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

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and so bee all such as wittingly labour about any ornament or implement to the setting forth of Idolatrie But God forbid that euerie Image and Image-maker should bee therfore accounted abominable for so the excellent Art of painting seruing in liuely colours so to expresse our friends absent as if they were euer present with vs and picturing many emblemes of vertue and vice for ornament and delight should cleane bee put downe and our very coyne were vnlawfull Therefore here are first to be excepted ciuill pictures for the delight and comfort of the beholder secondly all such as serue for some remembrance tending to our instruction for vertue or vice for wit policy discretion and diligence Thus the old Romans offended not in painting a drunken man goggle eyd foaming at the mouth thus Time is well pictured bald behind and hairy before Iustice with a paire of scales with the hands and eyes shut c. And lastly such Images as serue for good remembrances to stir vp deuotion or Christian affections Ioshua 4.22 without abuse Thus Ioshua set vp twelue stones on the further side of Iordan for a remembrance of the miraculous parting of the waters Ioshua 22. whilst the people went ouer and the people that dwelt on the other side of Iordan set vp an Altar like that at Ierusalem for a remembrance that they were all one Nation and serued one God and many like monuments were there of old tending to the same ends Of this commemoratiue nature was the vse of the transeunt signe of the Crosse in baptisme amongst the most ancient Fathers in the purer times Nor can I vpon due consideration see any iust reason why the same should not bee so reputed as it is now in vse retained in the Church of England being intended as a signe meerely monitory not operatiue that is as putting vs in mind of our duty and profession not as infusing any spirituall grace or protection or making vp any part of that Sacrament as imperfect without it I would to God that we all could grow to a like resolution about this ceremony 2 Kind of Idolatry to fall downe before and worship an Image The second kind of Idolatrie is the falling downe before an Image whether with an intention the better to bee put in mind of God or of any Saint or by bowing before the image to giue worship to the thing represented or ignorantly only according to the tradition of the Fathers For howsoeuer or vnder what pretence soeuer if the knee be religiously bowed before any Image Idolatry is committed and this Commandement broken And this is so plainely set downe in the holy Scriptures as that were there no Patrons of this vice it were superfluous to speake much But for their sakes first consider the beginning of this euill from whom sprang it from any of the Patriarkes Prophets or Apostles from any of the ancient Fathers of the Church since the time of the Gospell Euseb li● 7. cap. 18. No verily but if Gregorie Bishop of Neocaesarea or Eusebius may be heard they will tell you that the vse of Images came from the Heathen Heltogabalus Alexander Seuerus Hadrianus had first in their Chappels the Images of Abraham Moses and Christ If Theodoret and Augustine may be heard they will tell you that Simon Magus first offered his owne and the Image of Selene his Concubine to be worshipped by his followers If Ierom may be heard he will tell you that the Cretians whom Paul to Titus so much disgraceth brought Images first into the Church Wicked Marcellina began the worshipping of the Images of Christ Paul Homer Pythagoras Iren. lib. 2. cap. 6. The filthy Gnosticks worshipped the Image of Christ and are therefore condemned of Ireneus Irene a most wicked woman who murdered her owne sonne Constantine through a desire of raigning called the first Councell that gaue any allowance to Images and there her flatterers without all reason ordained that Images should bee both set vp and worshipped Their maine arguments are recorded in the booke of Charles the Great Iohn Caluin I●stit lib. 1. cap 11. sect 14. Legat of the East said That God made man after his owne Image therefore it was fit that there should bee Images of God Another said That no man lighteth a candle and putteth it vnder a bushell therefore Images were to be set vp in Churches c. Tom 3 qu. 25. art 3. Bellar. de Eccles triump lib. 2 c. 2. lib. 9. cap. 6. Secondly consider what foule error● the Patrons of Image-worshipping haue falne into Aquinas saith Because the Crosse representeth Christ who is God it is also to bee worshipped with diuine worship Bellarmine saith That Images are properly to be worshipped Azorius saith It is the constant opinion of our Diuines that the Image is to bee worshipped with the same worship wherewith the thing represented by it is worshipped Constantinus Bishop of Constance said in the forenamed Councell of Nice I doe worship the holy Images with the same worship with which I worship the consubstantiall Trinitie Iohn the Legate of the East The Image of the King is the King and so the Image of God is God and therfore if any man worshippeth it with the same worship he sinneth not Neither is there errour herein onely that they giue the worship of the most glorious God to wood and stone to the worke of mens hands but in that they Deifie make a God as it were of euery relique about Christs body the napkin linnen-clothes c. Yea of euery instrument vsed to torment and teare him vpon the Crosse as the speare and nailes witnesse their hymmes made vnto them To the Crosse they say O Crur Bell. l b. 2. de Imag cap 20. ●●e spes vnica auge pijs iustitiam reisque dona ventam that is Hayle O Crosse our onely hope encrease righteousnes to the righteous and giue pardon to the guilty To the Speare they say Aue ferrum triumphale intra● pectus tu vital cost●● pandis ostia Foecundata in ●ruore foel●x hasta nos amore per te fixt saucia that is Haile triumphant iron thou entring the vitall breast Cron. Crossin did open the doore of the rib O thou that wert made fruitfull by his bloud Oh happy Speare wound vs with the loue of him which was wounded by thee To the cloth with which his head was bound they light two Candles and by the Acolith it is exhibited to euery one being vpon his knees to be adored and reuerently kissed c. This grosse and palpable erring from the truth following vpon the vse of Images a man would thinke should be sufficient alone to make Image-worshipping odious to all but onely to such as are giuen ouer to strong delusions to beleeue lyes for who would drinke of that cup the bottome whereof hee seeth to bee full of poyson or who would lie downe in that channell the stirring whereof causeth a
euen as the holy Scriptures yea which is horrible before them and against them It is a farre greater wickednes accounted amongst them to omit auricular confession once in the yeare which was inuented by man then to leade a vile life all the yeare long to taste a little flesh vpon the Friday then to wallow in the filthy sin of vncleannes that a Priest be coupled vnto one lawful wife then that he defile himselfe with many whores Pap. pharis cap. ●7 to neglect a vow of going on Pilgrimage then to breake the necessarie vow of obedience in diuers Morall and Christian duties to God and man c. and therefore whereas any light punishment sufficeth when Gods lawes are broken such as breake any of their traditions are punished with imprisonment banishment death Neither doth it make any whit the more for their iustification whereas they pretended them to be the Traditions of holy men and ancient for this was the colour of the Pharisies theirs were the Traditions of the Fathers yet they were threatned for teaching and following them as Papists doe at this day Yet on the other side this hindreth not but that a true Christian Church may without any imputation of Idolatry inuent according to Ecclesiasticall prudence and impose decent circumstances of time place habit and gestures for the outward clothing of Gods worship so they be neither burthensome in multitude nor superstitious nor vnsauorie but tending to edification good order and comlines whereby the sincere inward worship may be not choaked but cherished Such are those which our blessed Mother hath thought fit to reteine as being vsed of old in the purer age before the corruptions of Popery crept in but as for the later Ceremonies which are the very spawne of Romish superstition our Church hath most piously and wisely cast them out of her doores I pray God and hope they shall neuer rush in againe Iohn 4.20 Secondly an Idoll is worshipped and not the true God when as men rest in the outward work of his seruice without the truth of heart and spirit For God is a Spirit and all true worshippers worship him in Spirit and in truth As the Apostle saith of comming together to the holy Communion 1. Cor. 11.20 When ye come together into one place This is not to eate the Lords body So is it of all other duties the outward hearing and preaching of the Word the outward praying singing and giuing of thankes are not alwayes acceptable seruice vnto God but when the life of the Spirit and heart is annexed The drawing neare with the lips when the heart is away is abomination to the Lord. And herein againe are they of the Church of Rome to be taxed for that they place the worship of God in outward things in kneeling knocking crouching kissing crossing repeatings praying vpon Beades sprinkling with holy water going on pilgrimage c. and some dull and ignorant people of our Church which serue God with the bare reciting of the Pater noster Creed and ten Commandements with resorting to the place of his worship and inwardly profiting no more then stocks and stones All these and the like doe please the Lord no better with their seruice then Kain did with his sacrifice or the Iewes imperfect offering Lastly an Idoll is worshipped and not the true God when men presume to compasse about the Lords Altar with vnwashen hands when they come impenitently to doe any holy duty For the Lord professeth that he is not delighted in any such seruice yea that he requireth it not yea which is more that it is abomination vnto him Wherefore he dealeth with the Iewes in this case by his Prophet Esay Esay 1.12 as a man would deale with his professed enemy who notwithstanding maketh a shew of loue by offering his best seruice he sendeth him as it were to meete them vpon the way and to stay them from their incense and Sacrifices new Moones and Sabbaths bidding them to bring no more oblations in vaine and professing that hee is weary of their solemne Assemblies c. and the cause hereof was for that their hands were full of bloud that is they liued impenitently in oppression and wrong and other heynous sinnes Now if God be not serued but grieued and made weary by being thus serued what else can it bee but an Idoll vnto which homage is done when holy duties are vndertaken by wicked persons liuing and proceeding in their sinnes Whence wee may see the fearefull estate of sinners which make a trade of wickednesse they runne still more into sinne euen into the worshipping of an idoll when they would be holyest when they would giue God honour they doe most dishonour him when they would bring a present to pacifie his wrath they make him more angry and to bid them bring no more oblations in vaine Wherefore whosoeuer thou art that wouldest please God by doing the parts of his worship present him first with a broken heart and contrite Spirit for thy sinnes as Dauid did Psal 51. Luke 16. wash the feete of the Lord with thy teares as Mary Magdalen did be deiected and haue a sense of thy sinnes foulenes as the poore publican had Rom. 7. let there bee an hatred of that which thou hast done as in Paul let there be a forsaking of sinne as in him that shall haue mercy Prou. 28.13 and then shalt thou bee like to bring an acceptable present and not to depart without thy full load of mercy and iustification Quest. 60. What are wee heere commanded Answ To performe all outward duties of Gods seruice according to his will reuealed in his word The duties of this Commandement Explan This duty of doing all the parts of Gods worship according to his will c. doth necessarily follow vpon the contrary forbidden viz. the following of our owne heads in the seruice of God for if we may not make our phantasies the rule of our doings then certainely Gods word alone must be our rule in all things Againe our God is so wise and prouident for our good as that it cannot but be a great disparagement vnto his care ouer vs to thinke that he hath left vs at sixe abd seauen in matters of so great moment as the parts of his worship be In the old Testament the temple was distinctly plotted out and all sacrifices particularly prescribed Matth 6. And in the new Testament the Lord directeth his Disciples not only in the matter but in the maner of fasting prayer 1. Cor 11. Chap. 14. and giuing of almes Saint Pau● setteth downe the maner of rightly comming to the holy Communion and how the word is to be preached and heard But yet there is difference for matter of circumstance betwixt the old Testament and the new Gal. 4. In the old as in the infancy of the Church euerie particular is set downe about euery duty for that was the time in which they
is the King my father 2. For a Superiour in knowledge and in wise counsell thus the counsellours of State are Fathers of the State as Ioseph Pharaohs chiefe Councellour speaketh of himselfe God hath made me a father vnto Pharaoh Gen. 45 8. and Pharaoh caused the name Abrech that is Father to bee proclaimed before him and the Senatours of Rome were commonly called Patres conscripti reuerend Fathers 3. For a Superiour in priuate and houshold gouernment thus masters of families are called Patres Familias Fathers of the Familie as Naaman the Syrian is called Father by his seruants 4. For a Superiour 2 King 5.13 in the inuention of any Art or Science Gen. 4. thus Iubal is said to be the father of all that play on the Organs and harpe and Iabal the father of all that make tents 5. For a Superiour in things spirituall towards God thus the Ministers of the Gospell are called Fathers in Christ because that through that spirituall knowledge and grace exceeding others they beget men vnto God 1 Cor. 4.5 as Paul who therefore cals the Galatians his little children and professeth to the Corinthians that hee onely was their father for J begat you saith hee vnto Christ 6. For a Superiour in holinesse and power with God thus the King of Israel calleth Elisha Father saying of the Hoast of the Syrians 2 Kings 6.21 Shall I smite them my Father 7. 2. Kings 2.12 For a Superiour in ouersight and instruction thus Elishab called Elijah who brought him vp in the knowldge of prophesying My father my father the chariots of Israel and the horse-men thereof 8. For a Superiour in estate and condition thus rich men vsing their riches aright are fathers of the poore Iob 31.28 From my youth hee hath growne vp with mee as with a father saith Iob. 9. For a Superior in age and yeares thus the gray-headed is called a father and the ancient are as fathers to be exhorted and not to bee rebuked 10 According to the common acception amongst children 1 Tim. 5.1 there is a naturall father and mother which beget beare and bring vs foorth and vp in the world and if one of them dieth or he or shee that suruiueth bee married againe and hee or shee vnto whom is now made also thy father or mother though not by nature yet by law and there is an honour due vnto them Superiours diuers wayes To honour is to giue that reuerend respect which is due to euery superiour whether in authority and power in place and calling or in worth and dignitie 1. In authoritie and power some are superiors by the law of nature some by the law of nations and some by the law of contract By the law of nature our naturall father and mother who are instruments of our very being by whose tender care wee are preserued in our infancy when we cannot help our selues they are therfore to be recompenced by our giuing of due honor vnto them Ephes 6.1 Col 3.20 And this is first obedience in all things in the Lord Children obey your parents in the Lord. Children obey your parents in all things for that is well pleasing vnto the Lord and he is an vnnaturall beast and no childe that giueth not this obedience vnto both father and mother 2. To beare their corrections with submission of this the Apostle speaketh as of a most common thing euen in children that haue nothing but nature to guide them Heb. 12.9 Wee haue had the fathers of our bodies correcting vs and wee gaue them reuerence 3. To reuerence them in giuing them all outward respect which is due to chiefe superiors and fearing to offend them for from hence the Lord taketh his comparison Mal. 1.6 A sonne honoreth his father and a seruant his master if I then be a Father where is mine honour if I be a master where is my feare 4. To cherish them and to giue them maintenance in time of need When the Pharisees did by their traditions vnder a pretence of holines dispence with this duty they were reproued by our Sauiour Christ for hypocrisie saying Why doe yee transgresse the commandement of God by your tradition Matth. 15.3.4.5.6 for God hath commanded Honour thy father and thy mother But yee say Whosoeuer shall say to father and mother by the gift that is offered by me thou mayest haue profit though hee honour not his father and mother shall be free That is if he dedicate his goods and suffer them to want whereas hee might therewith haue relieued them If a Widdow hath children or nephewes saith Saint Paul let them learne first to shew godlinesse towards their owne house 1. Tim. 5.4 and to recompence their kindred for that is an honest thing and acceptable before God Which he further expoundeth afterwards saying Jf any faithfull man or woman haue widdowes that is Verse 16. to their mothers or aunts let them minister vnto them and let not the Church that is other Christians bee charged And God hath made the Storke a wonderfull example to condemne children that are this way vnnaturall to their parents in their age for she nourisheth and bringeth food to her parents in their old age wherefore she hath the name Chesidah Pious or Mercifull in Hebrew And in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth this kind of mutuall retribution being deriued from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth a Storke In these things consisteth the honour due to father and mother and for examples wee may take Iacob who obeyed his father and mother in the choyce of his wife and Shem and Japhet who reuerenced their father Noah and went backward and couered his nakednesse and Ioseph who recompenced his father Iaacobs care with prouiding for him in his old age and all holy men who haue readily performed these duties They are wicked children therefore and accursed as breaking this Commandement in the head that do continually greeue their godly parents by their disobedience and light esteeme of them liuing out of all good order being Drunkards and Swaggerers and plunging into the estate of marriage without yea contrary to their liking The Lord prouided of old that such should be put to death If any man hath a disobedient son Deut. 21.18.19.20 which will not hearken to the voyce of his father nor the voyce of his mother and they haue chastened him and he will not obey them Then shall they take him and bring him out And all the men of the City shall stone him with stones vnto death Honour due to Magistrates Rom. 13.1 The Superiours in authority by the Law of Nations are Magistrates and Gouernours of the Common-wealth The honour due to them is 1. To be subiect vnto them according to that precept Let euery soule bee subiect to the higher powers And againe 1. Pet. 2.13.14 Submit your selues to all manner ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether
most horrible stench Psal 115.4 5. Thirdly consider how they are derided and mocked that bow before Images The Psalmist euen as if hee should set forth the vanitie of babes and children about their puppets made of clouts so doth he ascribe the Heathen Their Idols are siluer and gold mouthes haue they and speake not eyes and see not eares and heare not and noses and smell not c. They are like vnto them that make thē and so are al they that put their trust in them that is they haue euen as little wit and reason as they And Esay mocketh them thus Esay 28.9 saying Both the Countrey-man and the Noble-man boweth himselfe to the worke of his owne hands And againe Esay 46.6 They bring forth gold out of the pouch and siluer is weighed in the ballance they hire a founder who maketh thereof a God for them they carry him they beare him vpon the shoulder and set him in his place c. ●●n 35.4 Fourthly consider how greatly the worshipping of Images or Idols for they be all of one bastard brood hath been impugned by all holy men from time to time Iacob when hee had once knowledge that some of his houshold fauoured and kept images hee tooke them away and hauing ready no other meanes to destroy them he hid them vnder an Oake where they might neuer come to light againe Moses was so much moued at the golden calues as that he could not bee quiet vntill that hee had broken them in pieces Exod 32 30. Vers 28. beaten them to pouder caused the people to drinke them and destroied three thousands of them by the sword of the Leuites Iosiah did burne with such zeale against these idolaters 2. Kings 2.3 2. Kings 28. as that hee put them to death and burnt their bones vpon the altars of Baal Hezekiah spared not the very brazen Serpent being worshipped but brake it in pieces though at the first there was an holy vse thereof The Christians of the Primitiue Church were at so great defiance with image-worshipping that they would not eate of the meate offered to idols they would rather choose to die then that the world should haue the least occasion to thinke that they consented to the worshipping of Idols When the manner was amongst the heathen to weare a garland vpon their Emperours birth-day for the superstitious honouring of him the Christians hauing garlands offered them carried them in their hands and refused to put them vpon their heads and being asked the reason because said they we are Christians and thus they indangered their liues as witnesseth Tertullian who wrote his booke de corona milit●s of the Souldi●rs Garland in the defence of them When Iulian the Apostata had cunningly brought the Christians to cast euery man a graine of Incense into a C●ns●r of fire wherein perfume was made to idols they vnderstanding his deceit came and cast downe his gold wherewith hee had hired them and offered themselues to martyrdome to expiate this heinous offence Dan. 3 2. Fifthly consider that the meanes which haue been vsed to establish Image-worshipping are altogether carnall euen as Nebuchadnezzars golden Image had so many of all sorts to fal downe before it First the violent and peremptory command of the most haughty King Secondly the acceptation and flattring of Nobles and Officers Thirdly the glittering and alluring matter of which Images are made viz. Gold and Siluer Fourthlie their outward forme and beautie being most curiously wrought and apparreld Fiftly most grieuous penalties threatned to those that refuse to bow themselues Sixthly inchanting musick of all sorts And therefore the thing it selfe was sutably carnall and diuellish and all such of the like sort which are inticed by these fleshly meanes or compelled through feare to fall downe before images 3 Ki●● of Idolatry to serue God according to our owne phantasies 3. The third kind of outward idolatry is to serue God according to our owne phantasies either by a kind of worship which wee our selues haue inuented or other men for vs meerely out of their owne braines or by resting in the work done bodily and outwardly or lastly by seruing God without repenting vs truly of our sinnes For all these are abuses in Gods seruice and he is hereby made an Idoll As for the first most true it is that not onely the whole Church but also euery particular Church hath libertie and power to ordaine conuenient Rites and Ceremonies for the better furnishing and commending the outward seruice of God Caluins iudgement concerning Ceremonies Caluins iudicious resolution herein I preferre before a thousand ouer hasty disrobers who would haue all outward worship stripped starke naked he in his Instituts lib. 4. cap 10. Sec. 30. Dominus totam verae iustitiae fummam c. God hath in the Scriptures euidently set downe the whole summe of true righteousnesse and al the parts of his worship without omitting any thing necessary to our saluation But as for outward discipline and ceremonies it pleased him not to prescribe in particular what we should follow in asmuch as hee foresaw that this dependeth vpon the diuers estate of times and knew very well that one forme and fashion in those externals would not fit all ages In this case therefore wee are to haue recourse vnto the generall Rules namely of order decency and edification which maxims are to bee diuersly accommodated according to the manners of euery people and age as shall be most auailable for the good of the Church Thus in effect Caluin which me thinks should allay the vehement rashnesse of some who peremptorily conclude that in Gods seruice no externall Rite gesture or habit is to bee imposed or admitted without expresse authority of scripture But as this strict shutting vp the gates against al ceremonies deuised by man is a kind of nice superstition so on the other side to set open all doores to breake downe all barres and hedges by neglect of these generall rules and hand ouer head to take vp from Iew or Pagan whatsoeuer occurreth this adorneth not but ouercloudeth and polluteth the sincere worship of God in spirit and truth Verily it is no lesse then a fantastique Idolizing to obtrude vpon Christian people as parts of Gods worship a loade of duties and performances inuented and imposed without either special or general warrant out of the booke of God Which if they were instituted as circumstances tending to decency and edification and as vpon occasion abrogable the presumption were lesse but being thrust vpon the Church as doctrines and performed by the people as part of the Essence of Gods worship surely they aduance not but rather euacuate the worship of God Esay 19.13 Matth. ●5 In vaine doe they worship mee saith the Lord teaching for doctrines the precepts of men It is vanitie then and idolatrie which is daily practised in the Church of Rome where traditions of men are receiued and followed