 24.20 nor on the Sabbath day That which is here spoken hath relation to the times afterwards to ensue for the destruction of Ierusalem was thirtie six yeares after Christes suffering therefore euen then also there was a Sabbath the breach of which would bee some addition of griefe vnto the people as also if they should bee constreined to flie in the wet and cold of winter If any shall rather take these words as spoken of the Iewes sabbath the necessary breach whereof was most grieuous vnto them I will not much contend hereabout Let the former reasons then suffice 2. Our Sabbath ●ata●ne Secondly I say further that our Sabbath is not vncertaine but precisely determined and set downe as theirs was viz. the Lords day or first day of the weeke which is the day of Christ his resurrection from the dead For he arose the third day after that hee was crucified vpon the Friday which was their preparation to the Sabbath and had lien in the graue all the Sabbath day The reasons that serue to confirme this are diuers Arg. 1 1. Expresse places of Scripture wherein mention is made of this day as the set day of the Christians meetings to break bread to preach and heare and to doe other duties of holinesse In that place of the Acts where the Euangelist telleth that after their comming to Troas they abode there seuen dayes and vpon the seuenth which was the first day of the weeke the Disciples being come together to breake bread that is Act. 20.7 to the holy Communion Paul preached vnto them Which doth plainly shew that the Iewes Sabbath was now antiquated and done away and that this was the Christians Sabbath otherwise they would not haue let passe the day before as they did 1. Cor. 16.1 Another place is in the Epistle to the Corinthians where the Apostle prescribeth vnto them a rule of gathering for the poore euery first day of the weeke when they were come together which he also saith that he had established amongst the Galatians and why I pray you vpon the first day of the weeke and not vpon the Iewes Sabbath None other reason I suppose can be rendred but that this Sabbath was at an end and in stead hereof the Christians had another viz. the first day of the weeke wherein they made their meetings Reuel 1.10 A third place is in the Reuelation where it is said that Iohn was in the I le of Patmos vpon the Lords day rauished in the spirit Now what meaneth this that he calleth it the Lords day vnlesse a day appointed by the Lord For hence is the Passeouer called the Lords Passeouer the Communion the Lords Supper the bread the Lords bodie because he did appoynt all these in his Church Why is hee noted to bee rauished then in the spirit vnlesse that being in holy meditations as was the speciall manner of the Church now fortie yeares since Christ crucified hee was rewarded by the Lord with this wonderfull illumination in most hidden mysteries From whence may bee framed this vnanswerable argument That day which by the inspired Apostle is called the Lords day was appointed by the Apostle taught through reuelation to bee kept by holy meetings in the Churches of Christians not once or twice but euery time that it came is certainely the Christians Sabbath but such is the first day of euery weeke Therefore not any other but this day is the Sabbath of Christians The force of this reason standeth in the second part which is most firmely grounded according to euery branch Apoc. 1.10 Act 20.7 1. That it is called the Lords day 2.
depriueth a man of all iust title vnto these things for a ciuill right remaineth in wicked men to that they possesse by Law but of comfort in vsing them they being vncleane and accursed vnto them neither doth this saying All things are yours conclude the contrary against sinners but expresseth how all things consent together for the sanctification of the faithfull 2 Giue that is bestowe vphold continue and maintaine that which thou hast giuen vs for all our labour is nothing towards the obtaining and all our care nothing towards the conseruing and keeping what we haue vnlesse the Lord giue and preserue vnto vs. 3 Giue that is blesse make prosperous and wholesome our meates and drinkes for the strengthening of our bodies and for the cheering and refreshing of our spirits so as that our fraile liues may be vpheld and we inabled to serue thee in the strength of thy blessing in our callings for it is not any meere naturall vertue in vs that maketh our meates nourishable but Gods blessing for which it is also plaine which was said before Man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God This day that is we desire not such aboundance for so long a time as whereby our dependance vpon thee should bee cut off but to be content with things necessary for the present and to waite vpon thee from day to day though in the morning wee haue not wherewithall to be sustained vntill the euening or in the euening vntill the next morning though wee see present destruction before our eyes Daily bread 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bread for our substance such as nature doth require to vphold it no dainties or costly feasting but necessary cloathing and food whereby the substance of our bodies may be continued and confirmed and not pine and waste away through want 2 Thes 3.2 Our daily bread that is not the bread the cloathes the substance of another but such things honestly gotten by our labour through Gods blessing vpon vs according to the phrase of the Apostle calling this a mans owne bread We command and exhort them that are such that they worke with quietnesse and eate their owne bread that is honestly gotten 2. For the scope of this Petition The supplication and first in the supplication Wee pray for all things needfull for vs in this present life not being measured by our owne will and desire but by the will of the Lord. These things are either generall or speciall The things generall concerning vs all are 1. Peace and tranquilitie through which small things become great whereas by discord euen great things decay and come to nothing This is the maine end which the Apostle propoundeth in praying for such as bee in authority that wee may liue a peaceable and quiet life in all godlinesse and honesty 1. Tim. 2.2 2. Seasonable weather for heate and cold moysture and drought in summer and winter that the Sunne may shine and the raine fall seasonably that the heauens may answere the earth the earth may answere the corne and the wine and the corne and wine may answere vs as is the promise of God to such as he fauoureth 3. Worthie and vertuous Gouernours of the Common-wealth by whose care peace may be maintained and we may in quiet enioy euery man his owne Vine and Figge-tree for vpon such doth the well-fare of a Countrie much depend as the Prophet sheweth by the contrary Esay 3.2 3. threatning to increase the misery of the people to take away the Iudges Counsellours and Captaines 4. Healthfulnesse strength and ability of the people and the increase of them to our mutuall comfort and the dismaying of the enemies Psal 144.12 for this Dauid prayeth That our sons may be as plants growing vp in our youth and our daughters as the corner stones of the temple and it is promised to such as feare God that fiue shall chase an hundreth Leuit. 26.8 and an hundred shall put tenne thousand to flight 5. Victory ouer our enemies that rise vp against vs for it is likewise promised Deut. 28. Your enemies shall come against you one way and flie seauen waies before you Gen. 3.19 The speciall things which wee pray for are first an honest disposition to labor take paines in our particular callings to get and preserue such things as are for our maintenance otherwise we doe not desire our owne bread but bread pulled from the mouthes of other men Whether wee bee rich or poore therefore we must not be idle and vnprofitable neither vse vnlawfull meanes of getting but according to the Lords appointment In the sweat of thy brow shalt thou eat of the fruite of the earth till thou returne to it for the Apostle a sound interpreter of the Scriptures doth thus apply it saying This we warned you of 2. Thes 3.10 that if there were any that would not worke the same should not eate So that he which will eate must worke and take paines in his calling and not liue idly whatsoeuer he be 2. Good successe through Gods blessing in our labours for in vaine doth the builder build the house and the watchman watch the city Psal 127. vnlesse the Lord build and keepe it We pray therefore that when we plow and sow the ground that God would blesse it and giue increase and when we attempt and goe about any thing that God would bring it to passe 3. A charitable disposition in the rich to relieue the poore impotent that cannot helpe themselues and such a disposition in our selues if wee be rich for we pray not for mine but for our daily bread which is a mocking of God if hauing wherewith to relieue such as be in want we deny so to do as if a man being present at any danger of his neighbour from which he is able to deliuer him should stand still and call to some other a farre off to come and helpe him 4. The sanctification of the creatures which is when wee are sanctified that receiue them according to that of the Apostle To the cleane all things are cleane for without this there cannot be a comfortable vse of them 5. The blessing of God to make the creatures nourishable vnto vs for they haue not wherewithall in themselues neither haue we wherewithall in our selues to conuert them to nourishment our heat and organes of the body fitted for this purpose must haue strength from the Lord Psal 104.29 who if hee hideth his face we are troubled and returne to the dust 6. Contentation and resting vpon Gods prouidence in our greatest wants and dangers Whilst we haue food and raiment 1. Tim 68. let vs therewith be content for this is all which we pray for and praying for it wee are taught to depend vpon God for the same which we implicitely professe by praying yea though we should be very destitute that we know not how to
then petition for the grace of perseuerance Thankes to God is here first in order of nature for who considering himselfe to bee made the childe of God doth not at the first apprehension breake forth into the acknowledgement of Gods goodnesse and glorifying his blessed name for such vnspeakable mercy before he dare presume to begge a further guift from the same hand Saint Paul in most of his Epistles beginneth with commemoration of Gods fundamentall mercies in Christ and thanks for them before hee proceed to new Petitions for continuance of sauing graces Thanksgiuing to God for grace is the fruit of the first grace and the seed of the latter Lastly petition for Gods grace for continuance in grace sheweth First that it is not in our power to establish our selues but that wee must craue this blessing of him who is the first Author and last finisher of our faith by whose power wee are kept and confirmed vnto Saluation namely the same power and mercy by which wee are first taken out of the iawes of hell as I haue shewed before in handling the ability of forsaking the Diuell Secondly the difference heerein appeareth betweene the two estates of grace and glory the imperfection of this life and the absolute Perfectnesse of a better Heere we are still to intreat Lord increase our faith Lord strengthen our hope Lord assist our patience But there wee shall not need to make request for establishment our faith shall then bee euacuated by accomplishment our hope fulfilled by fruition our patience needlesse where there shall bee no tribulation There the exercise of the soule shall be in admiring adoring and magnifying that mercy and bounty which hath preserued vs to the end of our mortall liues and hath crowned vs with life euerlasting Of the Creede Qu. 2. THou saist that thou art bound to doe as was promised for thee which was that thou shouldest beleeue the articles of the Christian faith let mee heare thee therefore rehearse the same Answ I beleeue in God the Father Almighty maker of heauen and earth and in Jesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord which was conceiued by the holy Ghost borne of the virgin Mary suffered vnder Pontius Pilate was crucified dead and buried hee descended into hell the third day hee arose againe from the dead and ascended into heauen hee sitteth on the right hand of God the father Almighty from thence hee shall come to iudge the quicke and the dead I beleeue in the holy Ghost the holy Catholique Church the Communion of Saints the forgiuenesse of sinnes the resurrection of the body and the life euerlasting Amen The Symbol of the Apostles Explan Before I come to speake any thing of these Articles in particular a few things are to be premised in generall First touching the name whereby they are called What articles are it is well knowne to euery man and so is the other name the Creed of the Apostles The proper name heereof in Greeke in which tongue these Articles were first penned is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Symbolum Apostolorum which signifieth either a note a marke seruing to distinguish betweene one souldier and another or a summe of money cast in which wee call a shot It is likely and History consenteth heerein that the Apostles dispersing themselues ouer the world according to their commission to preach the Gospell aduisedly compiled an abridgement of the same to remaine as a rule according to the analogy whereof though the Church were scattered farre and wide yet both teachers and hearers might bee held in an holy agreement of the same faith and heresies arising being brought heerevnto as vnto a touchstone might bee tryed and being found drosse reiected And because that euery one of the twelue compiled some part which being put together make the whole it obtained the name of Symbolum as Augustine testifieth if it be his owne where he reciteth in particular the seuerall words put in by euery Apostle Aug. de temp Con● 114. These were gathered saith hee by Peter I beleeue in God the Father Almighty By Iohn The maker of heauen and earth By Iames In Iesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord by Andrew Which was conceiued by the holy Ghost borne of the Virgin Mary by Philip Hee suffered vnder Pontius Pilate c. By Thomas Hee descended into hell and the third day rose from the dead By Bartholmew Hee ascended into heauen and sitteth c. By Mathew From thence he shall come to iudge the quick and the dead By Iames sonne of Alpheus J beleeue in the holy Ghost c. by Simon Zelotes The Communion of Saints By Iudas Iames his brother The resurrection of the body By Mathias The life euerlasting Amen All which I haue here inserted as probable not as necessarily inforcing Jerom. Epist 41. partis 1. In the Symbol of the Church of Rome this phrase he descended into hell is not neither in the Symbol of the Easterne Churches that iust according to this forme it was first set forth by the Apostles for both the phrases of descending into hell and Catholique Church may seeme to bee of later stamp and moreouer if it were thus certainly penned by them it were a part of Canonicall Scripture The common opinion of our Diuines is that it is called the Symbol of the Apostles because it was gathered out of their writings it may bee by some of their disciples that heard them For mine owne part hauing recited thus what I finde touching the name and first collection of these Articles I will leaue euery man to iudge as reason shall induce him to doe Secondly concerning the number of Creedes It is certaine that there haue beene many some compiled by whole Councels some by seuerall learned men of the Church vpon speciall occasion but none of those which haue beene made by the Orthodox doe any whit differ in substance from this of the Apostles they do onely set downe in more words that which is here contained in fewer and so may serue instead of some Commentaries vpon this of the Apostles The principall is the Nicene Creede made some three hundred yeeres after Christs Incarnation vnto which were consenting 318 Fathers Constantine the great Emperor being President This because of Arius who denied Christs Diuinity is larger in setting this forth how hee is very God of very God and of the same substance with the Father Next is the Athanasian Creede made by that holy man Athanasius who by the Arians was much persecuted but he made this as for a testimony of his owne sincerity in the truth so also to instruct and confirme others And of like sort is the Ephesine the Calcedon the Agathen c. So that we neede not be doubtfull because there be many which to embrace knowe and receiue this and so thou dost know and receiue them all 3. The Creed penned why Thirdly concerning the ends why this was committed to writing They were sundry and excellent
First as hath been already saide to be a rule of Faith and a preseruatiue from Heresie 2 That it might bee a meane of distinguishing betwixt true Christians and heretiques 3. That euery man entring the profession of Christianity might continually haue before his eyes that faith for which he should suffer persecution and to the defence whereof hee should stand vnto the death 4. That euery one of the Catechumeni which were new conuerted Christians might haue in a readinesse what to answere in their baptisme when the Minister should demaund what beleeuest thou or according to that of Philip to the Eunuch If thou beleeuest with all thine heart Acts 8.37 thou maist bee baptized vnto which he answered I beleeue that Iesus is the sonne of God So when one of them was demaunded Beleeuest thou aright he could according to this forme of confession answere I beleeue in God c. And if these be the endes and according to these onely bee the right vse of the Creede then must it be acknowledged a grosse abuse amongst simple people to vse it for a prayer for the remoouing of which as also for signification of our readinesse and constancy to defend the true Catholike Faith it is rightly prouided in our Churches that all should stand whilst it is in rehearsing Standing at the Creeds rehearsing Some I knowe are offended hereat and doe refuse to conforme themselues to this order but truely they are too too disorderly for besides that hence there is a confusion of gestures in the Church some standing some sitting and others kneeling to the hindering the ignorant from the knowledge of the right vse how doe they answer the reuerent behauiour of the first Christians August rom 10. p. 327. who were wont to stand during the whole time that the Word was in reading except very aged and impotent persons it being now so farre yeelded vnto them that they are required to stand onely in the time of rehearsing the Creed as being a short abridgment of the Scriptures Or how doe they giue testimony of their consent in the faith rehearsed when as conforming themselues to the Ministers gesture in prayer to testifie their consenting desires herein they are altogether vncomfortable in the other of confession Quest What doest thou chiefely learne out of these articles of thy faith Answ First I learne to beleeue in God the Father who hath made me and all the world Secondly in God the Son who hath redeemed me and all man-kind Thirdly in God the Holy Ghost who hath sanctified me and all the Elect people of God Explan In this answere one thing must be warily vnderstood viz. How Iesus Christ the Son of God may bee sayde to haue redeemed all man-kinde otherwise euery mans estate shall seeme good enough sith by him all are redeemed Vnderstand it therefore as other like phrases in the Scriptures Rom. 5.18 as that to the Romans As by the offence of one the fault came on all men to condemnation so by the iustifying of one the benefit abounded towards all to the iustification of life c. By which is meant that all men which attaine to the iustification of life are made partakers of this benefit by no other meanes either in Heauen or in Earth within themselues the obseruation of the Law or without them the merits of others holy men or Angels but onely by the righteousnesse of Christ So according to Saint Augustines like exposition of another Scripture phrase tending hereto Aug. de predest Sanctili 174 8● Christ may bee called the Redeemer of all mankind not because all are actually redeemed by him but because no man is redeemed by any other but Christ onely When we say he redeemed all Mankinde the meaning is he is the onely Redeemer of all men who attaine this great benefit of redemption and saluation by no other according to that memorable saying Act. 4.12 There is none other name giuen vnder Heauen whereby to be saued but the name of Iesus Such as like better of the distinction viz. He redeemed all men that is in regard of the sufficiency of that hee did and suffered but not of the efficacie thereof may followe it if they please For the passion of Christ was sutable to his person his person of infinite excellency could not be so abased without infinite merit accrewing by such humiliation his dying was more then equiualent to all the worlds perishing euerlastingly in Hell Wherefore in giuing himselfe a ransome for sinfull man he is rightly said to haue redeemed all mankind for so much as he paid the full price of an vniuersall redemption And this is the same in sense with that saying of Iohn Behold the Lambe of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world Ioh. 1.29 Wicked men and vnbeleeuers are not hereby secured but more iustly and deepely damned as treading vnder foote the Sonne of God and prophaning his blood Quest 3. Whom do these Articles of your Faith concerne Answ The first part of them concernes God the second the Church of God Quest 4. In the first part concerning God what doe you learne to beleeue Answ First I learne to beleeue in God the Father secondly in God the Sonne thirdly in God the Holy Ghost Explan The articles of our faith being a sum of all things necessary to be knowne and beleeued vnto saluation as hath beene already said comprehend therefore not onely things concerning God but also the Church of God so that they may be fitly considered in these two parts And because the knowledge of God is principall and the greatest part of a Christian mans taske the maine things concerning him are first and more largely set down and then briefly those of the Church Now forsomuch as a Commentary of Catechisme is in this Treatise intended I would not willingly leaue any ground of our Religion vntouched therefore haue thought it needfull here to insert some things more generall concerning God and then to proceed to the seuerall articles as they lye in order 1. Whether there be a God 2. What God is 3. How many Gods there be 4. That God is both Father Sonne and holy Ghost 5. That Father Sonne and Holy Ghost are but one God Quest 5. How knowest thou that there is a God Answ Many wayes but chiefely by mine owne conscience accusing me for secret sinnes which cannot be but vnto an infinite wisedome that knowes the most secrete thoughts of the heart such as is neither Man Diuell nor Angell but God alone Explan Such is the Atheisme of these times that this had need be taught for a ground of Religion though it be indeed a ground in reason meerely naturall Now this is to be read not onely in the booke of conscience but secondly in the booke of Gods iudgements taking notorious wicked men oftentimes in the very instant of their sinning and singling out guilty persons by lots as Achan and Ionah and wonderfully discouering murthers
hath made to cease by the liberty which hee hath brought vs insomuch as we are not vnder the lawe but vnder grace So that now we may challenge this our greatest and most terrible enemy with the Apostle ● Cor. 15. Rom. 6. Death where is thy sting hell where is thy victory Death of it selfe indeede is most fearefull as being the wages of sinne and the passage to eternall pangs but Christ by dying hath altered the nature of death of a curse he hath made it a blessing of the passage to hell he hath made it the entry of heauen to all the faithfull Againe though our griefe in our sicknesses be great his pangs were greater Heb. 4.15 and so he hath had experience of our miseries and so cannot but haue compassion and prouide that we shall not be tempted aboue our power and in good time deliuer vs out of all our troubles Quest 26. Which is the third degree of his humiliation and in which words Answ Thirdly hee descended into Hell that I might he deliuered from Hell and euerlasting death to these words he descended into Hell Rus in Exposit Symbol Explan This clause was wont of olde to bee inserted into most of the confessions of faith as Rus●● saith 〈◊〉 est quod in ecclesiae Romanae Symb●lo non habetur additum W. must know that it is not added in the Creed of the Church of Rome and neither saith hee is this speech had in the Churches of the Past yet the meaning hereof seeme to be the same with this He was buried It is not in the Creed councell of Nice nor in the Creed of Athanasius nor in the Sirmian nor in the Sardian nor in the first Toletan nor in the Ephesine nor in the first nor sixt Constantinopolitan nor in the Calcedon councels nor in many other ancient confessions and tractates written by the learned Fathers for the space of foure hundred yeeres and vpward See Pirk nemonstr problematis page 129. Notwithstanding it is now and may well bee an article of our faith or at the least this third degree of Christ his humiliation set downe vnder it About the meaning of these words great disputations are held and whole bookes written to leaue all which onely signifie briefely that these words are interpreted fiue manner of wayes Of Christs descent into hell diuers opinions Some holding them meerely literally He descended into hell that is went into the place of the damned or some lower places thereabout They which vnderstand it literally of the place of the damned say that he went thither to triumph ouer all the damned Ghosts and Diuels his enemies They which vnderstand it of some place thereabout say that hee went thither to free the Patriarks that were detained for their originall sinne in Limbo The grounds common to both are both that to the Ephesians Ephes 4 9. 1. Pet. 3.19 He descended into the lower parts of the earth and that of Peter By which Spirit he went and preached to the spirits that were in prison which were disobedient in the dayes of Noah that of the Psalmist Psal 16.10 Thou wilt not leaue my soule in Hell But the last sort that stand for Limbo haue some speciall allegations besides as that to the Hebrewes Heb. 9.8 The way into the holiest of all was not yet opened whilst the first Tabernacle was standing And againe speaking of the Patriarkes he saith All these dyed and receiued not the promises Heb. 11. Secondly others againe hold them literally but expound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the graue saying that He died and was buried that is annoynted to the buriall and descended into the Sepulcher Thirdly others interpreting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the graue make the descent to be figuratiue thus he descended into Hell that is remained in the graue vnto the third day Fourthly some others interpret it as an Idiom or phrase peculiar to the Greekes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He descended into Hell that is was in the estate of the dead for thus the Greekes were wont to speake of a man departed whether good or bad Lastly some others hold it to bee meerely figuratiuely spoken He descended into Hell that is suffered the torments of Hell viz. the anger of God against the sinnes of all the elect powred forth vpon his soule driuing him into that bloody agony in the garden and making him cry out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Now of all those that which stands for Limbo is to be exploded as by other sound positiue reasons drawne from Scriptures so in regard also of the impertinency of the places alleadged for in that to the Hebrewes The way into the holiest was not yet opened is meant nothing else but that which in more words is there expressed viz. heauen and happinesse the redemption of man as verse 12. was not obtained by the seruice done in this tabernacle and in the other these dying receiued not the promises is meant the incarnation of Iesus Christ so long before and so often promised but not sent in their times The second interpretation seemeth to mee too much strained and maketh this short Creed needlesly to labour with tautologie for what else can this import He was buried that is laid in the graue and descended into hell that is went downe into the graue as if it had beene said He was buried and was buried The third not much different from this and onely sheweth that this his buriall was not a meere transeunt act or passion but had a due continuation by his body so remaining in statis quo till his resurrection which me thinkes is sufficiently implyed in the specifying of his buriall and rising the third day importing that for that interim his body lay still in the Sepulchre The fourth interpretation hath farre more probability this Creed being composed by those who fitted it not onely to the Greeke stile in which language it was written but also to the Hebrew ordinary phrase which soundeth in this fashion speaking of a dead man namely that he is dead and gone downe into Sheol which whether you translate hell or the graue or some place of blisse it doth not heereby specifie any of these distinctly but onely pointeth at the state and condition of the dead in generall and considereth them by a confused motion as opposite to the state of the liuing heere vpon earth So that by this construction heere is to bee meant that our Sauiours not body onely but soule also did for this meane space vndergoe the common lot of separation the one from the other and so remained in the ordinary estate of others departed this life Howsoeuer it bee yeelded that this phrase may well beare this sense yet because both thus much is implied in the generall word of Christs being dead which must needs meane a true death putting him in the common condition of other deadmen and forasmuch as these words of
descent c. doe rather import somewhat added to his death and buriall the more currant exposition is to make it a seuerall and different Article or Parcell of our Sauiours performances and so wee will now consider in the remaining interpretations That branch of the first interpretation auouching that our Sauiour did sometime in triduo mortis really descend in soule into the place of the damned is most literall naturall and agreeable to the words no way lyable to tautologie nor repugnant to the analogie of Faith but consorting with the plaine termes of Scripture and testimony of ancient Fathers In this sense the Church of England in the first times of reformation Artic● 37. seemeth to vnderstand and interpret this Article both by insisting vpon the direct words in the booke of Articles of Religion where the truth realty of Christs descent into hell is auouched in the same manner with the realty of his death c. as also by the explanation thereof in the larger Catechisme authorized by our Church called Nowels Catechisme The end of such descent might well bee to triumph ouer Satan in his owne dunghill and dungeon and withall there to vpbraid vnto the damned spirits of obstinate men what a gracious and glorious Sauiour they had neglected Though some be of another minde in this point yet I see no coactiue reasons out of Scripture or otherwise brought by them against this plaine literall construction And caeteris paribus why should not the authority of our Mothr the Church of Englād ouer sway For my part in my priuate opinion I haue much inclined to the fifth interpretation applying this descent into hell parabolically to the dismall apprehension of Gods wrath lying heauy vpon the soule of Christ and representing the paines of hell due to vs. The reasons that perswade that our Sauiour vnderwent such inward sufferings in his soule are First if hee had not suffered extreame torments in soule besides what he suffered by sympathy through bodily pangs hee must either haue been weake and ouer-yeelding or else haue dissembled being without sorrow Sixt. Sennensi Bibl. Patrum li. 6. Annot. 35. when hee expressed so great sorrow as one saith that Hillary sometimes held but afterwards recanted making a sound confession of his faith for if Christ did not truely suffer wee are not truely redeemed or else the Saints of God which are by infinite degrees more weake then Christ God and Man must bee acknowledged to haue had more courage and magnanimity when they haue been vnder extreame torments then he had For before his passion vpon the crosse he was very heauy much troubled Math. 26.38 verse 39.40 in so much as hee said My soule is very heauy euen vnto the death and prayed three times if it were possible that the cup might passe from him at what time also his passion was noted to be so great that he sweat with paine and his sweat was like drops of bloud Luc. 22.43.44 and an Angel appeared from heauen comforting him whereas weake men haue by Gods assistance ioyfully prepared themselues and haue beene ready to meet with the most extreame bodily torments Againe in the time of his passion what a wonderfull deale of feare was he surprized withall when hee cryed out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Luk. 24.46 yea and he cryed againe the second time and gaue vp the ghost whereof mention is made also in the Epistle to the Hebrewes verse 50. In the dayes of his flesh hee did offer vp prayers and supplications with strong cryings and teares to him that was able to saue him from death Heb. 5.7 and was also heard in that which hee feared whereas weake men haue beene vnder cruell tormentors hands with vndaunted courage to the astonishment of the beholders Now there is no Christian but will acknowledge that Christ was ten thousand times more able to indure any tormēts then any of the most cōstant Martyrs that haue suffered for his name and if hee were without all comparison more able to beare whence could it happen that he was pressed with such sorrow heauinesse and feare but for that hee alone suffered more then all Martyrs if all their sufferings were put together euer since righteous Abel to this day And how could hee suffer more but in his Soule wherein hee felt the wrath of God which is vnsupportable to men and Angels Heereto is added this reason also Arg. 2. Christ did sustaine the person of the faithfull who without him were all subiect not onely to bodily sufferings and death but to the euerlasting death of the soule now the only way whereby God is pleased to deliuer vs heerefrom is by sending Christ to bee in our stead and more or lesse to suffer that which wee for sinne should haue suffered wherefore it ●s said Hee was made sinne for vs that knew no sinne 2. Cor. 5.21 that wee might be made the righteousnesse of God through him And Hee tooke flesh that he might destroy through death him that had the power of death Heb. 2.14 that is the Diuell Therefore Analogie inferreth that as the Lord Iesus suffered for vs in body so hee suffered in his soule also and thereby hath perfectly redeemed vs in both but how and by what particular passions hee suffered in soule is not reuealed and therefore by vs vnutterable Only wee must know that how great soeuer his passions were hee did in the end ouercome them all and by the way though hee feared sweat blood and cryed out through want of present sense and apprehension of the vnion with the diuine nature yet the diuinity was neuer separated from Christ Iesus but supported him and made him conquerour ouer all when hee seemed to be ouercome The Meditation also vpon these suffering of our Sauiour is very needfull profitable to vs. First the remembring Christs passion in his soule 1. Duty By the remembrance of Christs sufferings to feare to sinne is an antidote to preserue vs from sin For though thou be so stout-hearted as that no bodily punishments can scarre thee from following thy will and resolution in wickednesse yet doe but behold Christ in his spirituall conflict with Gods wrath due to sinne sorrowing sweating sweat of bloud comfortlesse and crying out vpon his Father without hope and it will make thee to tremble to thinke am I forward to commit that which doth thus anger the King of Heauen that hee would not shew any countenance nor fauour that hee would no whit spare nor regard his owne beloued Son standing in the roome of sinners though his grones and cryes went vp to Heauen O then if I doe thus if I rot in the dregges of my sinnes how shall I indure his anger how regardlesse will hee bee of mee when I shall in my need cry for mercy Surely I shall with Esau be sent away empty Heb. 12.16 though I seeke the blessing with
merits as it were with incense out of a censor what neede haue we of Saint or Angell to helpe vs to accesse and acceptance before the Father Yea I neede not say what neede but what Faith can we haue in so doing seeing that both himselfe hath bidden vs aske in his owne name and in the case of sinne-guiltinesse wee are directed onely to him as our onely Mediator and Aduocate Wherefore the profession of the Church of Rome is in this point by all meanes to bee reiected as a profession and practice of infidelity in Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father Their comparison from earthly Princes are chaffie and of no moment if they be brought to the ballance of the Sanctuary and are meerely colours whereby they seeke to dawbe ouer their blinde deuotion and to gull the doting people Quest 31 Which is the third degree of his exaltation and in which words Answ Thirdly he shall come from Heauen at the ende of the World to iudge all that shall then be found liuing and all that haue dyed since the world began in these words From thence hee shall come to iudge both the quicke and the dead Explan For the meaning of this Article it is opposite to that which setteth downe the first degree of his humiliation for as there of God he was made Man yea a poore man vnder the gouernment of Ioseph and Mary so heere hee is of a poore man set ouer all both rich and poore great and small that they might be disposed of according to his pleasure And as there he was vnder earthly Iudges and Rulers who did often decree hard things against him so here hee comes as Iudge and Ruler of all to decree vnalterably extreame things against all the stoutest of his enemies and comfortable things for all his louers and friends He shall come from Heauen that is as man for thus onely hee can remooue from place to place his God-head euer fils all places as man then hee shall come downe visibly and openly with great glory and troopes of Angels about him as Iudges are wont in pompe and with great attendance to ride their circuits and he shall come downe towards this nether part of the world where they haue liued whose causes shall be heard and proceeded in as Iudges are wont to go to sit in Iudgement in such places as wherin they dwel which are to be brought before them To iudge those that shal be then liuing for the World shall be full of people euen to the houre of his comming and then the dead being raised out of their Graues euen all from the first Adam shall be ioyned with the liuing who shall onely instead of dying be changed and thus all people together of all Countries and Nations shall bee presented before his Tribunall to receiue sentence according to the equity yea and iustice of his Gospell whether of Absolution to passe into the Kingdome of the Father or of condemnation into the Kingdome of Hell with the Diuell and his Angels for euer Proofe Secondly for the grounds of holy Scriptures whereupon all this is founded the comming of Christ to iudgement according to all these circumstances is plainely heere set downe in many Places First that he shall come againe the Angels sent of God for the same end told his Disciples thus much immediatly after his ascension saying Acts 1.12 This Iesus shall euen so come downe from heauen as ye haue seene him goe vp to heauen Heb. 9.28 And in another place it is said that Christ vnto them that looke for him shall appeare the second time without sin vnto saluation and of himselfe he saith I goe away but will come againe Secondly that he shall come to iudge Iohn 14. not in pouerty but in Maiestie not basely accompanied but gloriously with Angels not like a Lamb to be slaine againe but like a Lyon to teare in pieces his enemies all this doth he himselfe promise saying Then shall they see the Son of Man come in the clowds of Heauen with power and great glory Mat 24.30.31 and he shal send his Angels with the sound of a Trumpet c. And what is here wanting is further supplied in the next Chapter Chap. 25.31.32 When the Son of man commeth in his glory and all the holy Angels with him then shal he sit vpon the Throne of his glory and before him shall be gathered all nations c. Thirdly that the world shall bee then full of people liuing as at other times and that all shal not die before the Apostle sheweth both where purposely he entreateth at large of the resurrection saying We shall not all sleepe but we shall be changed in a moment 1 Cor. 15.51 in the twinkling of an eye at the last trumpet 1 The. 4 and where he comforts the Church of God in this that their dead friends and they aliue shall meete againe at the last day And the Lord himselfe plainely saith that as it was in the dayes of Noah and in the daies of Lot so shall it be at the comming of the Son of man then the world was full of people which were eating and drinking marrying and giuing in mariage c til the floud came Luc. 17.27 swept them all away till fire came from Heauen and consumed them all so shall it be at Christs cōming to iudgment Fourthly that quick dead shal all come to iudgement before him was long since confirmed vnto Iohn by vision He saw a Throne set and the Son of of Man sitting theron the books opened and al euen the dead as wel as the liuing brought before him to be iudged according to the things written in the bookes Reuel 20.12 then the earth gaue vp the dead buried there the sea gaue vp the dead that were therin Rom. 14.10 And S Paul hence giues warning that wee iudge not one another For wee must al appeare before the Iudgemēt seat of Christ Fiftly that the maner of his comming shall be most terrible to all his enemies but comfortable to his friends and faithfull people for the terrour it is set forth by comparisons taken from the flood Luk. 17.27 fearefully drowning the old world without mercy or compassion from the fire and brimstone descending vpon Sodome Prou. 1. from the sorrowes comming vpon a woman in trauell Math 24. from a seuere master returning from a farre countrey and adiudging his vnprofitable seruants to be cut off and to haue their portion in the place of weeping and gnashing of teeth and from a thiefe breaking into an house to rob and slay in the dead time of the night c. For euen such and more terrible by farre shall Christs comming to iudgement be 2. Pet 3.10 Againe this terrour is set forth by particular accidents that shall accompany this time viz flaming fire in which the Lord shall come to render vengeance to the wicked
foolish was Achan and Ananias and Saphyra to their smart as their Histories doe declare and Salomon in taking many wiues and contracting affinity with most Princes for the encrease of his power and establishing his peace For Ios 7 Acts 5 Gehazi is thus made a loathsome Leper Saul is turned out of his Kingdome Achan and Ananias lose their liues and Salomon almost ten Tribes of his posterity Let these examples therefore be warnings vnto vs that we trust not to our owne inuentions but goe out after the Spirit speaking in the Word with Abraham Heb. 11.8 though we our selues know not whither Euen as silly Orphans which know not how to buy and se●l and to deale in this wily world themselues doe willingly submit themselues to some faithfull friend that vndertakes this care for them Quest 33. Which is the second part of your articles of faith concerning the Church of God Answ The second part is The holy Catholique Church the Communion of Saints the Forgiuenesse of sinnes the Resurrection of the body and the life euerlasting Quest 34. What learne you here to beleeue concerning Gods Church Answ Foure things Quest 35. Which is the first Answ First I learne to beleeue that God hath a Church consisting of a certaine number of true beleeuers of whom some be in Heauen and some vpon earth and that I my selfe am a member of the same To beleeue in the holy Catholique Church Explan We are to prefix in our vnderstanding I beleeue and so to confesse I beleeue the holy Catholique Church c. and not I beleeue in as we say of God the Father Son and Holy Ghost For the meaning of the words then it is fully set downe in the answer viz although I cannot see with the bodily eye into the inuisible Church of God consisting onely of true beleeuers yet I doe by faith firmely hold that as there is an outward and visible Church militant here vpon earth that is a company of people outwardly called by the sincere preaching of the Word and further marked out by the right administration of the Sacraments amongst them so there is such a Church as is seene onely by the eye of the Lord inwardly called by the efficacy of the Spirit part of which is already triumphant in Heauen and part here still in this world the one sort being the Saints and faithfull departed the other faithfull men and women yet liuing And because I can no otherwise haue no comfort in al this I beleeue to my further comfort that I am a member of this inuisible Church and of the same body with the godly in heauen 2. For the grounds of this they are first to bee brought which testifie that God hath a Church 2. That this Church is a visible company called together by the preaching of the Word which is the Church before men 3. That they yet onely are the true Church before God which are Beleeuers 4. That no Church is to be beleeued in that is to be made the foundation of our faith but onely to be beleeued that is to be acknowledged and to be cleaued vnto when it is found to be Gods Church and to be obeyed in all things wherein it obeyeth Iesus Christ the head of all First that God hath a Church is plaine 1. Proofe That God hath a Church from the often mentioning of the Church of God in the Scriptures Great persecution is said to haue bin raised vp against the Church in the Acts and God is said to haue giuen some Apostles c. Acts 8 1 Ephes 4.12 Reuel 2.3 for the building vp of his Church And in the Reuelation there be seuen Epistles directed to seuen seuerall Churches one to the Church at Ephesus another to the Church at Laodicea c. This is so generally acknowledged that it shall not need to bee further insisted in But that this Church is a visible company called together by the preaching of the Word c. The true mark of the Church these being the principall markes and signes by which it is knowne amongst men is somewhat contradicted yea exploded by the Romanists and other signes of vniuersality antiquity succession of Bishops c. substituted and therefore aliquantulum operosiùs as this Commentary will beare to deale herein And first of all the word Ecclesia a Church comming of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greeke that is to call out giueth great light herein the Church being according to the signification of this Word a people called forth out of the rest of the world as the Apostle not naming the Church at Rome yet in effect calleth it saying To you which are at Rome Rom. 1.7 called to bee Saints now if it bee a people called out of the world the best note whereby to knowe it must needes be the voyce calling which if it be the Talmud of the Iewes it is a Synagogue of Christs enemies if the Alchoron of Mahomet it is an assembly of Saracens if the Word of God corrupted by false interpretations in matter of faith it is a Sect of Heretiques But if it be the pure Word of God purely and sincerely preached it is the Church of God For this hath euer beene a certaine note of Gods Church and such as cannot deceiue Thus hath it beene noted to be in the family of Enoch that walked with God viz. by obedience to his voice Proofes of the old Testament and of Noah for hee did thus also walke with the Lord and of Abraham who went out at Gods Word from his Fathers house and amongst his posterity the Iewes who at the Word of the Lord followed Moses and Aaron thorow the red Sea thorow the wildernesse and the numberlesse turnings by which they were directed from the Land of Aegypt vnto Canaan And still vnder the new Testament this was the infallible marke of Gods Church first amongst the Apostles who were called out from others by the Word of God to follow the Lord Christ then amongst other faithfull people as they were added to the Church they were called by the Word witnesse that great worke of conuersion Acts 2.41 wrought by the Ministry of Peter at one Sermon there were three thousand who when they heard it were seuered from the rest of the World and added vnto the Church Verse 47. and it is immediatly further noted that the Lord dayly added vnto the Church such as should bee saued viz. calling them by the Sermons of his Apostles and Ministers To proceed from History to the Doctrine of holy Scripture Doth not the Prophet Esay teach the same thing Esay 8.20 when he saith To the Law and to the Testimony if they speake not according to this Word it is because they haue no truth in them viz. When Seducers shall goe about to draw them to the seruice of Idols Verse 19. and to follow South-sayers and such as haue the
truth by the Scriptures I answer This is a very silly shift indeed for are not the Scriptures translated the very Scriptures of God as well as the Originalls If there be difference of translations it is no more but as if the same history written in a strange tongue should be tolde in English by diuers some expressing it after one manner some after another Now for this little difference in words no man I suppose will say that no certainty can be had of the truth of the thing told by such as are vnskilfull of that tongue but that he may the rather perceiue the truth because they all agree in the matter which they interpret Yet this is not the onely thing that bringeth them to the knowledge of the truth but to the first beginning of knowledge As the people of Samaria were brought first to beleeue in Christ by the report of the woman with whom he had talked but afterwards they professed that they did beleeue not because of her words Iohn 4.42 but for that they had heard him themselues so they acknowledged the truth at the first because they finde it so written in translations but afterwards because they are certified by the Spirit and their faith is not built vpon men as the Church of Rome doth slanderously alledge thus pulling themselues by the eare Obict 5 The Familists and Brownists If it be still further obiected that this iustifieth those inordinate heady persons the Brownists Anabaptists Familists c. for that in simplicitie seeking for the truth in the Scriptures they do find it to be the doctrine taught amongst them and cannot find ours to be so I answer that they doe fouly deceiue the world vnder the colour of simplicity and religion for that they seeke not the truth but to bring the truth to the fauouring of their conceipts as may easily appeare to such as shall obserue their insolent carriage and lewdnesse which they follow vnder the pretence of conscience Moreouer as Gamaliel well noted vnto the Councell gathered against the Apostles Acts 5.38 If this cousel or this worke be of men it will come to nought but if it be of God yee cannot destroy it So may it be sayd of them If they were of God they should at some time or other haue flourished but in that their worke comes to nought it is a signe that it is of man For they haue long troubled the world and yet they are at this day almost none As their fighting hath beene for shadowes and about no substance so haue these fantasticall Enthusiasts themselues as shadowes vanished away Obict 6 Of Lutherans and Caluinists Lastly if it be obiected that yet it wil remaine doubtfull notwithstanding this rule of the holy Scriptures whether the Lutherans or Caluinists so called be the true Church of God because they both propound vnto themselues to find out the truth hereby both are content thus to be brought to their triall and both do almost flourish alike I answer That howsoeuer the Lutherans be grieuous enemies vnto their brethren especially some more harsh and hot-spirited amongst them yet we doe thinke so well of them in regard of the points wherein we consent together as that wee hold them to be the true Church of God also The onely thing that misleadeth them is that they are addicted too much Iurare in verba Magistri that is to sticke to Luthers teaching who no maruell though he could not see to reforme all things himselfe alone and so were ouertaken with some small errours If they be not so charitably affected vnto other reformed Churches the Lord rectifie both their iudgements and affections in his good time 1. Duty To ●r●quent the Word Preached Now follow the duties of this faith The first is diligently to frequent the preaching of Gods word and duely to read it because it is Gods voice whereby he calleth vs into the company of his people it is that whereby we must finde out his Church it is that by searching whereof we must finde eternall life 1 Peter 2.2 as saith our Sauiour To this S. Peter exhorteth As new-borne babes desire the sincere milke of the word for this the Bereans are commended vnto this all are by the Prophets and Apostles vrged as hath beene already shewed Other writings without this are but as pits that wil hold no water Wherefore as thou louest thine owne soule suffer not thy mouth to be musled by any massing Priest or thine eyes to be turned herefrom for feare of seeing as ●ue did that which may turne to thy destruction nay looke warily into this word pray heartily that thine eyes may be opened to see the truth lest by turning away thou come to destruction and know it not Ioh. 3.20.21 He that is in the truth seeketh not to haue the mouthes of all others stopped but is willing to let euery man speake and so it will appeare the better that the truth is with him If there be any then that cannot abide that others should bee heard but only themselues what shal we thinke of these men but much more if they cannot abide their chiefe witnesse of which they bragge to be heard speaking Surely we will say their matter is naught it cannot bee otherwise And what shall we thinke then of the Romanists which straightly tie their people from reading any Aduersaries writings yea from the holy Scriptures the chiefe witnesse of the truth Their matter must needes be naught and their workes euill as our Sauiour teacheth He that euill doeth hateth the light neyther commeth to the light l●ast his deede should be reprooued but he that doth truth commeth to the light that his deedes may be made manifest that they are wrought according to God 2 Duty To cleaue constantly to the Protestant Church●es The second dutie is to stick inseparably to the Protestant Churches as hauing the true and infallible markes of the Church of God viz. the word purely taught and the Sacraments rightly administred and to account all the faire shews of the Church of Rome in the antiquity vniuersality c. but as the whiting of Sepulchres which inwardly are full of rottennesse and dead mens bones For trees often times seeme a farre off to be men but come neerer and with better light and they are soone discouered what they be So the Church of Rome which is but a trunk or dead tree in respect of the liuing Church of God may seeme the Church by this diuine light and if we be held thus a farre off but come neerer and bring the light of Gods holy word and it will appeare as it is there being no page almost in the Scriptures but some way depraued by their false interpretations none of the Sacraments but so loaden with their superstitious ceremonies as that there is scarce any appearance of their first institution Wherefore whatsoeuer it shall cost vs though all our substance and liues yet let vs
and so bee all such as wittingly labour about any ornament or implement to the setting forth of Idolatrie But God forbid that euerie Image and Image-maker should bee therfore accounted abominable for so the excellent Art of painting seruing in liuely colours so to expresse our friends absent as if they were euer present with vs and picturing many emblemes of vertue and vice for ornament and delight should cleane bee put downe and our very coyne were vnlawfull Therefore here are first to be excepted ciuill pictures for the delight and comfort of the beholder secondly all such as serue for some remembrance tending to our instruction for vertue or vice for wit policy discretion and diligence Thus the old Romans offended not in painting a drunken man goggle eyd foaming at the mouth thus Time is well pictured bald behind and hairy before Iustice with a paire of scales with the hands and eyes shut c. And lastly such Images as serue for good remembrances to stir vp deuotion or Christian affections Ioshua 4.22 without abuse Thus Ioshua set vp twelue stones on the further side of Iordan for a remembrance of the miraculous parting of the waters Ioshua 22. whilst the people went ouer and the people that dwelt on the other side of Iordan set vp an Altar like that at Ierusalem for a remembrance that they were all one Nation and serued one God and many like monuments were there of old tending to the same ends Of this commemoratiue nature was the vse of the transeunt signe of the Crosse in baptisme amongst the most ancient Fathers in the purer times Nor can I vpon due consideration see any iust reason why the same should not bee so reputed as it is now in vse retained in the Church of England being intended as a signe meerely monitory not operatiue that is as putting vs in mind of our duty and profession not as infusing any spirituall grace or protection or making vp any part of that Sacrament as imperfect without it I would to God that we all could grow to a like resolution about this ceremony 2 Kind of Idolatry to fall downe before and worship an Image The second kind of Idolatrie is the falling downe before an Image whether with an intention the better to bee put in mind of God or of any Saint or by bowing before the image to giue worship to the thing represented or ignorantly only according to the tradition of the Fathers For howsoeuer or vnder what pretence soeuer if the knee be religiously bowed before any Image Idolatry is committed and this Commandement broken And this is so plainely set downe in the holy Scriptures as that were there no Patrons of this vice it were superfluous to speake much But for their sakes first consider the beginning of this euill from whom sprang it from any of the Patriarkes Prophets or Apostles from any of the ancient Fathers of the Church since the time of the Gospell Euseb li● 7. cap. 18. No verily but if Gregorie Bishop of Neocaesarea or Eusebius may be heard they will tell you that the vse of Images came from the Heathen Heltogabalus Alexander Seuerus Hadrianus had first in their Chappels the Images of Abraham Moses and Christ If Theodoret and Augustine may be heard they will tell you that Simon Magus first offered his owne and the Image of Selene his Concubine to be worshipped by his followers If Ierom may be heard he will tell you that the Cretians whom Paul to Titus so much disgraceth brought Images first into the Church Wicked Marcellina began the worshipping of the Images of Christ Paul Homer Pythagoras Iren. lib. 2. cap. 6. The filthy Gnosticks worshipped the Image of Christ and are therefore condemned of Ireneus Irene a most wicked woman who murdered her owne sonne Constantine through a desire of raigning called the first Councell that gaue any allowance to Images and there her flatterers without all reason ordained that Images should bee both set vp and worshipped Their maine arguments are recorded in the booke of Charles the Great Iohn Caluin I●stit lib. 1. cap 11. sect 14. Legat of the East said That God made man after his owne Image therefore it was fit that there should bee Images of God Another said That no man lighteth a candle and putteth it vnder a bushell therefore Images were to be set vp in Churches c. Tom 3 qu. 25. art 3. Bellar. de Eccles triump lib. 2 c. 2. lib. 9. cap. 6. Secondly consider what foule error● the Patrons of Image-worshipping haue falne into Aquinas saith Because the Crosse representeth Christ who is God it is also to bee worshipped with diuine worship Bellarmine saith That Images are properly to be worshipped Azorius saith It is the constant opinion of our Diuines that the Image is to bee worshipped with the same worship wherewith the thing represented by it is worshipped Constantinus Bishop of Constance said in the forenamed Councell of Nice I doe worship the holy Images with the same worship with which I worship the consubstantiall Trinitie Iohn the Legate of the East The Image of the King is the King and so the Image of God is God and therfore if any man worshippeth it with the same worship he sinneth not Neither is there errour herein onely that they giue the worship of the most glorious God to wood and stone to the worke of mens hands but in that they Deifie make a God as it were of euery relique about Christs body the napkin linnen-clothes c. Yea of euery instrument vsed to torment and teare him vpon the Crosse as the speare and nailes witnesse their hymmes made vnto them To the Crosse they say O Crur Bell. l b. 2. de Imag cap 20. ●●e spes vnica auge pijs iustitiam reisque dona ventam that is Hayle O Crosse our onely hope encrease righteousnes to the righteous and giue pardon to the guilty To the Speare they say Aue ferrum triumphale intra● pectus tu vital cost●● pandis ostia Foecundata in ●ruore foel●x hasta nos amore per te fixt saucia that is Haile triumphant iron thou entring the vitall breast Cron. Crossin did open the doore of the rib O thou that wert made fruitfull by his bloud Oh happy Speare wound vs with the loue of him which was wounded by thee To the cloth with which his head was bound they light two Candles and by the Acolith it is exhibited to euery one being vpon his knees to be adored and reuerently kissed c. This grosse and palpable erring from the truth following vpon the vse of Images a man would thinke should be sufficient alone to make Image-worshipping odious to all but onely to such as are giuen ouer to strong delusions to beleeue lyes for who would drinke of that cup the bottome whereof hee seeth to bee full of poyson or who would lie downe in that channell the stirring whereof causeth a
his sons consecrated c. Vpon this day Christ appeared at sundry times after his resurrection the holy Ghost descended vpon the Disciples and Iohn was enlightned Arg. 6 1. Cor 2 14. A sixth argument may be drawne from the approbation and consent of all the best men who are spirituall and most able to discerne the things of God and the opposition of godlesse and most euill men who are led like brute beasts who are naturall and perceiue not the things of God For the best men haue euer since Christs resurrection obserued and kept this day with all due reuerence only the prophane and licentious haue cast away all conscience hereof Whence we may reason thus That which is embraced and held by all godly learned men but oppugned by the vngodly as not standing with their corruption is certainely the truth but such is this doctrine of the first day of the week to be the Sabbath Therfore most certainly true For the first part of this argument wherein the strength consisteth and first that that is the truth which is held by the godly with one consent our Sauiour telleth them To you it is giuen to know the secrets of the Kingdome of Heauen And if any man shall doe his will he shall know the doctrine Matth 13.11 Iohn 7 17. 1. Cor. 3.19 whether it be of God or no. And on the other side The wisdome of this world is foolishnesse before God and they which are after the flesh do sauour the things of the flesh with many like places from whence it followeth that the constant consent of all godly men is no small argument of the truth and contrariwise of the wicked And thus yee see vpon most firme grounds that there is not onely a Sabbath to be obserued vnder the new Testament but the Sabbath the first day of the weeke which the Lord hath appointed Which meeteth with sundry phantasticall opinions Errors touching the Sabbath Rom. 7. First of the Anabaptists in Germany and the Familists in England which hold that all dayes are now alike and none more a Sabbath then another neither doth it any whit helpe them that they alleage Wee are free from the Law euen as a woman when her husband is dead from the law of her husband for by the Law here is meant the ceremoniall Law the heauy yoke of which Christ tooke from our shoulders and if in any other place freedome from the law bee spoken of it is either meant of the Ceremoniall and Iudiciall or of the rigor of the Morall Law exacting perfect obedience in euery point or else threatning condemnation If they shall say Col 2.16 Let no man condemne you in respect of a Sabbath c. and that the Apostle saith reprehensiuely Ye obserue dayes and times and moneths and yeeres neither doth this make for them seeing that the first place speaketh of feasts abrogated Gal 4.10 and done away only the other of times vsed to be obserued by the Gentiles Secondly it appeareth to bee an error which is held by the Iewes by Ebion and Corinthus and the Sabbatary Christians viz. that the old Sabbath is still to bee kept as before Christ his comming for the abrogation of which these places are most plaine Col. 2.16 1. Cor. 16.1 Acts 20. c. Thirdly they also erre that yeeld a Sabbath now but hold it vncertaine whether it be the seuenth eighth or tenth Fourthly they which ho d this day but with all that it may bee changed vpon the consent of Churches sufficient cause concurring which I take it is suppositus impossibilium a surmise of things impossible Lastly they which hold the same day but meerely vpon the ground of tradition as the Papists to make their other fond and corrupt traditions in the more request 3 To rest vpon the Lords day 3. Thirdly I say that this day is not remisly to be kept by vs vnder the new Testament although it may rightly be said that the strict resting inioyned the Iewes doth cease viz. as figuring our Christ his resting in heauen after the worke of our redemption finished according to that Scripture He that hath entred into his rest Heb 4.10 hath rested from his owne workes as God did from his Yet considering that there is a rest also for Christians Heb. 4.9 as is contained in the same place There remaineth therefore a rest vnto the people of God it were great temeritie to deny a day of resting now from seruile worke holding that the Lords day is rightly kept by comming together to publike duties though the times of vacation be spent in following worldly affaires For as Gods resting vpon the Sabbath did prefigure Christs resting vpon his day so there is a rest to come vnto all Christs members in heauen which is figured out by our resting vpon the Lords day to the apprehending of which sweet and most ioyfull rest we are more sensibly quickened by tasting the sweet of resting here after six daies painfull labour vpon the Lords day Acts 15 ●1 Moreouer it is necessary that wee cease from worldly affaires that wee may be more profitably imployed about heauenly which without doubt was one end of resting vpon the Sabbath of old for they attended then vpon Gods publike seruice euery Sabbath day seeing it is said that Moses is read in the Synagogues euery Sabbath day They must therefore rest that they might labour rest temporally and labour spiritually men being vnfit to doe both these labours to the best aduantage the same day especially the spirituall if there bee an incombrance of the corporall wee beeing fitted vnto the one by nature but to the other not onely not fitted but most vnapt vnto it by nature so that wee had neede to bee bowed and bent by meditation and prayer before the publike meetings and to bee confirmed and made tenacious of the things which wee haue been taught by recounting them after these meetings And to doe thus wee haue plaine direction giuen vs in the holy Scriptures Eccles 4.17 Take heed vnto thy feete saith the Wise man when thou entrest into the house of the Lord and be more neare to heare then to giue a sacrifice of fooles this is for preparation before and after the publishing of the law Take heed saith Moses that yee doe Deut. 5.32 Deut. 6 6. as the Lord your God hath commanded And againe These words which I command thee this day shall be in thine heart this is for recounting of the word againe after And that royall Prophet professeth according to this direction I haue hid thy word in mine heart Psal 119 ●● that J might not sinne against thee Notable is the admonition of Chrysostome to this purpose yee ought not In Mat. cap. 1. Hom. 5. when yee goe from the congregation to bee intangled presently with businesses contrary to this studie but to goe home and there to call together your wife and children to
by Ely as a drunkard I am not drunken my Lord saith shee rnd as Sarai reuerenced her husband and called him Lord or by a title of reuerence The ninth is to order all our speeches and gestures so as that we passe not the bounds of reuerence for what auaileth it though thou bow the knee and giue titles if thou scorne or deride him in vnseemely speeches or behauiour as C ham that cursed sonne against his father Noah Genes 9. The tenth is to vncouer the head before Superiours and to stand vncouered if the qualitie of the person doth so require And as these be the parts of reuerence due to superiours and they that wilfully offend herein doe not only passe good manners but sinne against Gods Law Hauing hitherto spoken of such as are to bee honoured for their authority or place it followeth now to be spoken of all others which are to haue any honour done vnto them for any dignity or worth appearing in them Men worthy of Honour by Learning and knowledge And these are first men worthy by learning and knowledge or by any other excellent qualitie in them Thus King Salomen was honoured of all the Kings round about so that many sent him presents and many came from farre to see him The honour due to such is highly to esteeme of them to praise them according to their worth and to preferre their acquaintance and friendship After this manner did the Queene of the South 1. King 10. Acts 18.24 honour Salomon for his wisdome and Luk Apollos for his eloquence and power in the Scriptures and Paul Titus and the Brethren sent to Corinth for their holinesse and integrity calling them the glory of the Church of God 2. There is a kinde of worth also in men euen for this because they are Christians Phil. 2.3 and we are all members one of another for which cause euery man is first to esteeme another better then himselfe because other men are not so vnworthy in our knowledge as wee our selues 2. Rom 12 10. In giuing honour we must goe one before another and not in taking such should our humility be 3. As we meet one another in the way giuing due salutations this was often prescribed to the first Christians as by Peter 1 Pet. 5.14 Greet yee one another with the kisse of loue And by Paul Rom. 16.16 c. prouided alwayes that if any were knowne an enemy to the truth 2 Ioh. 10. they should not bid him God speed Not that there is danger in saluting strangers in a Christian common-wealth where all are supposed Christians as some haue foolishly thought but if any be knowne to be Christs enemie 3. There is also a kinde of Worth because of Gods ordinance Thus men are to giue honour to women 1 Pet. 3.7 as to the weaker vessels and not for their weaknesse to despise them and to think them vnworthy of all respect because that howsoeuer the woman is weaker then the man yet shee is also the childe of God and an instrument of much good in the Church The honour therefore due to them is the like to that which hath beene sayd towards man in the like cases And thus much of the honour commanded heere Now wee are to speake of the duties of persons honoured which as is contained in the answer is to walke worthy the honour due vnto them from inferiours 1. The duty of Parents towards children Ephes 6.4 Gen. 18.19 And first to begin with naturall Parents Their duty towards their children is first to giue them good education as it is commanded Parents bring vp your children in the information and feare of the Lord. Season them with knowledge of the first principles and command them to doe accordingly as father Abraham of whom the Lord saith I know Abraham that hee will command his sonnes and his houshold after him t at they keepe the way of the Lord as the vessell is first seasoned it will fauour long after 2. Discreetly to chastize them for their faults whilst they are young according to that 2 Duty Heb. 12.9 Wee haue had the fathers of our bodies which corrected vs. And Hee that spareth the rod saith Salomon marreth the childe They are now young and tender plants and may easily be set to rights deferre till they bee growne and then as Elies children they will be incorrigible and accursed of God 3. Duty 3. Not to exceed in giuing correction but tempering the vinegar of sharpe correction with the oyle of gentle exhortation Ephes 6.4 so that they be not prouoked as the Apostle saith vnto wrath For too harsh vsage is so farre from amending them as that it doth obdurate and harden them like vnto the smiths anuil with continuall beating vpon it 4 Duty 4. To prouide like good parents for them both food rayment and the like and in time conuenient fit marriages and if ability will serue some competencie of liuing For it dishearteneth a childe much to see his father spend all vpon vanity and without all prouidence for his children or when they do their duty and earne something with their labour to haue it taken from them and to bee left without comfort Good Parents haue beene euermore prouident Gen. 25. as Abraham who left Isaac his inheritance and gaue so much as was fit to his other children Ruths very mother in law was carefull to prouide for her a good husband and this is commended to all Parents by S. Paul 1. Cor 7. 5. Duty 5. To beare an equall affection towards their children vnlesse there be inequality of desert otherwise it breedeth enuy amongst brethren and vndutifulnesse to Parents Thus was it amongst Iaacobs children who sought the ouerthrow of Ioseph for his fathers too much cockeriug him and this was a fault in old Isaac as he knew afterwards placing his affection most vpon Esau Parents must take heed therefore that they prefer not the eldest so giuing him all as that they leaue nothing for the rest nor yet the younger depriuing the eldest without iust cause of his du● for either way there is a breach of naturall duty What is a iust cause of disheriting the eldest Gen 49. we may see in Iaacobs last will where Reuben the eldest is put besides his right for incest and Simeon and Leui for bloud-shed So that no deformity or defect but onely sin which putteth out of Gods fauour ought to put any besides this right Lastly to be graue sober honest holy and in all things to giue the example of a father that is of one in Gods stead vnto his children for it is a vaine thing in parents to forbid their children lying swearing drinking and to be lyars drunkards and swearers themselues to bid them feare God and serue him and to bee prophane themselues Rather as Iosuah thou must be the first and chiefe in all goodnesse saying J and my houshold will serue
the last day when they shall see Ioshuah Abraham El●ana Hannah and all good gouernours sitting downe in the kingdome of God and themselues shut out of doores 5. Leuity and remisnes in Princes and set Magistrates sparing sinnes that must necessarily bee punished and to the incouragement of malefactors 6. Tiranny exercising their owne pleasure vpon their subiects without all respect of equity and right Contrariwise did the good iudge Samuel 1. Sam. 12. and Dauid the King after that he was well schooled witnesse that which hee professeth saying Psal 101.1 I will sing of mercy and iudgement And so scrupulous was he that he would not take of gift much lesse by violence the threshing floore of Arannah but would buy it to offer sacrifice there 2. Sam. 24.21 although the Lord had commanded him to build an Altar in that place 7. Sloath and infidelity in ministers whose calling is to labour who haue hire to labour and whose labour is to so excellent an end if then they be loyterers if they be seeds-men of tares woe is to them The dispensation is committed to me saith Paul 2. Cor 9.16 woe is vnto me then if I preach not the Gospell A threefold woe then is vnto them that haue not only the calling but the hire also and that double and trebble if they vse not diligence as is sometime seene to the scandall of the ministerie 8. A vitious life in all persons of note and qualitie whether they be magistrates ministers masters ancient learned or of any excellency any way they doe not only sinne in the breach of Gods law but in giuing example to inferiour persons so that they pull vpon them the burthen of their sinnes also and because many are ready to follow them more then men of meaner condition they make their estate by far more fearefull then others the sinnes of multitudes besides their owne lying at the dore Wherefore when a grieuous fall is threatned to wicked Iudges it is said Yee shall fall Psalm 82.7 as one of the Princes The Kings of Israel that were wicked are said to haue made Israel to sin they are euen the eldest sonnes of Satan that be such and therefore good reason that they should share deepely in his inheritance Quest. 90. Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ From the promise of long life if God please not to preuent vs with the blessing of eternall life 1. Tim 4.19 Explan The promise heere annexed may bee also read That they may prolong thy dayes Not that parents haue any power so to doe in themselues but partly keeping them from many dangers which they are ready to runne into to the shortening of their dayes but are preuented whilest they obediently follow their graue and godly counsell and partly blessing them by vertue of Gods ordināce with such efficacy as that this redoundeth to their great good euen for the prolonging of their happy and good estate in this world And in this sense it is vsuall in the holy Scriptures to ascribe that to the instrument which is proper to God Paul commending to Timothy the study and teaching of the word of God saith in so doing thou shalt saue both thy selfe and others And to the Corinthians he saith I haue begotten you vnto Christ Iesus Therfore of the reason then is thus 1. That is duly of all to bee done by which they may liue long and comfortably but the rule to be followed for this is Honour thy father and mother Therefore all are to honour father and mother 2. Thou wilt honour them gladly by whom thy life may be prolonged especially in weale but such are thy father and mother therefore honour father and mother For the first of these Life is so sweet that all desire it and most though it be ioyned with much bitternes and sorrow but to liue long well all doe naturally most earnestly desire so that they would follow any rule though verie hard for this but all other rules are vaine this only effectual the Lord the greatest Phisitian telleth thee so Doe not therefore harden thy selfe against it but bring downe thy rebellious nature and become obedient seruants children and people of all sorts For the second Euery phisitian whom experience teacheth to be a meanes of the health and long life of his patients men will honour in the time of necessitie seeking to them and carefully following their directions and he thinkes himselfe a happy man that can come to the best neither will hee for any thing displease him though he be froward and hastie towards him although his skill often faileth him and he bee till that time a very stranger vnto him but thy parents are no strangers but such as may challenge something at thy hands because they haue bred and brought thee vp with care and paines and God giueth them this blessing to prolong thy daies and not to faile if thou honour them Foolish then and out of his wits is hee and worse then a bruite beast which alwaies doth that which is naturall whosoeuer giueth not honour to his parents according to the scope of this commandement Quest 1 But how is this promise verified seeing as well such as honour parents and doe their duty as the disobedient doe often times die in the prime of their age and the disobedient and vnruly doe often liue long First it is often verified to obedient children when as they are kept thus in a temperate and honest course of life the disobedient comming to their end by surfets How parents prolong their childrens life or the Gallowes with shame in their very prime 2. It is alwaies verified because obedient children liue well and in the feare of God and to liue well is to liue long according to the prouerb 1. Tim. 5 6. Bene viuere bis biuere est To liue well is to liue twice and to liue ill is neuer to liue but to be euer dead as S. Paul speaketh of wanton widdowes Shee that liueth in pleasure is dead whilest shee liueth so that though the disobedient liue long yet they haue not this blessing of long life the obedient and dutifull haue it though they liue not many yeares for one day is better then a thousand of the rebellious Eccles 8.12 which is the cause that the Wise man maketh no reckoning of a sinners life though hee liue an hundred yeares 3. If it bee not verified for life here yet it is more then made good by their taking hence they receiuing for frailty strength for basenes glory for temporalitie eternity Who wil say that if the King promise any of his houshold-seruants by name one of his Guard a Pentioner or Porter that he shal euer inioy his place and yet remoueth him to be the Master of his Horse his Treasurer or Chamberlaine that he is not so good as his word vnto him and who can say then that the Lord of all if he promise
diuided from God vpon which hee will poure out his wrath Prayer at going to meat 1. Tim. 4.5 Againe prayers are ordinarily to be vsed when wee receiue any of Gods good creatures for our sustenance For by mans sinne the creatures become accursed vnto him by prayer they are againe sanctified Euery creature of God is sanctified by the word and prayer 1. Sam. 9.13 When a feast was made in the land of Zuph it is said that the people would not eat vntill that Samuel came and had blessed the feast euen as it is said of the beasts being gathered together to the waters in the wildernesse that for feare of poyson they will not drinke till the Vnicorne hath with his horne stirred the waters And after meat it is necessary to praise God so as we are commanded Whether we eate or drinke or whatsoeuer we doe 1 Cor. 10.31 we shall doe all ●o the glory of God Praying in time of troublel Dan. 6. Extraordinarily we must pray oftner in the time of any extraordinary danger or trouble by sicknesse persecution battles and wars famine and losses Daniel at this time besides morning and euening prayed also at noone-tide daily Dauid in the like case prayed seauen times a day and at midnight Christ prayed three times together in his agonie M●th 27. Acts 2. And the Disciples continued daily together in prayer And in those times of persecution the faithfull are noted to haue met to prayer and to haue continued three sometime sixe daies together without taking food vntil night These times of trouble are more specially times of prayer to make praying our practice night and day and to procure others to pray with vs and for vs. Ioh. 4. ●0 For the place and gesture to be vsed in prayer wee know that now there is no difference of places howsoeuer it hath beene in times past for euery where God may be called vpon in Spirit and in truth and for gesture Come saith the Prophet let vs fall downe and kneele before the Lord our maker Not that prayer is not auailable without kneeling for Isaack walked in the fields and prayed Ionah lying in the whales belly prayed c. But because all worship both of body and soule is due to the Lord of all and because prostration or kneeling is a meanes to b eed the more humility in the minde therefore though kneeling be not alwayes necessary yet it is to be preferred both in publike and priuate by all that would yeeld vnto God his due and entire worship and in all publike prayers it is the more duely and strictly to be vsed where the orders of Church doe expressly enioyne it or the laudable custome of the congregation commend it To conclude the omission of decent vsuall gesture must needs be more or lesse scandalous as arguing either coldnesse in deuotion or contempt of the Church or discrepancie in opinion o● in affection from the rest of Gods people with whom wee seeme to make but halfe coniunction whilest wee denye the vniformity of our bodily humiliation And thus much of the generall Introduction to Prayer Of the Lords Prayer Quest 116. HOw and according to what patterne ought wee to pray Answ The Patterne and forme of prayer for our direction is the Lords Prayer Our Father which art in Heauen hallowed bee thy name thy kingdome come thy will bee done in earth as it is in heauen Giue vs this day our dayly bread and forgiue vs our trespasses as wee forgiue them that trespasse against vs and lead vs not into temptation but deliuer vs from euill For thine is the Kingdome the power and glory for euer and euer Amen Explan Hauing hitherto made way to the Lords Prayer following in the Catechisme by considering some necessary questions it followeth now that wee come more neerely to the prayer it selfe which is our onely absolute and perfect patterne Concerning this prayer consider we some things generally and then particularly of the parts heereof Generally who was the Author of this prayer The Author of this Prayer Lu● 11.1 Answ Christ Iesus our Lord who with the Father and Spirit is God blessed for euer Hee hauing beene himselfe busied in prayer was desired by his Disciples saying Good maister teach vs to pray as Iohn also taught his Disciples and he said vnto them When yee pray say Our Father which art in heauen c. Whence ir hath the name the Lords Prayer as the Lords Day the Lords Supper c 2. Consider therefore the excellencie of this Prayer as Salomons song is called a Song of songs so this may bee a Prayer of Prayers excelling all other prayers And as the Lords Supper because by him instituted is of that reuerend account that whosoeuer eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth and drinketh his owne damnation so whosoeuer vseth the Lords Prayer being of diuine Institution vnworthily endangereth himselfe of damnation heereby The Author is the wisedome of the Father like vnto himselfe hath made this Prayer with admirable wisedome drawing the whole Scriptures into a short Epitome heerein and comprizing all our wants of euery kinde in a few wordes with all most needfull directions about prayer and reasons mouing in the offering vp of Praoer So that if all men should all together haue studied all their dayes they could not possibly make a prayer of such worth and excellencie Math. 6.9 Thirdly consider the vse of this prayer which is both for the words and the matter and forme Some thinke that it is onely to be vsed as a direction by which wee may learne how and what to pray and that the wo ds are not to be vsed because Christ saith After this manner pray yee Others thinke it the onely prayer to be vsed at all times and vpon all occasions because Christ saith When yee pray say Our Father Luc. 11.2 c. But neither right the truth is that which maketh a perfect consent betwixt these two Euangelists reporting what Christ said viz. the vse of this Prayer is not onely to direct for matter or for words but for both say these words when ye pray or vse this patterne for a direction and frame all your petitions accordingly First vse the words of this praye if thou knowest not how otherwise according to it to expresse thy minde and though thou knowest yet vse it and vrge the Lord as it were heereby to heare thee for as C●pria● saith A father will acknowledge the voice of his only son the Lord cānot but acknowledge the voyce and words of his son being vttered by any of the faithfull But take heed lest in praying these words the tongue runne without the heart as it must needes doe in those that ceremoniously rehearse them making hast to haue done euen like vnto a chlide saying his lesson which he hath conned perfectly Such may say the words of Gods deare Son and yet goe away without any notice taken of them
Christ being accounted such as he is all our sinnes being passed ouer And this is that which maketh true faith so excellent as that being indued heerewith the Lord vouchsafeth to seale couenants by his Sacrament vnto vs. Whatsoeuer faith wee haue else it is generall historicall and imperfect if wee beleeue that there is a God that the Scriptures are his word that the promises and threanings are true yea though wee had faith to remoue mountaines onely then is faith perfect and full when it doth lawfully apply the merits of Christs sufferings vnto the soule for the forgiuenesse of all the sinnes Quest Why then are infants baptised when as by reason of their tender age they cannot performe them Answ Yes they doe performe them by their sureties who promise and vow them both in their names which when they come to age themselues are bound to performe Acts 8.37 Explan Hauing shewed what repentance and faith is and how necessary vnto baptisme repentance is faith being also of the like necessity according to the institution He that beleeueth and is baptized shall be saued and according to the practise of the Church vnto the Eunuch If thou beleeuest saith Philip thou maist and when any came to be baptized it was wont to be asked What beleeuest thou and the person answered I beleeue in God the Father Almighty c. It remaineth now to giue resolution touching the baptisme of infants in whom there cannot bee faith and repentance actually Because faith and repentance are necessary to saluation it becommeth questionable whether infants ought to bee baptized and some haue altogether denied it affirming that if any haue beene baptized in their infancie they ought to bee rebaptized when they came to vnderstanding as the Anabaptists in Germany and some giddy-headed seperatists in England El●is and his faction But that the children of beleeuing parents may and ought to bee baptized it is plaine Reas 1 1. From the vse of Circumcision which was the forerunner heereof which was appointed to be done vpon the eight day after the birth Now the seale of Gods couenant is to be applyed vnto the children of Christians as soone as vnto the children of the Iewes but vnto the children of the Iewes the seale was applyed in their infancie therefore to the children of Christians likewise as Circumcision their seale to them so baptisme our seale to these If doubt bee made of the first part of this reason it is proued thus Where there is the like reason and none but the same hinderances it may bee sealed alike but in these children there is the same reason and onely the same hinderances the same reason because they are the children of Gods people likewise onely the same hinderances because they want vnderstanding alike therefore the seale is as well to bee applyed vnto the children of Christians as vnto theirs Reas 2 Acts. 2 39. Secondly from the estate of infants the promises belong to them as well as vnto their Parents saith Peter is made to you and your children Theirs is the kingdome of heauen saith our Sauiour Christ As the Parents are holy so they are holy 1. Cor. 7.14 so Now they are holy saith Paul to the Corinthians Now vnto those that are wholly partakers of the promises of God and of the Kingdome of Heauen the signe and seale of God is not to bee denied but children of beleeuing parents are such euen in their infancie therefore the seale or signe of baptisme may not be denied Reas 3 2 Cor. 1.16 Acts 16.5 Verse 33. Thirdly from the practice of the Apostles and first teachers of the Gospell S. Paul the Apostle baptized the houshold of Stephanas and Lydia and her houshold and the Iaylor was baptized with all that belonged vnto him And when little children were brought vnto Christ some disliking it were reproued and the bringers of them incouraged neither hath there beene any time since wherein they haue beene refused but since the springing vp of the many headed Hydra of Anabaptisme Indeed none but men of yeares haue been admitted to this Sacrament when their Parents had not before been baptized that commonly at one time of the yeare being able to giue account of their faith But for those whose parents had receiued the faith before they were counted worthy of this holy signe in their Infancie Whereas the Institution of Baptisme may be obiected and that no mention is made of any particulars that were baptized by the Apostles in their Infancie I answere that Christ in giuing order to his Disciples to goe teach and baptize doth onely prescribe for men of yeares and discretion who were not to be baptized without teaching going before and it is a good reason onely against the baptizing of their children who were not instructed and baptized before themselues Againe it is no maruell though Baptisme was vsed vnto children also that no particular mention is made heereof seeing it sufficeth vpon the conuersion of any to set downe he was baptized and his houshold For who can bee so ignorant and not out of this generall to conclude in particular that their children being part of their houshold were baptized also 1. Cor 7 14. For further resolution of the doubt why Infants are baptized seeing they cannot beleeue and repent that which is set downe in the Catechisme is that they performe them by their Sureties c. that is their Sureties standing in their Parents stead doe publikely professe both these so as they are supposed in them to bee performed and through them in their Children For there is so neere a Relation of the Child vnto the Parents that what the state of the Parents is such is the estate of the child reputed to bee vntill that it commeth to reason and discretion nay the young childe is taken for a very partie or limbe of the Parent whereunto giueth testimony that which hath been already said otherwise your children were vncleane but now are they holy that is the Parents or one of them being made holy by beleeuing Luke 19.9 For this cause when Abraham was appointed the circumcision it was for him and all the males belonging vnto him and when Zacheus entertained Gods grace and was made partaker of saluation it is said This day is saluation come not to this man but to this houshold And the state of this man is not to be measured by the fruites which he doth outwardly bring forth but by his incorporation through Baptisme into the visible Church whereby hee becommeth a member of it and the Children which hee begetteth are likewise members of the same So that howsoeuer children doe want actuall faith and repentance yet such as present them to the Church sustaining their Parents persons are supposed not to want them and in their Parents they are to be reckoned such as haue them because of their neere coniunction vnto their Parents whose bowels as it were they be and by Baptisme remission
and from the doctrine of the Apostle The cup of Blessing which wee blesse is it not the Communion of the bloud of Christ The bread which wee breake Iohn 6.47 is it not the Communion of the bodie of Christ But how is his body there to bee communicated Not by Transubstantiation as hath been already shewed nor by consubstantiation so as that his body is in vnder or about the bread as the Lutherans teach but onely in a spirituall Sacramentall manner faith making him present vnto the worthy receiuer euen as hereby we possesse euerlasting life according to that He that beleeueth in me hath euerlasting life For as Faith is an eye vnto which things to come are present so it is an hand holding them a mouth feeding vpon them and a stomacke receiuing them and vniting them vnto the person that beleeueth If it be said then the Sacrament is vaine seeing by faith Christ may be receiued without it and he is not outwardly any whit the more present with his body I answere God forbid for it is Gods ordinance to helpe our faith an outward meanes to conuey vnto vs inward grace and sanctification his seale to confirme our faith in his gracious promises As when the King bestoweth any thing vpon a subiect he is assured hereof by his meere donation and giuing it vnto him but yet hee appoynteth vnto him to take the state thereof a meanes of writing and sealing to ratifie what hee hath graunted for more assurance which writings and seale though they containe not the estate about them or in them that is the house or ground in quantitie yet they conuey them vnto him so though the body of Christ bee in heauen and being giuen vnto vs by the Father is made ours through faith yet it hath pleased him for more assurance to appoynt the Sacrament hereby to conuey this rich possession vnto vs and to write and seale to our hearts that Christ is ours by his holy body sanctifying our bodies and soules and by his blood cleansing vs from all our sinnes though this body bee not in or about the bread really in the quantitie as it was heretofore vpon earth And of like nature were the ancient Sacraments appointed to the Fathers vnto which though Christ was not really and corporally annexed yet vnto the receiuers they were Christ through faith 1. Cor. 10.1 Iohn 1.29 for the Rocke was Christ Christ was the Lambe Quest 2 Be there not other wayes besides this of receiuing Christ Answ Yes the Scripture speaketh of two other wayes or meanes 1. Gal 3.27 He is receiued by Baptisme for Hee that is baptized into Christ hath put on Christ 2. Hee is receiued by the preaching of the Word whether by himselfe when he came amongst his owne Iohn 1.12 and to such as receiued him hee gaue power to be the sonnes of God Math. 10.40 or by his Disciples for Hee that receiueth you saith Christ receiueth mee that is the doctrine which hee and they taught being entertained into beleeuing hearts and their persons being welcome vnto them By the word hee is receiued as by the draught of a conueyance and Articles of agreement by the Sacraments as by seales put heereunto Baptisme being properly the seale of a new life which is the beginning of euerlasting life we being dead and buried vnto sinne the Lords Supper the seale of the comforts and strength that wee grow vnto in this life as by most wholesome meats and drinkes till that in the life to come we shall bee continually feasted with him hee being meat and drinke and cloathing and wealth and all in all vnto vs euermore Quest 3 Wherefore is the Communion of the Lords Supper receiued often and Baptisme but once seeing both are Gods Seales and assure our spirituall estate sufficiently by being once put to That the Lords Supper is often to bee receiued the Lord himselfe doth intimate vnto vs where hee biddeth So oft as yee drinke this cup doe it in remembrance of mee Whereupon the Apostle inferreth So oft as yee eate this bread and drinke this cup yee shew the Lords death till he come 1. Cor. 11.26 construing this precept to last till the comming of Christ to iudgement at the end of this world And the reason hereof is first because that howsoeuer our new life is begun at once as is represented in Baptisme yet it continueth from yeare to yeare and must haue often meanes to sustaine it and therefore though circumcision was but once the Passeouer was once euery yeare Secondly because that although we are in Baptisme regenerate and become new creatures yet the flesh still dwelling in vs rebelleth so as that we are subiect to sinne daily against which as the bloud of Christ is continually by faith to be applied to purge vs so the Sacrament whereby his death and bloudshed is represented is often to bee vsed for the more comfortable remembrance hereof euen as to shadow it out before it was the high Priest entred into the holy of holies with bloud once euery yeere Now precisely set downe how often the Lords Supper is to be receiued we cannot because it is left indefinite Acts 10 7. Acts 2.46 The practise of the Primitiue Church was euerie Lords day or first day of the weeke and at the first daily as their dangers were great by reason of the persecution euery day Wherfore in the Canons carrying the name of the Apostles it was commanded that all which came to heare the Word being Communicants should receiue the Communion Et siquis non communicat excommunicatur vt ecclesiae turbator Can. 10. ordinum violator If any man doth not communicate let him be excommunicated as a troubler of the Church and a breaker of order And hereunto do the ancient Fathers assent But this often receiuing was in regard of the times such as at the first institution the shepheard being smitten and the sheep scattered Since in the peace of the Church the Communion hath been three or foure times in the yeare and specially at Easter as succeeding the Passeouer If it be said once in the yeare is sufficient as the Passeouer was but once I answer the Passeouer required a long time euen seuen dayes for the celebration thereof and if it had been often Exod. 12.19 it would haue been too heauy a burthen vnto the people it is not so with the Lords Supper Againe this is the proper time of the right Passeouer the Lords supper in times past besides the Paschall Lambe and vnleauened bread once in the yeare there being many other remembrances of Christ in action viz. the many sacrifices now we haue onely the Lords Supper often to be vsed to the same purpose Quest What are the benefits whereof wee are partakers thereby Answ The strengthening and refreshing of our soules by the bodie and bloud of Christ as our bodies are by the bread and wine Mouns du Plessis
of so great dignity to be so ioyned vnto him that I should be made coheire with him of the heauenly Kingdome How can I doe lesse then put away all basenesse of mind whereby I cleaue to the world and the flesh and bee like minded to my deare Sauiour to whom I am ioyned in fellowship though most vnworthy being holy as he is holy It is also to bee considered how our soules are fed heere euen as the Israelites with Manna from heauen in the wildernesse where they must otherwise haue perished and as Dauid flying from Saul by Abimelech with the hazard of his owne life so God spared not his sonne but gaue him as bread from heauen vnto vs without which wee must needs haue perished for euer and in our greatest need that wee might haue strength to flie away from the danger of Satan inraged against vs he spared not though with the hazard of his life to giue vs the true Shew-bread Oh how should my heart be affected towards thee O Lord therefore and resolued to abide alwaies with thee vowing with Dauid to Abiathar Hee that seeketh my life shall seeke thy life also those that are thy enemies shall be mine and as if they hated me Thirdly let the Communicant consider of the neere vnion that the Lord hath made by Christ betwixt all his Saints into the which hee is also receiued that faithfully partaketh of the Lords Supper which should effectually suppresse all exorbitant affections and worke an holy loue in him as towards members of the same body Quest 142. What is to be done after the receiuing Answ We must meditate of the Couenant of new obedience with the Lord renewed by this Sacrament that we may be more carefull to performe this obedience and to flee sinne and vice all the dayes of our life Explan The receiuing of the Lords Supper is not a transient holy duty as it is by most men vsed who put some holinesse vpon them for the time afterwards returning as the dogge to the vomit and as the swine to the wallowing in the mire but it is a sealing of couenants betwixt God and his people and the grace of God for the pardon of all our sinnes and our dutifulnesse to God in forsaking all our old sinnes and liuing according to his holy lawes For as God doth hereby giue himselfe vnto vs to become our God and gracious Father so we giue our selues vnto God to become his people and obedient children There be these two parties in all couenants otherwise they cannot stand something assured and giuen and something taken and receiued therefore So betwixt Princes and Subiects the Prince giueth and assureth his care in ruling and prouiding well for the good of the Subiect hee receiueth tribute custome and obedience so betwixt masters and seruants betwixt sellers and buyers lenders and borrowers In like manner in this Couenant God for his part assureth and giueth himselfe to be our gracious God forgiuing all our trespasses and on our part he must receiue tribute subiection and obedience otherwise the bond is forfeit and if it hath bin so once twise or often and the forfeit hath not yet been taken take heed of the next time for if thou still remaine vnreformed not better keeping couenants hauing renewed them so many times there is no hope for thee to bee dealt withall but as with a desperate person that thou shouldst suddenly be deliuered to some infernall spirit the Taylor and so be imprisoned in Hell whence thou canst neuer come out againe If thou hast therefore neglected to pay God the duties of praise and prayer of obedience and performance of holy duties both publike and priuate now bee negligent no longer but be rather officious redeeming the time with double diligence if thou hast loued and liued in sinne and disobedience keepe couenants by feare of offending any more hereafter and if thou hast no way answered that loue which the Lord tieth thee vnto towards thy neighbour for his owne sake but hast hated such as haue shewed any enmity against thee for offences hast been vnaduisedly prouoked and through an immoderate loue of thy selfe and of the world hast denied food vnto the hungry and hast sought to beguile thy neighbour learne of Christ to be meeke and gentle in holinesse follow Paul as he followeth Christ and for bounty imitate Zacheus conuerted giuing liberally to the poore and satisfying where thou hast done wrong to any man for thus and thus onely mayst thou haue comfort of the Lords Supper and shalt in his good time sit downe in the Kingdome of Heauen and be feasted with Abraham Isaak and Iacob for euer and euer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An Appendix to the Catechisme FOrasmuch as the holy Scriptures are the ground and foundation of all diuine Teaching and it auayleth not a little for setting men in the Trueth to vnderstand rightly both which bee the Bookes of holy Scripture and how wee may bee assured that they are the Word of God and by whom and how this Word is to be preached and heard for our further building vp in grace I haue thought it expedient here to annexe these short Questions and Answeres following Quest 143. What is the Word of God Answ Whatsoeuer is contained in the books of the old and new Testament and not any other bookes or writings whatsoeuer Quest 144. How many and which are these Bookes The Books of Canonicall Scripture Answ The Bookes of the Olde Testament are twentie and seauen Genesis Exodus Leuiticus Numbers Deuteronomie Iosua Iudges Ruth the first and second of Samuel the first and second of the Kings the first and second of the Chronicles Ezra Nehemiah Ester Iob Psalmes Prouerbs Ecclesiastes Song of Songs Esay Ieremiah with his Lamentation Ezechiel Daniel and the Booke of the twelue small Prophets The Bookes of the New Testament are twentie and sixe Matthew Marke Luke and Iohn the Actes of the Apostles the Epistle of Paul to the Romanes the first and second to the Corinthians to the Galathians Ephesians Philippians Collossians the first and second to the Thessalonians the first and second to Timothie to Titus to the Hebrewes the Epistle of Iames the first and second of Peter the first second and third of Iohn the Epistle of Iude and the Reuelation of Iohn Quest 145. Are not the other Books called Apocryphall part of the Word of God also as Esdras Tobit Iudeth c. Answ They are not bookes properly called Canonicall but are annexed to the word as being full of good instructions and histories declaring Gods wonderfull prouidence ouer his people Israel Explan Diuers haue beene and are the errours of men about Gods Word some denying diuers parts of the Old and New Testament to bee his Word and some Canonizing other writings also Concerning the first some detestable Heretiques haue receiued none for the word of God but the fine Bookes of Moses as the Sadduces some none but the New Testament as the
Manich●es and Marcion some haue reiected the Booke of Psalmes as the Nicholaitans and Anabaptists some the booke of Iob as some Rabbins and some Daniel as Porphyrius some haue reiected the Gospel of Luke as Cerdon some all but Marke as Cerinthus some the Gospel of Iohn as the Alog● some all Pauls works as the Ebionites c. Concerning the second some haue made the Apocryphall Books of equall authoritie with the fore recited Scriptures as the Papists and others haue more boldly long since obtruded for Canonical the fatherlesse brood of other books vnto these as the third and fourth of Eldras and Appendix of Iob a Preface to the Lamentation the third and fourth of the Macchabees a Booke called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Booke of Enoch the Gospel of Thomas and of Matthias the acts of Peter And in the yeare 1120 a certaine new Gospell called Euangelium aeternum the eternall Gospell was found out being full of blasphemies but all these and the like are damnable presumptions plainly forbidden by the Lord saying Deut 4.2 Ye shal not put ought vnto the word that I command you neither shall ye take ought there-from and grieuously threatned Reu. 22.18 19. If any man shall adde vnto these things God shall adde vnto him the plagues that are written in this Booke and if any man shall diminish any thing God shall take away his part out of the Booke of life Now that the Books first aboue named are all Canonicall Scriptures and part of the word of God Epist Tom. 3. hath been acknowledged in all ages by the Christian Church Ierome writing to Paulinus of the study of the holy Scriptures doth both reckon vp all these bookes in particular and adioyneth to euery one of them a seuerall pithy commendation And vnto Leta he prescribeth an order of reading them with most safetie and profit As for the other Bookes Epist Tom. 1. which our Church adioyneth to the volume of the inspired Scriptures they are both entertained and in part publikely read in our Churches not as authentike Principles whereon to ground any doctrine but as wholesome precepts of moralitie and declarations of the estate of the Church in those times very profitable for deuotion and heauenly meditation Quest. 146. What speciall proofe is there making manifest that those Bookes of Scripture are the word of God Answ The antiquity of those books some of them being before all other bookes sundry times oppugned and sought to be burnt vp by persecutors and yet wonderfully preserued and by miracles from heauen confirmed is a manifest proofe that they came from heauen and are not of mans inuention That the ●oly Scriptures are Gods word Explan Amongst all arguments there is none of that force in the conscience of man that this is of being taken from the diuinitie of the holy Scriptures For let it appeare that they are of God and what heart dares doe any other but yeeld vnto them Now that they are of God may bee plainely prooued by sundry reasons First by their Antiquitie for the first and most ancient writings in the world concerning Religion must needs be Gods but these are the first and most ancient therefore must needs be Gods 1. That the most ancient are Gods Scriptures is plaine because otherwise either some other Instructor must haue beene before God or else God the Ruler of the whole world must haue beene without any thing recorded whereby the world ought to be ruled till that man had inuented something to gouerne man by both which are most absurd That the holy Scriptures are most ancient appeareth by the most ancient humane writers Orpheus the first of all writeth of the two Tables deliuered to Moses Whence he saith that he learned what he knew of God Linus wrote of the Tower of Babylon described by Moses c. making plaine heereby that the Bookes of Moses were long before any of their writings and so the most ancient in the world Hence it is that Tacianus affirmeth that it appeareth out of Berosus a Caldee Writer Tatiani Oratio aduersus gentes Moses fuit Baccho antiquior plurimis diis gentium Clem. Alexandr out of the writings of the Phoenicians and Annales of the Egyptians that Moses wrote long before Orpheus Linus Amphyon Homer or the most ancient Ethnickes Now the Bookes of Moses are in effect the whole Scriptures all that followeth tending onely to the further explanation heereof Wherefore the Scriptures are most auncient and consequently the vndoubted word of God 2. This is further prooued by the preseruation of the Scriptures in all ages other ancient Bookes being perished either in part or in whole but the holy Scriptures though more oppugned then any by persecutors who haue sought to blot out the memory of them yet are wholly preserued without diminution or corruption of any part of them Had they beene of man certainly it would haue happened vnto them as vnto many other humane writings which are most ancient which if they haue not perished yet they haue been falsified yea one complaineth that hee himselfe yet liuing to see it Fratribus rogantibus vt scriberem Epistolas scripsi has Apostoli Diaboli Zizanijs alia eximentes alia ad●icientes Dionysius Areo● pag. repleuerunt The Brethren requesting I wrote Epistles these the Apostles of the Deuill haue filled with tares adding some things and taking away othersome Now the holy Scriptures haue been singularly preserued heerein in the hands of the Iewes who haue misliked some things and forbidden them to be read as Daniel because he speaketh so plainly of the Messiah in the hands of the heathen as when at the request of Ptolomee they were translated by the Septuagint and in the hands of Heretikes who haue corrupted Fathers and Councels yet neuer durst but haue beene restrained from heauen from corrupting the Scriptures 3. This is further proued by the miracles which haue been wrought to confirme the Scriptures to be of God the Author of all true miracles of this sort are the miracles wought by Moses by the Prophets by Christ and by his Disciples For all these miracles doe plainly testifie of them that they were sent of God and if they were of God then the word by them set forth is the word of God 4. The same is proued by the prophesies contained in the Scriptures some being of things to come to passe many hundreds of yeares after as that the seed of the woman should breake the serpents head that Abrahams posterity should be numberlesse that they should be strangers 400. yeares that Josiah should burne the bones of Baals Priests where Ieroboam did sacrifice that the people of Israel should be in captiuity 70. yeares that Cyrus expressely forenamed should giue them leaue to returne and diuersly honour them c. From hence we may reason thus Those Scriptures which in their reuelations exceed all the vnderstanding of all creatures are vndoubtedly his who is aboue
all creatures that is Gods but such are the holy Scriptures as appeareth by these the like Prophesies Ergo c. for no created vnderstanding can of it selfe reach to things to come to say certainly thus it shal be some may coniecture or being appointed as instruments of execution may declare what themselues shall performe as the Deuill did to Saul but God onely hath made it so proper to himselfe to foretell independently absolutely and infallibly what shall come afterwards as that it may well be said Let them tell what shall come let them doe good or euill and say that they be Gods 5. The same is further proued by the Argument handled in the Scriptures which is altogether graue holy tending to the setting forth of all vertue and against all vice wheras as Iustine Martyr hath obserued the writers of the Heathen gods and religion Iustin Martyr were either ridiculous Poets which deriue the beginning of all from the waters handle the quarrels and filthy loues of the gods or Phylosophers more ridiculous for that the very chiefe of them were vncertaine of the beginning of things Now such as the writing is such must needs be the Author from whom it first commeth true it is that he which is vnholy may write things holy good but then they come not from him but first from some other fountaine therefore the most holy who is God must needs be the Author of the holy Scriptures 6. This is proued by the testimony of Heathen men themselues The Law of Moses against Images Numa Pompilius the chiefe religious Emperour amongst the heathen Romans approued of Numenius a Pythagorean Phylosopher saith of Plato that hee was none other but Moses speaking in the Atticke tongue Euseb de prepar Euang. The Oracle of Apollo confessed that the Christians onely had the truth and acknowledged the true God saith Eusebius Tribellius Pollio writing of Moses saith that hee was the only man familiar with God Cornelius Tacitus confesseth the truth of that History in Exodus telling how Pharaoh after many plagues let the children of Israel goe though hee thrust in some absurd fabulous lyes concerning the Iewes Procopius testifieth of Ioshua that for feare of him the Phoenicians left their country Linus and Homer write of the Creation of the world in sixe dayes Ouid of the generall deluge as also of the Gyants rearing of mountaines vp to heauen which is an allusion to the Tower of Babell Abidenus Sybilla and Hestiaeus of the long liues of the Ancients Epolemus of Abraham and how he fought for Lot Plato confesseth that he learned the most excellent precepts of wisdom of the barbarous meaning Moses and the Prophets Now whence commeth this consent of men of contrary minds to the truth of the Scriptures Verily from Gods prouidence that no man might deny that which by the light of nature is acknowledged of naturall man viz the truth and Diuinitie of the Scriptures 7. The same is proued by the single drift of the Scriptures which is only to giue all glory to God nothing to man seeing that the faults of the best are ingenuously and without flattery set downe neither is any mans fauour affected or sought for in any of these books which cannot be said of any humane writings 8. The same is proued by the consent of all the books of holy Scripture though written by diuers men at sundry times Neuer was the like to be found touching mens writings but euen the same Author hath been oftentimes noted to differ from himselfe Wherefore the Writers of the holy Scriptures were vndoubtedly guided by one spirit of truth and what they wrote came from this spirit which is God If any differences seeme to be in these holy writings this is through the weaknesse of our conceit and misvnderstanding and not indeed Quest 147. Hauing this Word of God written is it not sufficient for our saluation without any other helpe euen as to haue a Booke of Statutes sufficeth to be kept from the danger of the Law to those that will Answ It is not sufficient but it must also bee set forth by preaching that the hard places may bee rightly vnderstood wee may bee kept from errours and haue our dull hearts stirred vp to imbrace the holy precepts hereof Explan Many there be who acknowledge the Scriptures to be Gods word but doe not so much regard the preaching of this word prosuming vpon their owne ability to make a good vse of it in priuat by reading for their edification and saluation And some colour of reason there is also for this seeing that the word serueth to acquaint vs with the wil and law of God as a statute booke with the Lawes of the land and knowing these Lawes if we will not obey all preaching cannot bring vs to obedience or doe vs more good But this is a deceitfull colour First because a Statute book is not like vnto Gods booke that being humane and the penalty sensible this diuine and spirituall and not vnderstood by a naturall man so that a man may read much here but remain still as destitute of vnderstanding Actes 8. as the Eunuch who asked How can I vnderstand without an Interpreter Secondly because preaching is the meane by which God hath wrought in all ages and will principally and most powerfully worke by this ordinarily for our saluation 1. Cor. 1.18 1 Pet. 2 2. Thirdly because no man can receiue the word to his comfort vnlesse he reuerence and esteeme of the preaching therof seeing that the word it selfe doth so highly commend and vrge to attend to preaching Fourthly because the Lord who onely can giue light by his word doth direct such as be in darknes to the Preachers of his word Saul to Ananias Cornelius to Peter the Eunuch to Philip c. refusing otherwise to giue them any light Lastly because men are naturally dull and backward to that which is good when they know it so that reading only they are still frozen in their sins it is necessary that by the exhortation of preaching they should bee stirred vp and by the zeale and heat of others bee warmed and become agile and chearefull to doe accordingly In all things wee say for comfort Two are better then one and why should it not be so in this also A man reading alone is forgetfull and letteth it flip soone out of his mind which he readeth a faithfull Minister of Gods word preacheth vnto him and bringeth continually to his remembrance hee is like a sticke lying by a firebrand ready to goe out the Minister stirres vp the fire and layes the stickes together he hath bread by him but is feeble because he cannot breake it in pieces to eate some of it the Minister breakes it vnto him for his comfort I conclude therefore that it is necessary to exercise the hearing of this Word preached besides the priuate reading thereof and hee that hauing the meanes contemneth them wandreth
still in sinne and blindnesse Quest 148. What is the preaching of the Word of God Ans It is properly the expounding of some part thereof the teaching hence the duties to be followed and the sinnes to be auoided and exhorting to doe accordingly Nehem. 8.9 Explan Some there be that moue as much trouble about preaching as others that deny the necessity hereof and content themselues onely with reading some affirming the bare reading of the Scriptures to be preaching some talking hereof one neighbour to another and some the reading of Homilies or Sermons But the preaching of the word to speak properly is more then all these as may appeare both by the practise in the dayes of Nehemiah when it is said that the Priest stood vpon a place higher then the people and read the Law of God plainely and expounding the sence gaue the vnderstanding of the Scriptures And also in the new Testament where after the Lecture of the Law and the Prophets it is said that the Rulers of the Synagogue sent to Paul and those with him saying Act. 13 15. Men and brethren if there be in you any word of exhortation vnto the people speake From hence ariseth plainelie this description of Preaching to be an expounding c. as in the Answere Now for reading the Scriptures though in a large sense it be a kind of preaching because that the truth is hereby set forth and the Gospell and meanes of saluation made known to him that readeth or heareth it read yet it is properly no more preaching then reading is an Oration neither is hee that doth thus any more a Preacher then such an one an Oratour For when the question is made whether reading be preaching it is not meant whether by reading is not the truth set forth and may not sauing grace be wrought in the hearers but whether reading bee the preaching practised by the Ministers of Gods word vnder the old and new Testament which is so much commended for the liuely operation being Gods special and greatest ordinary power to saluation and whether the reading bee that which wee haue charge to intend when we are bidden go preach the Gospel For vnlesse they striue to make their reading such a preaching they question about nothing if to make it such a preaching they striue against the streame the whole current of examples recorded in the Word being against them yea that speciall place which they think a most sure ground for them Moses hath of old such as preach him when he is read in their Synagogues euery Sabbath day Acts 15.26 doth plainely rebuke their negligence seeing that it may well be hence gathered that at all times vpon the Sabbath when the Priests read Moses they expounded and gaue light vnto the people by teaching as in Nehemiahs daies Much more might bee said for the confute of such grosse opinions but because I propounded to bee briefe in all things thus much shall suffice briefly for this Let vs all lay aside partiality whereby wee are carried to fauour our selues and seeke our owne ease and this corrupt fountaine of such troubled opinions being dammed vp I doubt not but wee shall with one consent endeauour to preach in another manner then by reading and familiar talking applying our selues to the right vnderstanding of the Scriptures that we may giue the right sense after the sense find out sound and profitable doctrines strengthened with good reason conuincing the iudgement and after the doctrines frame some forcible exhortations to bring and bow the affections to the light set vp in the vnderstanding that Gods people may haue more grace and his holy name more glorie Quest 149. Who may preach the Word of God Answ Onely such as are outwardly sent of God ordinarily and when extraordinary necessity doth require all such men as are inwardly stirred vp and inabled by the spirit of God Who may preach Explan Hauing shewed what the preaching is it followeth what Preachers are viz. either in times ordinary or extraordinarie ordinarily we are to account him as a fit Preacher who is outwardly sent of God and none other that is in a Country where the Gospell is maintained by the higher powers and an order for the sending forth of preachers is established he is a lawfull preacher of the word that is sent forth according to this order and if any preach being not thus sent they are intruders and not labourers sent into the Lords haruest And this I say for the satisfaction of the people that they may haue a sure ground to rest vpon against al cauils of those that would make thē belieue that the licensed Preachers of the Church of England are no lawful Preachers either because they which make them had not ordination at the first from such as could lawfully giue it which is the cauill of the Papists or because some forsooth misliked ceremonies are vsed in their ordination which is the dotage of the Brownists For admit that Bishops and other Ministers of the Gospell should faile so that there were none to giue orders or that all were so corrupt as that they would not to any that embraced the truth what should there neuer then be any more lawfull Ministers of the Gospell God forbid for so the Lord should be tyed necessarily to outward meanes of sending forth Preachers and if he wanted vnder-meanes his Haruest should be vnprouided of Labourers But the Church of England God be thanked needeth not to flie to this refuge We can and doe proue our Ordination and succession of Bishops Canonically inuested and continuing the ofspring of our inferior Ministery without interruption mauger the barking of lewd Romanists against our Church whose very Popes haue been many of them meere open intruders Secondly for the reformed Sectaries what other then decent and commendable ceremony can their pure wisdoms carp at in our Ordination Againe admit that some errors should creepe into the ordination of Ministers what shall the Ministers bee disabled hereby and become no lawfull Ministers God forbid for thus the maine vertue of such as take orders should depend vpon some outward circumstance making them if it bee right marring them if otherwise and the people that know not the circumstances of euery mans ordination should bee held in doubt whether they be Gods lawfull Ministers and to be heard or not Rom. 10. Wherefore I say that he is a lawfull Preacher that is outwardly called and sent prouided alwaies that hee preach the truth and no heresies which are errors stiffely defended contrary to the plaine euidence of the Scriptures and if he doth preach heresie which thou thinkest may bee so proued by some fa●re fetcht Argument yet this maketh not him to cease from being a lawfull Preacher yea though he maintaineth heresie plainely against the word in a Church where the truth is by the higher powers maintained he is stil a lawfull Preacher vntill that by publike authority he be inhibited And the
necessity and spirituall pouerty by reason of the darknesse of our vnderstandeng weakenesse to resist our enemie want of all good things pouerty and nakednesse and then shall wee haue a long ng affection vnto it indeed gaping after it as the thirstie ground doeth after the raine 2. For diligence in hearing where this preparation is made that will certainely follow for a man shall not neede to bid him that is hungry and in want to hasten to a feast or to come so often as hee may or to apply himselfe to feeding when hee commeth there for hee commeth with such a stomacke as that hee will surely doe so In like manner hee that commeth rightly prepared to heare the Word of GOD will neglect no time when hee may come nor lose his part of that spirituall food when he is there Esay 6.9 He will therefore first apply his heart to vnderstand for to heare and not to vnderstand is to neglect he will not suffer either the bewitching pleasures or inchanting profits of the world to steale away his heart but labour so to see as that he may perceiue so to heare as that he may vnderstand seeing the contrary is a greeuous iudgement of men giuen ouer of the Lord for sinne 2. Hee doth reuerence the Ordinance of GOD being rightly composed in gesture but aboue all inwardly affected in heart for he trembleth at the word he is pricked inwardly at the preaching Esay 66.2 Acts 2. hee expresseth sorrow at the hearing of the grieuousnesse of his sinnes and ioy at the hearing of comforts laughing wanton looks vaine prating and an impudent countenance Ezra 10.1 as most abominable things are farre from him 3. Hee doth perseuere in his attention vnto the end not when hee heareth this new Preacher or that but whosoeuer he be that preacheth the truth not sometime hearkening sometime sleeping not lightly departing when hee thinketh that hee hath heard enough but with due regard continuing to the end alwayes remembring that exhortation Gal. 6.9 Let vs not bee weary of well-doing for in due time wee shall reape if wee faint not Colos 3.16 Lastly for care after the hearing of the Word the good and profitable hearer hath the word dwelling in him plenteously like a good Apprentice to the trade of Christianitie he letteth not passe the precepts of the word so soone as hee hath heard them but doth carefully apply them afterwards Colos 3 1● This care after hearing is first by recounting in the mind from point to point the things which haue bin taught which is like vnto the husbandmans couering of his corne when he hath cast it into the ground or the chewing of the cud after that the beast hath fed J haue hid thy word in my heart Psal 119.11 that I might not sinne against thee saith Dauid and hee that doth not so like an idle husbandman leaueth his seed to the deuouring of the fowles and to the parching sunne as the beast that ch●weth not the cud is vncleane wherefore he that will get most profit by hearing must againe consider the text the sense of the words the notes reasons grounds and illustrations hereof and how for vse euery thing is to bee applied to himselfe Deut. 6. Secondly the good hearer will conferre and talke of that which he hath heard to helpe others children and seruants and neighbours of lesse vnderstanding and to helpe himselfe if his memory be imperfect by conferring with men more able if there be any doubt by repairing to the Preacher and of him seeking resolution For thou shalt talke of this Law saith the Lord to thy children when thou sittest downe and when thou risest vp and when the men of Boerea were doubtfull they are commended for examining the doctrines preached by the Scriptures Acts 17 1● Euen as the wayfaring man hauing receiued directions for the way but in going forward groweth doubtfull hee will aske and inquire againe that he may be the more sure and the more comfortably goe forward so hee that hath heard the word and thereby directions for his pilgrimage shall meet with doubts and for his more assurance must therefore enquire againe Psal 119.36 Thirdly the good hearer prayeth after that he hath heard that the word which hee hath heard may bee effectuall vnto him for his saluation that now he hath learned what is good and acceptable in the sight of God he may haue an hart yeelding vnto it in all things according to that of the Prophet Incline my heart vnto thy Law and not vnto couetousnesse Lastly the good hearer in all things laboureth to doe according to that which hee hath learned according to that of Iames Bee yee doers of the Word and not hearers onely deceiuing your owne selues He doth the Word by belieuing and imbracing by faith the most comfortable promises of the Gospell he doth it by loue and hearty affection towards God and towards man for Gods cause he doth it by obedience framing himselfe according to the rule of this loue he doth it by fighting and striuing against all rebellion he doth it by growing daily more and more like vnto it vntill that hee bee cast anew as it were in the mould of this Word This and all other spiritual graces he grant vnto vs and multiply in vs who is the Author of that holy Word and the end of the same To him bee all glory world without ende Amen FINIS A Prayer to bee vsed before the reading of Bookes of piety or Instruction O God that art the Father of lights enlighten my darkned vnderstanding that I may see into the wonders contained in the Law Dispell in me the darke and misty clouds of ignorance expell the loue of darkenesse and repell the rebellious law of sin Sanctifie my wit that I may be apt to conceiue strengthen my memory that I may be able to retaine and rectifie my will that I may obediently submit my self to thy good will in all things Thou which art the great Master-builder of thine owne house settle me as one of thy liuing stones vpon the right foundation Jesus Christ in whom I may daily grow vp till that all the building coupled together groweth to an holy temple in the Lord. And this I craue in the name of thy deare Sonne my most blessed Sauiour and redeemer Amen A Prayer to bee vsed euery Morning in a priuate Family MOst gracious God and mercifull Father it is by thy good prouidence that wee are brought so safelie through the deadly dangers of another night to see the light of this day to our comfort and much more hath thy goodnesse extended it selfe towards vs in that together with the light naturall the bright beames of thy grace haue shone vpon vs in Iesus Christ in our Election Creation Redemption Sanctification and Glorification We haue nothing to present thy Maiesty withall for this vnspeakable mercy only as is our bounden duty and thy commandement