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A64986 An explicatory catechism: or, An explanation of the assemblies shorter catechism Wherein those principles are enlarged upon especially, which obviate the great and growing errors of Popery; useful for those families that desire to hold fast the form of sound words. Vincent, Thomas, 1634-1678. 1675 (1675) Wing V434; ESTC R220763 119,453 302

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you that A. 1. Because the Will of God as secret is a peculiar Treasure which he hath put in his own power and will keep to himself 2. Because a man may sometimes sin in fulfilling the secret Will of God and be ashamed repenting in dust and ashes that he hath done it 3. Because all Creatures do this Will of God and none ever resisted it Q. Is the revealing of an event which God hath determined or those Actions whereby that event shall be brought to pass the Rule of Mans obedience A. No Q. But are not Gods own positive and ceremonial Laws this Rule of Mans obedience A. No. Q. How prove you that A. 1. Because they were so burdensome a yoke that neither we nor the Jews themselves were ever able to bear them 2. Because they were never pleasing to God irrespectively of themselves neither did he at all ever take delight in these Laws themselves simply considered 3. Because these positive Laws were such by which men should never obtain Eternal Life Q. What Law then is that which is the Rule of Mans obedience A. The Moral Law Q. Why is it so called A. Because it hath a perpetual binding power in all Ages unto the end of the world Q. When was this revealed A. At first Q. How understand you that A. Two waies 1. This Law was at first given to Adam in Innocency God having written it on his heart some small remainders whereof abide yet in mans nature 2. This Law was first revealed by Gods immediate voice after written in Tables of Stone and given to the Church as a perpetual Rule for their obedience Q. 41. Wherein is the Moral Law summarily comprehended A. The Moral Law is summarily comprehended in the ten Commandments Explic. Q What is it for the Moral Law to be summarily comprehended in the ten Commindments A. To have the summ and chief Heads of the Law contained in them Q. 42. What is the summ of the ten Commandments A. The summ of the ten Commandments is to Love the Lord our God with all our Heart and with all our Soul and with all our Mind and with all our Strength and our Neighbour as our selves Explic. Q In how many Tables were the te● Commandments at first written A. In two Tables of Stone Deut. 10. 1 2 4. Q. How many Commandments are comprized under the first Table or first great Commandment A. The so●r first Q How many under the second Table or second great Commandment A. Six Q. Do the Papists well in leaving out the second Commandment and in their dividing the tenth into two A. No Q. What is the comprehensive Duty of all the Commandments written in these two Tables A. Love Rom. 13. 9. For this Thou shalt not commit Adultery Thou shalt not Kill Thou shalt not Steal Thou shalt not bear false Witness Thou shalt not Covet And if there be any other Commandment it is briefly comprehended in this saying Namely Thou shalt Love thy Neighbour as thy self The like may be said of all the Commandments of the first Table Q What is the summ of the first Table of the Law A. To love the Lord our God with all our Heart and with all our Soul and with all our Mind and with all our Strength Q. What mean you by the word Summ A. A general or chief Head which comprehends other particulars in it Ibid. Rom. 13. 8. Q. What is it to love the Lord our God with all our Heart c A. It doth imply the supremacy ardency and activity of our Love whereby we chuse the Lord cleave to him and delight in him as our chief Good and employ all our faculties and powers in his service in obedience to him out of Love Q. What is the summ of the second Table of the Law A. To love our Neighbour as our selves Q Who is our Neighbour A. Every man Luk. 10. 29 38. Q. What is it to love our Neighbour as our selves A. To love him with the same truth and constancy of Love as we do our selves Q. But are we not bound to love our Neighbour with the same Degree of Love as we do our selves A. No. Q. 43. What is the Preface to the ten Commandments A. The Preface to the ten Commandments is in these words I am the Lord thy God which have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the house of Bondage Q. 44. What doth the Preface to the ten Commandments teach us A. The Preface to the ten Commandments teacheth us that because God is the Lord and our God and Redeemer therefore we are bound to keep all his Commandments Explic. Q. How many reasons or arguments are there in the Preface to oblige and perswade us to keep all Gods Commandments A. Two 1. God is the Lord. I am the Lord. 2. God is our God and Redeemer I am the Lord thy God which have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the house of Bondage Q. How are we bound and obliged to keep Gods Commandments as he is the Lord A. As he is the Lord he is our Creator and supream Soveraign and we owe him obedience as we are his Creatures and Subjects Q. You say you owe God obedience as you are his Creatures and Subjects what mean you thereby A. We mean that once we were not were made and are preserved by God or that we derived our Being from an● hold it of God and that we are und●● the unlimited and absolute Dominio● and Soveraignty of God and therefor● ought to serve and glorifie God in 〈◊〉 Body and in our Spirit which 〈◊〉 Gods and to be in perfect subjection 〈◊〉 the Laws of Heaven Q. How are we bound and obliged 〈◊〉 keep Gods Commandments as he is our God and Redeemer A. As our God and Redeemer our Father and Benefactor he hath brought us into the special relation of Children to himself and hath entred into Covenan●●● with us to bring us out of spiritual Egypt and Bondage under sin as he brought his people of old out of the earthly Egypt and the Bondage of men These two Rules must be learn'd for the understanding of the Commandments Rule 1. That when any sin is forbidden the contrary Duty is required and when any Duty is required the contrary sin is forbidden Rule 2. That where any sin is forbidden all the Kinds and Degrees of it temptations and incentments to it are likewise forbidden and when any Duty is required all the kinds and the highest perfection of it together with all the means and helps to it are also required Q. 45. What is the first Commandment A. The first Commandment is Thou shalt have no other Gods before me Q. 46. What is required in the first Commandment A. The first Commandment requireth us to know and acknowledge God to be the only true God and our God and to worship and glorifie him accordingly Explic. Q Is
unnecessary hazzard of our eternal Salvation Q. How do we by an implicite Faith in the Church of Rome refuse our own mercies A. Because without personal knowledge denied us by that corrupt Church which yet God hath given us for this very end to make the true Religion judicially our own all the Ordinances of God viz. our Praying Singing Reading and Hearing the Word of God Catechizing Meditating holy Conferences and receiving the Sacraments will be altogether unprofitable to us and in vai● Q. And how do we hazzard our eternal Salvation by it A. Because we do hereby follow the pernicious waies of that Adulterated Church which holds such doctrines that do very much endanger it Q. What other reason have you to prove that this blind implicite Faith is not a justifying and saving Faith A. 2. Because it secludes that knowledge which is a necessary ingredient incorporate into the very nature and essence of true saving Faith Isa. 53. 11. Ioh. 17. 3. 1 Ioh. 5. 20. Acts 26 18. Rom. 10. 9. 2 Tim. 1. 12. 1 Pet. 3. 15. Q. 3. Is this justifying saving Faith a keeping of the Commandments of God or obedience to his Laws as Socinians affirm A. No. 1. Because obedience is the fruit and effect of Faith 2. Because union with Christ Justification and Adoption are the fruits of Faith and not of works or obedience Q. 4. Is this saving justifying Faith a full perswasion of the heart or an assurance that our sins are pardoned and that our souls shall be saved A. No because we must be justified and pardoned before we can believe that we are justified and pardoned else we should believe a Lie Q. What then is this true saving Faith A. It is our hearty accepting receiving and resting upon Christ alone for Salvation as he is offered to us in the Gospel Q. Is Christ offered to us in the Gospel as our Prophet Priest and King A. Yes Isa. 33. 22. Q And is it not true Faith except we take Christ as a Prophet to be guided as a King to be ruled and as a Priest to be saved by him alone A. No. Acts 3. 22. Iohn 14 26. and 16. 14 Heb. 7. 21 c. Acts 2. 36. 1 Tim. 6. 14 15. Mat. 2. 2. Iohn 1. 49. Zach. 9. 9. Luke 19. 37 38. Q. 87. What is Repentance unto life A Repentance u●to life is a saving grace whereby a sinner out of a true sense of his sin and apprehension of the mercy of God in Christ doth with grief and hatred of his sin turn from it unto God with full purpose of and endeavour after new obedience Explic. Q. What Repentance is here descri●ed A. Repentance unto life Q. Why is it so called A. Because it brings the person in whom it is to Eternal Life Q. Why is it called a saving grace A. For the same reason viz. because where Repentance is truly wrought it brings the person in whom it is unto Salvation Q. What is that which is wrought in sinners as a preparation to Repentance A. A true sense of sin Q. What mean you by that A. Such a sight of sin as deeply affects our hearts with godly sorrow for it Q. What is the main motive to Repentance A. The apprehension of Gods mercy in Christ Q. Can there be no true Repentance without conviction a true sight and discovery of sin A. No Q. Will it be Despair and not Repentance except together with the sight of sin there be an apprehension at least of a possibility of mercy A. Yes 2 Cor. 7. 10. Mat. 27. 4. 5. Q. In and through whom doth the penitent sinner apprehend Gods mercy A. In and through Christ only Q. Doth true Repentance chiefly consist in turning from sin to God A. Yes Q. How doth the repenting sinner turn from sin A. With an holy indignation against it and with that grief and hatred of it so as never more to return to it Q. And how doth he turn to God A. With full purpose of and endeavour after new obedience Acts 11. 23. 1 Kings 8. 47 48. 2 Kings 23. 3. Rom. 6. 4. 2 Cor. 5. 17. Ephes. 4. 23 24. Psa. 119. 6 20. Q. What do you mean by new obedience A. The penitent sinners denying ungodliness and worldly lusts and his living soberly righteously and godly in this present world Q. Is not the confessing sins to God alone and the forsaking them sufficient without auricular confession A. Yes Prov. 28. 13. Q. When is the confessing our faults one to another necessary A. 1. When our offences are such as are not only against God but also against our Neighbours then we must confess our faults to them desire peace and make them satisfaction before we can reasonably expect Gods acceptance of our persons and services 2. When we are not well able to judge of our selves to discern our own guilts and to take the dimensions of our faults aright labouring under the horrour agony and disquiet of Conscience then it is necessary to go to some discreet and learned Minister to confess our faults and to open our griefs to him that we may receive such spiritual counsel advice and comfort as our Consciences may be relieved and that by the Ministry of Gods Word we may receive comfort and the benefit of Absolution to the quieting of our Consciences and avoiding of all scruple of doubtfulness Q But what do you think of the Auricular Confession of sin according to the Doctrine of the Papists who say that it is necessary for every Christian to search and examine with greatest diligence what his sins have been and that he is bound upon pain of Damnation to confess all his mortal sins unto a Priest even his most secret sins in heart and thought with all the considerable circumstances of them Is not this a cursed adding to the Word of God and that in matters necessary to Salvation A. Yes Q And is not this the lading the people with ourdens grievous to be born which the Priests themselves touch not with one of their fingers A. Yes Q. May not an Hypocrite and a graceless 〈◊〉 thus confess his sins to the Priest A. Yes Q. And can this confession then be so necessary a part of true Repentance which a man may do that never unfeignedly repented A. No. Q 88. What are the outward means whereby Christ communicateth to us the benefits of Redemption A. The outward and ordinary means whereby Christ communicateth to us the benefits of Redemption are his Ordinances especially the Word Sacraments and Prayer all which are effectual to the Elect for Salvation Explic. Q. Are Christs Ordinances the means whereby he communicates to us the benefits of Redemption A. Yes Q. What do you mean by Christs Ordinances A. The means and waies of worship ordained by him Q. What are his special Ordinances whereby he communicates to us his benefits A. The Word
the mouth of the rest prayeth though in a Form of his own present extemporary effusion yet at that time all others present are limited to his conceptions and pray in as stinted a Form as if what the Minister prays were read out of a Book or dictated by his Memory Q. But how do you prove it lawful to use a Set as that signifies a prescribed Form of Prayer A. It is apparent 1. By Christs prescribing one which he would not sure have done if it had not been lawful to have used it being prescribed and so also 2. By the other examples mentioned which are most of them prescriptions 3. By the no Objection against the use of them For sure if it be lawful to use them it is lawful to prescribe them at some time and for some uses for that a thing in it self acknowledged and proved to be lawful should by being commanded by lawful Authority become unlawful is very unreasonable unless lawful Magistrates be the only unlawful things and at other times to use other liberty is not forbidden and so hereby there is not any invasion or Tyranny used upon our Christian liberty 4. By the great benefit that accrues to the Congregation in having discreet well formed Prayers and so not subject to the tem●rity and impertinences of the sudden effusions and the same still in constant use and so not strange or new to them but such as in which they may with understanding go along with the Minister and by the help of their Memory the most ignorant may carry them away for his private use and generally those that want such helps are by this means afforded them And lastly by the consideration of this one special farther advantage of them viz. that by means of prescribed Liturgies the Unity of Faith and Charity is much preserved Q Well then supposing these Set Forms to be lawful in themselves and lawful to be prescribed whether may any other be used but such A. Yea doubtless For the Church being obeyed in the observance of the prescribed Liturgy in publick permits sometimes and upon special incidental occasions prescribes other Forms in the publick Congregation so it be done prudently and piously and reverently and to Edification and so also in the Family or in visitation of the sick if the particular condition of one or other do require it and in private in the Closet it is not supposed by the Church of England but that every one may ask his own wants in what form of words he shall think fit which that he may do fitly and reverently it will not be amiss for him to acquaint himself with the several addresses to God which the Book of Psalms and other parts of holy Writ and all other helps of devotion will afford him either to use as he finds them fit for the present purpose or by those patterns to direct and prepare himself to do the like Q 100. What doth the Preface of the Lords Prayer teach us A. The Preface of the Lords Prayer which is Our Father which art in Heaven teacheth us to draw near to God with holy reverence and confidence as Children to a Father able and ready to help us and that we should pray with and for others Explic. Q. How many parts are there in the Lords Prayer A. Three the Preface the Petitions and the Conclusion Q. Which is the Preface of the Lords Prayer A. Our Father which art in Heaven Q. How must we draw near to God in Prayer A. As Children to a Father Q. H●w is that A. With reverence and confidence Q. Must we come to God with all holy reverence and confidence because he is our heavenly Father A. Yes Q. What encouragement have we so to do A. Because he is able and ready to help us as a Father his Children Q. In what words are his readiness and ability implied A. His readiness in these words Our Father his ability in these which art in Heaven Q. Why do you say Our Father and not my Father A. Because we ought not only to pray by our selves and for our selves but with and for others Q. Must we pray for all A. Yes excepting those that have sinned the sin unto death Q. Must we pray for our enemies A. Yes Q. Whom must we pray for especially A. For the Church of God Q. And whom must we pray for more particularly A. For Magistrates and Ministers 1 Tim. 2. 1. 2 Thes. 3. 1. Heb. 13. 18. Col. 4. 3. Ephes. 6. 18 19. Q. May we not pray for those who are yet unborn A. Yes Q. But may we pray for those that are dead and departed out of this life A. No. Q. Why so A. 1. Because we find not any command or example in the Scripture that Prayers are to be made for souls departed but have the example of David that man after Gods own heart against it 2. The souls of the righteous in Heaven stand in no need of our Prayers and the souls of the wicked in Hell can receive no good by them or by the pretended sacrifice of the Mass. Q. But where are those souls pretended to be that are thought by the Papists to be profited by their Prayers and their sacrifice of the Mass A. In Purgatory Q. If then there be no Purgatory do not the Papists themselves grant it us that there are no Prayers to be made for the Dead A. Yes Q. What souls do the Papists tell us must go to Purgatory A. They tell us that the souls of the impenitent do not go to Purgatory but to Hell nor the souls of all Believers but of some only viz. of those that did not fully satisfie for their sins in this life Q. What kind of place do they imagine Purgatory to be A. A place of great pain where the fore-mentioned souls are tormented till they satisfie Gods Justice and then being purged fully from sin they are to be received up into Heaven Q. What difference do they make betwixt Hell and Purgatory A. They say in Purgatory the fore-mentioned souls suffer the vengeance of a temporary fire but in Hell impenitent Unbelievers suffer the vengeance of eternal fire Q The Papists profess to believe with us That the blood of Iesus Christ purgeth and cleanseth us from all our sins Why then have they invent●d the fire of Purgatory If all sins are washed away and purged by the blood of Christ what then remains to be purged in this imaginary fire A. They mock the world in calling it Purgatory for according to the Romish Doctrine it serves not to purge but to punish souls and to satisfie Gods Justice so that it is not a purging but a pain and a punishment Q But can the sufferings of the fore-mentioned Believers in Purgatory satisfie Gods offended Iustice so that by the help of the Prayers of the living and the sacrifice of the Mass they shall be delivered thence and accounted worthy to be
thing else nor the sense of them neither by any Creed farther than it contains it self within the very terms verbal or real of the holy Scriptures themselves But as the Creed contains it self within such terms we are to hold it fast as a form of sound words And as by the ten Commandments we may discern what are the words of God and what are the Commandment of men and by the Lords Prayer what Petitions we are to put up to God and what Prayers we are to say Amen to so by the Creed we may know what doctrines are of God and what of men And let what will be pretended if any man teach otherwise and consent not to these wholesom words he is proud knowing nothing he is of a corrupt mind and r●probate concerning the Faith I shall conclude this Head in the words of judicious Mr. Calvin Expertus pridem sum quidem saepius quicunque de verbis pertinacius litigant fovere occultum virus ut magis expediat eos ultro prov●care quàm in eorum gratiam obscurius loqui A●d the liberty of not using the very words of Scripture on some occasions hath ever been accounted lawful in the Church of Christ and is at some times very necessary for the obviating of growing Heresies Where all these Helps are either wanting or do not avail us as to some particulars and single clauses not so necessary to be known The Hebrew and Greek Idiotisms elegancies or proprieties may possibly guide us to the true and genuine sense and interpretation 3. Subsequent Rules 1. We must pray again Orationi lectio lectioni succedat Oratio We must pray and read read and pray again 2. We must medi●a●e upon the Scriptures we have read and understood and that sometimes will lead us into the true meaning of those which in our course of reading we understand not For Scripture will give light to Scripture 3. We must both before and after our reading the holy Scriptures get the guidance of Gods holy Spirit Methinks I hear God saying to each of you that are much in reading the ●o●y ●criptures Vnderstand you what you read And you again saying to God How can we except thy holy Spirit guide us Ask my beloved in our Lord Iesus Christ and it shall be given Luk. 11. 9 13. Suffer the word of Exhortation You that are much in reading the holy Scriptures content not your selves with bare reading but in the use of all attainable means endeavour to understand what you read of them To perswade hereunto take these two Motives 1. The bare reading of the holy Scriptures will be unprofitable to you It will be to you as he that speaketh in an unknown tongue whom none of you understandeth or as he that speaketh into the air whose speech is unfruitful Indeed the Scripture is the Water of life but to you the fountain is sealed It is as the Garden of the Lord But behold Cherubims and a flaming Sword which turneth every way to keep the way of the Tree of Life You are kept out of this Garden while you are kept ignorant of the true sense and meaning of the Scripture which is as the Soul and Life of it It is a Vision but the Vision becometh to you as the words of a Book that is Sealed which men deliver to one that is learned saying Read this I pray thee and he saith I cannot for it is Sealed By what hath in brief been said you see that the bare unintelligent reading of the holy Scriptures themselves is in this like a a Graven Image which we are sure is profitable for nothing 2. But contrariwise if you understand what you read the Scripture of all writings will be the most profi●able unto you 2 Tim. 3. 16. 'T is by way of eminency called The Scripture as the Original first writing as the hand-writing of God It is in Genere materiae sufficient to save our souls It is as that Tree mentioned Rev. 22. 2. which bare twelve manner and yielded her fruit every moneth and the leaves of the Tree were for the healing of the Nation● There is more weight in one Sentence of Scripture than in all Orations Declamations Poets Satyrs and Philosophick invectives It was a wise observation of Scaliger that some passages in Plato are wiser than their Authour and many excellent conceits are recollected from Homer and Aristotle they never dreamed of But in the Word of God it is quite contrary for after all the recollections that have been made by the most acute Sages of the world we must say with the Queen of Sheba in another case the one half hath not been told us I shall therefore conclude this Exhortation and Discourse in the words of holy and learned Baxter As you love your Comfort your Faith your Hope your Safety your Innocency your Souls your Christ your Everlasting Rest Love Reverence Read Search Study Obey and stick close to the Scriptures FINIS 2 Cor. 5. 10 Psal. 51. 1 5 Mat. 21. 15. Levit. 14. 41 c. Gen. 17. Gen. 22 a Hos. 10. 1. Isa. 5. 2. b Ps. 4. 6 7. 1 Joh. 2. 15 16. c Prov. 16. 4. Rom. 11. 36. d 1 Cor. 10. 31. e Psa. 73. 24 25 26. f 1 Joh. 1. 3. g Ps. 50. 23. and 25. 14. h 1 Cor. 13. 12. Luk. 13. 28. i 1 Thes. 4. 11 12. 1 Tim. 5. 8. Prov. 30. 8. Ps. 144. 15. Prov. 3. 8. Deu. 12. 19. and 14. 27 29. with Mal. 3. 8. k Joh. 11. 4. Ps. 144. 15. l Deut. 30. 19 20. Isa. 55. 3. with Joh. 17. 3. m Psal. 119. 16 17. Neh. 8. 8. 2 Tim. 4. 2. Act. 11. 19. 2 Pet. 1. 18 19. and 1. 1. 25. Mat. 7. 13. Act 13. 44. 1 Joh. 1. 3. n Gal. 6. 16. o Eph. 2. 20. p 2 Tim. 3. 15. q Gen. 3. 15. and 12. 3. and 49. 10. Dan. 9. 24. r 2 Kings 13. 2. with 23 16. Isa. 45. 1. Jer. 25. 12. and 29. 10. with Ezr. 1. s 1 Per. 1. 12. t 1 Cor. 2. 7 10. Eph. 3. 4 5. Col. 1. 25 26. u Deut. 4. 5 6 7 8. a Rom. 15. 18 19. 1 Cor. 14. 18 22. Acts 2. 42 43. and 4. 30 33. and 5. 12 14. and 6. 7 8. and 7. 36 37 38. and 8. 6 12 13 14 and 13. 11 12. and 14. 3. and 15. 12 and 19. 10 11. Mark 16. 17 18 20. with Heb. 2. 3 4. b Act. 2. 41. and 4. 4. with Matth. 28. 19 20. c Rom. 1. 21. d Heb. 11. 3. Psal. 19. 1 7. and 73 2 3 12 18. and 36. 5 6. e Psal. 119. 98. 99 100. Act. 24. 14. f Joh. 13. 13. Matth. 23. 9 10. g Jam. 4. 12. h Rev. 22. 18 19. i Psal. 19. 7. Joh. 5. 39. with 17. 3. 17. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16 17. Psal. 119. 96 Joh. 20 31. k Joh. 4. 39 41 42. l 2 Tim. 1. 13. m Luke 17. 10. n Acts 20. 27. and 24. 14.