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A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

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are providing our selves to defendin points of grand concernment and as a preliminary discourse to the following truths we shall preface upon that Subject Every Heretick stands confident in his errour and each seducer pleads for a belief of his Doctrine by imposing the name Church upon those whom they have so seduced and made Proselytes to their Hereticall Tenets by which means the glorious Fabtick of the Catholick Church is like a lodge in a Garden of Cucumbers sleighted and disesteemed of many we shall stand therefore a short season upon this holy ground and take a true survey of her large dimensions Da Domine perficere qui dedist● velle For her height or Altitude by the Scripture I see that she is higher then the Heavens her Head who is above all principalities and pow●●s is Christ the Lord. Ephes. 5.23 He is at Gods Right hand and in her affections she is at the same place Col. 3.2 Behold see you her not going up to heaven like Pillars of smo●k leaving the Wildernesse of this World Can. 3.6 Her hasty departure occasion'd betwixt Love and fear longing to be with her beloved and fearing to be devoured by faithlesse and unreasonable men who like Foxes have encompassed her about purposing to tear her in pieces from whom that she may be delivered she assumes the wings of a great Eagle and maketh her nest above the stars For her breadth or Latitude by my Creed I see her of an infinite and inconceiveable extension I believe that the Church is catholick she is as broad as the World as old as the Creation her age you may suppose to be attended with weaknesse but it is not the last visit that Christ her Husband made her renewed her strength like an Eagle so that shee walks and is not weary she runs yet is not faint holds pace with eternity it self Perceive you not Christ the everlasting Son of the father to be the corner stone of this glorious building 1 Pet. 2.6 And untill he cease being it shall never know dilapidations By the same Perspective or Fiduciary Optick Nerve I see her of a comely and beautifull proportion and holy uniformity I believe that the Catholick Church is holy The Kings Daughter is glorious within Christ her Spouse is ravished with the beauty of her eyes Cant. 4 9. Therefore she shall ever be Reverenced in mine He whose eyes are Ten Thousand times brighter then the Sun hath shined upon her garments of wrought Gold and protests that there is no spot in her Cant. 4.7 Let me therefore never cast a blot upon her He that is her Husband hath made her so Ephes. 5.27 Therefore let me that am her son ever hold her so but for the clearer understanding of this matter we shall 1. See the Nature of the Church in Generall 2. Resolve some questions concerning her The nature of the Church of Christ by a due weighing of this description through faith and Scripture may be fully manifested and known It is First The Whole Society or Company of Beleevers 2. Elected and appointed by Gods Eternall decree 3. Called by the Word of the LORD 4. From amongst the rest of Mankind 5. For the bringing of glory to his own Name and giving unto them Eternal lfie In this Description take notice 1. Of the Members of the Church they are the whole Society or Company of Believers in what age soever they lived in what place soever they aboad in however dispersed where everscattered whether far or near old young male female High and Low Rich and Poor All that ever were and all that ever shal be all that ever lived upon the Earth with all that ever dyed in the Womb from Adam the first man that ever was known with and until the last man that shal ever be born makes up this Temple of God and all of them are but severall Members of that body whereof the Lord Jesus is the head 1 Cor. 1.2 Rom. 12.5 2. Of the Causes of the Church and they are either 1. The efficient cause Gods Eternal decree There are none made members of the Church by chance nor by their own care and industry who by taking thought can adde one Cubit to his Stature and he is high with a witnesse who hath his head above the clouds None shall sit in the Kingdome of God but they for whom it is prepared of the Father Matth. 20.23 And it is prepared for them before the Foundation of the World God by his decree must separate Believers from among men or faith shall never purifie the hearts of men and Election must precede Vocation Gal. 1.15 The least blossome of true holinesse will never grow nor never was seen to bloom upon that stem whose root was not Predestination Ephes. 1.4 5. 2. The Instrumentall cause which is their Call by the Word of the Lord this is the means used for the bringing of many Sons and Daughters into glory It is the charge of Almighty God to the Apostles to hear his Son Iohn 17.5 It is the charge of the Son that the Apostles preach to the World Matthew 28.18 19. And by the benediction of the Spirit by that there is added to the Church dayly such as shal be saved Acts 2.47 None shall be glorified but such as are called with a holy calling we must hear the joyfull sound of his Word before we can see the glory of his countenance for whom he glorifieth he justifieth and whom he justifieth them he also calls Rom 8.30 This Call is so necessary to the Churches being that the Greek Word for Church comes from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from their being called and indeed none shall be crowned with the Lamb but such as fight with him and none shall fight under him but such as are called chosen and faithfull Revel 17.14 We have those that pretend a call in this generation but we have cause to suspect it is not by the word of the Lord for if so they would be holy without blame before him in love Ephesians 1.4 They would be full of love were they full of the Spirit and of joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith Galathians 5.22 Bitternesse wrath anger clamor and evill speaking should be far from them with all malice Ephesians 1.31 The word of Christ we are to look after if we seek to obtain glory for that leads unto it Revelations 22.7 And we are to entertain it in our hearts if we would have that to shine upon our heads the same Doctrine is taught us by the Church of England Art 17. Yet we must understand this calling of or by the word to be onely necessary First when God is pleased to give the word Secondly to those persons who are of years wit or discretion to understand the word or Thirdly where God hath given the naturall meanes for the hearing or reading of his word 3. The formal cause remotely described Separated from amongst the rest of mankind by
Either 1. Strictly for those Precepts Sayings Sermons Exhortations that he gave made left behind in the World when he was visibly dwelling among men in the shape and form of a Servant and whosoever lets these words dwell in them they shall be like men dwelling upon a Rock the water may come about them but it shal never hurt them they may come about their feet but never swell up to the head the wind may blow but not a hair of his head fall to the Earth Mat. 7.27 2. Largely for all the Words Sayings Prophesies Sermons that were spoken by all whom he commissioned to preach after for the whole Doctrine of the Old and new Testament rejecting nothing nor turning out of doors of the great and capacious building of our souls no Word no Scripture since we can see the Image of Christ upon them all we know that Orally and Vocally or Verbally Christ made no Psalm yet here they are put down as the Words of Christ for they were truly Prophetically and spiritually made by him they are a part of that holy Book called the Word of Christ not excluding the other persons but including for it hath various titles according to the purpose and pleasure of the holy Ghost It is the VVord of God Ephes. 6.17 It is the VVord of the Lord 2. Thes. 2.3.1 It is the VVord of Life Phil. 2.16 and here it is the VVord of Christ. In those other places the Son is not excluded quod necessario subintelligitur non deest and here the Father with the Spirit are concluded That the whole body of the Doctrine of the Scriptures and what ever is contained therein may be called the word of Christ though Christ might not be yet come in the flesh may be thus demonstrated 1. They were all uttered and spoken by his spirit or they were written by that spirit that came from him Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy ghost 2. Pet. 1. ult Now the Holy ghost is sent by the Father in his Sons name Ioh. 14.26 and the Son sends the Holy ghost again from the Father Ioh. 15.26 It was this Spirit that put words in the mouth and mind of Noah Abraham Isaac Iacob David Solomon Iehosophat Iob Daniel Ieremiah VVhat shall I say the time would fail to speak of Gideon Barack Sampson Peter Paul and Iames the Lords Brother all which were acted by one and the same spirit which proceedeth from the Father and the Son prompting them and dictating to them the things Councels prophesies that are recorded in the Oracles of God 2. They did all of them hold him out to the VVorld or to the Sons of men speak of him Abraham saw his day Iohn 8.56 Moses wrote of him Ioh. 5.46 Isaiah saw him born of a Virgin Isa. 7.14 and told the VVorld of it Isa. 9.6 Ieremiah saw the children of Bethlem slain for him Ier. 31.15 He was seen from the top Tower of divine speculation giving eyes to the blind and ears to the deaf Isa. 35.5 He was sold for thirty pieces of silver Zacch 11.13 he was seen scourged mocked and crucified Isai. 53.4 5. he was seen to rise from the dead the third day Hos. 13. 14. Psal. 16.10 Ion. 1.17 he was seen to intercede at the right hand of God Dan. 9.17 he was seen coming in the clouds to judge his people Iude 14. his Birth his Reign his Nature his Suffering the cause of his Suffering the profits of his sufferings the height of his Power the extension of his Kingdom was made known to the world to Simeon before he embraced him else he would not nay could not have beheld him as the Lords Salvation Luk. 2.30 that is he through whom God appointed salvation to come by Christ himself commanded the Jews to search the Scriptures Ioh. 5.39 as if he had said If you do not find by the Scriptures the properties acts signs tokens of the true Messias spoken of by the Prophets to agree with and in me then believe me not They speak so fully and so largely of him of his Kingdome strength and power that almost it is nothing else but the word of Christ as if he himself were speaking of himself the things concerning himself Every Prophet in his turn prophesied and spake of him untill Iohn and he pointed him with his finger saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 behold the Lamb of God they held him out unto the World in Prophesies and Types the Baptist held him forth to the World in flesh and bones yet fleshand blood revealed it not to him neither but the spirit which he sent before to restifie of those things that should come to pass and that they might be brought by those sayings to believe on the Son of man he brought indeed glad tidings vere magnum id est majus quom humana capit intelligentiam that said To you is born this day a Saviour which is Christ the Lord. Gloria in excelsis he plainer that said Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the World 3. They were all of them ratified and fulfilled of him confirmed and established by him Not a Iota or Title that was foretold of him but was to the height accomplished of him ut impleretur that it might fulfilled which was spoken in the Scriptures is a usual phrase with the Evangelists As Ionas was three days and three nights in the Whales belly so was the Son of man in the bowels of the earth As the Serpent was lifted up that the Israelites beholding it might be cured of those wounds the fiery Serpents had given them so must the Son of man be lifted up on the Cross that whoso beholds him might be saved from the stings of that old Serpent called the Devill and Sathan Revel 12.9 He is the true Melchizedec who meets the faithfull returning from the slaughter of their sins and comforts them with bread and wine and blesseth them yea and they shal be blessed There was one Text and it seems but a mean one yet he wil not dye nay rather he cannot dye until it be fulfilled for at the last gasp he cryes out Ioh. 19.28 I thirst Quodnam Genus Sermonis he that could endure mockings scourges buffettings nay nailing to the Cross cast out of the land of the living and near to be made free among the dead cannot he endure a little thirst This thirst it seems is more then naturall that death it self cannot quench he is a thirst and Heaven and earth shall perish before he drink not those hands feet that in this his condition we would think should rather smite him spurn at him must be imployed to fetch reach him drink Ut impleretur all this was done that it might be fulfilled which was spoken in that Scripture Psal. 69.21 In my thirst they gave mee Vinegar to drink which when he had done then Consummatum est all was finished if it had not been the truth
may answer all Satans temptations and put to silence all his fleshy Emissaries SECTION V. LEt the Word of Christ dwell richly in you in all wisedome c. Many there be that are often upon the search of the mind of God and studious to find out his meaning in the dark and hidden mysteries of prophesies and Revelations and in their thoughts draw from them unlearned and foolish Questions which do gender strifes 2 Tim. 2.3 forgetting or neglecting the words of faith or good doctrine 1 Tim. 4.7 bu● this is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all wisedome then dwels it twice wisely 1. When those truths are entertained that have a more proper tendency to the bringing of the soul to the perfect obedience of the Law of Christ how the grand duties of mortification shall be performed and what leads unto it how the Sabbath ought to be kept how those talents or gifts that God hath given them are to be improved will profit a man more then the knowledge of the time or fall of Antichrist and to know which way to appear before Christ without spot or wrinckle will conduce more to the souls happinesse then to study the day or year of the Son of mans coming down to judgement 2. When those truths are studied and received that are in their own nature necessary for a mans salvation Without holynesse no man shall see the Lord Heb 13.14 For a man therefore to discover to himself by the Scripture what holinesse is how to procure it if he want it preserve it if it be enjoyed will breed more unspeakable comfort then to know by the Scriptures What shall this man do 3. When those truths are most known that are for the more magnifying and gloryfying of God among and in the sight of the Sons of men to know how to maintain good works Tit. 3.8 and to let our light shine before others will bring more glory to God then to study what work God was doing before he made the World or if he will make another when this is finished A clear understanding of these truths and store of these laid up in the Garner of the soul will make a man rich in all good works and wise unto salvation SECT VI. LEt the Word of Christ dwell richly in you in all Wisedome teaching and admonishing one another c. We are not born altogether for our selves when men by faith as living stones are united to the body of the Church others are to be held fastned and preserved by them we ought to behold and consider one another Phil. 2.4 We ought to look on the things of others there is a publick teaching proper to the Gospel Ministry and there is a private Teaching common to the holy Priesthood Come Children hearken unto me and I will teach you the fear of the Lord is a Saints Dialect Psal. 34.11 Teaching according to some is instruction in matters of faith not done because not known and admonition hath reference to matter of fact known but not done of both these at large afterward we must speak for the present we may know that these duties are mutuall Teaching and admonishing one another he that now teacheth must by and by be a hearer and he that admonisheth this day must not be offended if he be reproved by his Brother to morrow SECTION VII LEt the Word of Christ dwel richly in you in all wisedome teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms Hymns and spirituall Songs c. There are some that will rise early to follow after Strong-drink these wil hollow and roar over their Cups they will make a gracelesse as well as an unseemly noise and these by singing or rather howling expresse their delight in the Acts of drunkenness Our Apostle would have these believers to expresse their joy in spirituall singing for their Christian Conferences How these three differ cannot be easily determined since there are variety of judgements equally probable or if they do differ at all is by many questioned It shall be left to the choice of the Reader by laying before him two or three of the chief Opinions 1. Some by Psalms understand those Songs or Psalms of David that were sung in the Temple and plaid upon by Instruments as those Psalms that were played upon the Organs Lute Harps Cymballs or any other Instruments and Hymns and Songs to be such as were only by voyce sung in the Jewish Temple or in private houses an instance of the first we have Ezra 3.10 of the other Mat. 26.30 2. Others by Psalms understand the whole Book of Psalmes whereof David was the principal if not the only Author wherein we have an Epitome and an abridgement of the whole Word of God By Hymns they understand those Songs that were penned by Moses Deborah Hezekiah wherein properly the praises of God are contained as of his power mercy greatnesse or in a word any song in Scripture whereof David was not the Author but other holy men By Songs they understand any Godly Religious Song used or composed by good men which though not proceeding from the infallible Spirit of God yet might advance godlinesse in the hearts of the pious users of them such as at this day is our Lamentation of a sinner or the like 3. Others there are who understand these three to signifie all one and the self-fame thing viz. the Psalms of David Hymns and Spirituall songs being only a variation of the phrase and holding out those Songs that that sweet Psalmist of Israel did compose for the benefit of that Church over which God had made him a Feeder or a Keeper where of some are Eucharistical spending themselves in praises some Penitential washing themselves in tears and some Petionary The Hebrews give generally those names and that promiscuously to the whole book of Psalmes as it is Composed in our Bibles But the Apostle is careful that the Psalm Hymn or Song be wel tuned he would have them sing with grace within their hearts he would not have them to have any inclination to pride when they sing Lord I am not pusst up in mind When Mary sung her soul did magnifie the Lord. It is known that the Heathens in their meetings sang and did sing Songs of praises to their Gods and Goddesses for their supposed goodnesse and greatnesse Here Christians are exhorted to sing but not to such we ought to sing but it 's with Grace in our hearts to the Lord Sursum Corda to the Lord let us lift them up He gives a particular direction in this place touching singing of Psalms in a more especiall manner then of other duties but we are to know 1. That he restrains not all Scripture to Psalms for there are Precepts Histories Prophesies Epistles in holy Writ which must be entertained as wel as Psalms Nor 2. That he would have other parts of Scripture put from their true and proper inheritance which in all ages they have had as to be looked upon
content he takes in men by his hatred a detesta●●on of things done by his feet is signified the power strength speed or presence of God by his back parts an imperfect Image of his glory c. these things being in Scripture in a Metaphorical way to help our infirmities Quest. 3. Whether there be but one God 1. That there is but one God the Scripture in no point is more clear For instance Thus saith the Lord the King of Israel and his Redeemer the Lord of Hosts I am the first and I am the last and besides me there is no God Isai. 44.6 And I am the Lord and oheré is none else there is no God besides me Isai. 45.5 so Deut. 32.39 1 Cor. 8.4 5 6. Deut. 6.4 2. There can be but one Omnipotent Omnipotency is to have all power might and strength there is power and there is Omnipotency Power may do much but Omnipotency can do all power may be suppressed by a greater power but Omnipotency knows no opposition It hath no difficulties nor Lets it works freely and perfectly without co-workers or Materialls if at any time it uses any it at no time needs either Gen. 17.1 I am God Almighty therefore there can be no other God but he For suppose another there must follow a Contest who should be most worshipped most feared most magnified one must yield to the other which denotes impotency which is a denying of a deity 3. There can be but one Infinite To be Infinite is to be fully constantly in all places It is to be without bounds to be unmeasurable to exceed reason or capacity it hath respect to time place power wisdome Justice mercy God is infinite in time being Eternall Infinite in place filling Heaven and Earth in power he do all things in wisdome he knows all things past present and to come In Justice who can dwell with everlasting burnings in mercy for the Righteous go into life Eternal Do not I fill Heaven and Earth saith the Lord. Jer. 23.24 There is therefore no place no time left for another God Suppose one you must at the same instant give him a Vacuum to Reign in which to affirm would but argue emptinesse of Wisdome and shallowness of understanding 4. There can be but one recipient We are commanded to love God with all our strength soul and mind Deut. 6.4 5. there is no part of our love service fear worship to be given to any other then one therefore there is but one 5. Therre can be but one Efficient There are many things in the World depending upon each other as the lincks of a chains which if we measure and count we shal come to the first which is the preserver of all the greatest number hath it's Original from a Unite Trace every Creature in it's steps upward and we shall fall upon one that is the Original of all He is before all things and by him all things consist Col. 1.17 To suppose another God were to suppose a being without acting which is an irrati●nall conceit Yet thre are in Scripture that are called Gods besides the Lord of which afterwards Quest. 4. Whether there be three Persons in the God head and how these persons do agree These things are by many of this age denyed and therefore must be proved and though they may be thought to be needlesse in regard that by many they are believed yet this may give to many an enlightning into the truths that possibly upon trust only are received Before we come to prove the question its proper to premise 1. We must know that this mystery is a great mystery and is indeed above Reason It is to be rather the subject of our admiration then inquisition it 's to be feared that many reason themselves out of Heaven by endeavouring to apprehend the depth and rationality of this 2. That though it be above reason yet it 's necessary for salvation i. e. to such as are of years of discretion Upon this Principle stands the Fabrick of all Religion to quit this is to quit with Christianity 3. That though the word Trinity be not found to be in Scripture yet the thing that we would expresse by that word is in it 1 Iohn 5.7 which holds out that one is three and that three is one which is expressed significantly enough by the Church under the word Trinity 4. That the three Persons in the God-head are distinguished by these Names The first person is called the Father the second is called the Son or the Word the third is called the Holy ghost or the Spirit yet they make not three but one God There are three that hear Record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy ghost and these three are one the other three that follow viz. the Spirit Water and blood are said to agree in one but these three are said to be one 1 John 5.7 that is essentially and naturally These three differs three ways 1. The Father begets Psal. 2.7 Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee He begets Christ by Eternal generation and believers by spiritual adoption in reference to both thes● is he called Father Ioh. 20.17 2. The Son is begotten he is called a Son Prov. 30.4 Iesus is the Christ and is born of God 1 John 5.1 3. The Holy ghost proceedeth from these two Ioh. 15.26 As a man when he looks in a glasse if he smile his image smileth also and if he take delight in it it taketh delight in him the face is one being suppose that the Father the Image of the face in the glasse is another being suppose this the Son begotten of the Father and the smiling of them both is a third thing proceeding from the two former suppose this that the spirit that procoeds from the Father and the Son All these a man knowing to be but one face and of one face may know that these three are but of one ●od That they are personally distinct from each other appears by many Texts chiefly these Prov. 8.25 The Son speaking of himself shews us that when there was no depths I were brought forth when there were no Fountaine abounding with water before the Mountains were setled before the Hils was I brought forth c. When he prepared the Heavens I was there when he established the clouds above when he gave to the Sea his decree then was I by him as one brought up with him c. In which speech it appears that he that was begotten by the Father was a distinct person from him that established the clouds which was the Lord Gen. 1. Again Psal. 33.6 we read that by the word of the Lord were the Heavens made and all the Hoasts of them by the breath of his Mouth Here are the three persons differenced Christ the word the Lord God the Breath of his mouth the Spirit which appears by comparing this Text with Iohn 1.1 and Gen. 1.2 Also Gen. 1.26 One says
to the Prophets and he is God And again I will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son v. 5. Who says these words he that begot him Who begot him He whose Son he is Who is that Son Christ that purged our sins and sate down on the Right hand of the Majesty on high v. 3. Whose Son is he He that spoke unto our Fathers by the Prophets and he was God v. 1. Moreover Prov. 8.22 The Son himself says The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way c. when there was no depths I was brought forth before the Hills was I brought forth Who brought him forth he that made the Earth and who made the Earth God Geu 1.9 10. Many other places might be brought for this truth as Ioh. 17.3 Ioh. 20.17 Rom. 1.7 but we forbear in regard that those against whom the question is raised denye not the divinity of the Father but of the other person 2. By reason drawn from Scripture or scripture reason it appears that the Father is God for 1. Prayer must be made to him Pray to the Father which is in secret Matth. 6.6 Pray Our Father which art in Heaven now we are to pray to none but to God Isa. 42. ● 2. It is he that revealeth hidden mysteries Luke 10.8 This none can do but God Isa. 41.8.22 23. 3. It is he that maketh the Sun to shine and the Stars to give light to the Earth Matth. 5.15 The Sun is his for he made it he made the Stars also Gen 1.16 This showes that he is God Isa. 40.26 4. It is he that maketh the Raine to fall Matth. 5.45 This none can do that but God Jerei 14.22 2. That the Son is God appears by Scripture and Scripture reason 1. By scripture John 5.20 And we know that the son of God is come c. And we are in him that is true even in his Son Iesus Christ this is the true God and Eternal life Heb. 1. ● But to the Son he sayeth Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever Rom. 9.5 whose are the Fathers and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came who is over all God blessed for ever Isa. 9.6 Vnto us a child is born unto us a Son is given c. his name shall be called wonderfull Counsellour the mighty God so John 1.1 The word was God John 20.28 Psal. 68.18 with Ephe. 8.8 Psal. 95.6 compared with 1 Cor. 10.9 Isa. 41.4 with Revela 8 6. Isa. 25.9 Zacha. 2 9. Isa. 7.14 Phil. 16. Phil 2.6 Acts 7.59 Tit. 2.13 1 Tim. 3.16 What ●e●d we oppose those blasphemous Arians any longer h●ve we not heard himself say I and the Father are one John 10. ●0 Reader these things are written that thou mightest believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God and that believing thou mightest have life through his Name Ioh. 20.31 And this is eternal life to know him to be the only true God and Iesus Christ whom he hath sent viz to be the true God also Iohn 17.3 2. By Scripture reason or reason drawn from Scripture t is clear that the Son is God 1. He made and created the world Iohn 13 this none did but God Gen. 1.1 or could do Isa. 44.24 2. He can and doth forgive sins Luke 7.48 this none can do but God Luke 5.8 3. He gives the holy Ghost Ioh. 20.22 this none can do but God Isai. 44.3 4. He preserveth his Church Matth. 16.18 this none can do but God 5. His Name is preached up Phil. 1.18 this ought not to be done were he not God 6. He is Omnipresent he is in Heaven and Earth at once Iohn 3.13 this could not be were he not God 7. He knows the thoughts of man Matt. 9.4 this he could not do where he not God 8. He is Eternall Revel 1.8 this he could not be were he not God 9. He is Almighty Revel 1.8 this he could not be were he not God 10. Men are baptzed in his Name Mat. 28 19. this ought not to be done were he not God 3. That the holy Spirit is God appears by Scripture and Scripture Reason 1. From Scripture Act. 5.3 Why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye against the Holy ghost c. Thou hast not lyed unto man but unto God Isaiah 6.9 The Prophet heard the Lord say Go and tell this people hear ye indeed but understand not c. The Holy ghost is said to speak the Words Acts 28.25 26. By which two places it appears the Holy ghost is God And so 1 Cor. 12.6 there are diversities of Operations but it is the same God which worketh all in all c. To one is given by the Spirit the word of Wisdome to another the gift of knowledge by the same Spirit to another the gift of Faith by the same Spirit Quest. What Spirit is it that giveth these diversities of gilts Answ. It is the same God that worketh all in all and the same Lord v. 5 6. Also we read Deut. 12.6 If there be a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my self known in a vision unto him and will speak to him in a dream now Prophets spake as they were moved by the Holy ghost 1 Pet. 1 21. 2. By Scripture Reason or Reason from Scripture It appears that the Holy ghost is God 1. He is Eternall Heb 9.14 this he could not be were he not God 2. He is Omnipresent Rom. 8.9 He is in all the faithfull whereever they be therefore he must be God Psal. 139.7 3. He is Omniscient 1 Cor 2 10. therefore he must be God 4. He created the World Psal 23.6 this he could not do were he not God Gen. 1.2 Job 26.13 5. He gives the gifts of miracles c. 1 Cor. 12.10 therefore he must be God 6. He calls men to be Apostles Acts 13.2 therefore he must be God 7. Because the sin against him is unpardonable Matth. 12 31 therefore he must be God 8. He knows the souls and consciences of men Rom. 9.1 therefore he must be God 9. He hath a Temple 1 Cor. 6.19 therefore he is the living God 2 Cor 6.16 10. Men are baptized in his Name Matth 28.19 therefore he must be God Thus it appears that the Father the Son and the Spirit are one essentially that is one in Deity The other two parts in which they are one a viz. in Operating and in willing may be dispatched in Word 1. For Operation they work all one and the self same thing together Joh. 5.17 Gen. 1 26 And 2. For willing they will all one and the self thing without opposing crossing or contradicting each other Joh. 8.29 I do always those things that please him viz. the Father saith the Son by consequence the Spirit of the Son must please him which is the holy Ghost Rom. 8.9 and the spirit of the Father must please the Son which ●sthe Holy Ghost Isaiah 48.16 The Church of Christ hath in
onely dipping but sprinkling or any other kind of washing as hath been before discovered To limit therefore the Ordinance of Dipping is to diminish the very sence and meaning of that Word 〈◊〉 by God to express that Ordinance which is a wrong both to him and the sence of the word 2. The word Baptize is used in Scripture where the word Dipping cannot nor ought not to be understood 1 Cor. 10.2 And were all baptized unto Moses in the Cloud and in the Sea Now let the History of the Iewes passing though the red Sea be observed and it will be found that not a man of Israel was dipped in either Some drops out of the Clouds might and questionless did fall upon the Tribes in going through the red Sea but that they were dipped in the cloud is non-sence to affirm in reason or that they were dipped in the Sea is false to affirm in History 3. The word baptize is used in Scripture where it were inconvenient to understand the word Dipped Acts 16.33 Acts 8.38 At this time this Sacrament was performed in haste and with all possible speed and the Eunuch as soon as baptized goes on his way rejoycing Now Dipping requires deliberation and provision both before and after to put off clothes to put on fresh cloths both for the baptizer and the baptized requires that which for this time cannot with conveniency be granted either for the one or the other 4. The word Baptize joyned with the word River doth not necessary imply dipping in Scripture and we find the word Baptize spoken of and no River mentioned in the Gospel Matth. 3.6 Iohn 3. ●3 Act. 16.33 Acts. 10.48 Act. 8.36 That place Matth. 3.6 And Iesus when he was baptized went up straight way out of the water holds not forth Dipping necessarily but rather that our Saviour was not baptized in Harvest For in Harvest Jordan overfloweth all his banks Ios 3.15 at that time being much dried up Iohn and Christ both might be truly said to go down to the water and to come from or out of the water without lying dipped over head and ears in it and without carrying either for dry cloaths or dry shirt we find him immediately driven to the wilderness Mark 1.12 and I am prone to suppose that it had not been very healthy for Iohn to have stood up to the middle in water so long a time and so much together as the multitude of the baptized would require if dipping must be necessarily understood in his Baptisme And what though Iohn also was baptizing in Enon because there was much water Iohn 3.23 In the Original it is many waters being a convenient place in respect water was not every where to be had where he and his Disciples might in several places baptize those multitudes that came to be baptized which possibly in other places particularly at Iordan could not so easily be done Besides there is a great difference between many waters or much water and deep water or a river of water none of which in Scripture is spoken of concerning AEnon so that dipping is not necessary to be seen or heard felt or understood about Salim and therefore cannot stand without something else to hold it up which is that grand errour that baptisme signifies onely dipping 5. If dipping had been essential to to the Sacrament that is that none ought to have been held as baptized without being plunged in a river without Question the Holy Ghost would in some place or other have told us of it and not to have left us a word of a large signification the spirit of God that leads us into all truth would have informed us in so necessary a point of doctrine in no place is there so much as a breathing for dipping yet we have sweet breathings of the spirit for that of sprinckling both in the Old and New Testament For 1. It is the usual sign of signification under the Law when things are hallowed or persons to be set apart for Gods service it was done with blood sprinkling Levit. 16.14 Levit. 4.6 Heb. 9.13 14. 2. It is a Gospel promise I will sprinckle clean water upon you and ye shall be clean which is the outward sign and I will put my spirit within you which is the thing signified Ezek. 36.25.26 and again I will pour water upon him that is thirsty the outward visible seal I will pour my spirit upon thy seed the thing inward invisible grace sealed Isa. 44.3 both those Texts in Leviticus and these in the Prophets have a shadow of good things to come Heb. 10.1 c. 3. The Apostle makes inward graces to be strengthened and given by outward signs Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience the inward grace and our bodies washed with pure water the outward sign he outward sprinkling or washing with water is an evidence of our hearts being sprinkled with blood with what blood with the blood of Christ which for that reason is called the blood of sprinkling 1 Peter 1.2 Heb. 12.24 could but one such Text be produced for dipping how might our adversaries boast and since we have such sure footing for our sprinckling besides the signification of the word baptize let us never be ashamed As it is not necessary for men to swill themselves with reverence it is spoken or drink large draughts of wine at the Sacrament of the supper a morsel being a sufficient sign of inward grace to remission of sin so it is not essential for men to plunge or dip themselves in large rivers at the Sacrament of baptisme sprinkling or any other decent application of water being a sufficient sign of our justification if adult of our regeneration being infant Further admit that dipping were essential to baptisme which it is not yet we may Question whether they be baptized that are dipped among them the water of baptisme being not applied to the flesh signifying the application of the blood of Christ to the soul. It is to be doubted whether it be applied to theirs whose bodys are not washed with water for they usually do it in rivers wells or horse-ponds as it is known for certain they have done in their shirts shifts and drawers and that ever the outward sign of baptisme was to be applied to such gear I suppose they will not affirm the baptismal water ought immediately to be applied to the body and the flesh washed with it as it is Sacrimental To say that Christ was so baptized is hard to affirm and the improbability of it hath already been handled And to say that he and all that came to Iohn were stripped naked is easie to be denied baptized he was we are sure and many others but that they were all dipped we have no certainty To conclude this Question dipping is not thought unlawful in the Catholick Church not that ridiculous kinde of dipping used
the name of a Catholick no more then a theife when he gets into a House deserves the name of a true Heire for by their new fangled toys brought in by the keys of the Pope a new word also the true antient and Catholick faith is robbed of her gracefull purity yea the antient Church of Rome is divested of her glorious Apparel by which those Popish impostors passe the better undiscovered and Romish Polititians make the better show but set them passe Are all the members of the Catholick Church holy No All are not Israelties that are of Israel Rom. 9.6 Would all the Lords people were Prophets Christ hath some Branches in his Body that bring not forth fruite and therefore shall bee taken away Iohn 15.2 There are some that by profession are members of his visible Church yet are dead Branches not having in them the sap of the Spirit to bring forth the fruits of Holinesse and good Works which alone makes them members of his invisible There are Prophane and Hypocritical sinners which are part of Christ but so as Mos or dead Branches are of the Tree accounted so of God and by Christ esteemed so to be Yet they professing the Doctrine of the Gospel owning the Sacraments of our Lords institution must be looked upon as members of the holy People There were prophane men no doubt in Israel yet by outward profession they were all the Lords people there were in our Saviours time those whom he threatn●d should be cast out and with the same breath acknowledges them Children of the Kingdom Mat. 8.12 It could not be that a Prophet should perish out of Jerusalem and the whole multitude with the high Priests and Elders of that City having seen the man that was Gods Fellow cryed out away with him away with him Crucify him Crucify him in her God found as in a common slaughter house the blood of all the Prophets and the Blood of the Son of God was charged upon her yet at the se●f same time the holy Ghost acknowledges Jerusalem to be a holy City Matthew 27.53 For there the law of God was read the worship of God performed and outwardly the people of God dwelt and the house of God was frequented There were divisions among the Corinthians contentions Law suits Fornication great haughtinesse of mind great prophanenesse and loosenesse in the administration of the Lords-Supper yea some receive it drunk and for all this the Apostle call them Saints prefacing the Epistle he sends to them for the redressing of those disorders thus viz. unto the Church of God which is at Corinth 1. Corinthians 1.2 Their profession made them outwardly holy and by their owning the Gospel ordinances it is manifest that they were outwardly called though their sins did demonstrate that they even those whom he had called before Saints were carnal 1 Cor. 3.3 If we in this age could but learn or see that the gate of the Church is wider then the gate of Heaven we should have less noise amongst us and more charity for each other Laodicea had lost her first love and was wretched miserable blind and naked nigh to be spued out yet the true and faithfull witnesse beares this record of her that she is a Church and her Pastor or Bishop is an Angel Revelations 3.14 In a word profession of the most holy faith and beleiving of fundamental Doctrine is sufficient among men to own any man as a member of the visible Church and to denominate him there from but not to give them interest or Title to the invisible or to make them fellow Citizens with the Saints in the new Jerusalem for without holinesse no man can see the Lord Hebrews 12.14 And therefore the Church is compared to a draw-net which draweth up Fishes of all sorts both good and bad Matthew 13.47 And to a field wherein is found both darnell and good corn both tares and wheat and they must not be plucked up before the time If Saul had been plucked up as a tare we should never have had such a pretious Paul To this Doctrine consent the reformed Churches Art 17. of the Church of Helvetia Art 8. of the Church of Bohemia Art 26. of the Church of France Art 27. of the church of Bel. Art 7. of the Church of Auspurge c. It is now time to come 2. To resolve some Questions concerning the Church Question 1. WHether the single Testimony of the Church be to be received in matters of Faith Quest. 2. Whether the Church hath p●wer to Ordain Ceremonies that are not Ordained ●f God Quest. 3. Whether the Church hath Power to compell any irregular person to her Ordinances Quest. 4. Whether the civill Magistrate hath power in or over the Church Quest. 5. Whether the segregated congregations now in England be Churches Quest. 6. What may justifie a Separation from a Church Quest. 7. Are there more Religions then one to be celebrated where the true Church is established Quest. 8. Wherein consists that individuality singlenesse unity or Oxenesse of the true Church Quest. 9. Why the true Church is called holy Quest. 10. Why is the true and only Church called catholick Quest. 11. Whether the Elect be onely Members of the true Church Quest. 12. What are the Marks of a true Church Quest. 1. Whether the bare and single Testimony of the Church to be received in matters of Faith or Salvation The Church of Rome defends the necessity of her Members yielding to the simple Testimony of the Church in matters of faith but very unsoundly for 1. Every particular Member of the Church hath erred and therefore the whole Church may for what ever be the quality of the parts the whole must be of the same as the simples are so is the Electuary that is made of them hot ingredients can never make a cooling plaister It is dangerous to make it the ground of my faith of which I have no surer testimony then he or they sayes so The Popes we know have sinfully erred whom they would make the Church virtual Councels have erred whom they would make the Church representative the Councels of Basil and Constance cannot both be true Peter erred Demas may fall back Laodicea may lose her first love It s hard to make a sound Christian believe he shall be damned for not doing that or not believing that which God hath nowhere commanded or spoken of Certainly to make the precepts of men equally binding to Scripture is against that text Deut 12.33 What thing soever I command you observe and doe it thou shalt not and the reto nor diminish therefrom why then should I believe that there are pains in purgatory which I must undergo with as strong a faith as to believe there are joyes in Heaven And why must I be damned if I believe not that the Pope is as really head of the whole Univarsal Church as to believe that Christ is risen from the dead The reason is the Church it
is himself and his Cardinals saies it a poor bolster God knows for a man to place his rest his confidence his assurance the unchangable estate of his eternal soul upon And why must I believe it because they say it Because they cannot erre and why must I believe they cannot erre because they say so thus may they impose upon mens consciences the very doctrine of Devils as they do 1 Tim. 4.12 3 4. and the poor people are taught that they must believe that o● herwise they are no members of the Church out of which indeed there is no Salvation or of Christ though no Scripture be brought in the least to confirm it 2. We were not baptized in the name of the Church this argument Paul brings against the divisions of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11.3 there were some that would stick to the Doctrine of Paul some hold to that of Cephas what sayes he was Paul Crucified for you or were you baptized in the name of Paul that you should suppose to be saved by me we were baptized in the name of the Triun God and we expect only and we believe throughly to be saved by him alone without the aid of men or Angels for if an Angel should come down and perswade us or teach to us a necessity of believing in him without or against the Scripture as frequently Rome doth he were to be accursed I say again he were to be accursed 1 Gal. 9. 3. The Catholick Church calls upon her members not to do that and good reason too the Son of God would not though he might urge his own authority plead for a beliefe but upon a Scripture account Iohn 5.39 and Paul desires to be followed no further than he follows Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 and those Bereans are made noble for searching the Scriptures whether the things that were spoken by Paul were true or no Acts 17 11. And we have a charge given us to hear the Son the same teacheth the reformed Churches as of France Art 2. Belg. Art 7. Art 20. of the Church of England Art 1. of the Church of Bohem In which Article there are two reasons given for this truth 1. because the Scriptures were inspired and taught by the holy Ghost confirmed by heavenly testimonies which spirit discovers to men how it ought to be understood for Prophecie came not in old time by the will of man but holy men spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. ult Besides the Lord himself saieth Search the Scriptures And again Ye are deceived not knowing the Scriptures c. 2 Because that is a true and sure testimony and a clear proof of Gods favourable good-will which he hath revealed concerning himself such things as are necessary to doctrine to discipline and government of the holy Church are all fully and absolutely so comprehended then which no Angel can bring any thing more certain and if he should he ought not to be believed For which cause saies that confession in our Churches the Scriptures are rehearsed to the hearers in the vulgar tongue and especially according to the ancient custome of the Church those portions of the Gospel in Scripture which are wont to be read on solemn daies out of the Evangelists and Apostles writings and are usually called the Epistles and Gospels The whole stream of the confessions of reformed Churches runs against Rome in this 4. Our Creed which is the rule of things to be believed as the ten Commandements are of things to be done and the Lords Prayer of things to be asked calls upon him that reads it or hears it to believe only in God the Father and in God the Son and in God the holy Ghost and not to believe in but to believe the Catholick Church i e to be perswaded that there ever was is and shall to the end of the world be a company of men Elected and called unto life by which confession we acknowledge our selves one of them Now to believe in the Church were to set her in as high dignity to rule over the consciences of men as Christ himself or any other person in the Trinity which were a giving his glory to another 5. Men should by this never be assured of their Salvation nor of their good estare it might be necessary for thy Salvation to do that this day which might not be done if I would be saved the next for as the Rulers of the Church uttered their judgments upon the light of reason I must judge my self in a happy or in a forlorn condition which is contrary to that Catholick doctrine Make your calling and Election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 which could never be done did it lye upon the fine flourishes of an Oratour or distinction of a Canonist sitting in counsell And indeed this may be one cause why the Church of Rome denies the possibility of a firm assurance of future glory contrary to the text above named 5. There are but four false religions in the world Heathnism Turcism Judaisme and Papism the Heathen possibly may reason the case for his religion against an Opponent though perhaps as soundly as Cyrus reasoned with Daniel concerning the dignity of Bel Thinkest thou not ●hat Bel is a living God said the King seest thou not how much he eateth and drinketh every day The Jew he will direct thee to the Scriptures see and try if his religion be not according to that most sure word of Prophesie The Turk is stubborn and it is death to dispute or search the truth for the confirming of the faith in the matters of the Alchoran The same it is with the Papist the bell will ring and candle will be put out and the book opened if the authority of the Bishop of Rome be once questioned though in matters of faith Let the Turk and Romanist therefore go together give me that religion that may be tryed and hold out in tryal yet let the Romanist remember that as Mahomet said he found the hand of God seven times colder than ice he may find it seventy times hotter than Purgatory for either adding or taking from the word of God and imposing any thing upon the people as necessary to be done in point of Salvation Illi ergo potius parendum monenti ut omnia exploremus quod bonum est retineamus quoe certe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instituti non potest nisi ad manum sit Lydius ille Scripiucarum lapis cujus ope aurea ab aereis humana á Divines internoscantur Notwithstanding that the restimony of the Church is not to be taken singly in matters of faith yet the testimony of the Church is of great weight and concernmnst in matters of fact For 1 it may prepare our hearts and move them to believe the thing the surer that the Church hath affirmed This made King Charles the first of glorious memory strongly to assert that what could not be proved by the word of God to be unlawfull
or her pleasure openly expound and preach the Gospel that it was no lawfull for a Minister to have humane learning or that it was unl●wf●ll to hear such that it was and would be unlawful for Ministers to prepare themselves to preach by study that it was unlawful for a Gospel-Minister not to have some handy Trade and work in a Mechanick way for his living Ought they not since it was known to have been long used by Gods people before the Law and by his people after the Law to have told that to receive Tythes now was to deny that Christ was come in the flesh why was it not told us that the whole ●●sterity of man whether of Heathens or Christians during their Infancy are pure and holy there being no Originall sin why did not that wise Master builder lay his foundation aright and show us that to enter any into th● Church by Baptism without declaration of Faith and Repentance though born of holy parents was a sin and also if any such thing were done in the name of the holy Trinity wherein consists the essence of Baptisme with the application of the spirit which is not hindred by Infancy yet that they ought to be baptized again Why did they not inform the Church that though God was pleased to receive the Children of the Jews so far into his favour as to give them the outward sign of his Covenant with the Fathers viz. by circumcision yet would not have the Children of Christians to receive the outward sign of his Covenant with their Fathers viz. by Baptism Why did they not inform us that there were none baptized nor none should account themselves baptized except they were plunged or dipped in a River And that any member of the Church might do that why did he not tell us that it was and would be a sin for one to teach his child to say the Lords Prayer or call God father since they had no faith in Christ Why do they not shew us that to be in a place hearing his word with those that were not all holy was a great sin before God and that there should be a parity in the Church of God That no civill Magistrate hath any power at all to be command any thing to be done in the Church of God and that no Christian ought to pray in a set form and therefore that the Lords prayer was not to be used yea was as abominable unto God as Swines flesh unto a Jew as I have read some of them do however we know it is disused by them all Why was it not told us that to receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper was either a vain thing or an indifferent thing or to eat it with unholy persons a sinful thing and also that any one that had gifts might administer the same or that the profit of the Sacraments depended upon the goodness or holynesse of him that gave it or did administer them These with a thousand more are the Principles that our Hereticks walke and teach by and if they be true doctrine how long hath the Church been without truth and in matters of greatest concernment as Preaching the word and Sacraments Why did not the Apostles once at least encourage Christians to persevere in Holiness upon the account of Christs comming personally to Reign upon Earth and why would they not tell that it was a decent holy seemly thing to hear a woman Preach It seems strange that neither by word nor by Epistle this was made known that any man might assume the office of the Ministry unto himself though he were not outwardly called as was Aaron why would they not tell us that Ordination was but a toy and was not to continue longer then themselves But what am I doing If these be true Churches and this Doctrine true Gospel the Apostles have been faithlesse and unjust I speak it trembling for no such thing did they ever teach but the contrary we finde them often times in the Scripture handling those very points and laies down contrary conclusions particularly Heb. 5.4 speaking of Priest-hood in generall and of Christs in particular who is the high Priest of the Gospel saies no man taketh this honour to himself but he that is called as was Aaron And that Aaron had an outward call for that Office and was deputed and set apart for that function in a publick way is clear from Ex. 29. and Levit. 9. Rom. 5.12 where the Apostle handling the infectious nature of sin maintains That by one man sin entered into the World and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all had sinned viz. by the sin of that one man I can find here no exception of Infants which if true doctrine the wisedome of God would have discovered in such an apt and proper place And truly that Infants should dye having no sin since death is the wages of sin Rom. 6 23. is a Doctrine that either charges God with unjustice or St. Paul with a falshood or at least a grosse mistake Of Baptizing of Infants we shall speak in it's own place and touching receiving the Sacrament of the Lords Supper with a mixed Congregation in its propper season and of Dipping when we come to the Font. Touching the peoples Ordination let the Scripture be produced that gives the people power for to set apart a Lay or Mechanick or any person and to constitute him a Church-Officer in the least Let the Scripture be produced that gives a power to a multitude so to do or that approves of a mans assuming to himself the power ministerially to teach Baptize give the Sacrament of the Lords Supper show or produce me that Scripture that gives authority to a Lay-man such a one we count him that is not Ordained by an Ecclesiastick person according to Apostolicall Tradition to bind or lose to cast out of the Church by judicial Excommunication or ●o receive in by authoritative absolution I say again let any of our ●ereticks produce me that Scripture show that text and I here promise them to renounce my Ordination forsake my calling and deny my Baptisme For I am not ignorant that the whole stream of the Scripture goes smoothly in another Channel If these or any of these be Churches then the candle hath never been upon a candlestick the City hath never been upon a hil Kings have never been her Nursing Fathers nor Queens her nursing Mothers except Iohn Buckhold alias Iohn of Layden with his fifteen Wives which Iohn being a Botcherly Taylour was by a mad crew of Anabaptists despisers and otherwise opposers of all government appointed King at Munster in Germany An 1534. where wearing Royall Robes of Embroidered work Spurs of gold Scabbards of gold and two Crowns of gold he had his Chancellours Cup-beares Carvers one holding up the holy Bible and another a naked Sword the handle whereof glistered with gold and pretious stones went before his Botcherly Majesty
a Prebendry at Windsor getting neither grew very discontent So D.B. I have read these in and have them from an Author that I am perswaded is able to defend his Print A man of the same Principles having gotten to be the Kings Chaplain shortly after being put out of it again by the Arch-Bishop for what cause my Author shews not to revenge himself became the chief leader of that Rascall rabble out of London crying for I against E. of S. Invaded afterward the Deanry of Paul's and the house of the Bishop of B. W. But says my Author had he been made Dean of Pauls or B. of B. and W. by King Charles he had never opposed the Bishops The like is known concerning M. H. B. the Original of his discontent against the Bishops was the losse of his place at Court which he enjoyed under Prince Charles and for that he was so enraged against the Government of the Church that what by speaking and what by writing he brought to himself deserved punishment not to call it suffering I Copy not this out of any distaste that I bear to the mens judgements or persons whose faces I never saw knowingly Yea the right hand was scarce known from the left when B. was putting on Armour to oppose the Hirearchy but that it may be known upon what ground some spirit opposed settled Government not so much out of zeal Religion or conscience as out of spite passion malice or discontentednesse which broached Arrius his Heresie and was the first moving cause of Corah his Rebellion Numb 16. and blew up some fiery spirits here in England to call out for a Reformation which was the mask they used to hide their ugly faces and the Cloak they wore to cover the wicked and malicious purposes of their revengeful hearts which at length though something late was discovered to the World by which they are now really as odious to the present age for their Villany as ever they were famous through Hypocrysie 2. Heresie springs from pride and ambition this is in some kind the Cause of the other before mentioned For if their pride meet with a fal they are discontented if it go smoothly on they are sattisfied To become a Teacher a head of a faction to have Disciples is to some in our days a gay businesse when Pride reigns in the bosomes of men it is Tyrannicall and must outlarge its Territories by bringing into subjection those Neighboring Countries and Cities that are about they are so full that they must empty their Hereticall Notions into shallow and ignorant brains and are not satisfied with being Masters of their own except they have Proseylites to their Doctrine Is it any other but this that makes our illiterate Mechanicks preach or Lay-men administer the Sacraments or our women to forget both their Sex weaknesse and the Word of God to expound the Scriptures What made the Vagabond Jews to presume to cast out Devills but this Acts 19. and how much this induceth the Church of Rome to stand and to defend strange points I leave for my Elders to consider 3. Heresie springs from lust or covetousnesse the Church lands since it 's establishment was usually a greater eye-sore to Hereticks then her doctrine the Egyptians that fold both their Cattle and their Land for bread when their mony was gone Gen. 47.18 never grumbled that the Priests Lands were preserved but these men having both Cattle Land and Bread grudge to see the Church enjoy her portion and if they want rather then they will dig will reach down all propriety and that the wicked should not enjoy the fruits of the ground The meek only should enjoy the Earth which Doctrine supposing it to passe in the affirmative not a foot of the Earth would fall to them Yet this set the Crown upon Iohn of Leydens head in Germany and hath been a fundamentall truth in England yea the corner-stone of strange divinity in our high places The silver Pillars the golden bottome the purple covering of the Church Ca. 3.10 hath been ●n alluring bait even to those who ought to have been her guard 4. It comes from the womb of ignorance a misapprehension many erre not knowing the Scriptures Mat. 22.29 Many things depending upon the knowledge of the diversities and seasons of times receiveth strange and strained interpretations from the unlearned This is one strong hinge that our Secretaries for the present move upon As that the Apostles being immediately called from fishing to preaching they shall be all taught of God And of Gods pouring out his spirit upon all flesh in the latter days and their daughters shall prophesie these with a many other are foundations upon which many build their Babel from the first they conclude that any man may preach from the second Isa. 54.13 they conclude that preaching is needlesse from the third Acts 2.17 they infer that women may preach as if that prophesie of Ioel Ioel 2.28 were not already fulfilled in the Apostles I must conclude this Question being quiet tyred with fighting with these beasts of Ephesus and beasts indeed they may be called not onely from their barking against the light of the Gospel but also from their surlinesse and crossenesse each to another or fawning upon any other for do but crosse or not humour them they will turn Ranter Quaker Adamite or Anabaptist and about from one to another if not locally in body yet professedly in judgement for never did you know any of them to be purely what he is called the Anabaptist is a Millenary the Millenary is a Quaker the Quaker is a Ranter and vice versa turn them again the Ranter is a Quaker the Quaker is a Millenary the Millenary is an Anabaptist and so round as one lye so one false opinion must have another to maintain it This makes such a monstrous unlovely hodge-podge among them that had these beasts been to have entered the Ark it would have perplexed Noah to have put them into pairs These Babel-builders are confounded in their Opinions as well as in their Language properly their own having that only in common that destroys the unity of the Church and never speaks with one tongue but when they rail against the Church of England Quest. 6. What may justifie a mans separation from a Church Saint Paul giving us some directions for walking after the spirit Gal. 5 in the 19. ver makes an enumeration of the works and fruits of either beginning with those of the flesh as Adultery Fornication Vncleannesse Lasciviousnesse Idolatry Witchcraft Hatred Variance Emulations Wrath Strife Seditions Heresies These two last in the Original might be Translated divisions Sects for there it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where according to this Sects or Divisions or cause lesse separation as well as Murther or Adultery are the works of the flesh the two last are Twins in one and the same womb for the Heretick will breed division or sedition and
truth to hear the word of God preached and to obey those that have the rule over them is a Catholicks practice even in their reproofs Suspentious Excommunications c. they know their preaching is the power of God unto Salvation I Rom 16. and the ●other is necessary for the saving of the Spirit in the day of the Lord Jesus I Corinthians 5.5 There are some among us that imagine themselves distinct Ch●rches from us in this particular viz for the separating themselves from the ministery as now constituted upbraiding their Minister perhaps his receiving his dues which he is no more to lose upon that account then a man is to lose the milk or the wooll of his beast at night upon the account that it wandered at Noon Untill they be cast out of the Church by Church censures and by those to whom that power is design'd their separation hi●der no more their union with us in the body of the Church then a Boyl scab or a sore hinders the continuity of the parts of a man or no more then a Malignant Fever takes away the being of a person so that in some sence we look upon them as Members of our Church but itchy ones scabby ones as members in our Israel but as troublesome ones untill they be cast out and then for me they sh●ll be looked upon as Publicans and Heathens and so by all the members of the Catholick Church for being cast out of her who is the only Church they must so be and so long as they are in her they are of her their own separation availing us no more then a mans willing confinement of himselfe to his house makes him a Prisoner in Law when he is commanded forth to action 4. It consists in that Communion that they have each member and each part with another they have the benefit of each others prayers they are all walking in one way by one Rule working all one work expecting all one reward acted by the same spirit carried forth upon the same Motive and armed with the same weapons fighting against the same Enemies building each other in their most holy Faith Iude 20. 5. It consists in that union and communion that they have with Christ he is their head and whereever they are as members of him they have life sence and strength from him in him they all live move and have their being The Church hath also communion with Christ and that both in his Person and in his Offices and Sufferings 1. In his person every part of her is a Member of his body they are bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh Ep. 5.30 and he that is joyned to the Lord is but one As the Holy Ghost did unite in the Blessed Virgins Womb the Divine and humane nature of Christ and made them one person by reason of his formation of the body whereby C●ist is of our flesh and of our bones so the spirit unites us to the person of Christ by the gift of faith that we are of his flesh and of his bones and members of his body For suppose a man to be so many Cubits high that his head should reach the stars and his hands stretch to either side of heaven and one foot stood upon the Sea and another upon the Land yet these members being knit together by natural Arteries informed by the same specifick soul they might truly be said to have comunion each with other even so though Christ be in Heaven and part of the Church with him and we on earth and so should seem to be a great distance from each other yet the distance is not so great as to make a distinction of the parts or separation of the head from the body by that fore-mentioned supposition we may be said to be united to him and therefore are hereby to have union each with another 2. In his Offices What Offices Christ executes as Redeemer of the World in order to the great end of bringing his Church together the same Offices doth he make his people to receive through the unction of his spirit untill and at their coming home he hath made them Kings Revel 1.6 makes them reign over all lusts and have dominion over all the powers of Hell and Earth and hath both Thrones and Crowns for them in Heaven and he hath made them Priests Rev● 1.6 in as much as they are dayly offering up the Sacrifice of burnt Offerings whole burnt Offerings of Praise prayer and thanksgiving he hath made them Prophets Io. 15.15 in as much as they know the Will of God and the mind of God is made known to them for what ever he had received of the Father he made known unto her 3. In his sufferings She must drink of that Cup that he drunk of and the Church must be baptized with the Baptism he was baptized withall Matth. 20.23 He drank of the Brook by the way and they must taste after him it 's their priviledge that are his Members to suffer for him Phil. 1.29 He drank of the Cup of affliction in the Garden and all his followers must pledge him Christ ought to suffer Luke 24.26 nay did it not become him to suffer Heb. 2.10 And it is decreed that all must suffer before they enter into glory for this suffering with Christ is a dying with him which must precede rising with him which must go before being glorified with him in all these do the Members of Christ which is the Church hold Communion and have Union with him Quest. 9. Why is the true Church called holy We believe the Catholick Church to be holy yet not that we hold all to be holy that are in it In a great mans House there be Vessels of honour and of dishonour some in the Church have a form of holinesse but denie the power of it there are Tares in the field as wel as Wheat there are bad as well as good fishes took with the Net of the Gospel Mat. 13.28 Would all the people were holy yet we believe that the Church is holy 1. For holinesse she aims at for this she prays fasts reads receives the Sacraments all the acts that she and her children do is upon the acco●nt of holinesse the Scripture cals upon her to be holy as God is holy and she calls upon God to sanctifie her thorowly by the washing of water and the Word to be presented as holy before him Eph. 5.26 2. It 's a holy Rule she walks by It is a holy pure and undefiled Law as silver purified seven times it hath no Impurity in it Psal. 19.8 3. It is a holy profession she maintains she hath places to worship in she hath holy Ordinances to live by she hath a holy calling for she is called to be holy all other Congregations live by sence but she by faith 4. It is a holy Lord whom she serves she serves the Lord Christ she worships through him that God that is so holy
that had spoken it in the Psalm the truth had not performed it so exactly in the Gosple 4 According to his pleasure were they spoken and at his good wil were they uttered by them The spirit of prophesie did not always abide upon the most holy Prophet hence Advenit Verbum Iehova The Word of the Lord came is a usual phrase among the Prophets Elisha was a man of God and yet the Lord had hid the Shanamites grief from him 2 Ki. 4.2 When he put it in their mouths then they spoke and not before they were his words for untill he spoke to their hearts their mouthswere shut up end they remained silent till the Word of the Lord came there was neither voice nor hearing in truth what he spoke they uttered and when he was pleased to be silent they were forced to be mute 5. The prophesies did but open a passage for him and the whole of them had a tendency to him the Law in all its Ceremonies and in all its precepts doth but lead us conduct us point out Christ unto us it hath no Language in it but Christ in it's Condemning power it is a harsh School-master to drive us to Christ Gal. 3.24 The Gospel hath the self same end viz. To bring us to Christ he stands as it were between both Testaments the Prophets behinde him Call but to touch the hem of his garment and come under the skirt of his apparel the Apostles before him call upon men to imbrace him in their arms by faith joyfully and he himself in their mouth utters but what he delivered in person Come unto me all ye that labour Mhtth. 11.28 6. They are his words in respect of that power and that Commission he gave to holy men to write and teach them he gave the Apostles power to preach and a Commission to teach all Nations Matth. 28.19 It was he that took the Apostles from their other Callings and gave them authority to teach what ever he had commanded They did nothing untill he gave that power and assoon as they received their authority from him they began that heavy though holy Imployment 7. In regard of the publication and promulgation of them whatever was spoken was spoken in the name of the Lord all was preached in the name of Christ they desired to know nothing more then Christ they called upon men to believe in Christ they baptized in the name of Christ not by their own power or holiness but in the name of Iesus Christ of Nazareth did they work their miracles Acts 3.6 It follows then that the whole Scriptures in what way soever delivered whether by vision inspiration dreams by signs by voice by writing by Urim and Thummim by men or by Angels by Prophets or Apostles for God spoke divers ways to our Fathers Heb. 1.1 All of it and every part of that All is the word of Christ which we must have to dwell in us for the words are Imperative Imperativo praceptionis a duty that we are to avoid then and shun him that would seek to turn us from the Faith of that word here enjoyned The Apostle is pleased to call the Scriptures the word of Christ rather then the word of God for this probable reason At this time these Coloss●ans were infected and in danger to be drawn to the old Rites and Ceremonies of the Jewish Church by self-seeking men who desired them to look back to the word wherein indeed these things were written Col. 2.16 but now since he exhorts them to the studie of the word of Christ he foresees and knows that by the word of Christ they shall learn that all those Ceremonies were but as shadows and since Christ is come not binding for which cause he chooseth rather to call it the word of Christ that those Hereticks might not take any advantage to corrupt them which they might have done if he had said the word of God From this we might draw many inferences we shall at this time collect two one concerning the Ministers of Christ the other to all the Professors of Christ. 1. Concerning the Ministers of Christ. Let them not hereafter be afraid of man nor of the son of man let them be bold to say to any offender Non licet tibi with Iohn the Baptist It is not lawfull for thee Mat. 14.4 Let their faces be strong against the faces of men their foreheads strong against their foreheads that they be not dismayed at their looks Ezekiel 3.8 9. the word is not theirs but the Lords Let the word of God be spoken with boldness Acts 4.31 Christ speaks as one that had authority Matth. 7.29 and he hath given authority and power to his servants to charge men to their duty 1 Tim. 6.17 where God threatens sin they must not be afraid to pronounce punishment The Lord God hath spoken who can but prophesie Amos 2.8 As they are to preach it with Authority so let them study it constantly where shall the Ambassadors of the most High know the will of their great Master but here Till Christ come let them give attendance to reading A Minister must be a man apt to teach 2 Tim. 2.24 And it s this alone that can fit him for that function In these lyeth the substance and matter of their Commission therefore they must be looked into studied upon 2. To all the Professors of Christ to all that name the name of Jesus let them freely hear me touching these two particulars 1. Let none of them trust believe or depend upon any new or immediate Revelation for his happiness there are in this Age many that trust to those raptures of the Spirit as they call them and will have no other word dwell in them then that word that the Spirit within suggests within casting aside and refusing the Scriptures as useless and unnecessary because a word without But I hope you have not so learned Christ. We shall carry a small time upon the search of that Spirit pretended to trying it by the Scriptures the touchstone of truth and we shall see if those breathings of the Spirit be different from the blasts of the Prince of the power of the Ayr that rules in the children of disobedience 1. It doth not those things that the Spirit of God should do not to insist upon particulars there were three general Acts that Christ promised his Spirit at his coming should perform unto Believers and this Spirit that goes abroad in this Age performs none of them as may appear by a rehearsal of the severall acts themselves 1. Was to bring to remembrance what ever Christ had spoken Ioh. 14.26 This was to be his work then and his work with all believers is the same now what Christ hath taught what Christ hath spoken is the Spirit to bring to remembrance which he will send That Spirit therefore that teacheth and puts that in the minds of men which Christ never spoke cannot be that spirit sent of
him but such doth the spirit that in this Age is pretended It calls down prayer it will not be guided by Scripture not live of the Gospel nor according to Law they will have no ordained Ministers they will not own Magistrates thrust Sacraments out of the Church make Ordinances in their power depend upon the merits of men take singing out of our Christian Temples preaching up new revelations and that they only are the Saints that heed least the Scriptures that it is only formal or Antichristian to crave a blessing before meat that none are baptized but such as are dipped to curse revile slander those that are set apart by Apostolical Tradition for the preaching of the Gospel c. This is that that Christ never taught and therefore it is not his Spirit that brings them to our remembrance 2. The Holy Spirit of God was to glorifie Christ Iohn 16.14 that Christ that was then with his Discsples that was born of the Virgin Mary that Christ that was to suffer at Ierusalem was he to make glorious that Spirit now amongst us casts contumelies and scornfully speaks of that Christ under the notion of a Christ without us Its seeks its own glory and bears witness of it self its whole aym is to invert the Divine dispensations by slighting that Christ crucified upon the account of being without 3. He was to shed abroad the love of God in the hearts of Believers Rom. 5.5 that is the apprehension of the love of God a sense of it a feeling of it from whence comes love joy and peace Now the spirit that some pretenders have is a contradistinct spirit from this for by their trembling quaking foaming it appears that the sense of the love of God is not shed abroad in their hearts but of his wrath those strange and monstrous actings proceed rather from wrath indignation and anguish and indeed if gnashing of teeth be a picture or fruit of Hell we may know whence that spirit comes that carries men forth into those distempers 2. The Spirit of God is a Spirit of Union and of Agreement that ever speaks and agrees with it self In no place doth it really oppose or contradict it self it leads all men into one kind and way of truth how distant soever they be from one another but this spirit that goes abroad in our Age never appears in one shape it speaks this in this mans mouth and contradicts is again next day In this mans mouth it threatens hell in that mans mouth it says there is no hell it says that it is a decent thing for a woman to preach the same spirit calls down all preaching in another here it throws aside the Law there it throws away the Gospel there it throws away both here it is for a Christ within there it affirms there is no Christ at all by its cloven foot you may discern whence it came 3. The Spirit of God teacheth honourable and glorious Doctrine such Doctrine as made the highest in the earth bow their necks to receive the same the whole Army of the Philist●ms even of those Heathens that persecuted the Doctrine of the Spirit of God was overcome by the noble Army of the Martyrs the more it was afflicted the more it grew and went over the world like a Sea overflowing the banks of all Penal Laws Kings became its nursing Fathers and Queens its nursing mothers The Doctrine that this Spirit teacheth is a Doctrine of Reprobation Reprobated silver hath God called it his providence and power hath crushed it always suppressed it and hath only given Satan a little power for the Tryall of his Church but never gave him all his chain to destroy Their Doctrine was never on a Candlestick their house was never on a mountain to bring all Nations in into it God kept it under that it never yet said So would I have it How hath the same Gospel we teach run over the world and that without garments rolled in blood and hath been beautifull and glorious But this spirit hath attempted indeed but stopped tryed condemned cast out Never was there a Kingdom Country Parish nay scarce a house that this spirits Doctrine or Doctrines rather was ever received in These things considered let not the Professors of Christ depend upon those seducing revelations but to the Scriptures the foundation of the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles But 2. If the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament be the word of Christ let none of the people sleight it it is that which Christ hath spoken to be the Rule of their lives tryers of their thoughts and measure of their actions if thou be of the houshold of faith thou art upon that foundation whereof Jesus Christ is the chief Corner-stone Eph. 2.20 All you that build must be squared fitted and proportionated to this Corner stone which can only be done by this Word of Christ and therefore it is not to be slighted Now the Scripture may be slighted divers ways 1. When it is regardlessely heard when Gods message is delivering for the good of a mans soul by Gods servant thereunto appointed to have an irreverend or unseemly carriage shows they put no high valuation upon it to be drowzy or sleepy when God is holding forth our duty or his own greatnesse our sins and his Justice is a great sign of irreverence and may provoke him to thrust us out of his presence for it is not a slighting or contemning of man who reads it or speaks it but of God who made it and enjoyned it 2. When it is scoffingly used when men make Scripture to be the bottome of Jests and Jears the Subject of their profanenesse or Object of their mirth When the Prophet called the Burthen of the Lord the people answered him in scorn the Burthen of the Lord the Burthen of the Lord. Ier. 23.33 34 35. or as Iulian that would smite a Christian on the one cheek und then bid him turn the other as his Lord and Master directed The Scriptures were not written to make men laugh but to make men wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 they were sent into the word by God to instruct men how to demean themselvs without offence towards God man Act. 24.16 it ought only to be imployed to that end It is not safe jesting with edged Tools so neither is it safe to sport with the two edged sword of the word of God This is holy ground let us be afraid to sin upon it least the owner of it Mock when eur fear cometh and laught at our calamity Prov. 1.26 It is in it self a high provocation of his Majesty contempt of his honour and a diminishing of his greatnesse in the sight of men 3. When it is heedlessely forgot if a mans servant should not do the thing commanded und excuse himself from his forgetfulness it would not reprieve him from his masters anger How shall God be patient when his precepts and word are
and received as the word of Christ which other Scripture is as well as the Psalms But 3. Because of all Scripture the Psalms are of most generall use as having in them the greatest variety of doctrine the most fervent and working motives to godlinesse and piety and 4. Because of all the Scripture they were usually most if not only sung they were in a special way chanted by the Saints and sung by the holy men under the Law which besides the Spirit of God who by David did compose those Psalms suitable to be sung was occasioned from those holy raptures that by experience believers felt in themselves in the using of them arising upon the variety of Doctrine that was naturally perceived to be in them and flow from them but of these things more at large when vve come to handle that Ordinance of singing in particular CHAP. III. HAving opened the Text we shall now by the assistance of him whose word is to be spoken of come to the drawing out of such truths as shall and may serve for firm pillars whereby the true Christian and sober Saint may stand upright against and in despite of the storms and blasts of all contrary Doctrine Our purpose is to speak of the nature of and to defend the Churches practise in those effectual and grand Ordinances viz. the Word Sacraments and Prayer the Conduit Pipes to convey the water of life to the languishing and thirsty soul though some in this Age surfeiting through plenty account them but as puddle and to be shunned by men As a foundation and ground to the whole Discourse we shall therefore handle this point of Doctrine from the words in generall That it is a Duty incumbent upon all persons to have knowledge of and to be well acquainted with the holy Scriptures The word of Christ is the unum necessarium that one thing needfull for a Christian in this earth and in his passing or travelling toward heaven indispensably necessary as a guide to direct him as light to comfort him and as armour to defend him Ephes. 6.17 Psal. 119.105 Psal. 19.7 In the opening of this doctrine we shall observe this method 1. Show what knowledge it is that lies upon all Christians as a Duty 2. What it is to be well acquainted with the Scriptures 3. Give other Scriptures for the proof of the point 4. Demonstrate the truth of it by reasons drawn from Scripture 5. Discover some causes that hinder the knowledge of the word in our days 6. Draw some Corollaries 7. Resolve some Questions This shall be the Order that we will follow and the God of Order cause his blessing to go along with it that it may effectually teach us how to order our Lives aright towards God and towards man in these irregular days of ours SECTION I. VVHen Christ had ascended up on high and led captivity captive he gave gifts to men Ephes. 4.8 which gifts did vary and were more or less according to the good pleasure of him that ruleth all things Every man hath not knowledge alike and no man knoweth all things he that knoweth most knoweth but in part 1 Cor 13.12 According to the Order God puts men in he will give five two or but one talent and no more some things lie hid from the wisest and other things God will have the lowest of men find out he hath given his word universally to all that by it all may know their duty and he is a wise man which knoweth that There are three things that every Christian must indispensably know in Scripture 1. All necessary truths God will be offended if they know not how to be good Christians not if we be not good Disputants We are to know that God is a Spirit And they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in truth John 4.24 that he is a hater and punisher of sin Rom. 1.18 that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and the Saviour of the world Acts 9.20 Acts 5.31 c. From the knowledge of these and the like things there are none excepted they are indeed the ground work of all Religion and God will be angry if men know them not 2. All profitable truths It is necessary for men in health strength and wealth to lay up some comfortable provision against the days come wherein they shall say I have no pleasure in them Texts that can mitigate sickness suppress doubts and keep off despair conduce much to a Christians being and his well being also The mysteries of Daniel will not afford so much comfort to a drooping soul as the great mysterie of godliness What time thou art afraid trust in God Psal. 56.3 Remember Happy is he what case soever befals him that hath the God of Iacob for his help whose hope is in the Lord his God Psal. 146.5 God may bring thee through the fire and refine thee as silver is refined and try thee as Gold is tryed Zach. 13.9 Meditate therefore upon the Faith and patience of the Saints Rev. 13.10 and upon the end of the Lord Jam. 5.11 3. All Relative truths i.e. to know those things that God hath given a man in charge in reference to that particular calling or relation that God hath given to him or put him in A Father must know his Duty for he shall answer for his failings in that particular the Magistrate his the Minister his the people theirs God will punish Eli for his failings as a Father 1 Sam. 3.13 Saul for his as a Magistrate 1 Sam. 15.26 Nadab and Abihu for theirs as Priests Lev. 10.2 The people for theirs Mal. 3.8 9 10. Eonus Civis sed malus homo it is one thing to be a good Christian and another to be a good Father be both or if thou be not thou mayst be saved yet so as by fire 1 Cor. 3.15 that is as a man that hath his house and his goods burned may yet escape with his life so thou mayst be brought to heaven but not in that comfortable and joyfull condition which thou mightest hadst thou filled up all thy Relations according to the duties enjoyned thee by the word But of these there may be and is a twofold knowledge 1. A speculative or a head knowledge a knowledge that goeth no further then the brain old Eli might know w●●t he ought to have done The word of Christ may be in a mans brain and there it will speed no better then the seed that was sown in stony ground Matth. 13.5 wanting depth of earth A head-knowledge will but encrease our guilt and that will increase our misery for he that knoweth his Masters will and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes 2. An affective or heart-knowledge Theologia est scientia affectiva directiva which goes down to the affections and causes a man to walk and to do according to that which he knows Blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the prophesie of this Book Rev. 22.7 This is to
2 Peter 1.29 And as many as walk according to this Rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God Gal. 6.16 Hence it is that the Scriptures are called Canonical because they contain and give a perfect Rule of all things conducing to salvation 4. God hath now ceased to repeat any new matter to his Church or for giving them any other Rule We must know that God who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in Times past unto the Fathers by the Prophets hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son Heb. 1.1 We are to expect no●hing now but to walk according to what his Son hath given us and to the word his Son hath left us God hath revealed his mind by his Son to the world and there stops his Son at the time appointed will come to Judge according to this Rule that he hath left behinde Him 5. By this Rule only can the soul be satisfied and peace secured when this Rule is left what Rule can man have to walk by nay how many Rules shall he presume to settle himself by when this is laid aside All other are so full of uncertainties so loaded with doubtings so liable to exceptions so uncomfortable in distresses so various in their natures that like Noahs Dove Gen. 8.9 the creature can get no rest for the feet of its soul untill it pitch upon this again When he that is builded that is ruled and fitted to upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Iesus Christ being the chief corner stone groweth unto a holy Temple c. Ephes. 2.20 being ●●stened secured and confirmed he grows in holiness and purity and in Christ is quieted and glorified 6. The Spirit of God it self when it acts within us is to be tryed by this Rule We are not to believe every Spirit but try whether they are of God 1 Ioh. 4.1 And this is one way to see if it speak according to the teaching of Jesus Christ or not Ioh. 14.26 The Doctrine that St. Paul taught was by the infallible Spirit of God and yet the Bereans are commended by the same Spirit for searching the Scriptures to understand whether the things th● were spoken were so or not Acts 17.13 7. We should open a wide door to all impieties and prophaness should we admit another What Laws might not be baffled by pretence of the Spirit what murders thefts might not be committed under the notion of a Call from God What man could be secure of his life or his goods if men might walk according to their own wills How often is that in Scriptures In those days there was no King in Israel but every man did that which was right in his own eyes And what villany was then committed is clear and obvious 8. We have seen sad wanderings and dangerous paths since this doctrine of inward Light was known or broached The s●me teacheth the Reformed Churches of France Art 2. Belg. Art 7. Bohem. Art 1. Helvet Art 1. of Ireland Art 5. and Article 6. of the Church of England The Article it self is this Art 6. of the Church of England Holy Scriptures containeth all things necessary for salvation for whatsoever is not read therein nor may be proved thereby is not to be required of any man that it should be believed as an Article of Faith or be thought requisite and necessary to salvation c. Quest. 3. Whether men may come to a saving knowledge of GOD without the Scripture That there is a natural knowledge of God in the hearts of men cannot be denied by him that knows his own soul the Nations never so barbarous acknowledged ever a superiour power and supreme being unto whom they called for help in their distresse but a spirituall saving knowledge of the true God is only to be acquired from the Scriptures but we must distinguish 1. Between Infants and the Adult how God works upon Infants in a saving manner to fit them for himself is a Theam the Scripture is dark in that Infants may be saved and that some are is easie to be defended though they are not capable of knowing God by Scripture the Question is to be understood of the Adult and such as are grown in years 2. Of the Adult there are two sorts some that never had the Scriptures unto whom the knowledge of Christ never came these we ought not neither will we judge them but leave them to rise and fall to their own master and others that have the found of the Gospell unto whom Christ hath been preached of them only is the Question proposed 3. Those that have the sound of the Gospell are of two kinds Some of them God hath bereaved of the use of sence or understanding one that is born deaf another that hath not the u●e and exercise of Reason we must behold as perpetuall Infants and leave them to the Judge of Israel that will do justly And others there are unto whom God hath given the benefit of sence use exercise and reason those then who having their understandings open to receive the Gospel and opportunities of hearing can have no knowledg that is saving without the Scriptures For 1. There was never any other way given by God The Scriptures since their composing have been by God given unto men that men might live by them know him serve him in this only is the way to motives for holynesse and piety here alone can we read of Heavens glory to stir up zeal and of eternall life to cause diligence 2. There was never any other way known to the Church of Gods The Scriptures are written that ye might have life through his name Joh. 30.31 The Church of Ephesus is recommended to this Word by Paul it being alone able to build them up and give them an inheritance among them that are sanctified Acts 20.31 Blessed is he only that keepeth the sayings of the prophesie of this Book Rev. 22.7 3. We are to shun him nay cur●e him that w●●ld teach us another way For though we or an Angell f●●m Heaven preach any other g●spel unto you that is that holds ou●●noth●r way to be saved then is in the gospel then that which we hav● 〈◊〉 unto you let them be accursed As we said before so ●ay ● now again If any man preach unto you any other gospell let him be accursed Gal. 1.8 9. An Angel who is incompassing the Throne of God dayly and whom ●od useth as his Messenger Ordinary should he as from God reveal another way of salvation though by his very nature and holynesse he might allure men to this doctrine but forewarned forearmed he were to be Anathema Maranath● 4. What need we any further witnesse we our selves have heard him say To the Law and to the Testimonies Isai. 8.20 Thou shalt not go aside from any of the Words that I command thee this day to the Right hand or to the left Deut. 28.14 Quest. 4. Whether Perfection may
no Kingdom so Atheistical no Nation so Ignorant no part of the Halitable world so Barbarous but acknowledged a Diety and ownud a ●od some superior power they had to call to in distress something though it were but an Onyon did they bow to the Knee to and adore Those barbarous inhabitants of Matta of Melita seeing a Viper come upon Pauls hand conclude Acts 28.9 that he was a murtherer whom though he had escaped the Seat yet VENGEANCE suffereth him not to live He had escaped drowning yet he will not scape dying some God or other Nemesis po●sibily will not have him live this was a darke acknowledgment of a God 5. From the Testimony of the consciences of men Who is he that can put to silence that tell-tale called Conscience which makes men affraid and tremble even when for all the world they might spend their dayes in mirch what made these Barbarians to think murther a sin a sin that deserved death even this testimony of conscience which though they know not the cause did so sharply reprove them fright them when evill committed that never could they fully nor freely act according to their own desire Suppose one of those in a wilderness meets a passenger loaded with treasure that may be profitable for him he dare not take his goods he dare not take his life why he is affraid of VENGANCE where doth that dwell when did you see it is it not a great way of yet for all this he is affraid that if he do so some time in some place some way VENGEANCE will not suffer him to live this is a dark yet a conscionable demonstration of the being of a God 6. From that restraint that is put upon wicked men in the world If their were but a Bridle in the jawes of the wicked such as they could not shake off how long should the world endure what face of Religion what beauty of Holinesse what acts of Righteousnesse what deeds of Justice nay what naturall maintenance would be either for good or bad if the wicked of the world could have there full swing in iniquity their are stops put to them by conscience they are affraid of VENGEANCE they are held in by Providence God beats out the Teeth of these Lyons and the cheeh Teeth of those young Lyons and oft times brings their wickednesse and their wicked lives to an end together They roare sometimes but as to the Sea he hath made them Bancks and though they lift up themselves yet can they not passe over 7. From the Testimony of the Scriptures in this the being natures properties works of God are so fully held out and in all points necessary so clearly that h● that runs may read it of whose authority if any doubt see Quest. 1. and 6. of the third Chapter Quest. 2. Whether God be a Spirit In reading of the Scripturee we read of the hands of God the Eares the Eyes the Nose the Back the Face the Mouth the Feet of God his Heart his Breath his Throne his Age which gave formerly and at this day doth give occasion to some to conceit God a corporall and bodily substance A Spirit therefore we defend him to be excepting the body of Christ which in fulness of time he took upon him 1. From the Scripture Ioh. 4.24 God is a Spirit saith he who was well acquainted with his nature and Paul who was wrapped up into the third Heavens charges the Heathen for changeing the glory of the incorruptible God into an Image like unto corruptible man Rom. 1.23 If God had a bodily shape there was no ground for this reproof 2. From his nature as 1. From his Infinity were he in the shape of man that is of a bodily substance he could not be infinite every body is confined to its own proper place but God is in all places at once filleth all yet confined to none of old did he declare of himself that he filled both Heaven and Earth Ier. 23 24. It was long before that that it was the ground of Solomns admiration that God would dwell on Earth when behold the Heaven and the Heaven of Heavens could not contain him 1. Kings 8.2 And before that it was the subject of Davids praise that he could not flee upon Earth from his presence and if he went up to Heaven he was there and if he went to Hell he was there Psal. 139.7 All which could not have been true had he been circumscribed with a body Christ himself as man is not infinite but sits at the right hand of God according to the 6. Art of our Creed 2. From his invisibility Were the Son of God again upon the Earth he would be seen because of his body now whoever saw him he is an invisible King 1 Cor. 1.17 A Spirit hath not flesh and bones as you see me have says Christ to his timerous Apostles Luke 24.39 Now God is a spirit Ioh. 4 24. 3. From his Eternity He was for ever and to everlasting shall remain with him is no variablenesse no shadow of changing Now all flesh is grasse and all the goodlinesse thereof as the flower of the field that is naturall of itself which shews if God were a fleshly substance he must in a great measure have a shadow of imperfection 3. Another Argument against that grosse conceit may be drawn from those prohibitions so often urged by Moses against the Israelites making any Image of God Deut. 1.12 Ye heard the voyce of the Words but saw no similitude only ye heard a voyce And again v. 15. Take ye therefore good heed unto your selves for ye saw no manner of similitude on the day that the Lord spake to you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire lest you corrupt your selves and make you a graven Image the liknesse of Male or Female If our Authropomorphites had heard this Law the Argument had not been strong enough to keep away Images they themselves being made after Gods Image and by their Logick the Picture of a man might have been a sufficient representation of God Since in outward appearance he is all one with them and they with him We must note that those Scriptures that hold out God to have a heart or hand c. are but spoken to our capacity that knowing the use of those parts we may be bro●ght to know the better what he is The Holy Ghost speaking to us as Nurses to their Children in that childish Language best understood by them By the eyes of God therefore we must understand his watchfull care and providence over men By his ears his infinite knowledg by his mouth the Word he hath revealed by his Nose his fury kindled by his heart his Eternall decree or his his good liking by his arm the greatnesse of his Power by his hand his effectuall purpose to bring all things to passe by his right hand his honour glory and Majesty by his finger the holy Spirit by his love the
Let us make Man in our image after our likeness he that sayes these words must be one that can create and make Man to whom are these words spoken not to a Creature not to an Angel for man was not made after the image of an Angel as some that denies this truth makes Christ to be it must be God Why is it said let us note that there are more Gods as hath been before proved but the word Us denotes the plurality of Persons for the next words show God created man in his own Image It must be therefore God the Father that sayes to the other persons the same God with him let us make man in our own image that is in the image of God not of any created being moreover Matth. 3.16 We finde Iesus the second Person in the water the Spirit of God descending like a Dove upon him and the Father calling down from Heaven this is my well beloved Son c. where we clearly see the three Persons in different places doing different acts which proves that they are different persons which place being clear for the distinguishing of three we may say to our new Atrians or Antiteinitarians what I read Athamasius said to the old ones who denyed the three Persons Abi ad Iordanem vibebis go to the River of Jordan and thou should see the truth of it Though they be different in persons as is so clear in Scripture that it is to be wondred what impudent devil possesseth so many in our dayes to deny it yet it is not to be concluded there there are three Gods for these three personally make but one God essentially 1 Iohn 5.7 which brings us to the second part of the question how these three persons do agree This being such a mystery if any be too curious about this point let them shew me how they are framed figured in the wombe how they grow upon Earth how their own Soul animates their Body and by that time something more may be thought on for the further clearing of these insearch●ble mysteries viz. the begetting of the Son and proceeding of the Spirit yet that the one is begotten and the other doth proceed from Scripture is apparent but the manner of his begetting and of the other is proceeding God hath clouded And it is not good to be wise above what is written but to the point The three persons agree and ate one in Eternity in Dignity in Diety in Operating and in Willing 1. In Eternity there was none of them before another each of them have had and shall have as long continuance as another all of them hath been from everlasting and all of them shall be to everl●sting Iesus Christ is the same Yesterday to Day and the same for ever Heb. 13.8 I was set up from everlasting from the beginning or ever the Earth was Prov. 8.23 In the beginning was the word and the word was with God Iohn 1.1 and Gen. 1.26 To suppose now the Father and the Son to be one from Eternity and not also the Spirit is to suppose that God was without his Spirit which were Blasphemy in Divinity since he was alwayes a living God and absurd in reason yea equally ridiculous as to imagine a man to live move and have a beeing without a Soul The Father the Son and the Spirit are therefore coeternal that is one in eternity 2. In Dignity that is one hath as great excellency majesty as the other they are in one and the same state Honour and Glory ● none of them is greater then another none of them to be worshipped called upon more then another nor to be worshiped less then another the same glory that we give to the Father we are to give the Son and the same to the Holy Ghost and what we give to the Son the same we are to give to the Father and the Spirit Holy Holy Holy is the Lord of Hoasts cryed the Angels Isa. 6.3 a darke representation of the Trinity in Unity so Iohn 5.18 Gen. 1.26 Iohn 5.23 All men should honour the Son even as they honour the Father and Revela 5.12 13 Blessing Honour Glory and Power be to him that sitteth upon the throne and to the lamb for ever We cannot give nor ascribe these to him that sitteth on the Throne and to the Lamb but we must give them also to the Spirit of him that sitteth on the Throne and of the Lamb. The Father the Son and the Spirit are therefore coequall that is one in Dignity 3. In Diety that is one is equal and as much God as the other the Father is very God the Son is very God and the Holy Spirit is very God and yet there are not three but one God the self same God that the Father is the self same is God the Son and that very God that the Father and the Son is the self same God is the Holy Ghost Trinitatem omnipotentem quis intelligit quis non loquitur eam si tamen eam Rara anima quae dum de illa loquitur scit quid loquitur Lord I believe help my unbeliefe I believe that the Father is not the Son nor the son the Spirit and also that the Son is not the Father nor the Spirit and also that the Spirit is neither Father nor Son yet I believe that the Father the Son and the Spirit is ONE A TABLE Demonstrating this In his igitur tribus quam sit inseparabilis vita Unae essentia quam inseparabilis distinctio tamen distinctio videat qui potest certe coram se est Aug. lib. Con. 13. c. 11. Haec est enim sides vera veniens de sana doctrina haec certe est Fides Catholica Orthodoxa quam me docuit Deus in sinu matris Ecclesia gratiâ suâ Aug. 1. med 30. This shall appear by a distinct proving each person to be God And 1. That the Father is God appears by the Scriptures and reason 1. By the Scriptures Thes. 3.11 Now God himself and our Father and our Lord Iesus Christ direct our way unto you here God Almighty is called upon distinctly with the Son under the notion of our Father for so he is by adopting us his children as before was spoken and so v. 13. Before God even our Father so 2 Thes. 1.1 2. Paul c. Unto the Church of the Thessalonians in God our Father and Chap. 2.16 Now our Lord Iesus Christ himself and God even our Father so Ephes. 1.3 Blessed be the God Father of our Lord Iesus Christ He that is his Father is our Father is God blessed for ever Heb. 1.1 8. God who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the Fathers by the Prophets hath in these last day spoken to us by his Son The same God that spoke to the Prophets hath a Son therfore he is his Father whose Son now is Christ His who spake in divers manners
time of teaching which is either Ordinary as the sabbath or extraordinary as the times of fasting and feasting appointed by the Church of all which we shall discourse somewhat and something briefly beginning with the ordinary time of teaching viz. the sabbath CHAP. V. Of the sabbath TO every thing there is a season and a time to every purpose under heaven saith the kingly preacher Eccl. 3.1 At all times God is to be worshipped and served by the sons of men but the sabbath is the special time wherein those that fear him singularly serve him When that beginneth then begin they as men in the dayes of Enoch Gen. 4.26 to call upon the name of the Lord more solemnly fervently orderly and publickly in obedience to his Law In prosecution of this Ordinance we shall let pass many distinctions made of sabbaths and particularly handle these points 1. What a sabbath is 2. How the sabbath is to be kept 3. Why God would have it kept 4. What sabbath it is that men now under the Gospel are bound to keep 5. Resolve some Questions SECT I. 1. A sabbath may be thus described It is one whole day in seven 2. Separated from other dayes 3. Wherein a man resteth 4. From all other works 5. And recreations 6. In a holy and spiritual manner 7. To serve and worship the living God in a publick solemn way 1. It is one whole day in seven a full day consisting of 24 hours beginning at the midnight before and continuing until the midnight after other dayes are of that length and the sabbath ought not to be shorte● Acts 20.17 Paul continued preaching on the first day of the week until midnight The Iews had a time of preparation for the sabbath Luke 23.54 which begun about three of the clock the day before the sabbath wherein all work was laid aside and all Artificers prohibited work saving Shomakers and Taylors and they had onely but half the time of preparation allowed them in this it were to be wished that Christians were Iews c. 2. Separated from other dayes the sabbath is distinguished from other dayes it is holy it is set a part by God for his own use and service she is Queen of all other dayes and Lady of the week the rest are attending her but as concubines and handmaids 3. Wherein a man resteth by this particle man is included all th●t is his ●he is head of his Wife Father of his Children Lord of his servants and Master of his beasts when he rests he is to see th●t all about him rest also from this day the day is named Sabbath signifieth rest and judgement shall rest on him that will not rest with all that belongs unto him 4. F●om all other works what ever trade or occupation he be of and what ever work he follow at other times must be laid aside at this time no servile work is to be done now without sinning against God and he that doth so sinneth against his own soul no bu●ing nor selling of Merchant ware no dealing in husbandry N b. 13.15 no carrying of burthens Ier. 17.22 no outward servile b●dily labour m●st be performed it would distract the soul and keep it from doing that for which this day was consecrated 5. And recreations This is a time wherein there is no time for sports and recreations that God that would not have us work never made the sabbath for us to play these distract the soul much therefore we are not to touch them it may be lawful with Samson to propose ridles at another time but not now for it is the sabbath of the Lord thy God Isa. 58.13 6. In a holy and spiritual manner The Law is spiritual and therefore birds the souls of men an outward resting from work is but Sabbatum Asinorum there ought to be a difference between the resting of a man and the resting of his Ox we must therefore rest from our works of sin but of this hereafter 7. To serve and worship the living God in a publick solemn way when God had made man he rested from all his works to shew that man was to be eternal and he instituted the sabbath as a type of that eternal test wherein man was to worship him for ever God ought to be must be served every day but in the sabbath more publickly if it can be or more solemnly if otherwise Acts 13 14 15 16.44 Acts 16.23 and Iohn 20.19 SECT II. The sabbath being known we are to inquire how this holy day is to be kept God will not have his sabbath polluted Is. 56.6 Other days by the Hebrews were called prophane this being by God made holy holding it unlawful to rost an apple to pluck an herbe nay to defend themselves when they were assaulted by their enemies by which a thousand of them were slain 1 Macch 2.38 The sabbath must be kept and our rest is onely sanctified and approved of God when we use the means and do the works of sanctification our resting must not be an idleness but in doing the work of God which is our sanctification Ex. 20.20 1. By using the means as hearing the word 4 Luke 20. praying to God Acts 16.3 receiving the Sacraments of Christ Acts 20.7 and all Acts that may conduce to the strengthening of grace confirming in faith 2. By doing good works as relieving the poor 1 Cor. 16.2 teaching the ignorant Acts 18.26 reclaiming the erroneous Acts 17.1 2 3 and all other Acts that have an immediate tendency to the edifying of the Church and these things must be done both priva●ely and publickly 1. Privately as Meditation upon the Word and inward application of it to a mans soul. 2. Publickly conferring with others ●●●ing the sick praying for them or if it may be singing some comfortable Psalm with them and that all these may be the better done we must prepare our selves 1. By removing all hinderances the night before overmuch businesse may and will distract the soul and keep a man either from all or from part of Gods worship the first burning of our Christian incense may be sweetest the first prayer may do us most good c. 2. By putting our souls in a holy frame some time before Meditate upon Eccles. 5.1.28 Gen. 17.10 Numb 3.1 Mar. 35. Isa. 2.56 Which may compose and put the spirit of man in a sanctified frame of heart to join in affection to the prayers of the Church and cause him to heed with affection the Word of Christ and that both Forenoon and Afternoon Eccles. 11.6 or then so far as in thee lies thou robbest God of half his due the whole day being his that this may be done 1 Prevent or quash all domestical or house-troubles Levit. 19. 3. Discords contentions and heart-burnings are but as water to quench the ●re of holynesse and may extend to the prophaning of Gods Sabbaths beware of coming before God with this strange fire least he consume thee 2. By meditating
they rest from their labours no time witho●t question our Apostle had taught that Church to keep one day in seven he was a wise master-builder and could not 〈◊〉 in so necessary a point to give them his judgement we conclude therefore that that day that was kept by the Apostles and the Churches where they were was taught also to the Churches where they were not which caused the Collossians to be judged in not keeping the Jewish ●●bbath and that made the Apostle write to them so punctually against sabbaths Now the day that the Apostles kept and the Church with them is generally called the first day of the week never the sa●bbath of which we have these remarkable passag●● holding forth a change 1. Our Saviours resurrection Mat. 28. he sleeped in the grave the Jewish sabbath left it behind him wrapped in the grave clothes as he had by his death burial put an end to all Ceremonial Laws so to the Ceremony of the sabbaths being precisely the seventh day from the Creation 2 Col. 16. on only day in seven being moral we have this shadowed out untosis more clearly then that idle Romanist Paleatus who took great pains to write about the shape or shadow of our Saviours body in the linnen cloth wherein he was buried we are sure that the Jewish sabbath was but a type or shadow of that day of rest that even on earth was to be kept 2. Our Saviours apparition Iohn 20.19 the same day at evening being the first day of the week he appeared to all his Disciples vers 19. And after eight dayes he appeared again which must be the same day of the week On the Jewish sabbath if the Disciples should be gathered together to worship God yet they behold not Christ but being gathered together on the first day of the week Christ comes and preaches to them confirms their faith in that he is the Son of God and so declared by his rising from the dead 3. The Spirits descension Acts 2.1 the Holy Ghost did chuse this day to baptize the Apostles And when the day of Pentecost was fully come ther were al● wi●● one accord in one place c. And there appeared ● even 〈◊〉 as of Fire c. That this was no other then the f●rst day of the week may easily be proved for that our Saviour was crucified at the feast of the Passeover is clear in Scripture and that the day after our Saviours death was the Paschal sabbath feast on which the Iews rested Luke 23.5.6 Now from the keeping of the passeover or from the Paschal sabbath feast for at our Saviours death that feast happened on the sabbath the preparation was not so much in regard of it as in regard of the sabbath as Ioh. 19.14 compared with Luke 23.5 6. and Mark 15.42 is just fifty days the fiftieth day from the passeover must be the feast of Pentecost Levit. 23.15 16. which feast shall fall on the sabbath Now the day of Pentecost was fully come before the Spirit discended that is the day or first day of that feast he came not down in the beginning of it not in the middle but when it was fully come that is the day fully finished at its compleating the Apostles were gathered together with one accord that is in the beginning of the day after betimes they were met according to agreement without doubt to worship God for the spirit came and the multitude was gathered and all before the third hour of the day which is our nine of the clock An argument made use of by Peter to prove that neither he nor his fellow Apostles were drunk as was supposed many such circumstances fully shew that the sabbath was passed and the day of the feast fully come that is compleated and ended God therefore chusing this day to inspire his servants with his own spirit to imbolden them in the preaching of his word and they preaching upon that day baptizing upon that day taking no notice of the Jewish sabbath is an argument of its change God giving them the spirit of doctrine not on the Jewish resting day but on the first day of the week in regard that not that but this was the day wherein God appointed men should be taught in a more solemn way the wonderful works of God of Christs resurrection from the dead and of salvation to all those that believe in his name 4. The Sacraments Administration Acts 20.7 it is thus written And upon the first day of the week when the Disciples ea●● together to break bread Paul preached the Jewish sabbath was kept by the Iews immediately before at the close of it and beginning of the next day the Disciples came together that is believers or Christians as if it had been customary and they came to hear the word and receive the Sacraments to break bread c. And Paul preached until midnight which is the close of the sabbath Now why should the Christians design and appoint meetings forbear working spend the day in Ordinances continue at that so long except the time of rest had been changed they would rather have done it on the sabbath day that was immediately gone before then on this if there had not been a change made 5. The poors collection The Apostles 1 Cor. 16.1 orders the Members of that Church that upon the first day of the week every one lay by him in store as God hath prospered him concerning collections for the Saints Now why should this office of Charity of setting apart some small piece of money for the use of the poor be done upon the first day of the week but because of this that that day being the day set apart for the serving and worshipping of God they should set apart some of their goods for the poor Saints of God charity being alwayes a work accompanying the sabbath and he informs them also that he had given the same Order to the Churches of Galatia vers 1. The first day of the week they must also Remember the poor and not on the seventh 6. The Divine Revelation what time was it that God was pleased to make known to his servant Iohn the things that were to be hereafter it was on the Lords day Rev. 1.10 as we call it the Lords Supper because of his institution and his Church because of his presence there in an especial way so there can no o●her reason be given why any day should be called the Lords day more then another for it is manifest that Iohn is speaking of some particular time but in respect either of his institution or some special Act that was done or day that was dedicated for the Lords service in a particular manner above or more then other days And without doubt this day at or before that time was commonly called the Lords day for we read it was a common question among Christians Servasti Dominicum keepst or hast thou kept the Lords day the
it was instituted by him who is altogether Holy it is not of an Earthly extraction neither was its original from the Creatures breast but the Creators will 2. In regard of the end of it it was set apart for Holy uses and purposes It was designed for the time of Holy worship and to be a day for Holy Assemblies and congregations 3. In regard of the Holy observers of it Holy men observed it nothing was done by them but was Holy they prayed they read they sacrificed they heard they received the Holy Sacraments they meditated they did Holy things in private Holy things in publick whence deservedly it is called the Holy Sabbath-day and is the ordinary time of hearing the word taught The extraordinary now follows CHAP. VI. Of a Fast. WHen Iesurun waxed fat then she rebelled Deut. 32.15 that the Church might keep her Children from sinful wantonness she appoints dayes of fasting which are as dayes of Physick wherein she her self as cloathed with sackcloth sacrifices with Iob for her self and her Children least in their feasting they should sin against God To let pass many distinctions a fast is either private or publick 1. Private Matth. 6.16 Then the Church goes into her closet if you mark her narrowly you may with Eli see her lips to move To this private fa●● is joyned reading of the word 2. Publick Ioel 2.15 then the Church blows her trumpet and invites her people to beare her company every preacher ought to be a Mordicas to give intimation to all Gods people to this is joyned Preaching of the word we shall speak of this kind of fa●● yet so as not excluding the other This Publick fa●● is either Occasional or Annual 1. Occasion Ester 4.16 when some imminent judgment is to be removed or some great suit to be made then the Church sends up strong crys and suplications for deliverance and acceptance 2. Annual Lev. 23.29 she hath dayes which at the return of the year she usually observes in mourning habit having for that purpose fervent and sutable prayers lying by her The Principal whereof is that solemn Fast of Lent in which by a moderate abstinence joyned with prayer she obtains a victory over corruption This large fast hath an Ash-wednesday for dawning and a Good-friday for its twilight which two like a goodly porch and a pleasant garden cast a glory upon the whole building of her Lent devotions If the Church be overseen in these or any of her family fa●● in point of duty she hath her Ember weeks sanctifying every quarter of her year by a holy mortification craving a blessing upon that part which is to come and begging a pardon for her offences in that portion which is past yet knowing that she dayly offends and therefore fearing the worst she casts in Wednesday and Friday to help her drooping spirits to enbosome her self before the Lord for her weekly offences not omitting her morning and evening sacrifice-duty performed for the sins of the night and of the day in which inwardly she is cloathed with Sackcloath by repentance and outwardly she is abstemious craving only for her dayly bread Before the fall the Churches garments were purely white and her service was only gratulatory but since she is possessed with an evil spirit which goeth not out but with prayer and fasting unto which sackcloath with ashes is proper cloathing In Paradice by eating she caught a surfeit through which for above five thousand years she hath been in a feaverish distemper and to prevent it from being deadly she is often in this duty of fasting touching which we shall run over these particulars and see 1 The nature of it 2 The Ends of it 3 The time of it 4 The manner of it 5 Resolve some questions concerning it SECT I. 1 The nature of it 1 It is an holy and religious abstinence 2 From the exercises and comforts of this ontward life 3 To witness the humiliation of the body And 4. Fitting of the soul for more fervency in prayer It is an holy and religious abstinence there is a natural abstinence or fast for the health of the body prescribed often by Physicians there is a civil abstinence or fast for the good of the Common-wealth prescribed sometime by the civil Magistrate but the fast that we are to behold is holy and religious prescribed by the Church for the good of the soul. Not that fasting in it self considered or abstinence abstractedly taken is holy or any essential part of religion but as a means or way to make the soul holy or religious that conducing to the ends hereafter to be mentioned It hath holiness in its eye and holiness in its desire and therefore may be called a holy abstinence 2. From the exercises and comforts of this outward life these are the things we must abstain from in the time of our fast alwayes having a respect to decency and frailty as 1. From bodily labor Levit. 23. 30. this is properly for that fast that is appointed for a certain day Ioel 1. 14. 2. From food Ionah 3.7 this is sometimes total as abstaining from God altogether 2 Sam. 3.35 and sometimes partial abstaining from pleasant or delightfull feeding according to the length of the fast Dan. 10.2 3. David there will eat nothing till the Sun go down and Daniel here will eat no pleasant bread for three weeks From sleep 2 Sam. 12.16 The body even in this may be afflicted for it 's frequent sinning in that passion 4. From attire Exod. 33. this came into the world by sin and therefore ought to be laid aside yet herein all apparell is not to be put aside nor in the other is all sleep to be forborn we must in these have respect to frailty and necessity David in the one place Will lye all night upon the earth and the Israelites for that day in the other place will not put on their ornaments so the King of Nineveh put off his robe Jonah 3.6 5. From the marriage-bed Ioel 2.16 1 Cor. 7. 8. 6. From sports and recreations Levit. 23. 39. A fast is a Sabbath a day of rest and therefore what is required for the one is to be performed on the other Isa. 38.13 19. 3. To witness the humiliation of the body here is one end of fasting But what shall we appear unto men to fast this rather hath an eye to publick then to private abstinence and deserves rather to have God for a witness then man he knows the body sinned the heart hath been lifted up and the eyes lofty the tongue hath spoken proud things in its hea●ing and the hands of man are not clean in his sight Man is defiled by that which befals him in the night and his ears are made impure by what he hears in the day Let God therefore that knows thou hast sinned by eating and by strange apparrel see that thou art humble for it either by thy fasting or more sober diet spare not thy
a Bed-chamber which is a civil dedication setting them apart for their use and the very altering of those uses hath a piece of unseemliness attending it a sink in a Parlour and a jack in a Dineing-room were not comely and therefore not used because of the civil dedication Now is it not therefore as proper that that house in a parish builded for the Lord have its sacred dedication and separated by some holy service for that end and purpose which may put a kind of sham upon any that would out of crosness or wickedness alienate it from its proper use but this brazen sacred age hath quitted shame and our upstart noble men and Gentlemen would be loath to have their grooms litter or curry their horses in their Halls yet these sacrilegious and prophane Saints could approve ye command them to do it in Churches Hear this ye old men and give care all ye inhabitants of the Land hath this been in your days or even in the dayes of our Fathers 1 Joel 1. O Tell it not in Gath publish it not in the streets of Askelon Kings 1.20 4. From that holy and generall rule of the Apostle avouching All things to be sanctified by the word and prayer 1 Tim. 4.5 It is these two by which our meat our drink our beds be sanctified that is that these things are fitted for their use for which they were appointed designed and created the like may be said of Churches that may serve for the use and purpose for which they were designed framed and erected 5 For the greater terrour to the enemies of Christianity or indeed of regularity when they shall know that this place this table hath been set apart for Gods worship for prayer Preaching and the Sacraments and seeing from Scripture that both God and Christ allowed of the like ●practises in former ages they may be affraid of alienating or thwarting the first institution of the same Quest. 2 Whether those places or Churches may be termed holy It was to be admired that some pretending to be so familiar with Scripture that it was their ordinary language yea the main ingredients of their orders and warrants would be text yet be highly offended with others for speaking the language of the holy Ghost in calling a man devout or a Church holy which are Scripture expressions to passe over the former and that we may not be mistaken in the latter we must distinguish of Holinesse for there is an absolute or relative holinesse 1. Absolute that is where holynesse is really inherent and actuall in the nature of the thing and so no created being can be holy but Angels and men It were high blasphemy to affirm a stone or a beam holy in this sense for they that are so sanctified are glorified 2 Relative that is where holynesse is only adherent and in respect of the presence or interest that it hath unto another that is holy in this sence the person of the Levite is in a peculiar way holy Levit 21.6 as being separated from others for the service of the most holy God so the Nazarite Num. 6.8 so the sabbath is holy so are the garments of the Priest Exod. 28 2. In this the flesh of Beeves of Calfes of Sheep is holy Numb 18.9 10. and the firstling of a Cow or of a She●p or of a Goat are holy v. 17. the Spoons snuffers and v●ssels used in the temple or about the worship of God are holy 1 Kings 8 4. And the garments in which Aaraon performed divine service are holy Exod. 3.5 Ios. 5.15 the structure of the temple is holy Psal. 79. 1. the ground upon which it stands is holy Psal. 48.1 Zeph. 3.11 In which sense our Churches in the birth may be termed holy the vestry holy Ezek. 42.19 there was never a spoon in all Solomons Temple holyer then our pulpit cushions are nor an altar in his Temple holyer then our tables nor a basin holyer then our souls nor a cu●l●hen our chalices nor any of his hangings holyer then our communion cloaths to speak then according to the language of the Spirit what ever it be that is set apart for the service of God to be used in his worship may without Idolatry or superstition be called holy that is in this relative sence in which only God speaks it for absolute holinesse God knew they wanted Quest. 3. Whether such Churches as have been Erected by Romanists may be used by Catholicks It is an argument brought by some who are wise in their own conceits that the Churches or Temples no● in England being builded by Papists and defiled through Idolatry are rather to be levelled then supported but nothing lesse 1 From the end and purpose of their being builded They were made by the Papists to worship God in and him in the Lord Jesus for the honour of Christ and him crucified were they erected if there were Idolatry mixed with this general end we may remove that and let the place stand and it is done 2 From the practice of godly Princes Holy Hezekiah did not destroy the temple though it was defiled by Idolatry in the days of King Ahaz but cleansed it neither did Iosiah overthrow the house of the Lord because it had been polluted by Mannasseth but repaired the breaches and ruines of it 1 King 22.5 It is true they both broke down the groves and the high places the Lord abhorring them and commanding at the first Israel to bring them down Indeed Iudas Macabans pulls down the altar that had been poluted through Idolatry and builds a new one 1 Mac. 4.46 which it is hoped will not be objected against us being Apocrypha and if it should when they can show us that it shall be as easy and as cheap for as to build other Churches as it was for him to build another altar then something may be done and yet at second thoughts it is easie to be supposed that there is scarce a communion table which the Altar typified now in England that was originally used by any of the See of Rome 3 From the scope design of hem that would have those places abolished they foresee that such places could not be builded againe and they know that such great lights keps their glow-worm conventicles from appearing these places being aloft do condemn their meetings in corners Christ preached on mont was transfigured crucified ascended on a mount all publick places now this they have and therefore to keep their error from derection they would have those places raized from the foundation Quest. 4. Whether at a Christians entry into those places he may perform his devotion Some have been thought superstitiously affected by many that knew not what superstition was for offering up upon their knees or otherwise prayer to the almighty at their first entry into the Church but wrongfully for 1 To performe some part of worship in a place set apart for worship is most sutable it is an house of
the first sight to the carnal Christian but a low and poor device to gather some men together and pray and lay their hands upon anothers head to make a man an Ambassador of Jesus Christ to make him a steward of the Mysteries of God a Planter a Waterer a Builder and a Watchman to the Church by the same kind of Logick the other ordinances of God might be abused What force may the same Creature say hath a Morsel of bread and draught of wine in the Sacramnnt of the Lords Supper to assure men of heaven to foagive their sins to confirm faith to qucken hope to preserve love and so contemn that We ought in those cases to look to the institution and approbation of God and practise of the Apostles and to keep and hold up Gods ordinances in purity is a means of being ever happy This therefore of ordination being one to receive it to come to it may procure much profit to the party that hath it and to the Church for whom it is given him 2. It imboldens him in that imployment by this he may shew both his gifts and commission which two may make his face as brass against the Irony faces of perverse wicked men There may be some whose imprudence may carry them out to preach without this commission yet when they read the Scripture and see this ordinance practised so constantly both in Law and Gospel their conscience if they have one must needs accuse of that of which the Pharisees were by ou● Saviour even for Thieves and Robbers Iohn 10. by entring th● Church not by the door of ordination for of the Pharisee preaching God gave no commission 3. The solemn prayers of the Church with which that exercise is attended may bring the holy spirit to him that is ordained The gift of utterance Gal. 4.3 The gift of Wisdom 2 Tim. 1.7 being asked God may send them down Prayes availeth much and in an act of so high concernment both to Christ and to his Church it is not Christian like to suppose those prayers to be barred from the ears of God he that is ordained may be a prophane sinner yet as men will give the Nurse good things for love of the Children God may give him gi●ts for the good of his Church Iudas bore the Bag by which Christ relieved the poor 4. It binds him to that function he that is once brought to the plow of the Scriptures and hath put his hand to it to till the ground of the hearts of men is not through the unevenness of the path or hardness of the soil to forsake that imployment knowing that what ever happen however the world go this must be his work it may and without question doth make him set himself to his work and study how to go through bad report and good report c. but this leads us to the Quest. 2. Whether a Minister may renounce his Ordination It hath been the practise of some persons for the pleasing of a factions generation of late years to contemn quit deny or renounce their ordination but it savoured not of godliness 1. The nature of Ordination is against it That is a setting a man apart by the Church for that peculiar exercise and office he is separate from othe● imployments to follow this and therefore it is not in his own power to renounce it at his pleasure or for any cause whatsoever 2. That Assertion of our Saviour ● Luke 9.62 condemns it He is not fit for the kingdome of God that puts his hand to the plough and looketh back he that makes an entry either upon the preaching of Christ or professing of him must never come back to the world for the renouncing of either 3. The Ministerial office should fail if this were granted It is unknow what the thoughts of a Minister are in his troublesome going through the parts of his office and allow him power to forsake his calling in a few years we might see Pulpits empty the least cross affront persecution might be arguments strong enough to induce him for the forsaking of his people study calling and betake himself to some other honourable profession or whatever seemed good in their own eyes 4. The Laws of the Church will not suffer it to go unpunished if it be done Those that are Church-officers themselves know what strong reasons may induce men to forsake and quit their callings to put a chain to them that are otherwise without conscience the Church of England orders No man being admitted a Deacon or Minister shall from henceforth voluntarily relinquish the same nor afterward use himself in the course of his life as a Lay-man upon pain of excommunication c. Quest. 3. Whether the Ministerial Office be to continue alwayes in the World There are spirits gone out amongst us crying down the Ministry as Antichristian affirming th light within or the witness within is only now to be heard but these spirits when tryed are not of God for that office must and shall continue 1. For Christ hath promised to be with it unto the end of the world Mat. 28.20 Unto that time therefore it must endure It is spoken to the Apostles the first Teachers who are dead it must therefore be understood with them that are their successors in that office which are now in being and those that shall come after us who are not yet born 2 From the imperfection of the Church Eph. 4 11 12. Untill all the members of the Church come in the unity of the Faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a p●rfect man unto the measure of the s●ature of the fulnesse of Christ God will give Pastours and Teachers admit that many were now perfect that were of age yet for them that are young the ministry is necessary there is dayly a young generation coming up belonging to the Election of grace and therefore the Church is not pe●fect and therefore the Ministery must abide that this Scripture might be fulfilled 3 God hath appointed this office to be the ordinary meanes of salvation so long as their soules on Earth this office must remain there being no way shown by God since the fall but this that can bring a man to glory repentance faith and good workes must be tau●ht by them and while ●he world stands this d●ctrine will be necessary 4 The Sacraments must be received by the members of the Church untill Christs second coming Mat. 28.19 1 Cor. 11.26 It is these men that have this power derived from the Apostles to administer the seales of the word which seales untill the end of all things and un●ill the coming of the Lord by the whole body of the Church must be received by consequence therefore there must be Church-officers to deliver the same untill the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. 5 From the practise of the holy Apostles and disciples of the Lord They constantly
mans inability weakness and unworthiness and withal shewing the grace of God freeing a soul from all doth very much tend to the advancement of free grace and the love of God 4. To set home the cross of Christ more powerfully In reading the history of our Saviours passion what soul can but be affected yet when the Preacher cloathed with a commission overshadowed by a divine ray in the congregation and his tongue made like the pen of a ready Writer declares his agony in its order time causes parts nature greatness and effects what heart can be so rocky as not to break 5. To keep down pride in man the more strongly Scripture shews man that originally he is but dust as the wild Asses Colt that he is worse then the beast that perish that he is as water spilt upon the earth that his days are swifter then a weavers shuttle and that his life is but as a vapour these being set forth in popular Sermons with the advantages of Oratory judgement and invention makes the eyes of the poor mortal to see the face of his nativity the clearer yea on his eye lids to behold the shadow of death SECT V. Questions resolved Quest. 1. Whether Gospel-Preachers ought to have a se●led maintenance Quest. 2. Whether an Heretical or upstart Teacher may be known from the true Quest. 3. Whether a Preacher once setled in a place may leave that place Quest. 4. Whether it be expedient to permit one to preach constantly in a place that hath neither order from the Church nor charge of the people Quest. 5. Whether he that is a Gospel-preacher may lawfully own civil Titles of honour Quest 1 Whether Gospel Preachers or Ministers ought to have a setled maintenance There is a crew or company in this age who either through ignorance or malice or both cryes down and speakes against a setled maintenance for the body of the Ministry affirming that they are purely to live upon charity and depend upon the good will of the people but not to ● and longer upon a Preface this Tenant seems to be unjust 1. From that certain and competent allowance given to the Ministers of the Jewish Church God took a special care that they that waited at his Altar and served him in his Temple should have certain and honourable maintenance for so doing what by first fruits by tithes c. the Levites had a liberal subs●●tence nay as it is recorded from Scripture out of an hundred bushels of corn the Levites were to have nineteen besides their forty eight Cities with the fields about them which in the land of Israel was no small portion he that appointed so liberally and provided so certainly for his servants under the Law did without question never design those under the Gospel should be beggers 2. From that certain and unavoidable charge that dayly he is put to what Ministers buy they pay for as other men ●they are at the same charge and expence as others are which to do and in the mean time be at an uncertainty how to clear that charge is in reason not to be admitted Except the world were free to them reason not to say religion would never leave them to be free to the world 5. From that uncertainty yea probability that he might have of having nothing Charitas as of old Astrea hath took her leave of the earth there are Nabals that would give none of their earthly goods to him that gave them heavenly food They would not buy heaven for a certain act of charity and rather then they would be at any charges they would go without a Teacher which thing being known to the Minister we may know what the issue of it would be 4. From that snare and temptation that it might lay before men Ministers though they be Angels in office yet they are but men in nature though they be chosen vessels yet they are but earthen ones Now for them to live at the good will and by the charity of others might keep their tongues from speaking the word of the Lord in that bold sincere upright manner wherein they ought to speak it for fear of displeasing their people or angering their hearers lest they should as Laban either change their wages for the less or take from them their wonted charity altogether the very thoughts of which ought not to come within the compass of a Ministers soul and therefore the occasion of them to be farre away 5. From the ends of those men that affirm such Doctrine it is not so much for the ease of themselves as for the rooting out of the Ministry they know what a few years would produce in the Nation where this should be practised i● which though conscience might make the Ministery that now is to go through their callings in fastings and watchings or else go and exercise their gifts among the heathen who with the Aegyptians have given lands to their Priests yet men might have no encouragement to bring up their sons to learning and therefore put them to other callings which in time would bring Ignorance and Atheism upon them The end these men propose to themselves in crying down a setled maintenance that their ignorance might be thought learning their impudence might pass for zeal and their errors for Orthodox Tenents but before they obtain this end Let them grin like dogs and grudge that they are not satisfied Let them howl like Bears and eat up their flesh with envy 6. From the practise of all civilized Nations whether Heathens Turks Jewes or Christians who alwayes had a care to mantaine the honour and dignity of their priests particularly Pharoah who would furnish the priests from his own table rather then for want when the whole world wanted they should sell their lands Exod. 47.22 What God under the law appointed for his priests cannot be unknown to them that know the Scripture They had citys and suburbs tithes free-will offerings first ruits and their part in sacrifices of all sorts that swere to be parted And under the Gospel in which time as God appointed that they which minister about holy things should live of the things of the temple and they that wait at the altar are pertakers with the altar even so hath the Lord ordained that thy which preach the Gospel should live of the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.13 Now God appointed certaine mantainence to them that served at the Altar even so hath he ordained that they who preach the Gospel should have certaine subsistance And where ever the Gospel got footing and Christ preached there was a certain allowance for the ministry throughout the whole Christian world 7 From that dampnesse that would fall upon the active Spirit were it not so what man is there but would have encouragment in his work to go throw it with joy and truly when it is considered ministers would have some encouragment too The Priests and Levits who had been scattered in the Idolatrous reign
of King Ahaz when gathered together by godly Hezekiah the people are commanded to give the portion of the priests and levits unto them that they might be encouraged in the law of the Lord and the people bring in abundance of the first fruits of corne wine and oyle and honey and all the increase of the field and the tithe of all things brought they in abundantly 2 Chron. 32.4 5. to say no more the ministers of the gospel are even to receive outward encouragment otherwise they may go out and see if they can find a place to sojourn in There are some that find out a way to prevent all these inconveniences they are so much in frendship and in love with their minister that they could wish him to learn some trade and so he might live comfortable and for his example they produce him Paul But to that we give this brief reply 1 The other Apostles worked not 1 Cor. 9.6 The Apostle vindicating himself declares that he and Barnabas hath a power to forbear working as well as other the Apostles he therefore haveing no engagement upon him by God for his so doing is not to be brought as a stan●ing president to the ministry of the Gospel in that particular he haveing a power to forbear working as well as Peter and the other Apostles and we are sure Paul had no commission to work 2 Paul for all his working made but a poor liveing so basely covetous were the Citizens or Corinth that he could not get a subsistence among them for all his preaching for all his working but took wages of other Churchs to supply his necessity 2 Corinth 11.7 8 9. And because he took it from those Churches unto whom at that time he did preach he calls it a robbing of them 3 He seemes to give us his reason of so doing 2 Cor. 11.12 The false Apostles in that City glorying that they preached the gospel freely the same which our Hereticks do now which the Apostles of Christ did not made Paul in that City to take a way the occasion of their so glorying by his free teaching which is no rule for them to follow unto whom God and the laws hath given a certaine maintainence and yet for his working was despised of those false Apostles ver 7. so desirous always are those that are not true teachers to find something against them that are Another reason of his so doing is the Corinthians covetousnesse If he had but took from them so much as would have maintained him the gospel had been hindered and Pauls doctrine by reason of charges had been neglected and therefore is not to be brought as a rule for the ministry of the Gospel now since Church rents are setled and Christianity established 4 Those Immediate inspirations whe●ewith those holy men of God were inspired are now ceased in the Church Paul might worke and yet his preaching never be the more erron●ous his lips being guided and that immediatly by the unerring Spirit of God but these gifts now fayling Men ought to study search and ponder upon what they are to deliver which indeed is sufficient considering other necessary divertisments to imploy the whole man without following a trade except we would preach as they do and lead our people into by-paths and by what I know of those preachers if they knew no better how to handle their needle their axe their aul or their plough then they do a text they would never get a living by their trade 5 These men are injurious to the whole Church of Christ they long to see her again in persecution pursued with fire and faggot Is it possible that they are ignorant of that text wherein the Apostle makes it one of his miseries that he must work with his hands take his own words 1 Cor. 4.9 For I think that God hath set forth us the Apostles last as it were men appointed to death For we are made a spectacle unto the world to A●gels and to men c. Even unto this present hour we both hunger and thirst and are naked and are buffeted and have no certain dwelling place and labour working with our own hands shall any man hence take occasion to affirme that it is a duty of a true minister of the gospel to live in want and misery and to have no certain dwelling place if so even those trades-men must passe for false teachers That then that Saint Paul groaned under through persecution and affliction shall it be a standart unto all others in times of peace and setlement To conclude then these men are angry that the Church hath gotten victory over her enemies in regard her ministers have bread and a habitation Let me assure them that when the wise disposer of all things shall see fit to visit the Church with persecution which they long for they may see many not only chuse to work rather then the Gospel shall go down but chuse to be burned and to dye as there hath been many rather then the faith shall want defenders Quest. 2. Whether an Heretical or upstart teacher may be known from the true The markes and tokens or symptones of an Heretick according to a very able and good man are these following 1 He preaches ambiguously in dark phrases there is a new kind of canting language got up among our Hereticks now I have heard some of them an hour together and so darke were their expressions that it would have puzled a wise man to have made even nonsence of it which the ignorant take for inspiration 2 He delivers some doctrine against the fundamental points of religion there is nothing more common with many of them then this some deny original sin some the divinty of the holy Ghost some eternal judgment other the doctrine of baptisme others the Inbeing of sin in believers c. 3 He opposes the faithfull preachers as Iannes and Iambres withstood Moses This text they have the Impudence to apply to the true ministery opposing them though they have no call to shew that they are sent of God whether inward or outward and the ministers of the gospel can show both however Wizards Witches Seducers are their ordinary language though God account them as the starrs in his right hand 4 He is not in the same tale in his chamber and in the pulpit to his followers and to others this experience abundantly testifies this piece of pollicy the jesuit hath learned him who often times in bookes seemes as made up of devotion and yet in their closets and practises are full of all manner of Iniquity 5 He boasts of illuminations and revelations this is like the popes infallibility which the heretick flys too in cases of necessity sometimes they will take the boldnesse to praedict or prophesie touching Christs second coming the downfall of Antichrist by which they mean the Clergy but their spirit hath so often deceived them that I hope they by this time see it was a
are able to know their error in this particular Be ye not called Masters both being equally a sin and equally reproved and forbidden by our Saviour And thus have we gone through both the nature and circumstantial adjuncts of publick teaching we must now come to speak of private which we shall cast into the body of the third direction given above for the words indwelling which was to confer about the Scripture to communicate with each other touching the great concernments therein contained CHAP. 12. Of Conferring THat part of the Text Teaching and admonishing one another is now to be the subject of our discourse of authoritative or publick teaching we have spoken which is proper to the Ministerial function of charitative or private teaching we must now speak which is common to all the royal Priesthood and that which is chiefly enjoyned in the Text as appears by that word one another This we call conference and hath two parts Teaching and Admonishing touching their difference we have in part spoken before Learned Interpreters by Teaching understand the doctrine of faith not done or not believed because not known and by Admonish they understand things known but not done of each in order Teaching one another i.e. in the matters of faith as touching the doctrine of creation redemption of the authority of Scriptures the union of God and man in the person of our Mediator the necessity of the Sacraments of the new Testament of the publick worship of God of the slate of the dead and of eternal judgement All which is profitable to be done at convenient times and in convenient places where and when Christians meet together Seeing it is the duty of all Christians at all convenient times to teach and instruct each other about the things of God to press this is within the compass of our undertakings and therefore touching it we shall consider 1 The necessity of doing it 2 The manner of performing it 3 Resolve some Questions SECT 1. That it is an ordinance of God for Believers to build up each other in the most Holy faith and to instruct their families Gen. 18.19 to comfort and edifie one another 1 Thes. 5.11 and that the aged should be teachers of good things Tit. 2.2 3 4. and that their communication should be such as might minister grace unto the hearers Ephes. 4.49 may appear by these Arguments viz. 1. Every one must give an account of the Talent given him Mat. 25.19 according to the measure of knowledge given to man and grace infused in him must he give an account to the Lord of heaven and earth we are not only to present him what he gave us but to produce what we have gained for him otherwise we shall be but unprofitable wicked and floathful servants that knowledge therefore and light that is in us ought to guide the feet and instruct the soul of him that dwelleth near us 2. All ought to be sensible of the infirmities of those that are amongst them there are imperfections in the souls of men and the brightest light may want and stand in need of snuffing what through ignorance forgetfulness dulness how many are there that go astray and what through Satans watchfulness lifes shortness how many may perish in the midst of their sinne to prevent which this duty and ordinance of private teaching would be a soveraign help and remedy 3. All ought to walk as members of each other Eph. 4.25 As the hand will assist another part of the body when it is distempered and the eye will pitifully behold a member that is out of case and weep over it so ought every Christian to spy out the spiritual distempers of his christian brother and give him to his power help accordingly We are not made Christians for our selves only But to exhirt one another dayly while it is called to day 4. All are bound to give to their very enemies natural relief therefore much more to the ignorant Christian spiritual help as there are corporal works of mercy which some reduce to seven Visito poto cibo Redimo tego colligo condo So there are spiritual which are reduced to the same number thus Consule castiga Doce Solare R●mitte Fer ora As we are bound to feed the hungry refresh the thirsty cloath the naked harbour the stranger visit the sick redeem the captive and bury the dead so we are bound to teach the ignorant to correct the obstinate to counsel the doubtfull to comfort the afflicted to suffer patiently to forgive charitably and to pray for each other servently It is but half good neighbourhood to regard the outward estate or condition of one that dwelleth near thee and take no thought of that ignorance that dwelleth in him 5. From that practise of Christians conferring each with other about worldly affaires may we draw an argument inforceing the duty now pleaded for Men will be apt to discourse of that mans nature of the others neglecting of his person of anothers bad husbandry of his health and of his estate and give their opinions judgements and counsels accordingly Ought not men also to regard the ignorance weakness sinfulness of others and give instruction doctrine and exhortations surable thereunto 6. Grace naturally will be doing and it ought not to be stifled as the kingdome of heaven is like leaven so is the kigdome of grace It will endeavour to dilate extend and inlarge it self it will as fire be striving to bring every thing to its own nature Grace in the religious soul will beger grace in anothers and true godliness will be satisfied though it walk towards heaven desiring still to have companions in a holy course The meetings of Christians ought to be Christian meetings in building up each other in their most holy faith and true grace will take an opportunity to insinuate it self into the bosomes of others that God may be all in all yet in this beware of these three mistakes 1 Take not thy passion nor thy prejudice against a thing for the spirit of God Luk. 9.55 2 Take not thy opinions in matters of Indifferency to be necessary points of faith 3 Take not thy Brothers judgment in his opposing thine in cases of indifferency to be infidelity in him There are apt seasons wherein men may speak and instruct each other for good in points of faith for other discourses usually engender strife however when God seemes to put forward such discourses the prudent may take the advantage and follow them and the Christian will charitably manage them SECT II. To performe this in such a way as a Christian Brother can accept these necessary qualifications must go along with it 1 Love and friendship the faith of Christ can never be foundly taught in choler nor received in rage passion is no good teacher nor will religion be rooted in anger It is but labour in vain to point out the way of heaven in heat of blood to him that is in thy presence he
just men made perfect Revel 14.1 2.2 read they do not hear Sermons they cannot receive Sacraments they need not in performing this they cease not and by this ordinance above all is the communion of Saints help up that it perish not SECT III. After what manner men are to sing the Scripture is not darke but clearing commanding that it be done 1 With understanding Psal. 47.7 2 With grace Gal. 3.16 3 With affection Eph. 5.19 SECT III. Questions Resolved Quest. 1 Whether it be lawfull to sing Davids Psalmes in a publick Congregation Quest. 2 Whether those psalmes containing direfull imprecations ought to be sung or how with a safe conscience they may be sung Quest. 2. Whether it be lawfull to sing Davids Psalmes in a Publick Congregation Some who are for the blotting out of every thing though never so good just lawfull or laudable that was practised by the ancients sentence the Church for her singing Davids Psalmes chiefly in publick in respect of those spiritual graces which are sometimes exercised in the composing of them as Psal. 131. wherein he attests that he is not puff't up in mind but this is not sufficient for us to suffer our selves to be deprived of this holy practise For 1 It is lawfull to read them in our congregations those that would thrust out the singing of those Hyms and bring in their own songs instead as many of them presumptuously do may upon the same reason cancel them out of the Bible and teach for doctrin their own inventions As many of those that are professedly of our Church by their practises give much Apostates too too occasion to performe 2 It hath been the ancient way of the Church of God both of Jews and of Gentiles since the establishment of the Church There were prophets and holy men of God when the whole Church of Israel used these Psalmes in their congregation and yet never was it condemned for so doing We may assure our selves that God was as tender of his own name as ever these men were or are and since he let those Psalmes be sung by all in a Church where he so often was visibly present they may be used in that Church wherein we have his promise he shall spiritually be untill the end of the world 3 Davids Psalmes seem most deserving if wee looke upon the worth of them they are much to be preferred For 1 For matter they are infallible they were composed by the unerring spirit of God and therefore their extemporary raptures and inventions are not to be put in the ballance with them 2 For number they are various the soul can bein no condition state or temper but in the book of Psalmes there are expressions that suite with that condition state or temper 3 For the users of them they have been the most excellent the whole body of the Church of God under the law used them Christ the Son of God at his last Supper used them Math. 25.30 It being a custome of the Jews at their passover to sing one of those Psalmes betwixt the 113. and 118. Our Saviour submitted also to this Lawfull custome though in his Fathers law not commanded and for some reason we conjecture he and his Apostles to have sung the 116. and since his dayes the noble worthies of the Christian Churches in all Nations used the same 4 Those prophesies that are in them touching Christ call upon beleevers for the siging of them● our faith may be confirmed in the doctrine of our Lords passion his resurrection and if a Jew be in our congregations he may learn to believe on Jesus the Son of Mary whom his fathers crucified by our very singing Touching what is Objected against our singing the 131. Psalm when some of the congregation may be puffed up we g●ve this short reply 1 They judge others proud in regard they are so full of pride themselves 2 As a Prince he was not proud of his glory and Kingship though he was taken from the sheepfold 3 As a Saint and so at that time the grace of humility might be eminent in him 4 This as well as other scripture is written for doctrine for reproof for correction for instruction so that by this we shew others what we are or what we ought to be 5 It is very lawfull to read it meditat● upon it and by consequence lawfull to sing it Quest. 2. Whether those Psalmes that containe direfull Imprecations ought to be sung or how wiht a safe conscience they may be sung THis is one grand argument brought against the Churches practices That there are many curses pr●yed for in severall Psalmes as 109. and 69. c. Which seemes to be much against that charity that ought to be in Christian meetings but this zeal or charity not being grounded on knowledge is not sufficient to disswade us from the using of so holy and ancient a practise For 1 They are not curses but prophesies the Spirit of God promised them to speak of those things that were to come hereafter When David was not moved by the spirit of prophesie he fasted and prayed for his enemies but when that stirred him he prophesied because he fore saw their destruction As before it is lawfull to reade them to have them much upon our mind therefore it is not against Christian love to sing them As touching the second part of the question we are to sing these 1 not with any consideration of our enemies let them curse but let us blesse 2 With conside●●●ion of the incorvertible enemy of God rather then the Church should perish let them become as dung for the earth Let God arise and make them that hate him flee before him 3 With serious meditation of Gods justice against sin and sinfull men which may induce us to mortifie the old man and crucifie the lusts that are in us Thus farre of the ordinances referring to the word the first part of what in the beginning we undertooke Fides Catholica OR THE DOCTRINE OF THE Catholick Church Referring to the Sacraments With a particular DISCOURSE Touching the Ordination of Confirmation By WILL. ANNAND Minister of the word and SACRAMENTS LONDON Printed for Edward Brewster at the sign of the Crane in St. Pauls Church-yard 1661. To The Worshipfull and Hopefull young Gentleman Iohn Wells Juni Esq of Heath in the Parish of Heath SIR BEing necessitated to divide where a union was both principally and primarly intended I am emboldened to divulge my thoughts of the Churches Sacraments under the umbrage and tuition of your name and eminent vertues To despond of your favorable Acceptance were to make my self the Subject of their Censure who are more acquainted with that innate candor which attends your refined Abilities Your Education being in the same Colledge with my self makes me more intencely ambitious of your Happinesse and Honor of which last Divinity shews and to her in this Philosophy agrees there are four species or sorts 1 Naturall by birth
now to the several Sacraments in particular which are baptism and the Lords supper Two Ordinances that above all others meet with most opposition we shall therefore through the light and guidance of the good word of God discover unto you their several natures beginning first with baptisme that being the first Ordinance the Church gives to her Members and the first that by her Officers they are invited unto Matth. 3.6 Iohn 3.5 Acts 2.38 Acts 9.18 Acts 10.47 Acts 17.15.33 In it we shall unfold 1. The Nature of it 2. The Elements of it 3. The End of it 4. The manner of doing it 5. The parties who ought to do it 6. Resolve some Questions SECT I. BEfore we come to describe what baptisme is it is requisite to know that there is a twofold baptisme 1. Inward which is the invisible application of the blood of Christ to the soul of the sinner for its justification which is called a Baptizing with the Holy Ghost and with fire Matth. 3.11 2. Outward which is the visible application of the Element of water in the name of the Holy Trinity to the bodies of them that are fitted for or desirous of baptisme which is called a baptizing with water Luke 3.16 Of this last we are at this time to speak of and it may be thus defined It is a Holy Ordinance instituted by God whereby a man by being dipped or sprinkled with water in the name of the Trinity is declared to be admitted into Communion with him and entered into the body of his Church 1. We call it a Holy Ordinance It appears to be so in many respects 1. In regard of him in whose name we are baptized which is in the name of the Holy and undefiled Trinity Matth. 28.19 Holy is the Father Holy is the Son Holy is the Spirit Holy Holy Holy is the Lord God of hosts Isa. 6 3. 2. It is a Holy profession which the party is baptized into he is baptized into the Holy Gospel into the most Holy faith he is brought at this time before the Father of spirits that he may stand before him in Holiness and Righteousness all the days of his life Luke 1.75 3. There are promises at this to oppose what ever is unholy we engage either by our selves or by our sureties to oppose all the enemies of the Cross of Christ and when we are of age we are bound to perform what was promised for us in infancy by our sureties if ever we expect to receive any benefit by the death or blood of Christ Sacramentally applied unto us in baptisme but of this afterward 4. In regard of that holy body into which by this we are entered we are by this Ordinance entered in an open and professed manner into the body of Christ which is the Holy and Catholick Church not to speak of the invisible which is secret and hid Baptisme takes them as Barnabas took Saul Acts 9 ● and declares that they have seen the Lords Christ and the Church beholds him as one of them and he goeth in and cometh out with them of Ierusalem i.e. the Lords people 2. It is instituted by God Baptisme is no humane Invention but hath for its being a divine sanction For 1. God first appointed the Person that did baptize Iohn 1.33 2. The Element wherewith that Person should baptize Iohn 1.33 3. Gives directions how it must be done Matth. 28.19 3. Whereby a man by being dipped in or sprinkled with water in the name of the Trinity Women from baptisme are not to be withheld since Christ is necessary for them Acts 8.12 Man is here only expressed as being of the more noble sex and first created of God The word baptize signifies not alwaies dipping 1 Cor. 10. but any kinde of washing sprinkling with dipping as shall be demonstrated in due time 4. Is declared to be admitted into Communion with him c. baptisme makes not a Christian nor makes one to have Communion with God but declares him so to be for as Circumcision was a sign only of that faith which the believer had before he was Circumcised and as every Son of Abraham was of the Church before his foreskin was cut even so all are Members of the Church by faith either actual or habitual before they be washed by the word with water that onely testifying or divulging that right which either by their own or their Parents faith they have to and in the Church SECT II. THe Element or visible sign with which this Sacrament is to be Administred according to the institution is water signifying the blood of Christ washing or sprinkling the soul for it is the blood of sprinkling 1 Pet. 1 2. and this spiritually poured forth upon the off-spring of the faithful Isa. 44.3 and promised to the seed of the true believer Now between the sign and the thing signified is a sweet and holy harmony in these following circumstances 1. Water is a necessary Element to preserve the life of man next unto aire water must be accounted of absolute necessity ye● unto all creatures is not the New birth the spiritual washing of the soul the blood of Christ applied necessary for such as would enter the Kingdom of God Iohn 3.5 2. Water is a cheap Element in most places water is almost free as the air and if it be bought the carriage is rather paid for then the water It is self generally easie to come by Christs Blood Kingdom Merits Glory is had for asking Is. 55.1 3. Water is a comfortable Element it refreshes and cherishes the spirits of every living thing It makes the birds to sing the fields to laugh revives the heart of the strongest Iudges 15.18 Nothing makes the soul look more lovely or beautiful then to be reconciled unto and adopted by God thro●gh the application of the blood of the Covenant unto it by the spirit of God Tit. 3.5.6 4. Water is a cleansing Ilement things that are soul water makes them clean Among other miseries that that New born infant typically the natural or unregenerate man Eze. 16.4 groaned under this was one that it was not washed yet God washed it with water vers 9. and made it clean the blood of Christ applied to the most polluted soul makes it become white like snow Psal. 51.7 5. Water is a Copious Element the Ocean is an inexhaustible Fountain there is enough in that to furnish all the world with water of water there is great plenty so Christ blood is an inexhaustible Fountain the Saints since the beginning of the world have been drinking of it yet it is not diminished they have been bathing in it yet not straitened Zacha. 13.1 6. It is a Common Element the Sea the Rivers are as Common to the poor as to the rich and as sweetly glide by the fields of the whistling plowman as by the furrows of the great Prince and being drunk refresh the one as well as the other So is Christ and his merits he
we defend that baptisme can only lawfully be Administred by the Gospel Minister thereunto appointed by Apopostolical Ordination For 1. Those only have a commission to baptize who have a visible commission to teach Matth. 28.19 Go ye and teach all nations baptizing them or as it is in the Original Disciple all nations batizing them c. teaching them That the Apostles were outwardly visibly called by Christ though extraordinarily to preach to the world the things concerning the Kingdom of God whereof baptisme is one and after their call that Christ called no other in that exordinary way is clear from Scripture whereof Paul is an eminent instance And that the Apostles might be encouraged in this great work he goeth on saying I am with you alway even unto the end of the world Now the world is not yet ended and Peter and Iames are gone with you therefore must be understood to be meant not of the whole multitude of believers but of them that are outwardly visibly called to preach all things that Christ had commanded in an authoritative way as the Apostles were And as it is said that Kings never dye that is regally and successively though personally they do so the Apostles never dye that is successively though personally they do for to the end of the world so oft as any is visibly and outwardly ordained and commissioned to teach and baptize the Apostles are not dead but alive and Christ prospering and blessing the doctrine of any so ordained in his being with his Apostles that is with them who are outwardly commissioned to teach to the end of the world To the multitude of belevers then was never the power to baptize given because not the power of teaching because not thereunto ordained as hath at large been discovered above unto which for brevity sake the Reader at present is referred 2. The nature of the Ordinance is against it baptisme is a declarative sign of the parties admission into the Church and not only so but an outward sign of the parties inward regeneration and a seal of the covenant of promise a manifestation of the forgiveness of sin Heb. 10.22 Acts 2.38 39. Tit. 3.5 And therefore to be given by none but by them unto whom the power of keeping the seals are given and in no age in no time in no place in no Text did ever God give the power of his seals to a multitude or appointed them to be used by any that ●●d indeed real gifts without an ordinary call even outwardly after the constituting of the Church Stephen Nicanor c. Acts 6.3 though full of the Holy Ghost presume not to exercise the office of Deacons without an ordinary call from the Apostles by imposition of hands the Church being constituted in their Election So Paul and Barnabas though full of worth and eminent in gifts yet must be set apart having given testimony of their abilities by ordination for teaching and baptizing by the Church Acts 13.13 2. Thus also was Timothy set apart for the same work by a Presbytery 1 Tim. 4.14 The baptisme therefore of these Lay persons or gifted brethren whence is it From Heaven or of men if from Heaven shew it from the Apostles for since them Christ ordained and set apart none and we shall believe it if of men let them Repent for the Kingdom of God is at hand or produce the Text that gives power to uncommissioned men purely upon the account of their gifts to exercise the power of the keyes and Administer the seals of the Church and that constantly and then their baptisme shall not be speak against The ability that a man hath to be a Minister is one thing and his putting into the office of the Ministry is another thing Saint Paul thanks God that he had both 1 Tim. 1.12 and we know by the Scriptures he had both by inspiration was he inwardly qualified and by ordination outwardly called he was separated unto the Gospel Rom. 1.1 by fasting prayer with laying on of hands Acts 13.2 3. 3. It is not to be found in all the New Testament implicitely or explicitely that ever any baptized upon the account of their gifts without an outward call from Church officers when those of this perswasion produce a man baptizing in the Church allowed of by the Church upon the account of his gifts then it may be a good argument for him that hath gifts to baptize without a visible commission 4. It would open a door to all irregularity and to all confusion imaginable Once make it lawful for any to baptize upon the account of his gifts we should find that Sacrament to be attempted by many that have no gifts at all what will not arrogance and pride puss men to what will nor ambition cause men to act this doctrine hath taken grace away from some and shame from many each Heretick laying a foundation for a new heresie by this man we are taught that preaching is not tyed to the Gospel Ministery and therefore not baptisme but the spirit that bloweth where it lifteth makes men sitted for that work and by it sufficiently called This being granted by another teaching is not tyed to men but common also with them to women since in Christ there is neither male nor female c. It is time for thee O Lord to work for they have made void thy Law Psal. 119.126 5. It is against the Doctrine of the Reformed Churches of Helv. Art 24. Of Bohe. Art 9. Of Pran Art 23. Of Belg Art 30. Of Ausp Art 14. Of Wirtem Art 21. Of Irel. Art 71. Of Scot. Art 22. and of Eng. Art 23. The Article it self is this Article 23. Of the Church of England IT is not lawful for any man to take upon him the Office of publicke Preaching or Ministring the Sacraments in the Congregation before he be lawfully called and sent to execute the same And those we ought to judge Lawfully called and sent which be chosen and called to this work by men who have publicke Authority given unto them in the Congregation to call and send Ministers into the Lords Vineyard SECT VI. Questions Resolved Quest. 1. VVHether Dipping be essential unto Baptisme Quest. 2. Whether Infants ought to be be baptized Quest. 3. Whether Baptisme is or ought to be readministred Quest. 4. Whether witnesses at Baptisme according to the Law of the Church of England be to be approved Quest. 5. Whether the Cross at Baptisme according to the Law of the Church of England be to be approved Quest. 1. Whether Dipping be essential unto Baptisme That dipping is lawful is not questioned by the Church of Christ but whether it be essential that is If Baptisme be not Baptisme without it or whether none is or cannot be baptized without he be dipped is the ground of our Quere It is to be denied Dipping is not essential to that Sacrament for 1. The word baptize used in the Scripture for that Sacrament signifies not
by some Hereticks of this generation who dips sometimes the adult by setting them upon their knees and dipping their heads in the baptist●ry pronounceth the words of the institution and infants after the same manner where without danger it may be done witness the reformed Churches of Helvet Art 21. of Sax. Art 13. The Assemblies direct Chap. 28 and the Church of England in her Rubrick or book of Common Prayer Quest. 2. Whether Infants ought not to be baptized By infants we understand such as are born of Christian parents unto whom the promise of salvation is only made and given Acts 2.39 The infants of others viz. of Heathens of Infidels being without God are also without Christ and so without hope of Eternal life Ephes. 2 12. That such infants as are born within the pale of the visible Church may be baptized that is dipped sprinkled or any other way decently washed in the name of the Lord appears from these following reasons 1. From the end of that Ordinance there are marks or distinctions that the Church of God ought to be known by and never was without one of which is baptisme as circumcision was to differ the Iew from all that were without God unto which baptisme succeeds as shall anon be proved Now to difference therefore the children of believing parents from the children of such as believe not baptisme may be Administred to them and ought 2. To them the Covenant of grace or promise of remission of sins belongs Act 2.39 the promise is unto you and to your children and to all that are af●r off that is the promise of the remission of sin of which baptisme is an outward sign and if our Adversaries were not wilfully blinde they would know what it were to be afar off Eph●s 2.13 Now the promise of the forgiveness of sins belonging to infants through the largeness of grace what should hinder but the sign of that ought to be given by the Churches charity And when shall the Adversaries of this truth finde out one place that the Covenant of grace made to believers under the Gospel is not so large as that to believers under the Law which included not themselves only but all their seed Gen. 17.10.11.12 Never Never Never 3. Unto them belongs the Kingdom of Christ Luke 18.15 All the graces that lead to Heaven and all the glory that is in Heaven belongs and is appointed for them and such as them This testimony of him who is Truth it self hath sufficient proof to discover the lawfulness even of Baptisme to such since that is a sign or earnest of their inheritance 4. Infants are Disciples of Christ He that receives one of them receiveth him and it is dangerous to offend one of those little ones that believe in him c. Matth. 18.4 5 6. Of whom doth our Saviour speak this Of that little child before him or of them that are little in the account of the world We say or then we say falsely that he speaks of both and whereas our adversaries then concludes it were dangerous to offend or anger children We conclude with them and truly it is dangerous to offend one of those little ones if it be purely upon the account that they belong to Christ as we know hath been done by Turks Jewes and Papists not otherwise for in some cases that may be a sin even against the Gospel not to offend them 5. Infants under the Law were circumcised therefore under the Gospel they are to be baptized Hence it is that Baptisme is called Circumcision 2 Col. 12. where the Apostle throws off circumcision of the flesh and placeth baptizing in the room of it And as all Iewish Proselytes were circumcised before they were owned as Gods people and therefore called upon to be circumcised so all converted to the Christian Faith were baptized before they were owned or declared Christians though both the one and the other belonged to God by faith before and were therefore called to be baptized In a word let the use and end of Circumcision be inquired after and Baptisme exactly answers it in all points It is true Circumcision was given onely to the Male because the Female was uncapable of it but both Sexes are capable sufficiently of this Sacrament and therefore to be denied to neither Acts 8.12 6. Christ gave commandment that all Disciples should be baptized Matth. 28.9 Disciple all Nations for so it is in the Greek reading Baptizing them teaching them so that all that are Disciples in all Nations are to be baptized And that even Children are Disciples appears Matth. 18.4.5 6. For whosoever receiveth even one of them in his Name receiveth him and he who offends one of them offendeth him of whom can this be said but of Disciples 7. Infants are holy and have the promise of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 7.14 If the Parent be holy and within the Covenant then the child is holy also to say that by Holyness here is meant not bastards is to say nothing to the sence and scope of the place and to say fondly to preserve their own Diana except Holy in the Language of the Holy Ghost in another place be taken in that sence which they shall never be able to find It is also promised the Beleiver that his child shall have clean water poured upon him which is the Sign and the Spirit powred upon his seed the thing signified by that water Isa. 44.3 Can any man therefore forbid water that these children should not be baptized which have received the Holy Ghost as well as we Acts 10.47 8. From that Opposition made against Christian liberty by some Jewish Zelots may we draw an Argument of weight There were some that were alwayes pressing the point of Circumcision according to the law to have the Christians not altogether to eye Baptisme but with it Circumcision Acts 15.1 Now that Circumcision was administred upon Infants is clear and as clear it is again that the Iewes seeing that liberty that Christians assumed under the Gospel would have had them lay a great part of it aside particularly baptisme which they might have seen believers to administer upon all their seed and this makes them press Circumcision the more eagerly an Argument more then probable that the Christians baptized their Infants in those dayes when that opposition was made 9. There is nothing in the Scripture that makes against it God had but two Churches that of the Iewes in which children and Infants were marked with that Initiatory ordinance of Circumcision and by that were within the Covenant and Members of his house whereby the Parent had this comfort that God was not onely his God but the God of his seed the other Church was that of the Gentiles every member of which is a son of faithful Abraham Now when God made Lawes for the Gospel would he not have in some place or other shew● that he intended not the seal of the Covenant which is the
H●b 6 2. after baptisme which in all ages of the Church it followed We must note that though we have mention onely of the Ad●lt or those that were converted to the Christi●n faith when they came to years of discretion yet the children o● believing Parents were baptized in their Infancy and 〈◊〉 and confirmed ●s the other were before they were owned as compleate Members fit to receive all the Ordinances of the Church particularly the Lords supper As no Ordinance in itself though never so pure necessary and holy but hath been corrupted through the vanity and sinfulness of men this Ordinance among others hath groaned under great abuses 1. By Remanists Rome hath made it a Sacrament preferred it before and above baptisme vel quia à dignioribus datur in digniore parte corp●ris seilicet in fronte vel forte quia majus augmentum virtutum praestet licet baptismus plus ad remissionem valeat And besides prayer and laying on of hands there m●st be anointing with Oyle during the pronouncing of these words Consigno te signo crucis Confirme te Chrismate salusis in nomine patris c. Without all this there is no confirmation contrary and besides the Primitive institution of this Ordinance 2. By male contents there are ever some that will be against rule and order except they be the only men to rule themselves this was in several places of this Land called down as Popish and Antichristian and that imposition of hands did cease with the Apostles themselves whereby the governours of his Church though commanded by Law to their duty in reverence to this Ordinance the Bishop being every third year required in this visitation to confirm all that were trained up in the faith and the Ministers of every Parish to take care to prepare all of years and understanding for confirmation against the visitation yet some Ministers neglecting their duty in this particular and others calumniating it there wanted heads whereon to lay on hands in many places and since our late grannd defection from all order it hath been quite laid aside in all places and not so much as thought on among believers though it be a principle of our belief Yet the deadness of this age hath done so much good as to give the Alarum and cause three great Champions to arm themselves for the reviving of this ordinance and defend the purity and necessity of the same in three excellent treatises and laying it down as a sin expedient to remove our distempers learnedly and largely Whatever Rome doth to exalt this Ordinance in a superstitious manner or discontented persons to debase it in a prophane manner yet being of God let us in a few words see 1. It s Nature 2. It s End 3. Resolve some Questions SECT I OF its Nature we have spoken already yet for clearer illustration take this Description It is a holy Ordinance whereby the baptized after a publick profession of his Faith is declared a perfect Member of the Church and blessed by solemn Prayer and laying on of hands This Description needs no particular Explication to them that have read what before hath been written therefore we shall wave that for the present and consider 1. That the Church of England will have none confirmed but such as can rehearse the Creed the Lords Prayer the ten Commandements and answer to such Questions of the Church Catechisme as shall be put to him and none if possible to be unconfirmed that can do it 2. That the Baptized have witnesses of this his Confirmation it is not inexpedient if they be the same that were at his Baptisme 3. That at the laying on of hands this Prayer is to be made by the Bishop Defend O Lord this Childe with thy heavenly Grace that he may continue thine for ever and daily increase in thy holy Spirit more and more untill he come to thy everlasting Kingdome Amen Whether his Ordinance belongs to the Bishop in particular to perform or whether it is common to him with other Presbyters is too high a question for us to discuss Yet by Antiquity it seems to be the Bishops Right and learned men h●ve defended it what ever the Guisell say to the contrary Calvin himself being witness 4. Imposition or laying of hands is of great Antiquity in the Church of Christ as hath been above ●roved in the Chapter of Ordination and is an essential outward Rite at this Ordinance also Heb. 6.2 Acts 8.17 It is a usual Ceremony bo●h in the Old and New Testament and to the case in hand by it or with it did our Saviour bless the children that were bro●ght unto him Marke 10.16 SECT II. The Ends for whi●h his Ordinance is appointed are briefly these 1. For the f●rther st●●ngthning of the baptized in the Faith of Christ ●he Holy G●●st wa● given by the l●y●ng on of the hands Acts 8.17 and ●ho●gh ●hat visible w●y and miraculous long since ceased yet th●t invi●●ble w●y of sanctifying the ●oul and streng●hing of the faith of ●he ba●tized is no● ceased b●t may an● d●th accompany this Ordin●nce as Prayer Reading Hearing and o●her Ordinances do 2 To Capacitate the baptized for the Lords Supper this is t●● top-stone of Christian Perfection in a visible way to approach that Table unto which Confirmation gives a real right and more proximate then Baptisme 3. It dischargeth the witnesses at Baptisme of that Engagement they then made for the baptized He now engageth himself personally to walk in the Faith and promises for himself before the Church to live accordingly they have brought him up in the Faith and by his Declaration there is declared that they have done what they promised and he himself now q●itt●th ●hem For which cause as we said before it is not inconvenient if the Baptismal witnesses be the confirming that they may see themselves discharged and be witnesses to ●i● of it 4. To remove or prevent the coming of the ignorant and scandalous to the Lord Supper i.e. aliquo modo some manner of way It is ordered by the Church and rightly That none communicate at the Supper but such as h●ve been confirmed which would make Parents more careful of their Childrens Education an they themselves if they have any discretion to be more heedful of their wayes Great a doe was made by some pretending purity concerning the celebration of the Ordinance of the Supper though they never went about to give it Admit the Aged was as they set them forth yet the younger sort might have been looked after and by this Ordinance of Confirmation might not onely have brought them to be worthy Receivers but the Aged to have become knowing and Penitents But now I remember this Ordinance of Confirmation favoured of the Common-Prayer and they were very tender-nosed though very hard-handed and hard-mouthed too they were not able once in seven year to say the Lords Prayer and yet the Common-Prayer at least
said it four times a day SECT III. Questions Resolved Quest. 1. VVHether Confirmation be a standing Ordinance in the Gospel Quest. 2. Whether the Church might not be advantaged by the r●st●ring of Confirm●tion Quest. 1. Whether Confirmation be a standing Ordinance in the Gospel There are that defend the Ordinance now pleaded for to have ceased and coninued no longer in the Church then the giving of the Holy Ghost in that miraculous way through it yet we learn by the Scriptures that it is no more ceased upon that account then prayer though the holy Ghost was gived by that Acts 4.31 for though that miraculous way be ceased whether as to prayer or imposition of hands yet that secret and saving way is still continued to both That Conf●rmation is a standing Ordinance ●ppears It is numbr●d among standing Principles Heb. 6.2 Therefore leaving the Principles of the doctrine of Christ le● us go on unto perfection not laying again the foundation of repentance from dead works of faith of baptismes of laying on of h●nds of the resurrection and of eternal jugdement Was not this Apostle a wise master b●ilder and will these men have him to erre in the foundation out of charity they close in to the last supposition look to all the parts of this Text and pick out one that was but for a time is faith repentance baptisme to endure always and imposition of hand for a time because we would hasten It lies upon them to produce that Te●t in which imposition of hands is limited or then by vertue of this Text it is to stand as a principle and remain in the world as long as faith repentance or baptisme Possibly by imposition of hands they conceit Confirmation is not here meaned so willing are men to fight● against the truth an opinion that riseth up against all ancient writers and modern expositors as Calvin Piscator Beza and as a learned writer sayes all interpreters agree in it except a few straglers but come let us reason together And 1. By imposition of hands the Apostle must mean something that laying on of hands was used in since he expresly mentions that Ceremony 2. There were three acts in the Apostles time at which this Ceremony was used 1. In healing of the sick Mark 6.5 Acts 28.8 2. In Ordaining Ministers Acts 13.3.1 Tim. 4.14 3. In praying for or blessing the baptized that he might receive the holy Ghost Acts 9.17 Unto which last all antiquity bears witness this of the Text is to be referred for though the holy Ghost in that miraculous way be not given by it yet Christ that will be with his ministers to the end of the world gives his spirit in a sanctifying strengthening and confirming way by using of this as well as other Ordinances which made the ancients bring their baptized to the hands of the Bishop of the place as the Apostles successor for his blessing and benediction and it seems was of that concernment that its doctrine was a chief head in the Apostles Catechisme taught here unto the Hebrews For 1. Healing of the sick cannot be the imposition here spoken of that being no Principle common to believers nor necessary doctrine to be taught such as were learning heads of Divinity the Imposition here must be of as large extent a● faith repentance Baptisme which the curing of the sick is not nor cannot be supposed 〈◊〉 2. By the same reason Ordination of Ministers is not solely to be the imposition here in the Text that is an act of office and not common to believers no woman must have it and every man is not a partaker Now all here in the Text is common to all the Hebrews and are principles wherein they are all as equally concerned and as general as in faith and bapt●●me except a place be produced wherein this imposit●●● of hands is limited we must hold it to be a principle as la●●e and common as the other which Ordination is not We say Ordination solely cannot here be understood yet since it is a standing Ordinance and must hold as long as baptisme that is to the end of the world also given with impsition of hands it may to this place be referred but cannot onely be understood for the reason above given 3. It follows therefore that imposition of hands here holds out that blessing or benediction that was given to Christians after their baptisme by the Apostles and by their successors that the spirit might sanctifie them all the dayes of their warfar and that they might be endued with power from above to conquer all the spiritual enemies of that faith wherein they were baptized and this being of Catholick concernment was taught the H●br●●w at their first coming to Christianity which benediction is called Confirmation from the effect and end of it and imposition of hands from the gesture it was given by and sometimes ●nction in regard superstition hath added Oyle to it It is to observable that the Apostle in the forementioned principles puts imposition of hands immediately after baptisme which ceremony even in practice and in all ages of the Church followed after it In the adult shortly and in Infants at the years of Puberty which according to some is about ten or twelve years of age as is fully demonstrated in one of the fore-mentioned treatises To conclude therefore imposition of hands being ranked among standing Ordinances particularly with bap●isme the Text must be produced that limits it or it ought to be accounted of equal extent with it and by consequence not ceased though the Apostles be fallen asleep And since Antiquity and the best modern Interpreters do hold in this place by Imposition is meaned Confirmation and since no other kind of Imposition of hands can be rationally defended they discover but their pride and arrogance or spleen or rancour that denie it Quest. 2. Whether the Church might not be Advantaged by th● restoring of the Confirmation What advantage would this bring unto the Church may some say We Answer Much every way For 1. It is an Ordinance of God and what Sacrifice can the Church offer that will do her more good then Obedience 1 Samuel 15.22 2. It would in a great measure prevent Apostacy we find the baptized fall from the Faith and Church both wherein they were baptized Now a solemn Protestation in the face of the Church might in a great measure bind men f●ster to her 3. It would silence the mouths of the Enemies of Infant-Baptisme It is usually Objected that the Infant hath no engagement to stand to its first Baptisme in regard it promised never to keep it It is true they nev●r promised to keep it yet hardly was there ever so prophane a wretch found that thence concluded he would not st●nd to his Baptisme The Church knows it is an Infant and therefore cannot speak yet being born within the Church and children of the Promise she gives them that holy washing upon
Bread grows in and rises out of the Earth so did the body of Christ he brought it not with him from Heaven for it had its Original in the womb of the blessed virgin 2. Bread undergoe● much labour sown dyes quickens reaped threshed winnowed grinded kneaded baked Christ body under-went the like things It was sown in the womb of the Virgin by Devils and wicked men was he continually threshed and winowed he was grinded in the high priests hall knead in his Cross and Passion baked in the Oven of his Sepulchre and then presented upon this table as bread for his people 3. Bread is broken before it can be food for man men cannot eat whole loaves nor whole joynts it must therefore be broken into parts even so must he be broken upon the Cross in satisfying his Fathers justice before he can be compleat or perfectly made the Captain of our salvation 1 Cor. 11.24 not that properly he was broken on the Cross for that the Scripture should be fulfilled a bone of him shall not be broken Iohn 18.36 Ex. 12.46 Breaking is renting one part of a thing from another so was Christ soul rent from his body his blood rent from his flesh he was poured out like water all his bones were out of joynt his heart was like wax melted in the midst of his bowels without question then broken his bones might have been told they looked and stared upon him Psal. 22.14.17 4 ●read is common to all that are about a table none hath a propriety in it every one cuts sufficient for himself unto whom is the merits of the Lord limited have not all Saints since the Creation been feeding upon them and all that now are and all that shall be every one saying My Lord and my God and yet no scarcity nor absolute propriety but a holy Communion this was darkly represented ●y our Saviours birth what house in a City more common then an Inn and what place of an Inn more common then a stable shewing that the fowlest sinner he is ready to embrace cleanse and entertain 5. Bread naturally strengthens mans heart Psal. 104.15 hence it is called the staff of bread Isa 3.2 the main upholder of natural strength without which man would fall unto his first nothing Nothing more strengthens a drooping soul a doubting Christian then the application of the merits of Christ unto its heart by the holy Ghost with a morsel of this bread men may walk many dayes unto the mount of God 6. Bread is necessary for life so necessary that all things conducing to mans life are subordinate to it as the Reader may know by the Lords prayer if he have not forgot it or slights ●t because common Christ in us Our hope of glory is most necessary and as we know without food or bread we cannot live a natural life we ought to know without receiving of this Ordinance we have no ground to imagine that we shall live a spiritual We dayly hear men chiefly ministers complaining of their peoples Apostacy and yet since this Sacrament in its season was not presented to their faith which might be a strong means of confirming it is not to be wondered to see their people faint stagger and all for want of bread Further between the wine the outward sign and the blood of Christ the thing signified stands this proportion 1. Wine is the juice of ●he grape pressed out by the wine press so was Christ blood pressed out by the weights of his Fathers infinite justice Isa. 63.3 2. Wine comforteth the heart of man Psal. 104.15 the blood of Christ drank in faith in large spiritual draughts out of the vessel or chalice of this Ordinance with the mouth of the affections and received into the stomach of meditation will produce holy purposes and give good spirits to the languishing Christian. 3. Wine encourageth and emboldens It raiseth the spirits that are otherwise cast down and makes the Gyant himself to shout at the flight of his enemy it makes a man to forget trouble and sorrow Prov. 31.6 Ecles 19. Christs blood applied to the soul makes it exceeding bold to fight against principalities and powers it makes them that are of a fearful heart be strong saying fea● not Isa. 35.4 and emboldens it to come to the throne of grace Heb. 4.16 It makes the people to clap their hands and shout unto God with the voice of triumph Psal 47.1 4. Wine is of a healing nature Luke 10.34 the Samaritan poured in Wine with Oyle into the wounds of the bleeding traveller the bleeding wounds of an afflicted conscience know that the blood of Christ is of a Soveraign nature to preserve it from dying and yielding up the Ghost Rev. 22.2 From this Doctrine we may draw these inferences 1. When we see bread and wine and feel the comforts of the one and know the necessity of the other to think of Christ and the comforts to be had in his death and the necessity that lyeth upon believers to receive this Ordinance 2. To strive for a spiritual hunger in our approaching to the table of the Lord for otherwise there is no refreshment will be found at the receiving of this spiritual banquet 3. That the Church of Rome by her doctrine of transubstantiation takes away the beauty of this holy Ordinance robbing the people of the cup of the New Testament and by making or teaching that the Accidents of the Elements that is the whitness or roundness of the bread and the colour of the wine to be the sign of the body and blood of the Lord for which cause she is justly condemned by the reformed Churches SECT V THis Ordinance of the Supper is instituted to assure the penitent receiver of the remission of his sins yet all that receive it are not pardoned in regard that some receive it unworthily and their sins are not forgiven justly in as much as the condition upon which the Lord promiseth absolution for his part is not performed upon their part and because of that they are so far from having their soul eased that it is more burthened They being guilty of the body and blood of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.27 by reciving unworthily Now there are three wayes by which men receive unworthily First by not giving due reverence to the mystery in that Sacrament contained Secondly to the ends for which it was appoint●d Thirdly to the Author by whom it was instituted 1. The Ministery in that Sacrament contained As 1. To the crucified body of Christ this presents unto us Christ and him crucifed and the same reverence or respect that we would give to Chr●●● were he visibly present with us we must give unto him represented before us by bread and wine Not that we should give it to the bread and wine but to the Person who is represented to us by them 2. All that God ever did do or that ever he promised to do for the best and dearest of his Saints is
whose riches were from pill●ging of the goods burning the houses and murthering the persons of those that were not of an Anabaptistical spirit This Kings Title was The King of Iustice the King of the new Ierusalem he erected a Throne of great cost and coyned Money with this Motto Verbum car● factum quod habitat in nobis By this Kings Regall Authority Divorces were frequently made as men grew weary of their Wives all books burned but the Bible all Churches rifled demolished and as from God performed blood sighs tears was only to be seen and heard in this Kings Reign At a feast he gave the Sacrament of the Lords Supper to the Number of 4000. but accusing one of Treason you must note he was a King between them cut off his head himself and with bloody hands consecrated the Elements administring the bread one of his Queens following him delivered the cup. I long to make an end of this Monarch he came in a few days to be tyed to a stake by two Executioners with two hot pincers was his flesh torn from his bones in Munster where his most Sacrilegious Majesty had acted and enacted unhe●rd of Villany This Sacrilegious King was not without Rebellious Subjects which the German Princes by burning drowning killing not for their consciences but for their ●reaso●●●tte● and hell●sh acts put an end to them At which time 〈…〉 of them into England for shelter A. 1535. 〈…〉 were burned and o●hers made to recant yet some 〈…〉 ●slily carrying them-themselves did live and became the 〈◊〉 Father of the Brownist Mr. Robert Brown of Northamptonshire venting their Doctrine in a Saw-pit first near Islington obtained Proselytes three years afterward he Recanted his errour and took Orders becoming a faithfull Teacher of the Doctrine of the Church of England though his Disciples remained as thorns in her sides they did somwhat refine the Doctrine of the German Anabaptists and continuing a separation did bring forth that Creature whom we call an Anabapist who must own the Quaker for his first born and all those by-opinions and fancies taught by the whole Rabble of Phanaticks must be acknowledge to grow out of his Roots and are sprigs of the Tame branch all of them being quickned with the same Sap or Spirit of their German Father who by a pretended humility and s●ow of Godlinesse got into the affections of the Vulgar which ceased not untill they had put them in the throne which deservedly brought them to the stake I have heard of a Welch-man that being condemned to be hanged by the neck called aloud O good my Lord hang her not by the neck her Father was hanged by the neck and her dyed Let our English Anabaptist remember that Her Father was burned at a stake and hanged by the neck for Treason Her Prince Prophet Her King and all Except I say this King they had never a Nursing Father So far hath it been from all Nations coming in unto it that if these be true Churches they have never had a village to boast of If these be true Churches there are more Churches then one and so the unity of the Church must be denied and consequently there must be more Christs then one Christ is the head of the Church Ep. 1.22 and the Church is his body Why because all the members move according to that life that is communicated unto them from the head Now this rabble hath not one Spirit nor one life neither do they preach all one kind of faith therefore there must be diversity of heads to give life to these several bodies consequently if they be Churches there must be divers Christs to quicken those severall Churches which destroy the unity of the Godhead in Trinity the consent Harmony and agreement of Prophets and Apostles and the unity of the Catholick Church on earth and before that be done let us condemn those segregated meetings for those that separate themselves sensual having not the spirit Iud. 19. Whence the Catholick faith came we know how old it is we know it hath Seniority over and above all other Doctrine as truth hath over error i● is of the same standing with the Creation And though heresie hath and must closely follow it yet it was before them the Wheat is first sowed and then the Tares Such is Sathans hast that he begun to lye at the beginning yet from the beginning lyes were not but truth Not to speak of those Heresies that were in the Church before the Time of our Saviour in his time there were those that denied the Resurrection and the being of Angels and Spirits Matth. 22.23 Acts 23.8 Most of those grand Heresies that troubled the Church by false Doctrine the time they came in the Authors that broached them are known by name and the occasion of their so doing is also known not so the Catholick faith We must know that all new lights that now shine are but the stinking snuffs of those old Heresies that were extinguished by the powerful breath of the Catholick Doctrine blown in again by the envious breath of him that fights against the Church and her seed and may be reduced to the same causes that before they of old were kindled by and may be reduced to these heads 1 Envy and discontentednesse when men could not get into those places that either their merit did not deserve or their ambition thought they were worthy of then to revenge themselves like Corah Dathan and Abiram Numb 16.1 they rose up against the Governours of the Church and rebelled against Catholick truth It was this that made Arius rise and swel like a great Sea to overthrow the faith of Christ. An. 310. for not being chosen Bishop of Alexandria of which he was a Deacon when Achillas the Bishop thereof dyed and Alexander a man he thought not so deserving as himself chosen in the place presently he set himself to oppose Episcopal dignity and such Doctrine as plagued the Church for almost three hundred years together purely because he could not be a Bishop whose Doctrine though condemned by 318 Bishops A. 325. gathered together at Nice at the command of the good Emperour Constantin the great is revived again in our Socinians Anabaptists c. for want of discipline in our Church And truly that hideous damp that came upon the Church of England in these last years had it's rise from the same ground viz. from the mouths of those men that were extended in a large measure for the receiving of a Mitre which not coming they vented their ill-favoured breath in the very faces of them that through desert wore it envying the glory that others had because they themselves had but Ordinary respect This made M. M. a principall Pres. break out into extravagancy he Petitioning the King for a Deanry and afterward for a Bishoprick getting neither strove as the King told to undo and overthrow all So D. T. an earnest Suitor for the Deanry of Salisbury or
taught the principles of that doctrine they were baptized in The Jewish children were taught the nature of their Sacraments Exod. 12.17 so ought the Christian Infant to be trained up in the doctrine of Gospel● ruth● 2 Tim. 3.15 2 All such as are converted to the Christian faith those that forsake the vanity of the heathen the Infidelity of the Turke The Errours of the Iew ought to be taught and instructed in the foundation-principles of the Catholick faith If any should renounce the Superstition of the Romanist he were rather to unlearn some principles then be taught new there being no principle of Catholick concernment wherein the universall Church differs from that of Rome 3 All the unlearned of what age soever It is but a poor plea to drop out of the world in ignorance because men are of age if they have lived under the power of the Gospel their want of knowledge will but make them full of misery It is no disgrace to learn Christ at any time and necessary for him that would raign with Christ at the end of time However in this there is much caution and moderation to be used and even a respect is to be given to age and an honourable mentioning of their name c. SECT IV. It may appear by what hath been spoken who are principally engaged in this kind of exercise and the p●rsons upon whom more especialy this duty lys 1 Parents and masters we shall joyn them together for brevity's sake Deut. 6.7 20. Gen. 18.19 Lemuel a Prince was taught by his mother Prov. 31.1 and how Boaz principled his servants appears by their holy salutations and greetings each to other Ruth 2.4 Timothy was carefully trained up by his mother and Grandmother 2 Tim. 1.5 and 3.15 and the fruit of Abrahams government appears in the piety faithfullnesse and discretion of his steward Gen. 24.12 They have the greatest advantages of any other by their dayly society by their authority And God in giveing the law charges the master with his son and servant touching the keeping of his sabbath which is a circumstance of time he is therefore to instruct them in that and not forget to teach the essentiall points of faith 2 Ministers or Priests It was a charge given to all pastours in the person of Peter Ioh. 21.15 to f●ed the lambs of Christ there are them that are not able to retain a Sermon or understand a Sermon or apprehend the parts of a Sermon now this sincere milke of Catechising may make them grow in knowledge But what shall we say the fewnesse of ministers the Number of the people even makes this doctrine Impossible to be performed There are many I will not inquire the cause that can and have cut out worke enough for a minister to do yet it had been wisdome to have considered how much one was able to do Mens flesh is not of brasse nor their strength the strength of stones to execute all that which men will lay upon them and God himself will require no more then what man is able to do where many iorns are in the fire they cannot all heate the work that most of the clergy of England especially in the country hath before them denotes an Impossibility to have all exactly done and for this the truth is in some cases and for some persons it must in some sort be layd aside and preaching preferred that being the most ordinary means for the tr●●slation of sinners from darknesse unto light but of this hereafter SECT V. When this is pressed there is nothing urged but what is rational and pious no greater burthen laid upon m●n then what God hath bound them to bear and carry the necessity of this kind of teaching appears 1 The young as well as the old must appear before the judgment seat of Christ that child that thou seest playing in the streets shall one day be stripped naked and stand before the th●one of God Revel 20.12 let it know this that it may be af●●aid of sinning 2 It is a hard thing otherwise to profit under the most powerfull ministry there are termes in divinity which in pulpits cannot be shunned as Justifie Elect Adopt and these can never be soundly understood without inspection into a catechisme 3 The law of equity binds men to do it if thou beest a parent thou hast conveyed some part of thy corruption whereby thy Infant is infected and is naturaly a Child of wrath now art thou not bound to give him counsell and teach him the fear of the Lord which may keep him from dying through that poyson thou hast given to him and make him a child of grace Art thou a master shalt thou teach him how to be faithfull to thee in the right managing of thy affairs or teach thy servant in the principles of thy art that he may live and neglect to instruct him in the doctrine of faith that he may be saved Art thou a Minister then thou art a Steward of the mysteries of God 1 Cor. 4.1 and so tyed to give children that meate that is proper for them and strong men what is fitting for them 4 It is a soveraign meanes to preserve religion from corruption when the heads of young Christians are filled with the particular branches or parts of catholick truth they will be the better able to stand out against the Hereticall tenets and perverse disputings of men of corrupt minds and being fixed in the truths of the Gospel when they are young they shall not be easily removed from them when they are old 5 They will be learning either good or bad and good they will learn with ease if it be taught them if the Fathers cry Hosannah unto Christ they can do so likewise Math. 21.15 and if they call an old prophet a bald prophet they can do so too 2 King 2.23 They will learn quickly to tell lyes and to swear oaths if the truth be not taught them and swearing forbidden 6 Unto this practise did our saviour yeeld himself when he was twelve years old Luk. 2.46 Noble T heophilus was thus taught Luk. 1.4 Elequent Apollos submitted to this teaching Act. 18.26 and can we follow better copys SECT VI. Questions resolved Quest. 1 Whether catechising differ from preaching Quest. 2 Whether preaching be to be preferred before it Quest. 1. Whether Catechising differ from preaching These two ordinances of the Church are in end and scope the same each of them being appointed for the perfecting of the Saints and edyfying of the body of Christ and at ordination are both layd upon him and with all authority yet as we may say of two eyes or two hands the one is not the other Preaching differs from Catechizeing 1 In respect of Amplitude or fulnesse what preaching draws out to an ample and large discourse Catechising contracts into some few words by p●ring off the exuberant parts of a continued speech retaining the cheif point matter or spirit of the doctrine 2
In respect of its activity and singlenesse In cathechizing there are some called out for assistance the catechist hath not all the work but in preaching there is no second to assist that is a taske wherein none claims a share wherein none are co-workers but the preacher himself is the sole agent and efficient 3 In respect of its object and partys preaching reaches to all persons old or young knowing or not knowing high or low now catechizing is properly for the ignorant and unlearned 4 In their subjects and actions preaching is peculiar for the ministerial function catechizing proper to none but common to woman and man no sex but may have hand in this exercise of catechizing and no person is a tyed to it Quest. 2 Whether preaching be to be preferred before Catechizing There is a generation that supposes if a minister spend one half of the sabbath upon catechizing that it is through idlenesse and sloath whereas if Catechizing be soundly performed there is no labour nor study saved yea possibly more undergone Others again would make no account of preaching holding that a proper dish for a feast and not for ordinary fare conjectureing they are not blame-worthy if the ordinance of catechising go forward In humble submission it is thought they are both out of the way and besides the truth It is not safe to make the ordinances strive with each other or one to jostle out another to the purpose in hand let us distinguish of places and of persons 1 Some places are rude plaine and ignorant without much travel we may fall into country parishes whose ignorance is so grosse that it is incredible there Catechizing may be of much use and though they love it not it may do them most good 2 Some places are more orderly civil and knowing there may be populous places and parishes in which generally the people may be knowing and by reason of schooles and other advantages Catechizeing may go forward without much troubling the Minister In which places there is no losse if it yeild to preaching especially on the sabbath day lest the genrality of the people make no account of their assemb●ing together And as touching persons there are men whose parts and genius are not fit for Catechizing their excellency may ly in preaching others there are whose excellency may ly in Catechizing the fewnesse of ministers craves that that be done by which their genius and parts may do most good in the Church of Christ yet by experience I know shortnesse of dayes infirmity of body c. must and will cut one short the preheminence therefore is to be given to preaching for 1 That is the most powerfull way for the convincing of sinners the strength of rea●on and the force of application in a Sermon are powerfull meanes for the opening of the heart of man and causing him to see his errour which would from a Catechist be Improper 2 That was cheifely the practise of Christ and his Apostles he and they both went into the Synagogues and taught the people expounding Scriptures and setting them home to the eares and consciences of their people 3 Preaching is of most general concernment there are sins of the age and times wherein the Catechist may faile but preaching disclaiming these detecting those is most profitable there are providences sometime sad and sometimes cheerfull which is to be observed and noted and people taught accordingly these oftentimes may not fall under the cognisance of a Catechist and if they should he would put a block in his own way and give occasion of stumbling to them for whose sake Catechizing is most u●ed Moreover preaching extending it self largely meets with the tempers sinnes dispositions of most whereas a Catechisme t ys up and limits the Spirits of him that teacheth by it that he can reach but a few if any his office being only to lay down the truth touching some head of divinity to convince the understanding and no more 4 It puts a greater chearfullnesse in the spirits of the most knowing to come to Gods service when Christians have been in the days of their minority trained up in that way by question and answer To be kept continualy to it might flat their appetite and blunt the edge of their devotion especially in publick places where by relation in former times when Catechizing swallowed up preaching halfe the sabbath was loosly not to say prophanely kept and spent the Ministers gifts may not be for that service nor his parts though otherwise eminent for such teaching which may in time breed a slighting of him among his own people what gifts God gives to teachers by which they may most advance the end of teaching which is the edification of the Church those ought to be most exercised by them and by this rule men may know what is best to be done CHAP. II. Of Preaching WE come now to that ordinance which is the power of God unto Salvation though some in this age account it foolishness and vanity In this ordinance we shall see 1 The nature of it 2 The manner of it 3 The necessity of it 4 The ends of it 5 Resolve some Questions SECT I. This ordinance of preaching by which men are saved if they keep it in memory 1 Cor. 15.1 2. may be thus described 1. It is an opening expounding or unfolding the meaning of the Holy Ghost in Scripture 2. According to Scripture 3. And applying it for the edification of the Church or perfecting of the Saints 1. It is an openning expounding c. of the meaning of the holy Ghost in Scripture That the Scripture is the mind or meaning of the Holy Ghost is blasphemy once to be doubted Heb. 3.7 Acts 1.16 2 Pet. 1.21 and his expressions are sometimes so lofty and at other times so dark that the understanding of man is naturally ignorant of his purpose yea when highest not able throughly to apprehend his meaning Man may read all day at night lye down upon the restless bed of uncertainty not understanding the nature of the thing read Now preaching unfolds it expounds and interprets it gives the sence and meaning of the Spirit of God in it by which the hearts of the Elect are turned from the world unto God Acts 19.19 and made to burn towards God Luke 29.27 32. and go towards heaven with rejoycing Acts 8.35 39. 2. According to Scripture There are those that will expound the Scripture by their own fancies and make the Holy Ghost by an irreverent compulsion speak that which he never thought but what they would have others to believe such were the Pharisees of old Mat. 5. and such are our upstart Preachers now who assoon as they find some portion of Scripture that they can coulourably wrest for the defence of their own fancies immediately cry to their Proselites Rejoyce with us for we have found c. and where any appears that is not so easie to be drawn by the wier of their