THE Evangelicall Communicant IN THE Eucharistical Sacrament. OR, A TREATISE, Declaring who are to receive the Supper of the Lord. That it is an Ordinance peculiar to some, and not appertaining to all that live under the Word. Contrary Objections answered. Necessary Directions tendered. Cases cleared, Care encouraged, and the whole course of the Lords Supper guided fit for Reforming times. By Philip Goodwin, Master of Arts of St Johns College in Cambridge, and now Minister of the Gospel, at Watford in HARTFORDSHIRE. Matth. 15. ●6. It is not meet to take the childrens bread, and cast it to dogs. LONDON, Printed by A.M. for Christophe● Meredith at the Sign of the Crane in Paul's Church yard. 1649. TO THE Virtuous, and truly Religious Lady, the Lady JANE FITZ-WILLIAMS. Madam, CVstom hath set up a kind of law, that when a Book is published, some Patron must be sought. I having lived to do that, which I never thought to do while I lived, I resolved not to be irregular, having such copious Copies, in this case, not only among Authors in all ages, but even in Sacred Writ itself. And though for this I have not sought a Noble Theophilus, yet I have found an Elect Lady, on whom I have presumed, and to whom I Dedicated this ensuing Treatise. In which choice, if either personal worth, or particular favours, both to me and mine, may be judged encouraged engagements, and engaged encouragements, I shall neither suspect any open check, nor deserve any secret censure: Those that know You, can testify the one, and I myself could amplify the other: But I know it would not please Your Ladyship, should I fall upon the unfolding of either; though I wish the world did more fully understand Your pious devotion, and charitable disposition, that many more might be provoked by Your precious and praise worthy Example. And to that end I cannot but bear witness, as to Your pious devotion, appearing, not only by Your Ladyship's care in a private performance of Religious duties; but by Your spiritual hunger after the public means of grace, in the Ministry of the Gospel, esteeming the faithful Ministers thereof very highly in love, I dare say, for their work sake; in so much that when through bodily weaknesses, there hath been a forced absence from public Ordinances, how sadly hath Your Ladyship complained for the loss of such precious liberties, a thing rare in this Gospel-glutted age. So to Your charitable disposition, whereof plenty of evidencing instances might easily be given, for though the common calamity (Divine providence so dispensing and disposing) hath no doubt disenabled Your Ladyship from doing that in some way which would have been aforded for the refreshment of others, yet God hath made you both able and willing to give out Your charity other ways: Whereby many even of the poorer sort have been helped and healed, restored and preserved to praise God for You. And this I take to be none of the lest of Your Ladyship's praises, that being even come to the eventide of Your days, and near the haven of Your rest, Your faith and love in the fresh-fruits thereof, be yet very vigorous. Madam, Go on with the good assistance of God to do the best good You may, and the good Lord keep his best wine for You in this later end of Your age, that when God Your Father sends, You may departed in peace, feeling much of the power and love of God in Christ warming Your heart while You live, and much more when You die: Which is and shallbe the prayer of him, who is and shallbe, Divine Grace assisting, at the Throne of Grace, Your Ladyship's real Remembrancer. Philip Goodwin. To the Reader. Christian Reader, I Have been often (the searcher of all hearts knows) in some such straight about this present Treatise, as the holy Apostle Paul once reported himself to be in, about his particular person, Phil. 1.23. not knowing whether to desire its life or death, whether I should let it forth to live in others hands, or to let it lie and die in my own: For verily when I consider the poorness of these sheets, my heart shrinks with fear, yet when I remember the preciousness of souls, my heart springs with love, and the unfeigned love in the Lord I bear to them, makes me desire this might live with them, though I know the depth of my affection hath here drawn me into a high presumption. Truly I see cause to tremble as often as I think what hazards I run in putting out this little weak Boat of mine to sea, and that in a tempestuous season, when the winds are strong and high, the waters are rough and deep, especially where I am to pass: For matters that concern the Sacraments are such as, 1. About them there is now great controversy. 2. In them there is ever great intricacy. As for Sacraments, there are mighty Mysteries in them, and mighty Mistakes about them, and that in this discerning age, wherein is knowledge that leads to truth, and yet ignorance that runs to errors. And indeed the meditation of all the several errors, both in speculative and practical matters, that now abound, might make a Christians heart like Jeremiahs' book, to be full of lamentations, mournings and woes. How the peace of places is disturbed, the passage of the Gospel impeded, the power of godliness abated, and the life of Religion almost worn out, and wasted with frivolous and fruitless disputes, is sad to see: but what controversies are so uncomfortable and uncomely for Christians, as those that are now started up and struggled in touching the two Sacraments and what refers thereunto? Who is so blind bu● sees this as a Master piece of the devil's malice, to set such at variance, whom the precious blood of Christ hath been shed to reconcile? And above all, Satan seeks to divide them with discords (according to the old observation) in re Sacramentaria, in matters of the Sacraments. The ancient Sacramental battles (if but the breaches between Zwinglius and Luther be remembered) may much affect and affl ct pious and peaceable spirits, but the disputes and debate● that are now in being, about Sacraments are exceeding sad to consider. Sacraments are to be bands of union and brotherly unity, 1 Cor. 10.17. 1 Cor. 12.13. Ephes. 4.5. O than that about these should be schisms, strifes, contentions, divisions, and that among persons professing the fear of God, and faith in Christ, must needs be dolorous and grievous to every truly tender spirit, yet so it is. Take both Sacraments, viz. Baptism and the Supper of the Lord, and (Lord) what differences, distances and discords about these are this day in England? For Baptism, how do some strive to contract and draw it in so narrow, as not to admit any infants, though of Christian parents thereunto? The Lord's Supper, it is true, some make the confines of it also too close, but the most part would extend it so wide, and open it so fare, as to let all men in, though of lose, lives to partake thereof. The charity of the former is too low and little, the charity of the later too loud and large, and against this I engage, so that the great Goliath my little David in the Name of the Lord is sent forth to encounter with, is, ALL TO THE SACRAMENT, and much pleading there is for a universal allowance to the Table of the Lord. Books be abroad to this purpose: The arguments that some urge, I suppose are but arrows taken out of those quivers, Such darts I have laboured at the lest to blunt, and such a promiscuous liberty I here oppose with my poor ability, neither am I herein single or singular. I read in the comfortable Notes of Babington upon Exod. 29.32, 33. Aaron and his sons shall eat the flesh of the ram. etc. But a stranger shall not eat thereof, for they are holy things, etc. That worthy Author applies this to the Sacrament of the Supper, and concludes no profane person aught to eat thereof: And yet (saith he) there are some that in our days (who though they seem religious) teach and labour to maintain, that wicked ones may as well as others communicate herein, and not only eat and drink bread and wine, but eat the body, and drink the blood of Christ as the godly may, neither will any thing draw them from their violence, not the sacrifices and figures of the law, nor the pureness and plainness of the Gospel, but headlong helward they will run with it against Scriptures, Fathers, reasons, and what ever to the contrary should persuade, etc. But Secondly, As about Sacraments there is now great controversy, so in Sacraments there is ever great intricacy. It was the expression of that learned Whitakers, that he had rather hear others, than speak himself, concerning either of the Sacraments, being both so full of sublime Majesty and profound Mysteries. And indeed who had not rather landlord what others bring out of these deeps, than launch out into these deeps himself? Both Sacraments have their dimensions; yet this of the Supper seems to have the higher frame as it suits to those who are of the higher form. So that who ever treats aright of this, runs divers difficulties, and who ever goes down into this deep, sees the wonders of the Lord. That which a Papist reports of their Sacrament of the Mass, that there are as many mysteries in it, as there are drops in the sea, dust on the earth, Angels in heaven, stars in the sky, atoms in the sunbeams, or sands in the seashore, etc. A pious and experienced Protestant may well assert all this of the Sacrament of the Supper, celebrated in a sweet Gospel-way. O what rocks of pearl, mines of crystal, mountains of diamond may we here dig in? A fountain of living water, we may here drink at: The water is good, but the well is deep; the fruit is sweet, but the tree is high. The world may well wonder at my bold attempt to bring forth this sl●ght bucket to draw water from so deep a well, to set forth this short ladder, to pluck fruit from so high a tree: but having (I hope) often seriously looked up to God for guidance herein, I have at length resolved to let this Treatise come forth to public view, upon these following grounds. 1. To answer the desires, and meet the encouragements given by several friends who heard some part of it as it was preached, preparatory to the Sacrament, in several Sermons, through whom I have thought God might speak. 2. To manifest that my settled thoughts have been upon, and serious studies about this blessed Ordinance, which aught to be administered, though in the place where God for some time hath pitched my Tent, for the want of necessary assistants, I have not known how actually to administer the same. 3. To declare plainly my poor appresions, so far as the Lord hath given me understanding, the meet subject of this sacred Ordinance, with the manner of its meet management; if so I might in some measure vindicate myself, who have exceedingly suffered several ways, in the uncomfortable cessation of the same. 4. To provoke the expedition of that way of government in all the congregations of Christ (if under any such eyes this Treatise may fall as the dispatch of that good work concerns) that so God's servants may safely and sweetly communicate in this Supper of the Lord. An Ordinance by all God's people earnestly to be panted after. It's reported to be one of the three things Austin desired to have seen, viz. Christ in the flesh. O how aught we all to desire to see Christ advanced on his Throne, and dispensed at his Table, etc. 5. To discharge that duty wherein I look upon myself obliged both in respect of my Ministerial calling, and in respect of the solemn covenant made with God. 1. For my calling, it engages me to use all good ways for the instruction of people. Now as people have two ways of learning, viz. by hearing and seeing: So Ministers have two ways of teaching them; by proposing truths to their ears in their Sermons, by presenting truths to their eyes, in their writings. I have often spoke to the ears, I now once speak to the eyes, the Lord ever speak to the hearts of his people. 2. For my covenant, it binds me in my place by all good means to endeavour, The reformation of Religion, in Doctrine, Worship and Discipline, according to the Word of God, and the example of the best reformed Churches: To the compassing of which good end, if this may be any means, I acknowledge mercy. 6. To supply the want of some fare better Treatise that may refer to Church Discipline, as it is to be conversant about the right transaction of the Supper of the Lord: for though many excellent Tractates have been published, some whereof have positively asserted, and others polemically discussed. Many things requisite to this Ordinance, yet to the point of Church-Government as it concerns this Sacrament, wherein some are to act, and others to submit, I find little extant, though I fear the casting in of my poor mite, will add no great matter. 7. To contribute my best assistance to compose present differences and disagreements among Christians, whereby they are rend one from another in opinion and communion; and could we accord in this one service, to walk by one rule, and mind the same things, other diversities would be soon reconciled. 8. To facilitate this great and difficult service, when it shall come to be performed in Congregations where it hath been long neglected (which I mention with a mourning spirit) the work may pass on the more smoothly, the way being cleared, scruples removed, helps prescribed, the hearts of God's people the better prepared to meet the Lord in this his holy Ordinance. All along which I have had special respect to the profit of the people among whom I am for the present placed, to whom some part hereof have been publicly preached; as the language towards the later end speaks. Lastly, To improve the short time of my sojourning, I have considered my weak body, and that I shall not speak long, to children, friends, or Gods precious people, which hath made me the more willing to get the wind, and take the season, to leave some part of Gospel-truth upon record for the benefit of God's dear Saints. Zisca desired his skin might serve the Bohemians in their wars, when his body could not more do it: O that I might leave something to be serviceable to God's Church when I am gon● Sights as they come sooner to the eye than sounds to the ear, so they abide longer. Audible words are more transient: visible works more permanent. Sermons are as showers of rain that water for the instant: Books are as snow that lie longer on the earth, these may preach when the Author cannot, and which is more, when he is not. Thus have I given an account of the reasons swaying me to publish these things, wherein if the Lord shall accept of me, my soul rejoices, I shall adore free grace to be made an instrument of the lest good to any, however I have begged pardon in the blood of his Son, for what ever errors or weaknesses are found herein, that may hinder the good success hereof; yet if possible I might attain thereto, I cannot but let this Treatise go forth, begging the blessing of heaven to go therewith. Philip Goodwin. THE CONTENTS. WHether Christ's taking only his Disciples in at the first institution and administration of his Supper, be a directory for future, to receive such only thereunto as are the Discples of Christ. page 5. 2. Who upon the account of the Gospel are now the Disciples of Christ, and what are their several sorts and signs. p. 10. 3. How it may appear upon proof that the Disciples of Christ are only meet to partake at the Table of Christ. p. 17. 4. What are the duties of the Lords Supper, and whether only Christ's Disciples can perform them. p. 18. 5. What are the mercies of the Lords Supper, and whether only the Disciples of Christ can receive them. p. 45. 6. What persons aught hereupon to forbear the Table of the lord p. 60. 7. What persons must hereupon be forbidden the Table of the lord p. 73. 8. Who are ignorant persons, and why they are to be restrained. p. 76. 9 Who are scandalous persons, and why they are to be restrained. p. 84. 10. How such are further confuted, who would have all hereunto admitted. p. 98. 11. Whether all the Jews eating the paschal lamb, prove that all must ●ow partake at the Table of the lord p. 102. 12. Whether the Israelites all eating manna, and Drinking rock-water in the wilderness, proves that all must eat and drink in the Supper of the lord p. 109. 13. Whether Judas were present with Christ and his Disciples it the first institution and celebration of the Supper. p. 111. 14. Whether, supposing he did partake thereof with the rest, it follows, that than all may safely receive the same. p. 118. 15. Whether those thousands in the 2d of the Acts, by the Apostles admitted to breaking of bread, prove that common multitudes may promiscuously partake at the Table of the lord p. 121 16. Where the fault is justly to be laid, if but few are admitted to the Table of the Lord, whether in any others, or not merely in men themselves. p. 123. 17. Whether those large bringings in of guests to the Supper, Luk. 14. argue that all must be also received to the Supper of the lord p. 125. 18. Whether, because the Scripture saith, God would have all to be saved, Christ died for all, Christ would have all to come to him, that therefore all are to come and communicate in this Supper of Christ. p. 132. 19 Whether, because all have been baptised, therefore none from the other Sacrament are to be refused. p. 142. 20. Whether, because we receive infants to Baptism, therefore their parents, though profane, must be accepted to the Supper of the lord p. 150. 21. Whether, because all come to the hearing of the word, none are to be put by the Table of the lord p. 167. 22. Whether the Sacrament of the Lords Supper be a converting Ordinance, as the Word is. p. 177. 23. Whether a regenerating Ordinance, as Baptism is. p. 188. 24. Whether unprofitable hearing the Word, is not as great a sin as unworthy receiving the Sacrament. p. 191. 25. Whether all that have taken the Nationall Covenant, may not partake of this Evangelicall Sacrament. p. 196. 26. Whether putting of men from the Sacrament, be not an usurping of some new Lordly power, and a judging of men's consciences. p. 201. 27. Whether there be any word to warrant from Scripture the refusing of any from the Supper of the lord p. 211. 28. Whether former custom of coming all to the Sacrament, be any good plea for present and future practice. p. 224. 29. Whether Ministers under the Gospel have any power beyond Admonition. p. 239. 30. Whether any are to be suspended from the Lords Table, not yet wholly excommunicate. p. 217. 31. Whether seeing wicked men eat and drink damnation to themselves, it be any matter to the Minister or any other. p. 244. 32. Whether, seeing it is the Ministers office to gather, doth it belong to any before Christ at the last day to s●ver, p. 247. 33. Whether the Priest's office under the law, to put a difference between the clean and unclean, was to be restrained to things, and did not extend to persons. p. 249. 34. Whether any that desire the Sacrament, may be denied the same. p. 250. 35. Whether, in that all will seem devout in Sacrament time, any should be denied the thing. p. 254. 36. Whether, seeing the best have their infirmities, the worst for all their impieties, may not be admitted. p. 259. 37. Who they are that aught to contribute their assistance, to keep pure this precious Ordinance, with motives to quicken their care in this case. p. 265. 38. What rules such are to observe to direct the right managing of their duties herein both for matter and manner. p. 283. 39 How fare it concerns the Christian magistrate to add his assistance hereto. p. 289. 40. What private Christians are to do, to afford their furtherance herein. p. 291. 41. What is to be done that the best may be innocent, though at the Lords Table with them the worst should be present. p. 295. 42. How the bore presence of profane men doth not hereat defile. p. 298. 43. Whether wicked men, if they profess repentance and promise amendment, are not upon this to be admitted. p. 300. 44. Whether, seeing God can make a sudden change of men's hearts, they are not upon hopes hereof to be received. p. 304. 45. Whether, because wicked men may make great disturbance, if put out from this Ordinance, it be not more meet to allow them for peace sake to partake thereof, p. 309. 46. Whether, seeing officers in the Church are few, and perhaps inferior men, offenders many for number, and mighty for power, it be not against such, more wisdom to forbear this censure. p. 312. 47. Whether, if offenders be neighbours, customers, kindered, officers are yet to refuse them. p. 316. 48. What rules Church-Elders and others are to observe, that while herein they discharge their duty, they may not be justly charged with malice and busy meddling. p. 319. 49. Whether there hath not been ill successes in former undertakes of this disciplinary course, that may discourage any enterprise thereof for future. p. 321. 50. What submission is meet for people in this p●int of the Lords Supper, and wherein it consists. p. 328. 51. Whether they are to be examined, and what motives may persuade willingness in them thereunto. p. 329. 52. Whether this examining people before the Sacrament doth not accord to that auricular confession of old to the Priest. p. 337. 52. Whether it be not sufficient for men to examine themselves. p. 341. 53. Whether such examining of men be not to catechise them like children. p. 345. 54. Why such examining of men before the Lord's Supper, and not before Baptism. p. 347. 55. Whether herein be not niceness and preciseness more than need. p. 351. 56. Whether, seeing this putting people from the Communion, may occasion shame before men, and trouble to them in their minds, it were not better forborn. p. 357. 57 Wherein lies the greatness of the evil, of wicked men's unworthy receiving. p. 361. 58. What course is to be taken that yet the worst may come worthily to the Table of the Lord: motives persuading, with rules directing thereunto. p. 367. 59 Whether public repentance be not in some case requisite, or whether a sad confession of sins in secret to God be not sufficient. p. 374. 60. Whether the interruption of the course of Sacraments in several places, be not cause of exceeding great sorrow. p. 385. 61. Whether there be not a necessity of celebrating the Supper of the Lord, and what that necessity is. p. 399. 62. What can be said for such places where the Lords Supper is omitted, seeing it is needful to be administered. p. 402. 63. Whether the true servants of Christ may not unworthily receive this Supper of Christ, and wherein to them the evil and peril of it lies. p. 407. 64. Wherein the utility and excellency of this Gospel-Sacrament consists. p. 413. 65. What is that peculiar interest God's Saints have in this Supper of the Lord that others have not. p. 428. 66. Whether such as have already repent, are not yet ordinarily to renew their repentance before they partake at the Table of the Lord. 67. Wherein that renewed repentance consists, with the care that becomes Christians therein. p. 438. 68 Whether every man must have an actual faith of his own to meet receiving the Sacrament of the Supper, when infants are received without any such faith to the Sacrament of Baptism. p. 449. 69. Wherein a Christians faith aught to act when he is at the Table of the lord p. 451. 70. Whether Believers be not bound to enlarge their obedience to Christ upon every receipt of this Sacrament. p. 467. 71. What that enlarged obedience contains for parts and properties. p. 475. 72. What are the evils whereof all are in hazard after a Sacrament received, and how they may be prevented. p. 485. 73. Whether the Lords Supper aught ever to be administered in public Congregations, not in private houses. p. 500 74. Whether it be not most meet for Communicants to receive the Supper of the Lord at the Table together. p. 513. 75. Whether the Sacrament of the Lords Supper be often to be celebrated. p. 522. 76. What time of the day is most meet to celebrated this Supper in. p. 527. To the Reader. Good Reader, AS I expect a friendly and brotherly acceptation of my pains, here presented for thy profit, so I entreat a courteous and candid interpretation of some things fallen out amiss as this book hath passed through the Press. My necessary absence secretly speaks my apology. Some mistakes I have in transitu discovered, others I must needs leave to thine own observation, and crave of thee to correct such faults in the printing, as thou findest in more diligent reading, some of which are more obvious, and do greater prejudice, though even those which are lesser and literal, must be warily marked, least even the misplacing of a point, make thee miss the sense of the place: And the good hand of God correct errors in thy life, and imprint such truths in thy heart as may be for his everlasting honour and thy eternal happiness. Amen. Errata, Or Faults escaped in the main Text. PAge 60. line 26. for denied read devoid. p. 69. l. 10. for nod buckats r. not buckets. p. 91. l. 27. for eaten r. eat. p. 96. l. 15. for Gen. 40. r. Gen. 4. p. 98. l. 20. comma removed at why. p. 106. l. 5. rem. the come. at . p. 135 l. 26. for bleeding r breathing. p. 142. l. 27 for bear r. bore. p. 154. l. 22. rem. the come. at accidentally. p. 225. l. 10. for these r. those. p. 227. l. 7. for Ministers r peoples. p. 267. l 15. for pr●phanened r. profaned, p. 306. l. 23. for ten r. two. p. 320. l. 15. for case r. cause. p. 339. l. 23. for fill r. until. p. 349. l. 11. for to r. the. p. 404. l. 2. rem. the come. at meditations, place it at instant be●ore. p 405. l. 29. for admitting r. omitting. p 407. l. 26. rem. come. at God, place it at seeking after. p 425. l. 17. deal you after mind. p. 440. l. 5. for falls r Fawks p. 441. l. 12. for frow r. from p 463. l 13. for in another's r. one in another's. p. 473. l. 10. add not after must. p. 492. l. 23. for ways r. days. Errata in the Margin. Page 23. pro cord. Su. lege cord s●●o. p. 33. pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lege 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. p. 3●. pro magnifaciamus lege magnifacimus. ibid. pro. men●iria lege memoria. p. 39 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lege 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lege 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lege 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. p. 118. pro quem ea lege quae mea. p. 162. pro exant lege erant. p. 361. pro homiciduum lege homicidium. p. 366. pro Geo lege Grego. p. 423 pro carictus lege Christus. p. 424. pro scit lege scili●et. p. 459. pro inrem lege intrem. In the Appendix. Page 518. l. 13. for handled r. handed p. 521, l. 26. for doubting r. doting. p. 524. l. 10. & 11. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. THE EVANGELICALL Communicant. MATTH. Chap. 26. Vers. 26, 27. Jesus took bread and blessed it, and broke it, and gave it to his Disciples, saying, Take eat, this is my body. And he took the cup and gave thanks, and gave it to them saying, Drink ye all of it, for this is my blood. THese verses of the holy Evangelist, Sacramentum utimur & Christus est Auctor Sacramentis a●utimur & Christ●● est ul●er. do lively lay forth the first institution of the Lords last Supper, and what our Saviour, the Divine Institutor of it, both did, and said, at the setting up of the same. Two things they hold forth in general about this instituted Supper. Caenae domini consideratur vel respectu partium ex quibu● est constituta, vel respectu hominum pro quibus est iustituta. 1. The Substance of it, or what it contains. 2. The subject of it, or whom it concerns. And in reference to both these, the language and carriage of Christ is considerable. First, For the substance of this Sacrament Supper, which as it consists of two parts, so the works and words of Christ that tend thereunto are of two sorts. Sicut homo ex du●bus naturis id est ex anima subsistat & corpore. Ambr. in l●c lib. 25. ca 3. It● Eucharistia duabus rebus constat terr●na & caelesti Iren. lib. 4. ca 14. The essential parts of this Supper, are the outward signs, to wit bread and wine: and the inwards signified, the body and blood of Christ. Now the works of Christ ●owards the external signs consider, First, For the bread, there is a four fold action of Christ: He took it, He blessed it, He broke it, He gave it. And than for the wine, Christ's actions are three, He took it, He blessed it, He gave it. Next the words of Christ towards these, which are either spoken, By way of Imposition, or, By way of Exposition. Touching the bread, that which Christ requires is, Take it, and eat it. And for the wine, that which Christ commands is, Drink it. And both these he seems further to unfold, For the bread, he says, Secundum quendam modum Sacramentum corporis Christi, corpus Christi est, & Sacramentum sanguinis Christi sanguis Christi est. Aug. ep. 23. This is my body, And for the wine he says, This is my blood, wherein we are to understand Christ after a Sacramental manner, meaning that these outward elements thus set apart did spiritually signify himself and the saving good of his sufferings, so you have the duties enjoined, and the mysteries explained, and the matters wherein the substance of the Lords Supper is contained, and all this I shall pass being thus briefly propounded, because there are many excellent books extant, wherein the Lords Supper for the substance of it (or the parts whereof it is principally compacted) is largely and learnedly discussed. That whereof I shall undertake to treat is the subject of this Supper, Non solum quid recipitur sed a quibus. Aug. in Joh. Tract. 62. or the parties to whom it is peculiarly directed: for therein we are not only to learn what is to be received, but who are to be receivers. Now the persons that Christ in the first model of this Supper administered it unto, and laid his Sacramental commands upon, are expressly said to be his disciples. Cr●de tibus Discipulis fragmenta pavis dedit Christus. Cyrill in johan. lib. 4. 1. That which Christ himself doth, is to them. He took bread and gave it to his Disciples, and he took the cup and gave it to them also. 2. That which Christ wo●ld have done is by them: For the bread, Take ye, Eat ye: and for the wine, Drink ye all of it. This for the outward matters, the inward mysteries are meant to them and to them applied. This is my body broken for you. This is my blood shed for you. So we see here who they were whom Christ himself received to this Supper at the first celebration of it, to wit, his Disciples only. Now the first and best of every kind, is to be the rule of all that ●hall after follow. Primum & optimum in unoquoque genere sit regis la reliquorum & regula vim habe● & doctrinae, & praecepti. Hence than we have a clear discovery, who are to be accounted meet communicants at this ho●y communion, namely, such only as are the Disciples of Christ, and in that this is according to the primitive pattern, I shall pitch down this profitable point. Doctr. That the Lords Supper i● such an ordinance, that the persons for whom it is appointed, to whom it is committed, and by whom it is to be transacted, are such all, and such only as are the Disciples of Jesus Christ. Touching this point I shall declare four ways. 1. How it is deducted. 2. How it is explained. 3. How it is confirmed. 4. How it is applied. First, I shall make good the ground or bottom where upon this conclusion is raised, that you may see it hath firm footing, and foundation in the Text, for happily it may seem otherwise to some, because Christ's taking in of these Disciples only, and requiring them to partake in this Supper, is thought to be a thing merely accidental and casual, falling out at that time upon occasion of the Passeover, etc. and that therefore from thence we can lay down no instruction for future. But the truth is, though we say in some sense this was casual and accidental, yet in some other respects more considerable, I am sure it was not, as 1. It was not so in respect of the praevision and providence of God, to whom nothing is contingent, but it was so ordered, and guided by the good purpose and pleasure of God, that those Disciples and those only should than communicate. 2. It was not so in respect of the intention and purpose of Christ, those were the only company Christ himself concluded of: had he desired others also, he could as well have sent Peter and John about to have invited more persons to meet, and communicate with, as well is he did sand them into the city to prepare a place to meet and communicate in. But to let it appear that this transaction, viz. with Disciples, was purposely for our instruction, and doth serve as a directory to us in this case of the communion to warrant our confinement of this Sacrament to Christ Disciples alone, learn two things. 1. Christ's admitting his Disciples, what that did notify. 2. Christ's admitting only his Disciples, what that did signify. 1. Christ in that he admitted those his Disciples to his Supper, did thereby declare two things. 1. That all that were a● that present time in relation to him as his Disciples, had a right to that Supper. 2. That all that should be his succeeding Disciples in time to come, should be accounted meet for this Supper, for Observe; 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Discip●li, quo nomine tum temporis intelligebantur non tantum Apostoli sed omnes qui Christi doctrinam amplexi, ejus fidem profitebantus, etc. That Christ had not only the twelve at that time for his Disciples, but the seventy, and several others, such who having given up their names to Christ, and professing the faith of Christ, etc. were called his Disciples, though infirm in themselves, and inferior to some others in place or grace, as Chemnitius well interprets upon Matth. 10.42. and upon Matth. 13.16. 2. Mat. 28.19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Facite Discipu●os. Pareus. That Christ was not only to have Disciples now, but hereafter in all ages to come. Those Disciples that were with him on earth, were after to go and make more Disciples, as some expound the Greek word, Matth. 28.19. for the success of which work Christ doth promise' his presence to the end of the world; Discipuli totius Ecclesia communicantis personam repraesentabant. Pareus. in Mat. 26. Discipulorum nomine omnes fideles Christiani intelliguntur quibus dat Christus suum corpus in Discipulis quoties sa●ram istam caenam inter se in communi fidelium caetu celebrant. vers. 20. Now when Christ did administer this Supper with those Disciples, he did it as they were, 1. A part of the present number that were his Disciples at that time, and therein declared what did appertain to all that were absent. 2. As they were a type of the future number, such as should be brought in and become the disciples of Chr●st, and so to possess the same privilege. Distributio primum facta est in discipulos tanquam semina quaedam populo, is a qui postea creditura erant. Thus the best of our late writers as Bucer, Marlorat, Piscator, Pareus, Aretius, etc. with a concurring consent carries it. Secondly, Christ in that he admitted those disciples only to his Supper, did thereby declare these two things. 1. That none for present that were not in some true sense his disciples had any right to his Supper. 2. That none for future that should not become his Disciples should ever be accounted meet for this Supper. First, Christ did hereby show that whoever now was no disciple had no right to fit at that Table, wherefore though we should suppose, if some others that were disciples, had been than and there present, Christ would not have refused them, yet we must not suppose that if any had been present, who were in no sense his disciples, that he would have received them. Secondly, Christ did hereby show that whoever should not be his Disciple for future, should hence have no ground to pled for any part in this Supper: Christ by this action did entail the proper interest of this ordinance upon his Disciples as they were his disciples, and therefore the propriety appertains to all his Disciples, to his disciples only, Zanchius lib. Epist. 1. ad princ. Freder, 3, de excom, Argum, 6. Vrsinu● in catec, de ●oena domini, Quest, 82, and to them always that entail to be continued, and never to be cut of while C●rist have any Disciples remain, but the title to extend not further: and thus I find Zanchy, Vrsine, and divers others Orthodox Authors, conclude from the example of Christ in receiving his disciples alone to this Supper, at the first Institution and administration of the same as to bar out all others, Polanus Syntag, Theol lib, 6. cap. 56. de subiectis Coen. Dom, for ever that should not be the disciples of Christ, from any share in this Supper. Therefore the conclusion is well laid down, let us see how it may be laid forth, or how it is Secondly, to be explained. That in the proposition which requires exposition, is, what we mean by the Disciples of Christ? To clear that, consider two things. 1. The signification of the word (disciple) in its own nature. 2. The acceptation of the phrase (disciple of Christ, as it is found in Scripture. 1. The word disciple in latin imports a learner, Discipulus a disco D●scipulus● disciplinae quasi discipulina. a Scholar or one that lives under good Discipline. And so a disciple of Christ is as much as one that learns well of Christ, and lives well under Christ's School-Discipline, and wh●le he lives, he loves to lesson, Cupio discere & discipulus m● esse profi●e●r dummod● doceant Deum in Christo. jero, if he may but learn any thing more of God in Chri●t. But Secondly the Scripture will speak up more fully to this: and so concerning the Disciples of Christ, as their footsteps are found for their discovery in Scripture, consider 1. The sorts of them. 2. The signs of them. Disciples of Christ for the sorts of them, were either such as were ●ore peculiar and extraordinary, or more common and ordinary. Those who were Christ's disciples more peculiar and extraordinary, were the Apostles of Christ, who preached Christ. Luk. 9.1, 10. For all Apostles were disciples, though all Disciples were not Apostles. 2. The Disciples of Christ more ordinary and common, were all such as professed Christ, and thereupon were called Christians, Act. 11.26. These Disciples of Chri●t were either nominal or real, seeming or sincere. Gentilem vitam agent su● nomine Christiano, Salvia. As in the world there are some Christians in name only, and such as under a christian name lead a Pagan life, and under a Christian title oppose Christian truth, Sub nomine Christiano doctrinae resisterent Christianae, jerom, Non nascimur sed renastimur Christiani. jerom, and some indeed Christians being truly regenerated by the grace of Christ. So in the word there be disciples of Christ so named because of some outward appearances for Christ made by them: a joh, 6, 66. others, disciples of Christ indeed, so owned of Christ himself, because of the saving evidences of Christ's grace in them. And now these Disciples of Christ see the signs of them as given by Christ in Scripture, in the Scripture Christ discovers these Disciples two ways. 1. By their affections to him. 2. By their afflictions for him. The case of Christ's disciples in respect of their affections to Christ is very commendable, their love to Christ is large, and so great that they can hate fathers and mothers, wives and children, Brethrens and sisters for Christ's sake, yea and their own lives likewise: and indeed else they could not be Christ's disciples, Luk. 14.26. It was a Disciple-like resolution of Jerom, Hieron, ad Heliodor, Epist. 1. If my father should stand before me, my mother should hung upon me, my brethrens should press about me, I would break through my brethrens, throw down my father, tread under feet my mother, to cleave to Jesus Christ, and the like I read of one Kilian a Dutch Schoolmaster being asked if he loved not his wife and children, answered, were all the world a lump of gold, and in my hand to dispose, I would leave it at my enemy's feet to liv● with them in a prison, but my soul and my Saviour are dearer to me than all, nay a disciple can slight his life out of his love to Christ as that blessed virgin in Basil being condemned for Christianity to the fire, and having her estate and life offered her if she would worship Idols, cried, let money perish, non amant illi Christu● qui aliquid plus quam Christum em●●t. Aug. de re. and life vanish, Chri●t is better than all, and sure they do not love Christ, who love any thing more than Christ, O the surpassing love to Christ that is in a true Disciple of Christ. He loves Christ more than he fears Hell, if Christ should say to him, Discipulus plus amat Christum quam timet g●hennam, Bern, take thy fill of sinful delights, thou shalt not perish, only thou ●halt never be with me, O not, he trembles and will not si●, not so much because he would avoid hell which he fears, as because he would not offend him whom he loves, this is a true disciple of Christ, Quomodo ama● Christum cum adhuc amas quod in te odit Christus, Aug. O how far is he from a disciple of Christ, who saith he loves Christ and yet loves sin which Christ hates, and hates them whom Christ loves! Christ's disciples they love others in Christ, and for Christ's sake, Jerom professed how much he loved Augustine in Christ, and Christ in Augustine, Christ's disciples they love others, but they love one another much more, because they are all related to Jesus Christ, and by this they are known. joh. 13. Secondly, The course of Christ's disciples in respect of their afflictions for Christ, Vae portantibu● crucem & non sequentibus Christum Bern. is likewise laudable in that they willingly take up any cross for Christ, follow Christ, under, and than deny themselves in all, as our Saviour reports, Luk 9.23. & 13.26. The Disciples of Christ they will not decline any cross for Christ's sake, josephus' lib. 18. cap. 4. nor decline Christ for any cross sake: josephus writing of the times of Christ, saith that in those times there was one Jesus a wise man, if it be lawful to call him a man, for he did divers admirable works, himself was condemned to the cross, and his followers suffered much for his sake, yet after all they followed him still, being dead they owned him, and for all the Ignominy of his death, and the troubles of their own lives, yet they acknowledged him, etc. Those are no true disciples of Christ, who either will not take up the cross of Christ or sit sullen under it, or seek themselves in it. Those who hope to wear the crown but will not bear the cross, they love the credit but not the cross, as great And irons in Chimneys, that stand for show, Inimici sunt vel qui crucem Christi non credunt vel qui non p●rtant. but bear nothing, those are rather Christ's enemies, than Christ's Disciples, or such who when others bear the cross, they have no bowels in the afflictions of others for Christ, Duobus mod● crux tollitur aut cum per abstinentia● affligitur corpus, aut compassione animi affligitur animus. Greg. they have no fellow-feeling, what is all to them? Or if they must come under the cross yet than they will not follow Christ, but sit down under deep discontents, sure Christ hath no such disciples: but sure such are the disciples of Christ, who when they suffer for Christ, they rejoice in Christ: let it be for Christ, and a prison is a paradise, his cross is their crown, in such troubles they triumph, such shame is their glory: for herein they are conformable to Christ, of whom it is said, Heb. 12.2. for the joy that was set before him, endured the cross, despised the shame, etc. yea upon the cross he had a glorious triumph, Col. 2.15. Yet further, Christ in the Gospel discovers who are his disciples by these two notes. 1. Their fertility in his works. 2. Their stability in his words. The former declares whereof they abound, and the later wherein they abide. First, Christ's Disciples are full of good fruits, Joh. 15.8. Herein, saith Christ, Aliquid dicitur fieri quando patefit & manifestatur. is my Father glorified, if ye bear much fruit, so shall ye be my Disciples, that is, So shall you make it manifest that you are indeed my Disciples, by your bearing much fruit unto the glory of God; when we are not only fruitful, but very fruitful to God, than it is most clear we are the Disciples of Christ. When our fruit is not only for quality good, but for quantity great, than it appears whose Disciples we are, when our fruits of holiness and righteousness are not only for kind various, Inscholis human, non pro discipulo habetur qui unam vel alteram lectionem audit, sed qui constantèr in ea addiscenda haeret, etc. Ita in schola Christi ill● verus discipulus eius est qui in doctrina eius evangelij perseverat Chemnit. but for degree glorious, than we are seen to be the Disciples of Christ. Secondly, Christ's Disciples they seek to settle themselves firm in the words of Christ: If ye continued in my words, than are ye my Disciples indeed, saith Christ, Joh. 8.31. As he is not a scholar in a school who learns a lesson and away, but he that abides at his book, etc. Neither is he a Disciple of Christ, who learns a little of Christ, and leaves it presently, but he that learns and lives accordingly: Hence than as not those that are barrer, so not those who are backsliding are any of Christ's Disciples indeed, Joh. 6.66. Christ had Disciples that went with him a while, at length they went back from him: but such were his Disciples in pretence, not indeed. Those who have seemed to come up to Christ, but now like the sun in Hezekiahs' days they are gone many degrees back, yea and their going on still is as the reading of Hebrew altogether backward in every line of their lives, these are not the Disciples of Christ indeed, nor ever were. Well than I hope by this time it is understood according to the rules of Christ, who are the true Disciples of Christ, to whom appertains this privilege to partake in this Supper of Christ. 1. Such as love Christ above all, and love all others in Christ, they are fit to take this token of Christ's love. Quomodo Christi sanguinem possumus hibere, qui propter Christ●● sanguinem erubescimus fundere● Cypr. de ca● dom. 2. Such as are content to take up any cross for Christ: let them drink of Christ's blood, who are not ashamed to shed their blood for Christ or to follow Christ in blood. 3. Such as in their lives bring forth much fruit to God: they may receive from God this sweet fruit of Christ's death. 4. Such as keep close to the say of Christ are meet to partake of the sufferings of Christ, let them drink of his blood, who will abide in his word. These being disciple-properties, let this be a disciple-priviledge. So I proceed, Thirdly, To the third thing, which is for the confirming of the point, to prove, that this ordinance of the Lords Supper is for Christ's disciples alone. The sincere servants of Christ who are sanctified by Christ, and subject to Christ, are such only in the sight of God, who are meet to communicate in this Supper of the Lord. To make this good, observe that there are things which refer to this Supper-Sacrament of two sorts. 1. The mercies of this Supper. 2. The duties of this Supper. The mercies descending, which are from God to man, from the Lord to the believer. The duties ascending, which are from man to God, from the believer to the Lord. And these things are so conjoined and involved, to wit the duties with the mercies, and the mercies with the duties: that as who ever performs the duty shall receive the mercy, so none can receive the mercy but who performs the duty. Now come to disciples and non-disciples, believers and unbelievers, penitent Saints and impenitent sinners, and thus falls the present case. The duties of the Lords Supper, are such as only Christ's disciples can perform. The mercies of the Lords Supper are such as only Christ's disciples can receive. To clear the case, first in respect of the Sacramental duties. The duties required for a full performance of those that communicate aright in this holy ordinance are of two sorts. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 1. Preparatory to it, which make way to the main work. 2. Executory in it, which concern the work itself. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The duties preparatory to this present Supper, as the Apostle proposes them in the 1 Cor. 11. are principally two. 1. A man must examine himself, ver. 28. Triplex est judicium, discussionis, condemnationis, absolutionis. Aquin. 2. A man must judge himself, vers. 31. A man must examine himself that he may judge himself aright, and he must judge himself when he hath examined himself as is meet, neither is he to eat or drink in this ordinance until he have done both, but now a natural man that is not discipled to Christ can never do either. 1. Let a man examine himself and so let him eat, saith the Apostle, 1 Cor. 11. Truly that man who takes this trial of himself, he must have prudence and patience, two Greek words the Apostle uses in one place which implies as much, 2 Cor. 13.5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Examine yourselves, prove yourselves. Prove by examining, and examine by proving. A man must examine himself as exactly as one that would weigh gold in curious scales, try it to a grain, gold-oar is for a goldsmith not a blacksmith to weigh, and try. It must be a prudent and experienced exchanger to judge such mettle by weight, sight, and sound: Hieron. in Ephes. lib. 3. so self examination requires skill in a Christian, as that word imports: but than so to examine as to prove himself, or as that word signifies, to ●●●r & pierce into himself, not only to 〈◊〉 the skin, but to run himself through, and pierce the entrails in a deep search: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. An unconverted Christian as he hath not the prudence, so he will never have the patience to do thus with himself, only a pious man, a disciple. Proving, examining or searching, ordinarily arises upon some degree of suspicion: now it is no ways ordinary for an unregenerate man to suspect himself. There is this difference among divers between a good man and a wicked man, a good man fears the worst of himself, and hopes the best of others in whom he can but see any thing of God or Christ, as Calvin and Bucer were want to speak. A wicked man on the contrary, fears the worst of others, but hopes the best of himself, will rather suspect all the world than himself. The disciples of Christ when Christ tells them one of them should betray him, they each reflect, Is it I? not, is it Judas? so prove are good men to misdoubt themselves. When Jehonadab comes to Jehu, 2 King. 10.15. O saith Jehu to him, Is thy heart upright as mine is? he questioned the uprightness of Jonadabs' heart, never doubting his own: so fare is a sinful man from suspecting himself, and thereupon he never examines or searches himself. Suspicion that puts a man upon examination, arises upon a double case. 1. In case some good requisite be suspected to be absent. 2. In case some evil opposite be suspected to be present. Now take a natural man, and he suspects not himself in respect of either of these: For good he conceives he hath abundant; for evil, he conceives himself innocent. Abundant in respect of grace, like the Laodicean Church, who thought herself rich and increased in all good, needing no spiritual gift, yet was poor and knew it not, Revel. 3.17. and innocent in respect of sin, Jer. 2.35. Because thou sayest I am Innocent, I have not sinned, I will pled with thee. Now when this is a man's opinion of himself, he will not examine himself: for grace, he hath it, what need he search as if he had not? for sin, he pleads not guilty, and makes no more question. Thus we find that Pharisee, Luk. 18.11. or else as for sin if he doth not think himself free from it yet than he fears he is so full of it, and foul in it; that he is loath to look into himself, had rather put out the candle at the door, than go with it into his house to make any discoveries there. It is reported of the Elephant, how unwilling he is to go into the water, being forced, he puddles it, lest by the clearness of the stream he should discern his own deformity: so a sinful man, either he thinks he is so good as he needs not examine, or he thinks he is so bad, as he is loath to examine, so is this thing cleared. That 1. He will not examine himself. See than 2. He cannot examine himself. 1. Because he is restrained in himself. 2. Because he is remote from himself. 1. The power of sin and satan in him, will be sure to put him by, and pull him of from this. The devil he loves to sift men, Luk. 22.31. Simon Simon, satan hath desired to winnow thee as wheat, or to winnow you, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luk. 22.31. in the plural number: Noting that the devil desires that himself may sift and winnow all men, but he is loath any man should sift himself. Therefore those in whom he works powerfully, he will be sure to hold them from this work of examining themselves. 2. Such men are remote from themselves: sin as it carries a man from God, so from himself, as appears in the work of repentance, wherein a man doth not only return to God, but to himself, Luk. 15.17. The prodigal repenting, is said to come to himself; his sin had not only carried him out from his father's house, but also from himself: Discesserum peccatores a cord. Su. Mufcul. In a sinful estate men and their own hearts lie asunder, till God by grace causes them to return to their hearts, Isa. 46.8. Now self examination requires a man to be at home with himself, it cannot be done at a distance, therefore this cannot be done by an impenitent man; and so seeing he doth not examine himself, he must not ear. 2. A man must judge himself, and this likewise lieth out of the compass of a carnal man: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Tit. 3.11. Some wicked men we read are judged and condemned of themselves, but for any such to judge and condemn themselves, we find it not. Nec se iudicant nec Sacramenta dijudicant. Cypr. de can. Dom. They are rather passive than active, forced than free, which makes them not more meet for the Supper of the Lord. For a man to judge himself as is meet, his conscience must be rightly informed out of the word, and than join with God in passing just votes of his own estate. But now the conscience of an unrighteous man, is as an unrighteous judge altogether unfit for the seat of judicature: Not natural man will ever be a just and righteous judge in his own case. Scientia ad benè distinguendum, iustitia ad rectè distribuendum. To complete a righteous and sufficient judge, two things are requisite, Knowledge and Justice. A twofold knowledge is required. A knowledge of the law, and A knowledge of the fact. A knowledge of the law, that judgement is to proceed by. A knowledge of the fact, that judgement is to proceed against, and p●sse impartially upon, Ignorantia juris Ignorantia facti. now a sinful man hath neither of these, but the contrary, Ignorance. He hath not the knowledge of God's law, that in judging of himself, he is to be guided by. It is a Socinian error, that a natural man without any supernatural light, is able to understand the whole law of God: They consider not, that beyond a literal and Grammatical sense, there is a spiritual sense of God's law to be looked into, which lies out of the view of an unconverted man: Let Paul be the instance, who speaks of himself in his unregenerate estate, Rom. 7.9. I was alive without the law, but when the commandment came, sin revived and I died. The Apostle being an Hebrew, a Pharisee, bred up at the feet of Gamaliel, was not without the law in its literal sense, but in respect of the spiritual knowledge of it, as it afterwards came, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. which was not bred in him, nor brought in by him, but it came from God, Jam. 1.17. The like is the case of every carnal man, he cannot look into the glass of God's law, so as to see that whereby he may pass a right judgement upon himself, the law in its naked and native virtue in its vital and vigorous compass, piercing and proper power, he understands not, he is no good lawyer, therefore an ill judge. 2. Perc●ssi sum animi cacitate ut delicta nec intelligant nec plangem. Cypr. de la. The knowledge of the fact is requisite to right judgement, this is the knowledge of sin, and this the sinner hath not, and so can never judge himself, a natural man never sees or knows the sinfulness of his own sin. 1. Because of sin-deceit. 2. Because of self-love. 1. Sin-deceit is great, Heb. 3.13. Prov. 11.28. It is the most egregious impostor and cheater in the world, Sub velamine pietatis incidi in laqutos iniquitatis. Aug. Conf. of dissembling its name and nature, vice often puts on the vizard of virtue, and passes unknown. As dim-sighted Isaac mistook his own sons, and knew not Jacob in Esau's garments, so a man unregenerate is ignorant and unable to discern his own sins, especially putting on the cloak and colour of appearing piety. 2. Self-love is great, a man is not willing to believe any ill again himself, Vitia nostra quia amaneus defendimus & malumus excusare illa quam excutere. Seneca. affection bribes and blinds the judgement, love covers a multitude of sins, 1 Pet. 4.8. If love will do so to others, in respect of their sins, what will self love do towards a man's own sins? so hid ●hem as himself shall not see or know them: nay self-love will 'cause a man to judge well of sin, and himself for sin. As when God said to Jonah, Dost thou well to be angry? yes, saith he, I do well: so let God say to a sinful man; Dost thou well to be covetous, carnal, unclean? Dos● thou well to swear, lie, blaspheme my Name, profane my day? Yes, I do well; their self-love and sin-love makes them think their evil is good: As we are apt to love what we judge good, so we are apt to judge that good, which we love. A wicked man cannot behold the evil of sin, it's so near him, Sensibile positum supra sensorium non facit sensationem. and lies so close to his heart: there must be a due distance between the organ and the object, that which lies close to the eye, it sees not; so in such a one there is the first thing wanting to complete a judge, to wit, knowledge. The next requisite for a meet judge is Justice, this lies in two things. 1. In pronouncing a just sentence. 2. In executing of just vengeance. Now not unconverted man will ever thus become his own Judge, Nemo se iudice peccat. he will not so Judge himself as, 1. To give sentence against himself, this is only the practice and property of a repenting sinner, who if none else appear, yet he against himself will be Plaintiff, Witness, Jury and Judge. 2 Sam. 24.10. 2. To take revenge upon a man's self, so a wicked man will not judge himself: but a poor paenitentiary doth practise this also, 2 Cor. 7.11. Peccator● paenitentia est sui ipsium punientia. He is ready to do execution upon himself: in that way wherein he hath offended, by himself he is punished; If sinned by defrauding he is the more free in restoring, as Zacheus, Luk. 19.8. if raised himself in pride, he will the more abase himself in humility as Hezekiah, 2 Chron. 32.25, 26. Epimonondus a Thehan Captain being asked why he was so sad the day after a great victory, answered, Yesterday I was tickled with much vain glory, therefore I correct myself for it to day, and thus will a good man do in this duty of self-judging. He often sets himself as at God's bar, and Christ's tribunal, arraigns, indites, and condemns himself: C●rissi ad cogn●scendam vitam altenam, desidiosi ad corrigendam suam, Aug. conf.. but how common is it for carnal men to judge others and justify themselves, to examine others and excuse themselves, to aggravate others faults and extenuate their own? so we see these two duties of self-examination and self-dijudication, which are preparatory to the Lords Supper (as those two disciples our Saviour sent to make ready a room for the celebration of the Mar. 14.13.) come not within the course of unconverted Christians. Tell any such man when he calls for this Sacrament, he must first examine himself, acknowledge his sin, humble his soul, seek the face of God by prayer, alas! he is not accustomed to these things at other times, and therefore cannot go about them than. As David 1 Sam. 17.39. when he was to go and fight with Goliath in the field, being desired to put on Sauls armour, he casts it by, saying, I cannot go in these, for I have never proved them. So call upon a carnal man when he means to go to this communion, first to arm and prepare himself by a practical putting on these disciple duties of soul-searching and self-judging, &c, alas! may he say, I cannot go to these for I have never used them. Yet as David how naked and weak in himself soever he was, yet he would to a combat, see how Saul seeks to dissuade him, Thou art not able to go against this Philistine, to fight with him, for thou art but a youth, and he is a man of war from his youth, so counsel a carnal man that is resolved to the Lords table, you are not able to partake in that Sacrament, it is a great and mighty Ordinance from the first Institution: you are little and far below it, and very unfit for it, yet all avails not but away he will, without any self-examining, or self-condemning, or any such way of preparing himself to the Supper of the Lord, and this his omission ariseth in general from a double cause. 1. Because he is negligent in himself. 2. Because he is confident of himself. 1. Out of slothful negligence, being lazy and loath to take the pains he puts all such business by. And also, Out of sinful confidence being lifted up with self-conceits of his own ability and worth, he lays aside all such preparatory work, but truly such a man in stead of meeting the Lord at his Table, nay expect the Lord should meet him wit● this heart-quaking question, Friend, how comest thou in hither? Mat. 22.12. which should either strike with astonishing silence, or else force this trembling answer: How came I in hither? Why Lord, Good Lord, hither I come vile wretch this day without any preparation or praemeditation, without any soul-searching, or self-judging, woe woe to me. And indeed great is the foregoing care that is required of every one that comes unto the table of the Lord, Chrysost. ad pop. Ant. Hon. 6, ad Ephesi Hom. 3, as the forecited Question in the Parable, Mat. 22. does import, which is not as one well observes: Friend, how satst thou down? but, friend, how comest thou in? as if he should have said. Friend, before thou comest in to this wedding feast, thou oughtest to have prepared thyself for it, but so he did not, nor so does any such man in this matter. Mat. 25. We find they were only the wise virgins that well prepared their lamps to the meeting of the Bridegroom, and were admitted with him, so they are only true Christians who aright prepare themselves to meet the Lord in his Supper, and so are accepted of him. I proceed to the second sort of sacrament duties that concern the work itself, and they to be sure are such as no sinful man can transact, only a Disciple, to these I shall speak two ways. 1. Moore generally, and than more particularly. In general the great work of a Christian at the Sacrament lies in the diligent exercise of suitable graces. A meet communicant. 1. He must exercise several graces at the same time, and 2. He must exercise one and the same grace several ways. Divers graces are to be stirred up and brought out upon this solemn occasion and in this sacred action: A commander upon small matters, sends forth some few of his soldiers: but when the service is greater, he draws out the more of his forces, here a christian must draw out most of his graces, the service being so great, whereas lesser may suffice in inferior affairs, David when he managed the combat against the Giant, he had especially five smooth stones ready in his bag, which he chose out of the brook. So a Christian that well manages this matter at the supper of the Lord, he hath in ready exercise at that time, especially these five excellent graces, Faith, Hope, Charity, Humility, and heavenliness of mind. Nos fide sp● & delection● s●●●s cum Chri●to in c●lo, & ipse divinitate, bonitate & unitate, nobiscum est in terra, Aug. Tract. in Ep. joh. 1. Than he puts forth faith in its workings Christward, by the power of which the soul is born up and brought in to Jesus Christ: Faith to a Disciple at the Sacrament, is like Philip to the Eunuch in his chariot, Act, 8. it occasions sweet warmings and workings of spirit, while it opens unto him Christ Jesus in his bitter and bloody sufferings, when a believing soul like a net, hath on it the lead of a holy fear, and the cork of a lively faith: than cast it out, and it catcheth the good things of Christ, if the cork of faith were without any lead of fear; the net of the soul would lie too high, if lead of fear without cork of faith, the net of the soul would sink too low, and so nothing caught: what than shall those do that have neither fear nor faith? Luk. 18.8. when Christ comes shall he find faith on the earth? Truly he may find faith in heavenly hearts, but when Christ comes in the sacrament he shall find no faith on earth, Ille apud de um plus ●abe loci qui plus attulit non argenti sed ficei, Aug, no faith to be found on earthly or worldly minds: therefore no duty of faith can be performed by earthly men, than hope must also do its work, which is 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, caput & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 videre. Eras. to stretch out the heart in an earnest expectation. Phil. 1.20. Rom. 8.19. The word translated signifies a putting forth the head to look earnestly for some good from God. Act. 3.5. A Christian looks and expects to receive something by the Sacrament of Christ, Aliud est sperare in, Aliud est sperare per. as that cripple did by those servants of Christ, he doth not hope in the Sacrament, but he hopes through the Sacrament to receive from jesus Christ, and 2. Hope stays the heart in a patiented expectation, as an anchor holds the ship of the soul still, till faith brings in Christ, Heb. 6.19. hope keeps the soul it slips not as the word there imports, and so while it holds it helps. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of α, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. A natural man's hope is as a spider's web. Job. 8, 14. it may catch flies, but will never catch Christ in a Sacrament: Faith and hope in the heart as two oars in a boat, a Christian strikes with both, and rows out to meet Christ in the Sacrament. A man without these graces is as a boat without oars, what can he do in the wide Sea? Now love likewise must be at work, and indeed love is a working grace as the greek word signifies, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. and it doth not only work itself. but it sets all the soul on work to attain what is beloved: O how love to Christ is operative at this ordinance, when a Christian takes the cup of wine, Nihilest quod Christum ita nobis amabilem reddit, quam calix ille quem pro nobis bibis. Bern. Ser. 10, in cant. Amor concupiscentiae non re●ui●sc●● in quacunque extrinseca aut superficiali ad eptione amati Sed quaerit amatum perfecte haberequasi ad intimae illius perveniens, etc. Aqu, ●, ●, cue, 28. a. 2. he thinks of the cup of wormwood that Christ drunk for him, and that springs love to Christ, and such a love as will not be satisfied in a little of Christ, or to look at Christ at a distance, but sets the soul in labour with eager desires of the most intimate enjoyments of jesus Christ: O! cries the Spouse, Comfort me with apples, stay me with flagons, for I am sick of love: Now a natural man hath no love to Christ thus to set a work at a Sacrament. He hath no such fire of love burning in him, as may make his cold watery affections, so to boil over after Christ. The Apostles Judges such worthy of the greatest execration and excommunication. If any man love not the Lord Jesus, let him be an Anathema Maranathae, 1. Cor. 16.22. Sure than unfit for this Sacrament, and at this time, O how the grace of humility is set a work by a sincere Christian, Non dicit Christus beati sunt pauperes spiritus. Sed spiritu. Mat. 5.3. Cajet. an. in loc. Hoc est humilitatis miraculum ut elatio deorsim: humilitas sursum tendat. Aug. de civ. Dei, l. 14. c, 13, hereupon his soul sensibly feels spiritual poverty which puts it into a spiritual capacity: O blessed are the poor, not of spirit (as one well observes) but in spirit, Mar. 5.3. those who are not without spiritual graces, but are affected with their wants in spiritual graces, and so are humble in their own eyes, these the Lord will sweetly fill when he sends the the rich empty away. Luk. 1.53. And thus the heart the more humble, the more heavenly, the lower the higher, and so the nearer God, and the fit to close in with Christ at this Ordinance. The highest God and the lowest heart are nearest together, this is the miracle of humility, it tends upwards, and though it be not an elation, yet it is an elevation of the heart that puts it into a Sacrament frame, and fits it to converse in this Ordinance. Come to unregenerate men, they are high in pride, and their spirits are low in earthly-mindedness, the curse of the serpent is upon a worldly man, upon his belly he goes, and not Christ, but dust he eats all the days of his life. None of these graces can he than exercise, for he hath them not, Yea how can any such have the graces of the spirit, when they have not the spirit of grace, jud. 19 now spiritless men are unmeet for this spiritual matter, But yet further, he that comes hither. 2. He must exercise one and the same grace several ways: as for instance, the grace of faith, It is said of man's soul, Tota in tot● & tota in qualibet parte. that the whole soul is in the whole body, and the same in every part of the body, though to several purposes, it's in the eye to see, in the ear to hear, in the tongue to speak, etc. so may it be said of a Christians faith, it is in this whole business, and in every part of the business adding life to all, it is as an eye to see, as a hand to take, as a tongue to taste, as a mouth to feed, Fides non est necessaria accessuro adeucharistiam. Caiet. jewel, deaf. Apol. 283. etc. Faith is all in all. When any come to the Table of the Lord, absolutely necessary is the use of Faith; (However Caietan at a conference with Luther concludes the contrary) hereupon Augustine, Cyprian, and others were want to call upon those that went to the table of the Lord, Nolite parare fances sed fidem. Quid paras deutem & ventrem crede & mandu●asti. Aug. in joa. Tract. 25 not to sharpen their teeth, but to quicken their faith, the great work at that time, being to lie upon that grace, and hereupon we s●ill urge upon such as mean to communicate, to examine themselves concerning their faith, 2 Cor. 13.5. now this were needless, were there not than a necessary use of faith, were there not much business to do, which cannot be done without faith, and only by a believer, every faithless man being an unfit man and no way meet for this matter: let us se● this more distinctly in the particular duties that are to be done at the Table of the Lord. There are four things each communicant is than to do. 1. To remember Christ. 2. To discern Christ. 3. To receive Christ. 4. To eat and drink Christ. And all these belong to believers to do, being works quite out of the walk of every wicked man in the world. 1. To remember Christ at his Supper. This is according to the express precept of Christ, Do this in remembrance of me. And this is according to the proper practice of pious men, Isa. 26.8. The desire of their souls is to have the Lord ever in remembrance. But much more than when they have the memorative help: O the fresh thoughts of Christ that by this means are more fastened in their hearts: To remember Christ his death and sufferings at this Supper, is more than to have some few transient thoughts at that iustant of Christ and the things of Christ, and so vanish without any permanent impress made upon the minds of men. To remember Christ and his death is so to be affected with it, as to draw virtue from it, and feel the effectual fruit of it. Quid tamefficax ad cu randa codscientiae vulnera q●am Christ. vulnera sacramentalis meditatio. Bern. Ser. 62 in can. It's more than to look at things in a distance or in a general notion, it's to make all present as if the Sacrament day were Christ suffering day to be at the Lords Table as at mount Calvary, beholding Christ on the cross bleeding, etc. to bring all home in a close application to ones own particular interest, and for each ones spiritual advantage, Thus carnal men can never remember Christ, or the sufferings of Christ they are things they do not rightly understand, nor highly esteem, and so have no mind to remember, Quae magni faciamus memiria infigimus. Psa. 106.7. man's memory and God's mercy hardly hangs together. Two things natarall men are apt to forget: God's goodness and their own sinfulness, the goodness of God in Christ is easily forgotten, rarely remembered, alas! sinful men at the Sacrament, they a little think upon Christ as corporally crucified long since: not as spiritually crucified at present before their eyes, Gal. 3.1. they mind the outward Ordinance but forget Christ, not laying his love, his death, his worth to heart: Ecce ego derides & tamen plaugo carnales bomines qui nondum possunt Christum spiritualem cogitare, Aug. as a woman whose husband being to travel left her a precious jewel as a token of his love to remember her of him in his absence, she loved often to look upon her jewel but forgot her husband: her jewel was often in her hand, but her husband seldom in her heart, far from the desire of her thoughts. 2. To discern Christ his body and blood, this is our duty when we are at his Table. 1 Cor. 11.29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Qui discernis dissipat segregat, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. to look otherwise at bread and wine there set apart than at an ordinary table: so as to espy Christ in them, to see Christ's body in bread, and his blood in wine, this a believer doth, but no other man can. A natural man makes no difference between bread and wine at the Lords Table, and common meat and drink● at his own Table, he can see no Christ in those creatures, Magis sunt illa quae intelligimus quamista quae cerulmus Aug. and so while he eats and drinks them, he eats and drinks his own damnation. Such a one discerns not Christ spiritually present, for he cannot discern the things of the spirit, 1 Cor. 2.14. The presence of Christ is vailed not revealed, his eyes are held in darkness and blindness, so that his soul sees no Christ when outward objects are apparent. Tenebrae átenend●. Two things be requisite to discerning, light, and sight, light in the air, and sight in the eye, let there be sight in the eye, yet if the air be dark, let there be light in the air, yet if the eye be blind, a man seethe not: Now a natural man hath neither light or sight, his light is darkness, and his sight is blindness, and so seethe not, Eph. 4.18. As Isaac said to his father, here is the Altar, wood and fire, but where is the sacrifice? So may that man say to the Minister, Cacus interi●● panem Christum non videt. Et beatus est ne? nemo sic dicit nisi paritèr caecus. Aug. in Psal. 57 here is the Table, the bread and the wine, but where is the lamb? He seethe no Christ, neither indeed doth h● mind Christ, so he seethe other things present, O saith the Eunuch to Philip, here is water what lets me to be baptised? as long as there was water present, he looked not further: Here is bread and wine saith one, what lets me to communicate? not looking to see whether himself be prepared, or whether Christ be present, as a child loves to look on the gilded outside of the book, but looks not on to what is within, so men at the Lords Table gaze on the outward elements, but seek not to see Christ within. The wise men, Matth. 2. were not satisfied to see the star, till they came to behold the Babe in the manger: So here to see Christ in the Sacrament, only gives true Christian's content. 3. To receive Christ this is also a duty at the Table of the Lord to take, 1 Cor. 11.24. not bread only, but the body of Christ: this every unregenerate man is utterly unable unto, as may appear by considering what the act is. It is a soul extending act. Ascendamus cum Domin● in caenaculil mag●●●, & accipiamus ab eo sursum calicem novi Testamenti. Hiero. It is a soul ascending act. He that would take Christ in the ordinance must stretch out himself and stir up himself, both which are beyond the activity of all unregenerate men in relation to Christ. The Saints though they do not stretch themselves for matter or measure beyond what is meet, 2 Cor. 10.4. yet in good matters they stretch themselves to the utmost of what is meet: as in prayer to God, in faith towards Christ, they reach out heart and hand, to the utmost, Phil. 3.13. to take hold of Christ, joh. 10.29. Exit de manibus eorum non enimeum apprehendere potuerunt, quia manus fidei non habuerunt. Aug. in loc. an unbeliever hath neither hand nor heart stirred up, or stretched out to the receiving of Christ. Hence the Lord complains, Isa. 64.7. No man stirreth up himself to take hold on me. A true Christian though he cannot take hold on Christ as well as he would, yet he stirs himself up to it as well as he can; whereas the case of another man is like that of the poor woman, Luk. 13.11. she was bewed together and could in no wise lift up herself, ever since the first fall of man from God, all ascending motions of man's heart to God are forced, none free; only through grace a true Christian can at the Lords Table reach up a hand into heaven, and take hold of Christ sitting there. Marry looked down to Christ on earth, and so touches him not, Joh. 20.17. Stephen looks up to Christ in heaven, Act. 7.55. and not by the hand of his body, but by the ascent of his faith takes his hold on Christ there, and so doth a believer in Christ, at the Supper of Christ. 4. To eat and drink Christ, his body and blood at his Table, this is also the duty of each communicant, 1 Cor. 11.24, 25. Here is such solid and savoury meat, as the souls of believers love: The Lord at his Table doth not only provide somewhat for his servants to look upon, but for their souls to live upon. Suidas reports of one Pasetes, who used ● to ● all his friends to a Banquet, where they should see a table furnished with variety and plenty of all manner of meats and drinks, but when the guests went to take any thing to eat, it suddenly vanished away and turned to nothing. Here is a feast to which the Lord calls his friends, and whereat, not only their eyes may be filled, but their souls may be fed, that whereof they may certainly and sweetly eat and drink, and so indeed do the dear Saints of God, and that others at this table do not, it is not because there is no meat whereof to eat, but because they have no mouth wherewith to eat. He that is well prepared to this Supper, must not only have two eyes, and two hands, but two mouths also, one to eat and drink bread and wine, Proculdubi● non manducant spiritualitèr carnem nec bibunt sanguinem Christi ●icet visibilitèr pramunt dentibus Sacramentum sanguinis & corporis ejus. Aug. in joa. another to eat and drink Christ's body and blood; this later every unbeliever wants, and so though he eats the bread of the Lord, yet her cannot eat the bread which is the Lord, though he cracks the shell, yet he never eats the kernel; there is milk in the breast and marrow in the bone that he comes not at: honey in this rock that he doth neither taste or touch, such men suppose themselves to eat and drink of the best but what they eat at this ordinance is Kid and not Venison, Gen. 27.9. Like Isaac they are mistakes in their meat: only a sincere disciple of Christ, he feeds and feasts upon Christ indeed, at his Table, for as he hath there, meat to eat of which others see not: so he hath mouth to eat with, which others know not. Thus go through all these duties, Christ is than not only to be remembered absent, but to be discerned present: neither only to be perceived with the eye, but to be received with the hand: nor only must there be a hand to take him but a mouth to eat and drink him, and all in a spiritual manner, to all which duties all unregenerate men are altogether unable, upon a double cause. 1 Because they are bound. 2. Because they are dead. They are held fast in the cords of their own sins, and lie like prisoners in the bonds of their own iniquities, Psa. 9.16. Act. 8.23. A sinful man when he goes to the Supper of the Lord, he comes out of the world as Lazarus out of the grave, Joh. 11.44. Bound hand and foot with grave-clothes, and his face bound about with a napkin, alas the soul of such a man can neither see, take, eat, or think upon Jesus Christ at his sacred Supper, in any suitable manner. 2. Because as he is bound, so he is dead, bound by sin, dead in sin, Ephes. 2.1. Can a dead man see, eat, or drink? Can a dead man discern with his eyes, take hold with his hands, meditate in his thoughts? It was an ancient abuse of this Sacrament, to give it to dead bodies, Placuit ut defunctorum corporibus Eucharistia non d●●●r, nam dictum est a Domino, Accipite & edite, hoc facite, etc. cadavera autem nec accipere, nec edere, nec memorare possunt. Con. Car. 3. can. 6. which sinful custom was cashiered by a council at Carthage, for this very cause, In that Christ saith, take, eat, do this in remembrance of me, whereas carcases and dead bodies, cannot eat or drink, take or touch, mind or remember, and so judged unmeet for this matter: And upon the same ground, unregenerrte men, whose souls are dead in their sins, are therefore unable to act about the spiritual part of this Supper. So I pass from the duties of the Lords Supper, which you see only Christ's disciples can perform, to the mercies of the Lords Supper, which only Christ's disciples receive: And these are either, Primary and principal, or Secondary and consequential. For mercies of the first sort, I find two. 1. Communion with Christ the chiefest good. 2. Remission of sin the greatest evil. At the Lord's Table a true Christian hath the mercy of communion with Christ 1 Cor. 10.16. The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? It is so to believers, but for other men who by their sinful lives hold communion with devils, and so can have no communion with Christ, as the Apostle clears it in a particular case, 1 Cor. 10.20. sinful men they willingly join themselves to satins service, Luk. 15.5. and so are fit to be with the swine at the ●evils trough, than with Saints at the Lords Table: they can have no communion so much as with the members of Christ, much less Christ himself. True Christians, they have union and fellowly unity one with another in their ordinary converses, Act. 2.46. Quam suavis est haec communio? nam etsi non miscet persenas nec unit substantias tamen consociat affectus & confaederat voluntates, Cypr. de can, dom. Act. 4.32. and so a sweet union and communion one with another in this present matter, 1 Cor. 10.17. We being many are one bread, and one body: sure than sweeter is the union and communion they have with Christ their head, in this holy business: carnal men can have no communion with Christ, because they have no union with Christ. Two things concur to make a union between Christ and our souls. The spirit of Christ and faith in Christ. The spirit on Christ's part laying hold on us, 1 Cor. 6.17. and thus we are glued to the Lord by one spirit, as the Greek word there signifies, and than faith on our part laying hold upon Christ, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Eph. 3.17. Eph. 4.5. Now an unregenerate man hath neither of these ligaments to knit a union betwixt Christ and him. He hath not the spirit of Christ, Rom. 8.9. Neither hath he faith in Christ, 2 Thes. 3.2. No faith, not Christ. God's Saints have a twofold union with Christ. The one mystical, by faith in him. The other moral, by love to him. Natural men, as they have no faith in Christ, so no love to Christ: they love Christ, as a malefactor loves a judge, nothing less. Union is of things present, that some sweet way lie near together, but Christ and all unconverted men lie fare a sunder, Eph. 2.13. Non intervallo locorum sed pravitate morum. Ambr. in Psal. 119. not by distance of place, but by dissimilitude of properties: union is of things homogeneal that assimilate one another, but Christ and such men are Heterogeneal, different and discrepant, so that there is no union, and so no communion. Where there is union there is unity and agreement: communion and concord goes together, Christ and those men have no concord, therefore no communion, 2 Cor. 6.14, 15. What communion hath light with darkness? What concord hath Christ with Belial. 2. At the Lord's Table a true Christian meets with the mercy of remission of sin, Matth. 26.28. Christ's blood was not only shed on the cross, but also his blood is drunk in the Sacrament for the remission of sins, that pardon of sins to God's Saints, might thereby be the more sensibly conferred, and the more certainty confirmed, and so unto them it is, O saith the Lord, while such sit at his Supper; Be of good cheer, all your sins are forgiven. There are three things the Lord gives together: Hidden Manna, a white stone, and a new name, Revel. 2.17. And truly at this Table his disciples receive, Hidden Manna to refresh them, a white stone to absolve them, and a new name to describe them, the mercies of remission of sins, and adoption of sons assured to their souls: for other men it is no such matter, they who mind not repentance, Da Domine panitentiam & postea indulgentiam. Fulgent. meet not with remission of sins, these two, as Jacob and Esau, one holds the heel of the other, Act. 5.31. Christ is exalted of God to give repentance to Israel, and remission of sins: Repentance, as it is placed, so it must be practised first, and than inseparably follows remission of sins, unto our spiritual sense. God's servants first study the practice of repentance, and upon their attendance at this Table, their souls receive the sense of sweet pardoning mercies: whereas others who so harden their hearts that they will not, and their hearts are so hardened, that they cannot repent, Rom. 2.5. men to be mourned for, because they cannot mourn for themselves, they come to the Lords Table, but no pardon doth God there apply, and when after they think to apply pardon themselves, it proves as a plaster that will not stick. Now these being premised, I proceed to Supper mercies of the later sort, which as it were follow upon these. To instance in five, 1. Graces increased. 2. Comforts enlarged. 3. Conquests obtained. 4. Covenant sealed. 5. Life eternal assured. Now it is none but a true Christian that can gather such a bunch of grapes on this vine, such a posy of flowers in this garden. 1. Hereby he gains growth of grace. Growing creatures, we know, are most hungry; and a growing Christian is hungry to eat of this Supper, and being hungry, the oftener he eats, the more he grows. At this Table is that food, upon the eating of which, every grace in a Ch●istian grows fat, and flourishing: but as of all graces in this ordinance, faith is mo●t exercised; so of all graces by this ordinance, faith is most increased. Fides pinguescit operibus Muscu, A Christians faith gathers strength from all good works, but most from this; here his faith converses with Christ, and Christ increases his faith, here the hand of faith is upon Christ, and the hand of Christ is upon faith for good. Other men when they approach this Table, they have no grace to increase, no faith to strengthen: That faith they have is a dead faith, and dead th' ngs are not capable of growth or receiving strength. It is not with dead stones as with living plants, Lapides non crescunt sed augescunt. Scalig. that sun and rain cause● to increase, many a man's faith is as Nabals' heart, dying, nay dead in him as a stone, all the Sacraments in the world no: give it life, much less strength, Jam. 2.17. 2. Hereby the spiritual comforts of a Christian are inlivened and enlarged. The holy Ghost like Noah's dove, brings the olive branch of peace in his mouth, to a disciple, as he sits at the Table, thereby signifying the waters of God's wrath are assuaged. Yea God and Christ comes in, and both bids them welcome: Me thinks I see as it were the Lord standing at his Table, and speaking to all others, like that, Isa. 65.13, 14. Behold my servants shall eat, but ye shall be hungry, behold my servants shall drink, but ye shall be thirsty, behold my servants shall rejoice, but ye shall be ashamed, behold my servants shall sing for joy of heart, but ye shall cry for sorrow of heart, and howl for vexation of spirit. A true Christian is at the Supper of Christ, as Mary at the Sepulchre of Christ, with some fear, yet with much joy, Mat. 28.8. Non necessarium est homini ut Christum in ipsius passione deploret. Sed magis seipsum in Christ. Luth. with some sorrow, yet with great comfort, he sorrows that his sins were the cause of Christ's death, and he rejoices that Christ's death should be the means of his life, Christ's cross the cause of his crown, and Christ's blood the way to his bliss. But a stranger doth not intermeddle with this joy, nor sinful men partake of these comforts, this new wine would break their old bottles, and old bottles spoil this new wine. Sicut post vehememes imbres mundus ae● & serenus efficitur ita post lachrimarum pluvias mentis sequitur serenitas. Chrys. Sup. Mat. Tanquam leones ignam spirantes ab illa mensâ recedimus daemonibus terribiles. Chry. ad popul. Ho. 61. The servants of Christ have had their black clouds and bi●ter storms of soul troubles, showers of godly sorrow for sin, whereupon at such an Ordinance as this, O what bright beams, and clea● calms and sweet comforts come in upon them! 3. Hereby glorious victories are also obtained, sin and Satan subdued. A prevailing lust than vanquished, fiery temptations, and hot burning corruptions than quenched, by one draught of Christ's blood drunk down at his Table, Hence some Disciples have gone from this Supper triumphing and trampling upon Satan as lions breathing fire (saith chrysostom) terrible to the Devils themselves. Whereas wicked men they come to this Table, and drink down the Devil, yea go from it as incarnate devils, afterwards breathing infernal fire abominable to God, being seven times worse the children of hell than before. Indeed they refuse to combat, how should they conquer? Though all that fight do not overcome. yet who can ever think to overcome that will never fight? A true Christian as he will not look for conquests without combats, so neither will he rest in combats without conquests. It is said of Alexander he never reckoned how many battles he had fought, but how many victories he had gained. O the desire of a Christian is so to come from an Ordinance, that he may cry, Victory, Victory: and when doth he more obtain his desire than when he hath been in the exercise of this? God's people when they come out from the Lords Supper, like Israel when they came forth of the read Sea, they look and see their enemies lie dead upon the shore, that wherein they were preserved, thereby their foes were destroyed: and God's children here have their souls revived, and their sins destroyed: this Table is an altar whereupon their lusts are sacrificed. 4. Hereby to their souls the covenant of grace is sealed, and upon their hearts the holy characters thereof are set. Sacrament days to Saints are sealing days, Illud dicitu● novum quod est de novored●nte gratum. Aliquid dicitur novum vel respectu Institutionis vel respectu restitutionis. O the sacred stamps that God than strikes upon the souls of his servants, or if written before, yet than he wipes of the dust, as it were, that all the letters are more lively, and become more legible. It is as a new draught it is so renewed. jer. 31.31, 32, 33. God than puts on the Seal again that all the prints and parts of the impression are left more perspicuous and apparent: sinful men are not seal-able, nor capable of soul-impressions. Hard wax will not receive the print of the seal, not more will hard hearts. The wax is first warmed and melted, and than it receives the Seal: so it is the heart softened and melted, that takes the seal of God. Those that are humble and holy, God seals with this holy spirit of promise, Eph. 1.13. God's Saints do not only receive the broad Seal, but the privy seal, the Seal of the Spirit in the Sacrament, making its Impress upon the Table of their hearts, ratifying and confirming unto them the promises of the Gospel, Vnum apex Evangelij plus valet quam caelum & terra. Lut. one of which is more worth than Heaven and earth, unconverted men they can have no such sealing, they are strangers from the covenant of promise, Eph. 2.12. they have no Christ the centre in which all the promises meet. 2 Cor. 1.20. Whereas true believers have them all under seal, 2 Cor. 7.1. As Caleb gave to his daughter the upper and neither springs: so God gives to his children the promises of earth and heaven, 1 Tim. 4.8. and to put all out of doubt, he sets to his seals, 2 Cor. 3.22. 5. Hereby eternal life is assured this is the fruit which hangs upon the top-bough which only a true Christian can reach. Joh, 6.51. I am the bread, says our Saviour, that came from Heaven, If any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever, and ver. 54. whoso eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternal life, Here is a mercy. What thing so excellent as life? Vita est operatto creaturae cum delectatione. and what life so excellent as that which is eternal? life is the most precious treasure and richest Jewel in the world. A mariner in a storm will hurl all overboard to preserve his life, skin for skin, and all a m●n hath will he give for life, what made Queen Ester so earnest with the King? chap. 7.3, 4. she wrought for life, what made the woman in the Gospel spend all upon Physicians? she strove for life, But alas! this life what is it? Vita non est vivere sed valere. It hath bitterness and brittleness in it: one hours' life in heaven is more worth than all Methusalems' time on earth, a thousand years here are not to be valued with one day, There is life indeed, where is health without sickness, joy without sadness, beauty without blemish, etc. Alas! a sinful man at the Lords Supper, receives no such mercy as assurance thereby of life eternal, because he only partakes there of the meat that perisheth and not of that meat which endures unto everlasting life, Joh. 6.27. Eternal life it is the life of grace on earth, and the life of glory in heaven, these are one and the same, and only gradually differ, the life of grace is the life of glory begun, and the life of glory is the life of grace perfect. and so only such as have the life of grace entered, can have the life of glory assured, so we see what are the mercies of this Supper, and that only Christ's Disciples can receive them. For a general proof of this, we know the receptacle of all mercy from God is the heart of man, as that duty is not done which the heart doth not: so neither is that mercy received, which ●he heart receives not, come now to the hearts of carnal men, and they are not capable for the receiving of mercy. 1. Because they are filled up. 2. Because they are shut up. Their hearts are already f●ll, Act. 5.3. why hath Satan filled thy heart, ●ntus existexs prohibet alienum. saith Peter to Ananias. Their hearts are as dens of Devils, and of them it may be affirmed as was prophesied of Babylon, Isa. 13.20. Their houses shall be full of doleful creatures. Owls shall devil there and Satyrs dance there, Dragons and wild beasts shall lie down there, etc. The hearts of men unconverted are full of filthy lust, devils devil there, sins dance there, they are as pitchers of earth, filled up with the poisonous liquor of hell, or at best their hearts, but as childrens pockets that are filled with babbles, trash, and dirt. The Inn Luk. 2.7. being full of guests, Christ and his mother could have no room, men's hearts filled with lusts, there is no room for Christ or such mercies. Cor clausum habent quia clavem fidei non habiut. Aug. Their hearts also are shut up and as they have not repentance to empty, so neither faith to open their hearts, now un-emptied and un-opened hearts can never receive those mercies. The hearts indeed of God's Saints are enlarged to let in those marvellous mercies. Christian's hearts are well figured out by golden vials, Rev. 5.8. vessels narrow beneath and wide upwards, their hearts being narrow and contracted towards things below, but open and enlarged upward towards things above, on the contrary carnal hearts be open downward, and shut upward, that when mercies come from God, they cannot receive them. Take them at the Lords Table, and they receive Judgement, not mercy, a curse, not Christ, their bane, not their bliss. Quicquid recipitur recipitur ad modum recipicut●. As men are that receive, so is that which is received, He that is good receives good, but all proves bad to a bad man, Tit. 1.15. As that covering and conducting cloud, Exo. 13. which was bright and gave light by night to the camp of Israel, they had a great mercy in it, and much benefit by it: But to the Egyptians the same cloud was all black, Eucharistiae sacramentum sicut mori rubrum alijs vehiculum alijs sepulchrum. Chrys, in Psa, 113. full of darkness, and disadvantage to them, Exo. 14.20. So this Ordinance of the Lords Supper to God's Israelites, it's a bright and blessed means of much mercy, but to wicked Egyptians it carries death and darkness with it, Hell and destruction follows it. 1 Cor. 11.29. Take two men, let them sit and eat of the same meat, and drink wine together at the same Table, the one hail and sound, he is nourished and refreshed, Corpora impura quanto magis nutrias deteriora reddu. his strength augmented, his blood and spirits increased the other sickly and unsound, he is the worse for his meat, his distempers the stronger, etc. O the soul-refreshing mercies that a sound Christian receives at the table of the Lord, whereas others insincere and unsound, their maladies and miseries are much more by this means augmented. So we see that except men be the true Disciples of Christ, the duties of this Supper they cannot receive, and so are unmeet to communicate. I now pass on in the fourth place to apply this. Hence we first learn how few will be found fit to partake at the Table of the Lord, Use. for to be sure the number of such disciples is small: Christ who knows all his sheep, Joh. 10.14. himself says his flock is but little, Luk. 12.32. fear not little flock, yea little little flock, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. two diminitives in the Greek, to signify his flock is very little, In the world there is a world of men, but few such men as are faithful followers of Christ, we may say of such numbered and compared with others, what our Saviour saith of the five loaves and two fishes, Magna planitudo hominum, sed magna solitudo bonorum. in respect of the hungry multitude, Mat. 15. what are these among so many? Surely the servants of Christ in respect of the contrary company, but as the army of Israel sometimes in compare with that of Aram like two little flocks of kids, whilst the Aramites filled the country, Luk. 13. ●3. Panci sunt qui s●●vantur? Multi certè & pauci & pauci & multi multi societate Angelorum, Sed pauci co●paratione 〈◊〉 perditorum. Aug. Serm. 32 de Verb. dom. 1 Kin. 20, 27. Our Saviour well states this to our hand, Mat. 7.13, 14. Wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leads to destruction, and many there be that go in thereat, Straight is the gate, and narrow is the way, that leads to life, and few there be that find it: If but few shall be saved by Christ, than but few are the disciples of Christ. And as but few find that gate of life: so but few feed upon this bread of life. Yet to evidence this more clearly. That the number is small whom the Lord will accept at this Supper, there are two sorts to be considered. 1 Those who aught of themselves to keep out. 2. Those who aught by others to be kept out. Those who of themselves aught not to come in, but to keep of from the Supper of the Lord, though no external power prohibits, are of two sorts. 1. Those who are denied of such saving graces as are necessary for it. 2. Those who do abound with such secret vices as are contrary to it. Those aught to forbear this banquet of the Lord who are destitute of necessary graces. To instance in 4. sorts of these. 1. Impenitent persons who have not the grace of repentance, they who have no sour herbs are not to eat this Passeover. Those to whom unfeigned repentance hath made sin bitter, to such Christ is sweet in his Supper. Those that would by faith eat the bread of life, must first by repentance change their course of life, or else they eat eternal death because they repent not, let the best relapse and fall back into any act of sin, they must renew their repentance, or not approach this Ordinance, sure than such as continued in a state of sin, and never repent, aught to abide at a distance, and not presume the Table of the Lord. Cyprian reports that in his time a christian relapsing, Cypria Serm. 5. d●lapsis. and having committed Idolatry, yet before he was restored by repentance, coming to receive the communion among the faithful, took the bread, but putting it up to his month to eat it, it was turned to ashes in his hand. O how shall any dare to draw near the Table of the Lord, who without repentance perseveres in the practice of sin, and service of Satan? Christ at his Table will only enter that heart, out of which repentance hath ●irst cast forth the Devil, Christ will only be food to that soul, who by repentance hath forsaken Satan and sin: as for others they shall only feed upon ashes and husks, Luk. 15 16, that which is neither solid nor savoury: they shall only take in the Devil, not Christ: and so become seven fold worse the children of Hell than before, Mat. 12.45. 2. Unbelieving persons that want the grace of faith, The Lord's Supper received without faith it is received without fruit. A faithless receiver is a fruitless receiver, Nazareth was Christ's own country, yet he could do no great works therein, because of their unbelief, so this Supper is Christ's own Ordinance, yet to many he can do nothing thereby, because of their Infidelity, whilst we are without faith our receiving is neither profitable to ourselves, nor from us acceptable to God; wherefore want of faith is a sufficient bar from this business. It is said of the Jews they could not enter into Canaan, because of their unbelief, Heb. 3.19. so for many of us our very unbelief hinders our entrance to this communion, when Josephs brethrens came for corn to Egypt, their father Jacob commands them to take money in their sacks: when we are to go to the Lords Table, for food God our father calls us to carry faith in our hearts: let us consider what sad entertainment the man met with at the wedding dinner, who was found there without this wedding garment: Faith is that grace which is of absolute use, for there is not any thing else in this case that we can make to ourselves to supply the room of Faith. In ancient times there were some who when they were to partake at this Table, in stead of receiving with their hand, they had Instruments made of gold, or some such matter, wherewith they more immediately received the holy communion, which was after condemned by a counsel, Concilium constantinop, 6. cap. ●0●. and concluded that such persons with such Instruments should be in no wise admitted. Indeed when we come to the Table of the Lord, if there were any thing that might serve instead of Faith, any Instrument equivalent to Faith, wherewith we might receive this holy Supper, than the wan: of faith would not unfit for this service, as no doubt it doth. 3. Uncharitable persons that want the grace of love, The Lords Supper received without love, it is received without life. Love puts life ●nto the Ordinance, and makes the meat therein eat sweeter and better, Pro. 15.17. Better is a dinner of green herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith. If so in a common meal, much more in this; It is a good temper to come to the Lords Table in bitterness of sorrow for sin, but ill to come in bitterness of spirit, in regard of hatred and malice against any man, though our very enemy. Christ when he was suffering on the cross, stretched out his hands to both malefactors, to him that died his adversary, as well as to him that craved his favour in death: Beatus qui amat te, & amicos in te, & inimicos propter te. Aug. so such as come to partake of Christ crucified in his Supper, aught to put forth a hand of charitable affection to foes as well as friends, Luk. 6.35. such as would have the Lord so feed them with his flesh being hungry, and to give them his blood to drink being soul-athirst, must be willing if their enemy hunger to seed him, and if he thirst to give him drink, Rom. 12.20. this is a lesson that only a true Christian can learn, all can love friends, but these alone love enemies. If such a general love be requisite, in those that come to the Supper of Christ towards enemies, O than what love is required to the servants of Christ? the poor as well as the rich. Shall the Lords love be so great as to feast us at his Table with his own body and blood, and shall our love be so little as from our Table to deny bread to our hungry brethrens? Remember Dives who having no love to poor Lazarus when he desired but crumbs from his board to refresh him, Desideravit guttam qui non dedit mica●. Aug. Hom. 7. was after in torment, and could not attain a drop of water to cool his tongue, Luk. 16.21.24. Those that want love to refresh the bowels of Gods poor Saints, shall not have leave to refresh themselves with the blood of God's dear son. 4. Impatient persons or such as are without the grace of patience. Each man which herein communicates must not only have love that is opposed to hatred, but patience that is opposed to wrath. In anger a man goes out of himself, By patience a man possesses himself. Ira est extra se ire. Now he that doth not by love possess his neighbour and by patience possess himself, he cannot by faith possess Christ in his Supper. Patience against provocations and patience under tribulations both are required in this case. An impatient man that is presently provoked, and not easily appeased, or soon reconciled, is no way fit for this service, Mat. 5.22, 23, 24. He that brings his gift to the Altar, must not come in anger against his brother, but first be reconciled and than come, which he will not without patience. Patience also we urge in point of affliction, whether from God or men, in the cause of Christ: such are not in this Supper to partake of Chr sts suffering, who have no patience at all to suffer for Christ. Two things argue a man's ill estate in respect of the cross, either To be exempt from it, or To be impatient under it. I have not a stronger Argument against the Kingdom of the Pope (saith Luther) than in that it reigns without the cross: Ego non haebeo aliud contra pape regnum robustius argumentum quam quod sine truce regnat. Iu. and as to reign without the cross, so to rage under the cross, argues ill also, its wicked men who in trouble are like the Sea in a tempest, casting out mire and dirt, as crabs in the press, sending out nothing but sour verges, and shall drink in therefore none of this sweet wine. Let not him go to supper with Christ who will not go to suffer for Christ, being called thereunto: He that will not by patience bear a burden for Christ, cannot by faith drink the blood of Christ. Thus through the want of these graces many men remain uncapable of this Communion; what shall we say than to those persons, in the Second place, who in respect of prevailing vices are made much more unmeet? Sure such of themselves aught to abstain from the Table of the Lord In general, here we mean such whose sins lie more secret and unseen in their souls even to themselves: The very remains of which in a true christian, cause him to complain and cry, O Lord my heart is a hell: wicked men's hearts like Pharaohs Court, are filled with such frogs, Exo. 8. The schools well observe that outward sins are of greater crime and blame among men, but inward heart-sins are of greater guilt and blot before the Lord as in the Devils: not wonder they waylay this work, and unfit souls for this service, princely and predominant sits who are in the heart as Kings in their throne though not open to ordinary view. It's reported to be a part of the pride of the Persian Kings, Apud Persas persona regis sub specie majestatis occulitur, Iust. lib. 1. seldom to be seen in public: and secret sins they reign in the souls of men most powerfully, when lest apparently, and altogether block up the way of such souls from their access to this Supper. To instance particularly in 4. sorts of such sinners who are thus made unmeet. 1. Unclean in heart, those who though they abstain from outward actual uncleanness, yet their hearts are as defiled beds in which abominable brats night and day are begotten by the Devil the Father of filthy lusts, Joh. 8.44. Their hearts are as a Baker's oven, Hos. 7.6. which when it is stopped up, that the heat breaks not out, it burns hottest, and bakes hardest within, so the hearts of such men when they are restrained from outward acts, have the most violent heats within. Their hearts are as the chimny-bricks whereupon lie burning ●oals, and a constant fire is kept. The case of such men calls ra●her for water than wine, and bids them rather to a fast than a feast, and rather to sorrowing, than supping with Christ, which indeed a good man does, the lest sparklings and kindle costs groans and griefs of heart. Hierom piteous complains that in his withered carcase such fleshly and filthy desires did boil and burn. But O those who when their lusts inwardly begin to flame, they use Bellowss no● buckats: Unclean lusts and lusts of uncleanness they both breed them and feed them, Rmm. 13.14. If men's bodies were so putrified that they bred vermin continually (as is reported of Maximinus) which should run about, Euseb. de vita Constam. lib. 1, cap. 50. and creep upon them would they come and sit at a great man's Table? many men's souls are so vile that they breed noisome lusts which sometimes creep out at their mouths, in sordid and unseemly words, O let not such come and sit at the Lords Table. 2. Covetous in heart. Avarus a non videndo. These the world so blinds their eyes that they cannot discern the Lord's body. The world so takes up their desires that they cannot hunger and thirst after Christ, covetousness causeth such a distemper in their spirits, as that disease that makes some forsake good and wholesome food to eat Oatmeal, Robertus Gallus vir pius & insignis vixit. Centur, 13. ashes, dust and trash of the earth, one compares the School-Doctors to a man that refuseth good bread and wine, and gnaws hungrily on a fliat-stone, Intimating their folly in declining wholesome food in the Scripture, the edge of their desires being sharpened, all about subtle questions, that no way nourished their souls. Truly such is the case of covetous men, they gnaw hungrily upon the dead stones of the earth, having no appetite to the living bread of Heaven, They pant after the dust of the earth, Am. 2. ●. but see no beauty in Christ why they ●hould desire him, Isa. 53.2. The richest diet the Lord dishes out in word or Sacrament, they loathe and leave, whereas the rankest poison which the Devil can prepare, let it be brought to them in the sweet broth of some worldly profit, and they greedily devour it, and will the Lord welcome those to his Table? 3. Proud in heart, these though they come near the Table of the Lord, yet the Land will not come near to them at his Table, Psa. 138.6. Though the Lord be high, yet hath he respect to the lowly, but the proud he beholdeth afar of, nay, such shall not have a look of love from his eye, much less a gift of love from his hand. Isa. 66.2. The Lord cannot look above himself, because he hath no superior, nor about himself because he hath no equal, but he looks at such as are below him, Luk. 1.48. proud men whose hearts are lifted up high the Lord beholds not them, neither can they behold the Lord. The distance is great, his eye perceives not them, and their hand receives not him. Their pride swells them they feel no spiritual wants, Superbia non magnitudo, sed tumor est, Aug. a poor humble Christian comes needy and empty indeed to the Lord, who is full and free, and finds refreshment, The more haughtty the less hungry, An humble soul when it judgeth itself most unmeet for this matter, is than most meet, whereas proud spirits (as Luther observes) are ever unfit for this Sacrament, Optima dispositio ad Sacramentum Eucharistiae non nisi ea qua pessime es dispositus & tunc pessime es dispositus quando aptissime. Lu. and never more unfit than when they think themselves most fit and best prepared. 4. Hypocritical in heart, these are as shadows flying having no solid substance, an hypocrite is a sign without the thing signified, a Sacrament he is unfit for, because unlike to: for there we have not only the visible sign, but the spiritual grace which the sign represents, God doth not bring his people to a painted banquet, as Zeuxis who fed his birds with painted Berries. Caligula the Emperor set golden loaves, and all other services of whole gold upon a Table before his guests, and bade them eat, these were fine to look upon, but not food to live upon. The Lord at his Table provides not only for our sight, but for our souls, not only a show of gold, but gold to eat and drink indeed. An hypocrite as the greek word imports, makes an outward golden appearance, but inwardly is base refuse, and ●otten stuff, and God will one day fill them with the fruit of their own false ways, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deriv, ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, super & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aurúm. Pro. 14.14. job. 36.13. Thus we have some of those sorts who by reason of secret sins are not meet for the Table of the Lord, I do not mean where such sins are only remaining, and abiding as a burden, for so in the best: but where they are reigning, Note. and abounding without control or contrition. This is sure, all sin pollutes and prejudices those in whom-soever it is, but yet where there is the greatest measure of it, there is the greatest mischief by it, and in those sin hath the most defiling stain, in whom it hath the most prevailing reign, and the more any are defiled with sin, the more they are unfit by sin, for this holy service, The fouler the chest is, the more unfit it is to have a fair and precious garment put therein, Et si in arca sordibus plena non mittitur vestis pretiosa, quae fronte in anima quae peccatorum sordibus inquinetur Christi Eucharistia suscipitur? Chrys. and the filthier any soul is, the unfitter it is to receive in this holy Sacrament. I now pass from those who aught of themselves to forbear the Lords Supper, to those who aught by others to be forbidden the Supper of the Lord, and they are of two sorts. 1. Ignorant persons. 2. Scandalous persons. God and man declares against both these, as those who aught to be kept of from the Table of the Lord, their sinful case being more discoverable and visible. There are two ways whereby men may be seen and known, in respect of their dispositions, constitutions and estates. 1. By their faces or countenance. 2. By their speeches or language. Some are able to know much of the natures and manners of men by Physiognomy or by their external visage, so likewise by the language much may be learned. The language whereby men discover themselves to others view, it is twofold. 1. The language of their lips. 2. The language of their lives. Loquere in te videam. Let the lips of men speak, and thereby much may be seen, to what country they pertain, Heaven, Earth or Hell, Mar. 14.70. Thou art a Galilean, thy speech bewrays thee. Luk. 6.45. Speech it is the Speculum or glass wherein man's mind is seen, and heart made known. Let the lives of men speak, and thereby more may be seen, Ille semper erat qui semper bona facit. In God's account men speak, not only by their vocal expressions but by their vital actions. Hence a continued good life is a continted prayer to God, and a continued evil l●fe is a continued blasphemy against God: so to us the voice and speech of men's deeds, as well as their words give out a visible discovery of their inward estates: so that by this twofold language those two sorts of persons to be prohibited the Table of the Lord are discerned. Ignorant persons by the language of their lips, though some of their lives be fair. Scandalous persons by the language of their lips and lives. Accordingly there are safe grounds to proceed in the restraint of both sorts from the Supper of the Lord. First, To begin with ignorant persons, touching whom two things shall be enquired. 1. Who be so ignorant as they aught to be restrained? 2. Why they aught to be restrained who be so ignorant? Who Ignorant persons be that are thus to be debarred from the Table of the Lord. The Schools well distinguish between persons nescient, and persons ignorant: Nescientiaest simplex carentia scienty, ignorantia est nescientia corum quaequo scire debet. Aquin, Persons nescient are such as know not many things which either they are not bound to know, or else have not the means of knowledge. Ignorant persons are such as know not what they aught to know, and which they have the means for to know. Persons may be two ways ignorant, according to a twofold ignorance. An Ignorance of pure negation. An Ignorance of brave disposition. Ignorant in respect of a privative absence of knowledge. Ignorant in respect of a positive awknes to knowledge, Such are Ignorant persons with us, they have means to know but they have no mind to know, job. 21.14. not only willingly without knowledge, 2 Pet. 3.5. but wilfully they reject knowledge, Hos. 4.6. Aliud est non scire aliud nolle scire. They shut up themselves in ignorance, and care not to have the key of knowledge put in their doors. Scripture-knowledge they are not only destitute of, but opposite to, and yet think themselves knowing enough: They are ignorant of their ignorance, Gratias ago Deo qu●d ignorantiam in meam non ignora. Ou. they know ●ot that they do not know, whereas God's Saints the more they know, the more they complain they know not, 1 Cor. 8.2. But further to declare what Ignorance it is whereupon we exclude from this Supper. Let us consider what knowledge it is that renders meet for this Supper, Among the graces that must concur to make a meet communicant, knowledge is not the lest nor last. As there be divers graces that must meet to make a spiritual ●uilding for Christ, so to make a spiritual partaker of Christ, for Christ will not be taken in from this Supper, but where there is a house well built, and ready raised for him, To which end Faith lays the foundation, Hope helps up the walls, knowledge sets open the windows, and love covers the roof, and this makes, a room ready for Christ, Christ will not from his Table be taken into that house, where Ignorance shuts up the windows, that the light of knowledge cannot enter. There is a twofold knowledge for which we call in this case to make communicants me●t for this Supper. 1. A reflect knowledge which looks inward upon ourselves, and 2. A direct knowledge which looks outward upon the Sacrament. Knowledge of ourselves, our spiritual sores, maladies, and miseries through sin, so that we see a need of some healing salves and medicines for our souls. Knowledge of the sacrament as an excellent salve and medicine for our cure in this case, knowing the author of it, the ends of it. The person by whom it was instituted. The parts of which it is constituted. Ignorant than are they who have not this twofold knowledge, but hate it rather, Pro. 1.22. They am Ignorant of themselves, their sores, their sins, There are men who know many things, Notus nimis omnibus ign●tus moritur sibi. yet know nothing of themselves, many are gone upon whose grave-stones it might have been written. They lived too well known to others, and die● unknown to themselves, and yet too many such remain whose own hearts and souls are to themselves, a Terra Incognita, or as the unknown part of the earth. Ignorant also they are of the Sacrament, they know not whose it is, what it is, why it is, how can it do them any good? A pill or physical potion may do a patiented good, though he knows not the Apothecary that made it, or the ingredients whereof it is compounded, but not so in this case of the Sacrament. Ignorance of it, and no advantage by it. What than when persons are ignorant of main principles? Heb. 5.12. Blind sin lets that can not more take hold of the chief pillars of religion: than blind Samson of the pillars of the House without his lad leads him, Judg. 6.26. and shall these take a Sacrament? Nay when persons by examining of them, and speaking with them, shall be found thus foolish than. 2. They are to be restrained the Table of the Lord, being through their ignorance so mightily unmeet to meddle in those holy mysteries, as will appear by six demonstrations following. 1. Those that cannot perceive, aught not to receive, they that have not an eye to discern the Lords body, have sure no hand to take, or mouth to eat the body of the Lord, but do undoubtedly eat on this very ground their own damnation, 1 Cor. 11.29. men it may be wise worldward, Luk. 16.8. but Godward they are very fools, Psa. 14.1 Nahash the Ammonite would covenant with those of jabesh Gilead, so he might thrust out their right eyes, 1 Sam. 11.2. Sin and Satan leaves the left eye in men of human and worldly knowledge, open and quicksighted, but the right eye in men, of spiritual and divine knowledge, is put quite out, and so are unmeet to sit at the Table of the Lord, being abominable for their blindness sake, Mat. 1.8. 2. Those in whom the Devil dwells are not fit to take in Christ, Satan's Synagogue, and the Lords Table never well stand together, Satan sometimes transforms himself into an Angel of light, but he ever loves to devil in a ●ark house, and to lie in the thick mud of ignorance. There is a word in Greek by the which the Devil is often called, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. that signifies himself hath much knowledge, but yet he hates and hinders knowledge in men, he knows he hath none more fast than those that lie in the dark dungeon of ignorance, bound in the chains of this darkness, There is not on earth a greater vexation to Satan, than to see men seeking for saving knowledge, for let this once be, and he knows he shall not have after an hours quiet abode, Origen in Numer. Hom. 27. but soon be to seek for his lodging. In the mean while there he couches, and therefore thither Christ will not come. 3. Those whose understandings are dark, their affections are dead: the Lord Christ they have no love to, nor desire of, etc. Isa. 52.2. There is no communion for them, but a condemnation to them, because they affect darkness rather than light, Joh. 3.19. An ignorant man is worse than Nebuchadnezars' Image, Dan. 2. for he hath not so much a● a head of gold, though he have feet of clay, he hath not the bright gold of Gospel-knowledge, but he hath cold claiey affections, Claritas in intellectu parit ardorem in affectu. neither can he have any true heat in his affections, being without true light in his understanding, no spiritual heat, no spiritual hunger. It is by the use and force of natural heat, that the nutritive faculty of the soul, turns the food that is taken unto the nourishment of the body. Ignorant persons are not fit to take food at the Table of the Lord, because they have no holy heat, to turn such food to soul-refreshment. 4. Those whose souls are blind, themselves are bad, as the mind is, so is the man. It is the efficacy of divine knowledge, when it comes into the mind, to make the man good: If the mind be without saving knowledge, the man is without saving goodness. Hence Prov. 19.2. The soul that is without knowledge, it is not good. For any to say, though I am ignorant, yet my heart is good; It is as one should say though I am blind, yet my eyes are good: Not, heart and all is naught where the mind is ignorant. In the law, when the plague of leprosy was in a man's head, the Priest was to pronounce him unclean, and to be turned out of the camp. This is the case of the ignorant man, the leprosy is in his head, the man is unclean, and is not for this society of Saints. If the head of the fish stinks, the whole body we say is unsavoury, it shall never come for a dish to the table. It is only the soul that is seasoned with knowledge, which the Lord accepts at his Supper. 5. Those who know not, they are not known. I see the Lord as it were standing at his Table, Qui ea qua sunt domini nesciunt a domino nesciuntur. Greg. in pastoroli lib. 1. cap. 1. with his hand stretched out, and voice lifted up, crying upon the approaches of ignorant persons, Departed from me I know you not: So saith Nabal when David sent for provision, 1 Sam. 25.11. Shall I take my bread, my water, and my flesh that I have prepared for my servants, and give them to men whom I know not whence they are? so saith the Lord, Shall I take my bread and my wine, my body, and my blood, prepared for my Saints, and give them to know not whom? 6. Those that Christ will come against in judgement, are not to come to Christ in this Sacrament. How dare any ignorant man look that terrible text in the face, 2 Thes. 1.8 The Lord Jesus shall come from heaven in flaming fire to tender vengeance against them that know not God, etc. In fire, in flaming fire, by the light of which they shall be forced to see that whereof they ever before were ignorant; and as it declares how, so why, Christ shall come, to tender vengeance against men not knowing God. And can we think those to take virtue from Christ in the day of a Sacrament, on whom Christ will take vengeance in the day of judgement? To conclude, Ignorant persons, such is the sadness of their sin, that they are more fit to have a sacrifice offered for them of Saints prayers and tears, than to have a Sacrament offered to them of Christ's body and blood. Aqui. 21. 2 ●. qu. 76. Miserable men, they will know little, that they may sin much. Sure their ignorance may well 'cause grief and shame to others, Ignorantia pecoris, ignominia pastoris. their parents, their pastors, but much more than so to themselves. Thus much for the first sort, to wit, ignorant persons. To proceed now to the second sort, to wit, scandalous persons, both being to be put by the Table of the Lord. Touching these two things. 1. How they may here be described. 2. Why they must hence be restrained. For the describing and discovering scandalous persons, I shall declare two things. 1. Their property. 2. Their diversity. Scandalum est impedimentum in via, ut quis vel collabatur, vel ab instituto cursu impediatur. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Id quod cogit cadere vel claudicare. The property of scandalous persons is to lay stumbling stones, and blocks in the way to hinder others as they go, to set snares and traps to entangle men, and so to interrupt their course, as the usual Greek word for scandal imports, Rom. 14.13. Let no man put a stumbling block, or an occasion to fall in his brother's way, that is, let no man scandalise or offend his brother: two Greek words the Apostle uses, that signify offence and scandal, they may there serve one to explain another. The offence is a scandal, and the scandal an offence. Inter offendiculum & scand●lum non opus est distinguere quod a quibusdam factum video sed & parum . Ellius. in Ro. 〈◊〉 shall here a little more largely inquire what a scandal in Scripture is, that so from the abstract to the concrete, a scandalous person may lie the more clear. A scandal is an offence given in some evil thing, either said or done, through which another receives some real wrong. 1. It is an offence given, not taken only, 1 Cor. 13. Scandalum passivum non est sine peccato scandalizati, Aq. If any take offence when none is given, it is their sin. The disciples took offence at Christ's words, Joh. 6.61. He gave none. 2. The offence must be in some evil thing, ●ffendiculū est non bonae, sed malae rei exemplum, aedificans ad delictum. Bonae res neminem scandalizant nisi malam mentem. Tertul. Scandalum est dictum aut factum minus rectum occasionem praebens ruina. Aquin. an offence cannot properly be given in a good thing. Men indeed of bad minds will take offence at good things, as how often were the Pharisees offended at the say of Christ, Mat. 15.12. There was no matter for offence. 3. It must be evil in word or deed, for thoughts, they only offend God. Let men's imaginations be never so mischievous, yet they are not scandalous till they be in some measure manifest, not men's secret sins, but when evil comes out to the light, and walks abroad bare-faced. 4. There is a real wrong to some. B●● peceat qui cor●m ●li● peccat & quia agit & quia docet. He sins twice that sins before another, for some harm reaches to him that stands by, some offence fastens, when others before whom the evil is, are either infected by it, Peccare non tantum in se perdi●ionis habet quantum quod reliqui ad peccandum inducuntur. Chrys. or afflicted for it. When God is dishonoured, his name blasphemed, his Gospel blemished, his people troubled, the good hindered, the bad hardened, this is scandal, and they that do so are scandalous. Pracepta ducunt, exempla trahunt, 2. Scandalous persons being divers, are divided into several sorts. 1. Such as are scandalous ●n doctrine. 2. Such as are scandalous ●n practice. Errare possum, Hereticus non ero. Aug. 1. Such as are scandalous in respect of heretical opinions, which they broach and teach, 1 Tim. 4.1, 2, 3. 2 Pet. 2.1. when Haeresis Graecis dicitur ab eligendo, 1. Their errors are foul. 2. Their choice is free. 3. Their hold is fast. Those that embrace, an● with pertinacy maintain their damnable doctrines, Schismaticus disrumpit charitatis vincula, haereticus corrumpit veritatu dogmata. are scandalous, 2 Tim. 2.17, 18. These because they corrupt the truth of Christ, are not to approach the table of Christ. 2. Such as are scandalous persons in respect of practice, and these are of two sorts. 1. Those that are scandalous in respect of some more particular case or fact. 2. Those that are scandalous in respect of a more general course or state. Of the first sort, suppose some forward in paths of piety, yet relapsing and falling into some heinous sin, whereby they give great, and sad offence, and wherein also perhaps for a while they lie without giving any visible testimony of true repentance, as David. Of the second sort, where indeed the denomination of scandalous, falls most fitly, and fully, it being not from some particular ill action, but from a sinful conversation, they are so called, and of these there are two sorts. 1. Such as pretend to Religion, Novi multos professor: nominis Christiani not professionis suae vim aut scientes aut exhibentes vos tamen admoneo ut Ecclesiae maledicere desinatis vituperando mores hominum quos & ipsa condemnat, & quos quotidiè ut malos filios corrigere studet. Aug. de moribus Eccles. cap. 34. yet give great and just offence in their lives by their lame and lose, their uneven and unanswerable walking. Augustine confesses many such in his time, who professing Christian Religion, yet by their licentious and luxurious lives, gave great scandal, and with them the Manichees were want to reproach the whole Church of Christ, though the Church herself (as he saith) did condemn such, and those that were not reclaimed, were disclaimed: Such sure in that they disgrace the people of God, and blemish the Gospel of Christ, they aught to be debarred the Table of Christ. 2. Such as profess nothing so much as prophanensse, their whole course is a continued race of wretched and riotous living, and now against such scandalous ones I chief engage. 1. Because they are the worse sort. 2. Because they are the greater part. These are to be kept of from the Supper of the Lord, and that upon a two fold cause. 1. Because of what they already be. 2. Because of what they will otherwise do. Let us consider what in Scripture such are reputed to be. Ungodly men they be as chaff which the fan flings out of the floor, Matth. 3.12. They be as dirt and dust, which the besom sweeps out of the house, Luk. 15.8. They be as leaven, which if let alone sours the whole lump, and therefore must be purged out, 1 Cor. 5.6, 7. They be as thorns and briers, which though a man suffer to be about his field, yet not to stand in the midst of his corn, but stubs them, and burns them up, Heb. 6.8. They be as heathens and publicans, Matth. 18.17. they will not hear such as admonish them, yea Ahab-like they commonly hate such Mica●ahs as tell them the truth. They be as open sepulchers, Rom. 3.13. out of which proceeds nothing but noisome savours. They be as venomous vipers, Matth. 3.7. ready to ruin those that bear them. They be as ravenous wolves which every careful shepherd keeps out of his fold, Joh. 10.12. They be as dogs and swine, Matth. 7.6. not only legal curses and corrosives, but Evangelicall cordials and counsels they tread under feet, Amara est veritas & quisquis cam praedicat amaritudine satiabitur. Hier. and tear those that teach them. They shoot out their arrows even bitter words, Psal. 64.3. against those that apply God's Word for their profit. What is it to preach, saith Luther, but for a faithful Minister to draw the fury of such people upon himself? Quid est praedicare nisi furorem populi in se derivare? See an instance in Steven, Act. 7.54. Another in Paul, Act. 21.30. Several such yet remain, who hate those who carry the tidings of Christ, and shall they come to the Table of Christ? shall such take in their hands the holy signs of Christ, Quid dementius est Sacramentis Domini communicate & Domini verba conculcare? Aug. who tread under their feet the holy say of Christ? nay, not only the Ministers of Christ, but the members of Christ, they are apt to oppose; they be worse than the dogs of Egypt, who when the Israelites went in great multitudes by night along the country towards Canaan, not one of them stirred his tongue, Exod. 11.7. whereas these, they both bark and by't at such as hasten in heaven's way: And shall they appear at this service of Christ, who so abhor the servants of Christ? 2 Pet. 2.20, 21, 22. They are as swine, that love to tumble in the mire, yea which is worse, as dogs that love to lick up their vomit. That very vomit which they were sick and pained with, and was their ease to be delivered of, yet they return ●o: such who sometimes have been conscience-sick, with some horrid sin, have received some ease by confession of it, yet fall afresh to it, sure the rails of good discipline are meet to keep of all such Scripture-dogs from the Table of the Lord. It is not fit to take the childrens bread, and cast it to dogs, Mat. 15.26. They may have of common bread, but not of childrens bread, God may give them many crumbs of the bread of the earth, Totum Turcicum imperium quantum est mica est quam pater-familias canibus proijcit. while yet he will not give them one crumb of this bread of Heaven. The whole Turkish empire, saith Luther is but an earthly crumb which God the master of the house casts to dogs. Wicked men, let them possess their own treasures and freely feast at their own Tables, yet they must be forbidden the Table of the Lord. But why is it yet further that such must not partake at the Lo●ds Table? Because if they should, these 5. things they would do. 1. They would provoke God. 2. They would crucify Christ. 3. They would grieve the Saints. 4. They would divide the Sacrament. 5. They would destroy themselves. If men shall with their sins as with so many plague-sores running upon them be allowed the Table of the Lord, than, 1. They will certainly provoke God to wrath, this the Apostle Paul plainly proves and presses, 1 Cor. 10.21, 22. There being some who being not broken of from their idolatrous do, kept to their old idol feasts, yet would also come to the Lords Table, O says he, Do you provoke the Lord to wrath? are you stronger than he? Zanchius Ep. lib. 1. ad pr. Fre. de Exco. from whence Zanchy upon the very business in hand, urgeth an argument home, and observes these two things in that text. 1. That it is ill provoking God to wrath because he is stronger than we. 2, That though God be stronger than we, yet there are those who provoke him to wrath by pressing to his Table while yet they impenitently persist in the open practice of sin, 1 Cor. 10.3, 4, 5. we read of the ancient Jews who at● of the manna from Heaven, and drunk of water from the rock, both representing Christ. But with many of them God was not well-pleased, That is God was dreadfully displeased, who were they? They were Idolaters, fornicatours, murmurers against God, tempters of Christ, ver. 7, 8 9, 10. and how did God's displeasure appear? they were destroyed of serpents, overthrown in the wilderness, in one day there fell of them three and twenty thousand. And what is that to us? these things were our examples, ver. 6. we should avoid such God-displeasing-sins, not come to eat and drink at his Table, continuing such offenders, lest the Lord in wrath consume us. Neh, 13.18, 19 He forbade the buyers and sellers en●ring into the City upon the Sabbath day, because by so profaning the Sabbath, God's wrath was brought in upon them, so should profane persons be restrained from the Sacrament, because by polluting the same, God's wrath is kindled against them. 2. They will crucify Christ, and become guilty of his body and blood, 1 Cor. 11.27. The Apostle, Heb, 6, 6. speaks of some that crucify to themselves the son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame. So do scandalous livers when they approach his Table. The Devil hereby gets more full possession of them, and so turns more derision upon Christ, Satan casts scorn upon Christ's death, when the memorial of it is made as but a mockery by them. Christ was crucified that sin might be crucified with him, Rom. 6, 6. They let their sins live to crucify Christ again, Philip. Melanct. in collectane is Manly. as if all that past, were but a sport. In a certain place there was acted a Tragedy of the death and passion of Christ, in show, but indeed of themselves: for he that played Christ's part, hanging upon the cross, was wounded to death by him, that should have thrust his sword into a bladder of blood, tied at his side, who with his fall slew another, that played one of the women's part that lamented under the cross, his brother that was first slain, seeing this, slew the murderer, and was himself by order of justice therefore hanged: here were four real deaths to them that made a play of the death of Christ. Wicked men when they come to this representation of Christ's death, they do but dally with the death of Christ, despise it, disgrace it, and as much as in them lie put Christ to death again, sure such must be hindered. 3. If not, they will grieve the souls of God's Saints in this service, wherein God would have them rejoice. David when his men went forth to battle, 2 Sam, 18. charged all the officers in the Army, concerning his son Absalon, that he might take no harm, yet when Joab saw him hanging in an Oak, he struck him through with three darts that he died. When there is going forth to the Sacrament, God chargeth the Church-Officers to see his sons be not sadded, yet when they admit known wicked men among them, their very presence is apt to pierce thorough God's children as with darts of grief, so that their hearts are ready to die in the duty. How ill was it in them who when Christ was dying upon the cross, and drinking his father's cup, they to increase his sorrow gave him gall and vinegar to take, Mat. 27.34. So also ill is it in such who when God's servants are drinking this cup, and taking Christ as crucified upon the cross, wicked men being mingled amongst them, mar much of their joy, and give them as it were gall and vinegar to drink. 4. If they come they will divide the Sacrament, and sever what God hath joined together. An excellent union there is betwixt the signs and things signified, In the Sacrament scandalous men will we may be sure sunder those which God would have go together: As Potiphars wife, she gets hold of Josephs garment, and keeps that, but Joseph himself escapes from her, so such men at this Table they get the outward signs which are as the garments wherein Christ is wrapped and represented, Miserabilis est animae servitus signa pro rebus accipere, etc. Aug. de doct. Chr, lib. 3. c. 5 but Christ himself goes away having no hold of him. When Samuel turned to be gone, Saul got hold of the skirt of his mantle, but it rend. Saul had Samuels mantle-skirt, yet the body of Samuel went from him, so those men catch at the elements of Christ, but Christ himself rends away. They take bread and wine, but Christ's body and blood they get none of, So to them it is but a piece of a Sacrament, a lap as it were rend of from the main substance. And thus to divide is to deface, yea destroy the Sacrament, as man's body and soul once severed, he ceaseth to be a man, it is indeed no Sacrament if Christ the soul be separate, There is only a dead carcase. It is not the Lords Supper, such eat only bread and wine. 1 Cor. 11.20. They must be kept out. 5. If they come in, they will destroy themselves, damn themselves at the Sacrament, 1 Cor. 11.29. O miserable, for a man to murder himself, let us consider these things following. 1. Of all sins what worse than murder? The Manichees though: that to cut down a tree that life was in, to be a sin, much more to kill a beast, because the life was better, this was fond: O but to slay a man where the life is best, is sure a cursed and a crying sin, Gen. 40.10, 11. The very boiling of the blood in anger is a sin, what than this? 2. Of all murders what worse than self-murder? A man's love to himself is to be the rule of his love to his neighbour, Regula est prior regulato. therefore if it be bad for a man to murder his neighbour, because he is to love him, than it is worse for a man to murder himself, because he is to love himself better. Inter p●utem & fontem misericordia Domini. 3. Of all self-murders what worse than soul-murder? some have thought that its possible a man murdering his own body may find mercy, but let a man murder his own soul, and he certainly sinks himself, so dying, for ever. The soul being the most precious piece, the murdering of that is sure the most notorious sin. 4. Of all soul-murders what worse than for a man to murder his soul in a Sacrament? that a man should turn that to the destruction of his soul, which tends to the salvation of souls: As the Egyptians who made the read sea their sepulchre, when Israelites went thorough it to Canaan. For a man to murder himself with that knife wherewith he might cut bread and live, O stop such stabs, let not men poison themselves in physic. To conclude, all these sorts once out from the Sacrament, few will be found fit to receive. Secondly, Use. We may from all this clearly see how wide is the mistake of them, who pled for a promiscuous approach of all persons to the Table of the Lord: as if Christ had set up this ordinance in his Church, to be as an Ordinary, or common Inn in a Town, for all that will come thereunto, and much paper is blotted to this purpose. But against all partaking at this Table, we conclude positively, 1. From the plain precept of the holy Apostle, 1 Cor. 11.28. Let a man examine himself, and so let him eat: not eat, but first he must examine himself, which may contain two things. 1. He must difference himself from himself, in respect of his former condition. 2. He must difference himself from many other men, in respect of their present condition. Now what need this, if all without difference are to partake in this ordinance? Is not this duty needless if that liberty be general? let a man examine himself if he find sins weakening, and graces working, sure than he may eat: Why if he finds sins many, and graces none, by that rule yet he may eat. Why, than examine himself? Let a man examine himself and so let him eat: Hence it may be inferred; as that if one knows he hath not examined himself, he aught not to eat, though others should let him: so if it be well known, such a one hath not examined himself, Zanch. Epist. li 1. ad princ. Freder. 3. de Excem. though he would eat, yet others aught not to let him. Thus ●anchy argues on this. 2. From the ill effects upon many people, whom the Lord punishes for their approach to his Table, it may appear all are not to come, 1 Cor. 11.30. The punishment here lies in three degrees. 1. Weakness, viz. the first languishing of the body, and inclination to diseases. 2. Sicknesses, which is the more full seizing of diseases upon the outward man. 3. Death the compliment of both the former. Now of the two first degrees being the lesser evils, the Apostle saith, many were weak and sick: of the third, being the greater evil, to wit death, he altars the word in the Greek, and saith, not a few were dead, though not so many as were weak and sick: it is likely all were not equal in this sin, so not all equal in the punishment, though for that very sin all in some degree punished. For this cause many are weak and sick among you, and not a few are asleep. They some sinned in coming unprepared, and others in that they allowed some that they knew were unprepared, to come to the Table of the Lord. 3. From the nature and matter of the Sacrament, it may appear it aught not to be common to all, consider it in respect of both parts. 1. For the visible part, bread and wine, these are administered not as common bread and wine, but as bread and wine blessed, sanctified, and set apart for that holy use, and are they all in common that these are to be administered unto? or not rather such as are sanctified and set apart for such holy services? may we not take bread and wine as they lie in common without consecration? and may we take in all commonly without any consideration? 2. Christ who is here the invisible and spiritual part, he is set apart of God, holy, undefiled, separate from sinners, Heb. 7.26. Him hath God the father sealed, Joh. 6.27. And surely such as receive in this Supper aught to be sanctified and sealed ones, 2 Cor. 1.22. There aught to be a similitude between Sacrament and communicant. 4. From the peculiar interest of Believers. If all men may come and eat at this Table, what propriety than or privilege hath the Believer more than the unbeliever? unbelieving and ungodly men what right have they, either to the outward or inward part of this ordinance? 1. For the outward, to wit bread and wine, as in this Supper, no right in the Court of God. Common bread and wine, by a common providence, grant they have some divine right to, but Sacramental bread and wine, which is more special in respect of this holy use, and comes by a more peculiar way of promise, is proper only to pious and godly men, 1 Tim. 4.8. A Church-right, or a right before men, some of them may have, their knowledge being competent, and their outward practice consonant. Secret things we leave to God, in whose sight no unholy man hath right to these holy things: and such men the ignorance of whose lips, and wickedness of whose lives, testify to us they have no right, there we may safely suspend the act. 2. For the part inward, to wit Christ, such have no right, Heb. 13.10. We have an Altar, that is Christ crucified upon the Altar of the cross, they that serve at the Tabernacle, that is, which will continued the old Tabernacle ceremonies, have no right to eat, sure than such as hold fast their old abominable sins, have no right to Christ crucified, a● eaten at his Table; yea divers ancient writers have by the Altar in that place of the Hebrews understood the Lord's Table, Estius in loc. whereat only the faithful have right to eat, not all to be admitted. But I will not here further speak to this, because I hasten to examine what others speak, who press for a general admittance of all that w●ll, to the Table of the Lord. The seeming grounds that are alleged to make this out, are raised partly from Scripture, and partly from other reasons. Scrip. The Scriptures from which some so conclude, are, first, Exod. 1●. All the assembly of Israel were to eat the paschal Lamb, vers. 3. All the congregation of Israel were appointed to keep the feast of the Passeover, vers. 47. So to remain an ordinance for ever in their generations, vers. 14. Therefore seeing the Lord's Supper comes in the room of that Passeover, all thereunto are to have the like liberty. Answ. 1. The Passeover appointed to the Jews was to be partly figurative, and partly memorative. It was to figure out unto them something more remote, and something more immediate, remote, to wit, Christ that Immaculate Lamb to be slain in the end of the world, the sprinkling of whose blood upon the hearts of Believers, should save them from eternal death. Immediate, to wit, the present preserving of them and their houses from that dreadful destruction in Egypt, their door posts being sprinkled with the blood of the paschal Lamb, the destroying Angel passed over. And that this mercy might not be forgotten, this ordinance was to remain as a memorial thereof for ever, Exod. 12.24, 25, 26, 27. wonderfully did God work for all Israel, both by saving all their firstborn in Egypt, and bringing them all safe out of Egypt; and they all partaking of that external deliverance were therefore all to partake of that external ordinance. 2. The Sacraments to Christians under the Gospel as they succeed, so they exceed the Sacraments of the Jews under the law, so is all our care in the course and carriage to accord. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The Pharisees were the most exquisite sect of the Jews, Act. 26.5. yet our righteousness aught to exceed theirs, Matth. 5.20. Take the whole people of the Jews, our plenitude of advantages exceed theirs, our liberty in privileges transcend theirs, and therefore our purity in ordinances aught to surpass theirs. We have greater clearness in knowledge, and therefore should have greater pureness in practice. The new covenant made with Christians by Christ, goes beyond the old covenant given by Moses to the Jews, 1. In quality. 2. In quantity: For quality far more excellent. 1. In respect of perspicuity, 1 Cor. 3.18. 2. In respect of liberty, 1 Cor. 3.17. For quantity, Extensively, reaching out to all nations that believe in Christ, Act. 10.35. Intensively, grace now not dropped out, but poured out by floods, Act. 2.17. It's meet we be more exact in the seals of the covenant. Grant some particular persons of old in grace beyond many of us. Yet sure greater plenty of grace is bestowed upon the Church in the time of the Gospel, if we respect the body of the Church and faithful in general. God would not give out and lay forth the richeses of his grace all at once, but by degrees for the greater glory of his name, and good of his people. Christian's must exceed Jews; as the Gospel exceeds the law; Qui scit inter legem & Evangelium distinguere, gratias agat Deo & sciat se esse Theologum. I would be loathe to diminish the due honour of either. He is a good Divine saith Luther, who hath learned of God how to difference law and Gospel aright: They are both excellent, but the Gospel surpasses in spirituality and perspicuity. That difference which Zeno put between logic and rhetoric, is ordinarily put between law and Gospel: The law is as the hand shut, the Gospel as the hand open. The law is the Gospel vailed, the Gospel is the law revealed; the ministration of the law carries death and darkness, but the ministry of the Gospel, life and lustre, 2 Cor. 3.9. See there how it exceeds in glory, and therefore all Gospel Ordinances are to exceed legal administrations. The penalties God inflicts upon Gospel-abusers, are far sorer than those formerly inflicted upon violators of his law, Heb. 10.29. Therefore the more care becomes Christians, and the more exact they aught to be in the discharge of all duties under, and towards the Gospel, than those who worshipped God under the law. Further the Gospel gives more strength to duty, and therefore we aught to be more strict in duty. Moses impera●, Christus impetrat, lex jubet & Evangelium juvat. The law like those Egyptian taskmasters, requires a full tale of brick, but denies straw. The Gospel guides to Christ for all abilities, Phil. 4.13. The Jews were as servants under bondage and burdens, Gal. 4.1, 2. Christians are the Lords freemen, and have many advantages for more exquisite services: therefore as in other things so in this of the Sacrament, our transactions are to be more accurate, pure and perfect, and to go beyond any , pattern, and we aught in this, and in all our worshippings of God, Hag. 2, 9 to outgo those who lived in the time of the law. Compare the ancient , and the Lords Supper together, and this latter is a transcending Ordinance: that set up more in the beginning of the world, this brought out more in the latter end of the world, and are not the Lords last works most excellent? We read Job. 2.10 what the Governor of the marriage feast said to the Bridegroom, In illig sacrificijs figurate significabatur quod nob●s donandum, in hoc sacr. quod nobis jam sit datum evidenter ostenditur. In illis praenu●tiabatur filius Dei pro nobis occid●ndus, in hoc autem pro nob●● annuntiatur occisus. Aug. ad Pet. diaconum. cap. ●9. when he tasted the wine made of water, and ●ot knowing whence it was. Every man at first sets forth good wine, and after that which is worse, but thou hast kept the good wine until now: so may a believer say to Jesus Christ, O Lord thou hast set me at thy Table, and I have eat and drunk, and blessed be thy name, my heart is warmed, my sin is wounded, my corruptions weakened, my affections quickened, thou hast surely kept the best wine till now, the sweetest Ordinance for last, come to particulars and you shall find this Sacrament of the Supper surpassing the Jews Passeover. 1. In the figurative part that shadowed out Christ to be crucified, and hereafter to die, whereas this is to represent Christ that is crucified, who hath already suffered the death of the cross, and is now advanced to the crown. 2. In the memorative part, that was to remember them of a temporal desiverance from bodily death, and the like: this is to put us in mind of our eternal salvation, and everlasting deliverance from the death both of body and soul in hell, by the redeeming death of Christ once on earth. 3. In the material part, At the , we read of bread eaten, but not of any wine drank. In that, the Jews they eat flesh, but there was no blood drunk, though bloodshed, Lex esum sanguinis prohibet Evangelium praecipit ut bibatur. Cyp, de caena Domini. but in the Lord's Supper is two helps meet, both bread and wine, and here is not only the body of Christ to be eaten, but his blood also to be drunk by a lively faith, In a word, every time a was celebrated, there must bn a lamb slain by their hands, here is a lamb slain to our hands. Well this being more excellent, let us be the more diligent to preserve this in its practice purely. Thirdly, Yet from that Passeover there were some forbidden, sure for ceremonial uncleanness some were kept back, Num. 9.7. and a rule was made in such cases for the time to come; that those so unclean should be kept back until the next monthly , ver. 10, 11. that they might have time to cleanse themselves. Now as ceremonial uncleanness on the body, did figure out spiritual filthiness in the soul, by thought, word and deed; So that legal prohibition of persons ceremonially unclean, from the Passeover, did represent that such aught rather to be debarred who were known to be polluted with moral uncleanness, and sure left for our instruction upon record, to signify such filthy offenders aught to be suspended from the Lords Supper, wherein we are not to fall short, but rise higher than they in that old Passeover. Script. The second Scripture is 1 Cor. 10.354. It is said there of the Jews, They did all eat the same spiritual meat, & did all drink the same spiritual drink. That Manna from Heaven, and water from the rock, did resemble our bread and wine in the Sacrament, all representing Christ, and therefore as all the Jews did take of them in the wilderness: So all with us may take of these at the Table of the Lord. Answ. Answ. 1. By way of concession. Grant that this Manna and water was as a Sacrament to the Jews, and grant that our Sacrament of the Supper holds a resemblance with the same. Hence (says chrysostom) as thou eatest the bread of the Lord, so did they Manna, and as thou drinkest the cup of the Lord, so did they water, to them God gave Manna and water, to thee he gives bread and wine, yea his body and blood, etc. 2. By way of resolution. So First, we say that Sacrament was temporary, and their participating extraordinary. It was temporary, not as the Passeover permanent, and to abide, but merely transient at that season, and so cease: Now from a passing, flitting Sacrament, we cannot well take a standing, binding Argument: And their partaking was extraordinary, occasioned by their present extremity, by reason of bodily necessity, being in the desert, where they were in miserable hunger and thirst, and so were allowed to eat the Manna, and drink the water to preserve their natural life, having nothing else whereof at that time to eat or drink. This is a wrong key than and will never open the door to let in all to eat and drink at the Table of the Lord, But, 2. Mark what immediately follows, 1 Cor. 10.5. They did all eat and drink, But with many of them God was not well pleased, for their carcases fell in the wilderness: God was much displeased with them, not only in their persons, but in that very action, they being sinful and carnal did only eat and drink in a natural way, and to a sensual end to feed their bodies, Qui in man na Christum intellexerunt spiritualem cibum manducarunt. Aug. de utilita panit. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though the Manna and the water had a spiritual signification, yet they all did not so eat and drink them, and therefore God was displeased, and they destroyed. 3. The Apostle instantly adds, v. 6. now these things were our examples, so ver. 11. The Greek word for example, signifies an impression or stamp, such as is made upon coin, where print answers to print, intimating what deep dints those things that fell upon them aught to make upon us, that we deal not in a carnal manner, about things that have a spiritual meaning, lest with us also God be displeased, and we destroyed. People that persist in their sins, and yet shall sit at the Table of the Lord, they may possibly please themselves, Sordes in conspectu iudicis quod fulget in conspectu operantu. but the thing will certainly displease God, and though it doth not procure their present destruction, it will prepare them for eternal damnation. The third Scripture is, Mat. 26.20, 21. Script. Jesus sat down with the twelve, etc. and than did he institute his last Supper, whereat Judas was one than present, wherefore should any now be excluded? Is any worse than Judas? Answ. Answ. That Judas was with Jesus at his first setting down, and eating the Passeover, I think none deny. But whether he stayed to partake in the last Supper, hath been and is a very great question, I will not undertake to determine it, but lay down what may be probably said on both sides, That Judas was present at the Supper it may be supposed on these grounds. 1. The Passeover and the Lords Supper being one and the same in spiritual substance, why should it be yielded he was at the one and yet not at the other? 2. The Passeover and the Supper were than so coetemporary in their administration so instantly one upon another. For as they were eating, Jesus took bread, Mat. 26.26. it may seem unlikely that Judas should go forth in the very exercise of things, though quickly after. Aqui●as 3●. Quest. 81. Art. 2. 3. judas being a close sinner, and nothing appearing against him, for Christ yet to refuse him, might thereby give an ill precedent for future, to eject upon Jealousies, where there is nothing detected. 4. For Christ to forbidden or forbear judas in this when no charge lay against him, would have been but the way to exasperated him, and thereupon to take the motion to betray Christ: whereas Christ from first to last, having been friendly to him, it aggravated his sin against Christ. 4. Luke the Evangelist chap. 22.21. saith after mention of the Supper, our Saviour points out Judas, with a Behold, the hand of him that betrayers me, is with me on the Table. But on the other side li● these grounds, that our Saviour would not allow Judas the liberty of this Supper. 1. Because he knew him to be an hypocrite, a reprobate, a devil, as himself calls him, joh. 6.70.71. were hypocrites and reprobates known to us, we aught to eat them at this Ordinance, as other sinners: But, First Hypocrisy is a fine thread not easily discerned: till discovered by Apostasy it passeth unknown. An hypocrite is an Apostate vailed, and an Apostate is an hypocrite revealed, than we see him as out of his , but before we say of an hypocrite in compare of other sinners, as it's said of the Serpent, Gen. 3.1. It was more subtle than any of the beasts of the field. 2. Reprobation is a secret counsel locked up, close in that cabinet whereof God alone hath the key, we may tremblingly think on it, not presumptuously pry into it. Therefore for us at the Lords Table we must admit, where there is no known cause to exclude. But seeing Christ well knew the internal and eternal estate of judas, Joh. 17.12. it may cast a scruple whether Christ did accept him to this Supper with the other Disciples. Zanch. l. 1. de culi, Dei externo & pag. 447. 2. Those Disciples Chr●st gave the bread to, he said, this is my body broken for you, and when he gave them the cup, he said, This is my blood shed for you, now sure Christ's body was not given, nor his blood shed for judas, as Christ well knew, and therefore doubtful whether Christ would accept judas to the outward signs, when he knew the things signified, were none of his, and declare h●s body and blood to be for him, when he knew it was nothing so. 3. judas was not a subject capable of any of those ends and uses of this Sacrament for which Christ himself appointed it, as nourishing of his soul, pardoning of his sin, etc. no promise to apply, no faith to confirm, etc. A man will forbear his work, Finis est quod maxime volumus. suspend his act, where he sees his end will fail, in this we may conceive the same of Christ. 4. Those that Christ gave those precepts to, for the bread, Take and eat, for the wine, Drink ye all of it, to them he made this promise, that hereafter he would drink wine new with them in his Father's Kingdom, Mat. 26.29. which expositors interpret two ways, both make against judas, that to him this promise could not appertain, and therefore not those precepts. 1. chrysostom and some others by the Kingdom of the Father, understand Christ's resurrection, and by the new wine which Christ therein would drink with his Disciples, understand that corporal eating and drinking of Christ with his Apostles after his resurrection, Luk. 24.43. Act. 10.40, 41. judas was now dead and gone to his own place, Mat. 27.5. He lived not to see Christ's death, much less his resurrection. 2. Moore ordinary and likely, by the Kingdom of his Father, is meant that Kingdom of glory after this life, and by the wine he would drink with them, that celestial liquor of sweet joy, and eternal comfort which the Saints partake therein with Christ, Christ could easily tell that this judas should never attain to, himself having declared that judas was The son of PERDITION. 5. Christ having given judas the sop, he said, what thou dost, do quickly, and judas went out immediately, joh. 13.30. That this sop was no part of the Sacramental Supper, we may safely say, as soon as judas had received this, Hilar. de Trin. lib. 8. Durand. ratio lib. 4 ca 4. away he packs: upon this very ground there are both Fathers and Schoolmen, who affirm that judas was absent from this Supper, Satan entering with the sop did not suffer him to sit still, joh. 13.27. The Devil no doubt, says Augustine, was in him before, but upon the eating of the sop, Satan entered more forceably that made him more hasten about his horrid sin, August. ad Frat. in Erem. as when the Devil was entered into the swine, they ran straightway headlong into the Sea, Mat. 8.32. The principal thing that seems to prove judasses' presence with the rest of the Disciples at this Supper, is that of Saint Luk. 22.21. De cultu Dei exter. Zanch. lib. 1. Pa. 447. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mention being made of judas at the Table after speech of the Supper, which yet Zanchy and others answer to make nothing for that purpose. It being in that method according to a figure well known to Rhetoricians, That Evangelist going on with narration of the Passeover and the Lords Supper together, adds, that ver. 21. Behold his hand that betrays me is with me on the Table, which is by way of recapitulation or rehearsal, and than returns to the words, which the other Evangelists, Calvin, Chemnitius, and others, can easily make a sweet harmony, let us make no discord in this. It was in the eating of the Passeover judas dipped his hand with Christ in the dish, and in eating of the Passeover did Christ give him the sop, which as Deodat upon the 13. chap. of joh. ver. 2. says, was a bit of unleavened bread dipped in a sauce made of bitter herbs, Vid. Diodat. joh. 13.30. which according to the custom of the Passeover, the Father of the Family used to distribute to each therein. Illa nocte cana. 2. ex vulgaris paschalu Eucharistica. judas having received this sop, goes instantly out. The Sacrament of the Lords Supper being administered afterwards, he is thought thereupon, not to partake therein, as the other eleven did. But 2. Grant that judas did remain, and receive this Supper with the rest, yet than do but imagine how this must needs soon after occasion both a torment to him, and triumph to Satan, Mat. 27.3. He not sooner saw Christ condemned, but he was amazed with the guilt of innocent blood, and well he might, for were he at the Sacrament he was guilty of the blood of Christ two ways. 1. By abusing that Ordinance of Christ. 2. By betraying the person of Christ. Non est tum jesu sed meus est, quae mea sum cogitat, quam ea sunt in pectore volutat: tecum epulatur, & mecum pascitur, a te panem a m● pecuniam accepit, tecum bibis & mihi sanguinem t●um vendit, Satan hereupon insults, Ambrose brings in the devil boasting against Christ, and challenging judas as his own. He is not thine, Lord Jesus, he is mine, his his thoughts beaten for me, he eats with thee, but is fed by me, he takes bread from thee, but money from me, he drinks with thee, and sells thy blood to me, O dreadful! was judas at the Sacrament? the worse was his woe. Truly men had better be shut out from this Ordinance, than to think to get in at this door by making judas the porter. 3. Suppose judas was also received to this Sacrament, yet many may well be kept of. 1. Because in respect of good they fall short of judas, and 2. Because in respect of evil they go beyond judas. For good judas served Christ, and suffered for Christ, judas professed Christ, preached Christ. When Christ was in his low condition, judas forsook others to follow him, Mat. 10.27 For evil judas his life towards men unblameable, no drunkard, scoffer, swearer, or open offender, were he with Christ and his other Disciples at this Table, yet than we may say. 1. He had not showed any ill affection to Christ. 2. He had not given any offence to them that were Christ's: not open disaffection had he particularly discovered against Christ. The grudging at the ointment Mary poured upon Christ. 1. This seemed to be the fault of all the Disciples, Mat. 26.8. 2. If judas first and chief in this, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. yet it was not from a mind malicious, but covetous: suppose the other Disciples towards the poor had indeed charitable thoughts, judas made the poor but a pretence, he aimed at the benefit of his own bag, joh. 12.5, 6. when he saw the ointment poured upon Christ's head, he grumbled, not because he was a cruel wretch, and hated his Master: but because he was a covetous wretch, and loved money. No scandal or offence had judas given to his fellow-Disciples, but had carried all so fairly, that for any wrong done by him, they have no charge against him. If any object, o but Judas betrayed Christ. Answer. 1. Did he communicate with Christ in the Sacrament, than he had not actually betrayed Christ. 2. There are with us that have betrayed Christ in ways worse than Judas. 1. Judas betrayed Christ for thirty pieces of silver, many cell their souls, and their Saviour for naught, Isa. 50.1. 2. judas betrayed Christ so but once, many betray Christ often, so many transgressions, Illi enim persecutisum carnem ambulantis in terra, vos Evangelium sedentis in calo, Aug. count. lit. pet. lib. 2. cap. 87. so many treasons against our sovereign Lord the King. 3. judas betrayed Christ corporal in his low estate, wicked ones now betray Christ spiritual, though above in glory. Augustine says to the Donatists, how their sin against Christ was worse than the Jews. They persecuted the flesh of Christ walking on earth: you persecute the Gospel and spirit of Christ sitting in Heaven. So men's sins are worse treasons against Christ than that of judas was. 4. judas it's a question whether he intended to betray Christ to death, or only thought to get the Priest's money, knowing Christ at a pinch could easily escape from them. 1. Because when judas salutes Christ he seems to will him to shifted for himself, saying, master save thyself, or Hail Master. 2. Because as soon as judas saw Christ condemned, he was struck with horror, as if that were beyond what he meant: Worse are they who sin out of malicious wickedness. 5. judas betrayed Christ and repent, Mat. 27.3. confessed his sin, restored the money, justified Christ's innocency to the face of Christ's enemies, men betray Christ his cause, truth, Church, and are hardened, persist, and yet presume. From this instance of judas is no proof we see for all to come to the Table of the Lord. Fourth Scripture is, Act. 2, 41, 42. Scrip. 4. where we read that three thousand were added to the Church, and unto them all instantly the Apostles broke bread. Therefore in great Congregations where are thousands all may come to the Supper of the Lord. In this are two parts, Answ. to both we will speak. 1. To the Scripture itself here premised. 2. To the conclusion from it inferred. For the Scripture, Grant there were thousands whom the Apostles did there admit to this bread-breaking Ordinance, but than we find who they were, and how they were qualified. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, pungendo penetre, punctim caedo. Sca. 1. They were a people pricked to the heart, pierced through as with the stab of a dagger, so the Greek word imports, in the sense of a particular sin, which the Apostle Peter had reproved in his preaching Act. 2.36.37. 2. They were a people craving good counsel, willing the holy Apostles, should put them upon any pious course, O what shall we do? 3. They gladly received such counsel as the Apostles gave them, though part of it was yet more to repent, though for sin heart-prickt already. ver. 38.41. 4. They kept close to the Apostles company and counsel, continued steadfast in their doctrine, fellowship, and prayers, v. 42. O were people thus prepared and disposed what ever their numbers were, none need fear to admit them, but bless God for them. 2. For the inference, Than thousands may, yes? if they be meet: and that but a few do, the fault will be found in themselves, For if to this Supper not great multitudes, but little companies are admitted among us, why is it? 1. It is not from the matter of it. 2. It is not from the master of it. 3. It is not from the Ministers of it. First, for the material part of this Supper, whether we respect that which is outward, or that which is inward, sufficient supplies might be had for thousands. As for bread and wine, God be praised, provisions might be made for million of men in this case. So for Christ's body and blood, the virtue and value thereof being infinite, is able to secure and save million of worlds. 2. For Christ as he is not only the matter but the master of this Supper, he is not only able, but willing to communicate himself; and as ready to give his flesh to eat, and his blood to drink, as a mother her milk to suck, as Christ freely yielded up himself to suffer death upon the cross: so he is free at his Table to yield out the benefits of his death. 3. For the Ministers, Christ's servants, sure they take no pleasure causelessly to straiten this Supper. A faithful Minister may say to his people be they never so great, somewhat like as Paul to Agrippa, Act. 26.29. I would to God that not only some few, but all that hear the word preached, were not only almost, but altogether such as might eat of this Supper, O blessed is that man whom God makes as a fruitful vine, that his spiritual children like olive plants are round about this Table, As many arrows in the hands of a mighty man, O happy is he that hath his quiver full of them, his crown, glory, and joy. Yet alas! little is the number we dare accept at this Supper, the reason ariseth from the unmeetnesse of the most to communicate therein. That Kingdom that few enter into, it is not because of the incapacity of the place, as if there were not room to receive, or as if God and his holy Angels, were resolved to withstand multitudes prepared, but the cause is the unfitness of the greater part of people for so holy a p●ace: so this Sacrament few are taken thereunto, not as if the Ordinance were uncapable of more, or as if Christ and ●is Ministers were unwilling to admit a multitude how meet so ever, but the cause is the uncapeablenesse of the most to have admittance to this holy Ordinance. A fifth Scripture is Luk. 14.16, etc. Script. 5. The master of the feast sent out three several times to bring in guests to eat and drink of his Supper. A certain man made a great Supper: He bade many at first, after sent into the streets of the city for more, than to the high ways and hedges, among the worst of men, requiring his servants to compel to come in, vers. 23. Therefore the Lord would have all good and bad to come to this Supper, and thereof to partake. First, Moore generally, and after, Answ. more particularly. In general let us learn this, that much is required of our constant care in the course of parables, lest we err when from figurative allusions, Theologia parabolica non est argumentativa. we draw positive conclusions. Parables are precious parts of Scripture, which many do miserably misunderstand. Parables are like spectacles, that help some to see better, but 'cause others to see the worse. A parable is as a dark lantern that gives light to one, but leaves another in the dark. And truly such as make use of this parable of the Supper, Luk. 14. to prove that all are to come to the Sacrament of the Supper, the spectacles blinds their eyes, and the darkness of the lantern hinders their sight. As if the Invitation of such several sorts to that, were a clear argument for a universal admittance to this, that these two are taken like one and the same; this mistake is not new: I find Salmeron and some other popish writers interpret that Supper in Luke, Salm. ser. in parab. Evan. as this Supper of the Lord, and conclude that all are called thereunto. To speak particularly to the Supper in that parable by more orthodox authors, it is taken two ways: Either for the Supper of grace in the Gospel, or for the Supper of glory in the heavens. Besides that which is commonly called the Supper of the Lord. Christ hath a twofold Supper. 1. That whereby Christ sups with us, bringing his provision down to us. 2. That after whereby we sup with Christ, taking us up to his provision, both mentioned, Revel. 3.20. Canam maguam in effabilem Regni Dei f●uationem vocavit, quod finem nesciat. Euthym. in luc. cap. 54. Some by the Supper in that parable, understand the Supper of celestial glory, and others the Supper of Evangelicall grace. To this later I rather lean. When Christ utters his voice in the Gospel, and works open men's doors, comes in and makes, first a Supper in thei● hearts, before the Supper in the heavens, Revel. 3.20. This Supper meant in the parable is the grace and mercy of God in the Ministry of the Gospel, proposing Christ as a Saviour to lost sinners, and persuading poor sinners to come in by faith and repentance, and to partake of Jesus Christ in the tenders of the Gospel. It is memorable, God for the sustaining and saving poor perishing souls hath provided three several meals; A breakfast, a dinner, a supper. All may be but the doctrine of the Gospel setting forth Christ. The breakfast that is in the morning or beginning of the day, it is the lesser, quicker, and shorter meal. This was that brief Evangelicall promise' of Christ to lapsed Adam in the morning of the world, Gen. 3.15. Christ the Lamb slain from the beginning of the world, Revel. 13.8. The dinner at noon or midday, here the provision is usually larger and dishes fuller. In Moses and the Prophets more about the noontime of the world, Evangelical discoveries and discourses of Christ, are more perspicuous and copious, Isa. 9.6, 7. Malach. 3.1. Act. 10.43. The Supper that is at the evening or end of the day, when the cheer in a feast is very full. 1. The Supper meal is the sweet meal, in regard of the work of the day past, we than cease from, and in regard of the rest of the night to come, that we than soon lie down to. The Supper God hath now provided in the evening, or later end of the world, 1 Cor. 10.11. This is sweet and large in the plain and plentiful preaching of the Gospel, and abundant powerings out of the spirit, Act. 2.17. Hard servitudes of former bondage and burdens, blessed be God, we are free from, there is a rest we enjoy, and a better we are hastening to, Mat. 11.28. Heb. 4.9. 2. The Supper-meal is the last meal, not more after, than eat or never. Now is God sending in his last messes of mercy, not another Christ to come, or Gospel to preach, Gal. 1.8. now feed or famish, this is the last meal. It's Supper, upon this God is earnest, Christ is instant. The Lord calls first Jews, than Gentiles; first those more near in the streets of the city, than sends to them more remote, that lay as it were abroad in the high ways, Jews and Gentiles, rich and poor. God would have them compelled in, viz to the hearing of the Gospel, Chemnit. Harm. Euang. in loc. that by the workings of the spirit, and the woo of the word, they may be turned to God, and saved by Christ. While the Gospel is preaching, and Christ proffering, it is Supper time, the last meal is serving in, yet how many pled excuse from this Supper. O their oxen and farms, pleasures and profits, they have no leisure to look after what God in the Gospel tenders. I remember it's storied of. Henry 4th of France, ask the Duke of Alva if he had observed the Eclipses, answered he had so much business on earth, that he had no leisure to look up to heaven. O sad for men to be so bend on the businesses of the world, as not to cast up looks to the things of heaven, nay not to regard though the Lord brings heaven down to them, yet thus it is, Rom. 10.8. men that mind not Christ's Supper brought down in his Gospel, shall they partake of the Lords Supper brought forth at his Table? A sixth Scripture is, 1 Tim. 2.4. Script. God would have all men to be saved: therefore God would have all men to come to the Sacrament, as a means of salvation. I will not now stay to distinguish of the particle All, Answ. nor speak to ordinary distinctions about the will of God, which might be of use for the general opening of that text, but hint out some few things briefly as applied to the particular case. And so 1. God would have all men to be saved, and God would have men use all means that tend to salvatior. Admit yet than he would have men in all the means they use to be methodical and orderly, taking each up in its due time and place, that first, which is first, and than that which follows, for those means that help a man must one help another. Finis ultimus omnibus mediu dat amabilitatem ordinem & mensuram. The first prepare for the second, the ultimate end ever gives, as a desirableness to, so an orderliness in the use of the means. In a course of physic for health, the patiented, as he useth all for the matter, so all in that order as the Physician prescribes, the first having done its due working, he takes the second. Now for men, the first public means for their salvation, is the word preached, Rom. 1.16. When this upon them hath had its due work, ●hen take the Sacrament, as the next means to be used in its order. 2. God would have all men saved, but so as first to come to the knowledge of the truth, 1 Tim. 2.4. so as to come first to repentance, 2 Pet. 3.9. God will have none come to heaven in their sins, 1 Cor. 6.9. Thus God is willing all should come to this Table, viz. that will first forsake their sinful ways, and return to the Lord, by newness of life. God will not more allow wicked wretches to receive at this Supper of Christ, than hereafter to receive salvation by Christ. 3. God would have all saved. Grant, Multi nobiscum edunt & bibun● temporalitèr Sacramenta & tamen habebunt aeterna termenia. August. but for many to come to the Sacrament, it's the way to their damnation, 1 Cor. 11.29. And no marvel, to many it proves the damning of their souls, when God accounts them guilty of the blood of his son, 1 Cor. 11.27. and though not instantly damned, yet some ways they bear Gods angry blows, before their final damnation comes. Master Knocks in his history of Scotland tells of one Sir James Hamilton murdered by the King's means there, he appeared to him in a vision with a sword drawn, and strikes of both his arms saying, take this before thou receive thy final doom for thy blood guiltiness, and within 24. hours, two of the King's sons died. Men herein guilty of Christ's blood, God strikes their bodies with weakness, their children with diseases, their with death, their hearts with hardness, before the last doom come. Another Scripture produced for a promiscuous admittance of all to the Supper of the Lord, is that 2 Cor. 5.14, 15. Scrip. 7. wherein the Apostle saith, that Christ died for all; thereupon say some the Sacrament of Christ's death belongs to all. Answ. Answ. This argument stands upon two lame legs, and will easily down, let but truth be held forth, Christus non omnin● mortuus est pro omnibus & singulis mors om●● esus & si sufficiebat in pretium pro omnibus & singulis non tamen factum est; pretium pro-omnibus & singulis, quia non pro omnibus & singulis est solutum, sed duntaxat pro electu● D. Twiss. vind. Grat. and Dagon-like, it will soon fall before that Ark, and nothing left to be seen, except stumps. That which the Apostle affirms, I ●hall explain, and that which some infer, I shall deny. True, Christ died for all, But what all? To wit all the elect of God. Take all restrictively with reference to all whom God hath chosen, Rom. 8.32. God spared not his Son, but delivered him to death for us all: What all? look before and after, vers. 30. Whom he hath predestinated, them he called, whom he called, them he justified, etc. For all these God delivered up Christ to death, vers. 33. After, Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect? It is God that justifies, Pro omnibus Quid est? non omnibus hominibus sed omnibus nobis scilicet quos praedestinavit vocavit, rustifis cavit, etc. Aug. de civ. lih. 21 c. 24. It is Chr●st that died: And therefore the Apostles expression is observable in the 32. verse, God delivered his Son to death, not for all, but for us all: All us whom before he hath chosen. Again, Christ died for all, What all? Take all distributively, of all ages, languages, places, cases, of all some, Revel. 7.9. Lo a great multitude of all nations, kindreds, tongues stood before the throne of God, made white by the blood of the Lamb, vers. 14. Revel. 5.9. The Elders fell down before the Lamb, and sung: Thou hast redeemed us all to God, by thy blood, out of every kindred, and tongue, and people and nation. Christ died for all, not for all collectively and in a universal sense. For first, Christ in his birth was set for the fall of many, Luk. 2.34. therefore sure in his death not for the rise of all. There are some of whom Christ professes he did never know them, Mat. 7.23. for them sure he did not dye, Verba notitia connotant affectus. Est mundus damnandorum de quo scriptum ne cum mundo pereat, pro isto non orat, est mundus salvandorum (de quo Apostolus) Deus erat in Christo mundum sibi reconcilians, pro isto orat. Aug. in joh. see how Christ protests and professes, I never knew you, it's more than if he had said, I do not know you, I do not now approve you, but I never at no time had the lest knowledge, with likeance of you. There are some on whom Christ would not bestow, in petition, a word of his mouth, and would Christ in his passion, bestow on them the blood of his heart? joh. 17.6. I pray not for the world: There is a double world in this world, as Ezekiel's vision had wheel in wheel: There is a world that shall be damned, 1 Cor. 11.32. Ye are chastened of the Lord, that you might not be damned with the world; this world Christ prayed not for: there is a world that shall be saved, 2 Cor. 5.19. God was in Christ reconciling the world, for this world Christ prayed and died. Some say that this was one of those bitter ingredients mixed into Christ's dying cup, which he drunk, that made him so sad in death, the foresight how few would be saved by his death, but to pass that undiscussed, comparatively those are few for whom Christ died, though in themselves considered, they are many, hence is it sometimes said that he died for all, Isa. 53.11, 12. and for every man, Heb. 2.9. he tasted death for every man, in the next verse Christ is said by his sufferings to bring many to glory: Lege D. Field de Ecclesia, lib. 5. cap. 17. & Parker the descent. lib. 1. sect. 91. not all. There are two reasons rendered why Christ, though by his suffering he infinitely satisfied, yet did not suffer infinitely in time. 1. Because the excellency of his person was able to raise a finite suffering into the value of an infinite satisfaction. 2. Because he suffered only for such as were to break of their sins by repentance. For all it's clear Christ died not, Joh. 10. 11.15. Joh. 15.13. Eph. 5.26. Heb. 9.28. S●nguis Christi o●nibus dandus est, nam pro omnibus fusus est etiam Turcis, Iudae● Ethnicis. Bellarm. de Euchar. lively 4. cap. 25. as the Papists teach. To leave than this of Christ's death for all, as an Antichristian tenant, and no fit bottom for a Christian argument: Now see how the foundation of the objection fails, the building than must needs down, But 2. I answer, Lapso fundamento labitur aedificium. Quisque nascitur ex Adams nascitur damnatus de damnato. Aug. in Psa. 131. Sunt filij Dei qui nondum sunt nobis, & sunt nobis qui non sunt Deo Aug. de cor. & glac 9 Secundum occultam Dei praedestinationem plurimae sunt foris ove●, plurimi lupi intus. Novi● enim ac signa●o habet, qui adhuc nec cum nec se nos cunt. Aug. in Io. Tract. 45. there be some for whom the sacrifice of Christ's death was purposely intended, yet to whom the Sacrament of Chists death is not for present to be applied, I mean, the elect of God in the world, unconverted, who still stick in nature's estate, and abide in the damned condition wherein they were born, foolish, disobedient, serving divers lusts, living in malice, envy, hateful, and hating one another, Tit. 3.3. look into the Apostles black bill of abominable sinners, 1 Cor. 6.9, 10. such (saith he) were some of you, and some are such: Touching God's election they be the sons of God, though in condition enemies against God, Romans 11.18. Bloody souls bleeding blasphemies: sheep by election, but wolves by condition, such as God knows, but they neither know God or themselves: what Gods purposes are to them we understand not, but what their practices are against God, we discern, and to such we cannot allow the Sacrament of Christ's death, though Christ died for them as may after appear. In the work of our redemption that is dispatched by Christ's death, there is considerable a double act. 1. An act of oblation wherein Christ offered himself once for all as an adequate sacrifice and full compensation for the sins of all Gods elect. 2. An act of application which is twofold. An act whereby Christ's death is applied to us. An act whereby Christ's death is applied of us. The application of Christ's death on Christ's part to us is by his Spirit. The application of Christ's death on our part to ourselves, is by faith, and both these are required when the Sacrament is received: now this being the case of believers alone, they only are meet to communicate. Gods elect while unregenerate are not any way able to make out any interest in themselves to Christ's death, therefore how shall they presume to partake in the Sacrament of Christ's death? There is a virtual interest they may have before conversion, in respect of payment made, but no actual interest in respect of purchase applied till really regenerate: Take Christ's death, those have actual interest in it, who have actual benefit by it. such sure have part in it, who have power from it to put sin to death, and to cleanse the soul from sin, Heb. 9.14. This is the privilege of Saints. The last Scriptures objected. Scrip. Christ calls all to come to him, Mat. 11.28. and declares, that whoever comes, he will in no wise cast out. Joh. 6 37. Therefore all may come to the Supper of the Lord, and not any that come, aught to be put by. Answ. Answ. 1. For that Mat. 11. it is true Christ therein calls all to come to hlm, but than, 1. All, who? viz. All that be weary and heavy laden, that is, all that be weary of the work of sin, and laden with the weight of sin, let them come to Christ even in this Supper-feast, and Christ will in and by that afford them such a refreshment as those find who fainting under some heavy weight, or at some hard work are revived by taking some pleasant food, so some translate the word of promise added in the ver. I will give you rest: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reficiam. But what is this to those, who 1. are not weary of the work of sin, such who if they should live ever, they would sin ever? sin is such a work, Omnis peccator peccat in suo aeterno. Greg. wicked men may be weary in it, but never weary of it, neither is any thing ever tired of its natural motion, it's as natural for such men to sin, as the fire to burn, Isa. 57.10. nor 2. are they laden with the weight of sin. The Angels sinning fell down from Heaven, Korah and his company sinning sunk down into the earth, sin the burden of which neither Heaven or earth is able to bear, many carry as lightly away, as Sampson the gates of the City, Jud. 16. Sin lies in them like an element in its proper place, and so burdens not: now what shall such do at the Supper of the Lord? those there will Christ refresh with the pardon of sin, who feel the burden of sin. Quomodo reficit peccatis onerato● nisi indulgentiâ peccatorum. Aug, de ver. Apo. sex. ●4. 2. Christ calls all to come to him, but all, how and why? 1. So as to learn of him meekness and humility, meekness in well moderating all their furious passions, humility in well managing all their various actions, to rise high in meekness, and yet lie low in humility, to learn of Christ, whose meekness was admirable, among his provoking adversaries, and his humility imitable among his following servants, as his very washing their feet lays forth. 2. Come so as to take up Christ's yoke and burden, ver. 29. yoke of active obedience, and burden of passive obedience, both to do and suffer what Christ pleaseth, what is this to them who as they will not learn of, so also they will not live to Christ? In stead of humility and meekness, O the sad transports of pride and anger, wherein they live with free allowance, in stead of taking Christ's yoke and burden, they choose to draw the Devil's cart, to be under the yoke and burden of that infernal Pharaoh, that will sink their souls to hell, rather than yield to Christ's yoke and burden that would lift them up to Heaven, for Christ's burden it's not only light but lightning, the more of it we take, the more meet we are to mount, as the wings of a bird, the bigger they grow the better she flies. Onu● 2. ex o●eram allevians. Yet such as will not come to take Christ's yoke and burden in service; cannot come to take Christ's body and blood in a Sacrament. And for that text, joh. 6.37. It is true, who ever comes to Christ he will not cast out, yet what is this for those who continued in that case, as that 1. They cannot come to Christ, Joh, 6.44. Au con. duas Ep. Pel. l. 1. cap. 3. & 19 None can come to me except the Father draw, he says not except the Father leads, as Austin observes, but except the Father draws: There is in natural men no power bending forward, but there is hanging backward. God must draw, or man not stir, man in nature's estate hath not the feet of Faith and Love, and so cannot come to Christ, though a man comes not to the Lords Table, yet by those he may come to Christ in Heaven, whereas without those feet a man may come often to the Table of the Lord, yet never come to Christ, but fall from thence to hell. 2. They will not come to Christ, when God called Christ to come to man in the work of redemption, he had a will, only he wanted a body, God fitting him with that, he cries, lo, I come, Heb. 10.7. but when God calls man to come to Christ, in the work of conversion, though he have a body, yet he wants a william. They will not come to me, joh. 5.40. Christ prepares for their coming, sends and beseeches them to come, looks and waits long for their coming, and yet sits down with this sad complaint, They will not come to me, that they might have life. 3. Confiteor me esse Apostatam nam fidem diabolo da●am non servavi. Lut. They come further from Christ by daily departures, and dreadful apostasies, Luther was a good Apostate, he came from the service of the Devil to Christ in the Gospel, many are bad Apostates, they came from the profession of Christ in the Gospel, to the service of the Devil, and while they so come from Christ in his Gospel, shall they come to Christ at his Table? 4. They come forth against Christ as those, Mat. 26.47. A multitude with swords and staves to take Christ, men come with swords in their mouths, and staves in their hands, by wicked words and works they oppose Christ. Thus much for the Scriptures, Obj. now secondly for the reasons proposed to promote a general allowance of all to the Table of the Lord, they follow, 1. All have been received to baptism, therefore all may be admitted to this Supper, all being accepted to one Sacrament, why should any be denied the other? Answ. Answ. 1. In the Church of the Jews, under the old testament, some who though circumcised being Infants, yet in the course of their lives becoming ceremonially and legally unclean: they were kept of from the Pass●over, not suffered to enter into the Temple. 2 Chron. 23.19. and shall not the Churches of Christ under the new Testament, be enabled to bolt out black and abominable sinners, though baptised in their Infancy from partaking at the Table of the Lord? Is not filthy wickedness now worse among Christians, than ever ceremonial uncleanness among Jews? 2. Consult the age and acts of the Apostles, we shall find they administered to some the sacrament of baptism, to whom yet we read not that they administered the Sacrament of the Supper, though they were grown men and women. As Simon Magus, the Eunuch, the Jailor, Lydia, The household of Stephana●, it seems hereby they judged somewhat more requisite to this second Sacrament, than unto the first for participation: and that the bear being baptised doth not tender men meet, immediately to communicate at the Table of the Lord, but somewhat more is required to interest men therein, and make them capable thereof. 3. Those who when they were children did, not by any actual evil put up any bar against the effectual benefit of baptism: yet being men by their manifest and manifold high-daring iniquities, do daily and wickedly, and wilfully waylay, and put up continual crosse-bars to prejudice the power, and prevent the profit to their souls of this precious Ordinance, therefore though they than allowed their admission to Baptism: yet they may now be justly denied liberty at the Table of the Lord. 4. For men that remain in their sins, their being baptised cannot entitle them to, or prepare them for the Supper of the Lord, because they are in truth, as not baptised, That which they call their baptism, is indeed as no baptism, in that the main is not, which should essentiate, & integrate the same. As the Apostle says concerning circumcision, Rom. 2.28, 29. That is not circumcision which is outward in the flesh, but that is circumcision which is of the heart, in the Spirit, So that is not baptism which is the bore washing the body with water, Tres sunt in baptismate aqua, sanguis spiritus. Si anum horum detrahas non stat baptismatis sacramentum. Amb. de ijs quimyst. init. Tom. 4. cap. 8 but that which is the purging of the soul, not the putting away the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience towards God. 1 Pet. 3.21. Three things as Ambrose observes, I add a fourth, must meet to make up baptism, water, word, blood and spirit, and draw away says he any one of these and there is no Sacrament of Baptism left. What is water without the word? and what is water and word without blood and spirit? Nihil profuit Simoni Mago visibilis baptismu●, cui sanctificatio invisibilis defuit, etc. Aug. It is not baptism, So than those that cannot pled baptism aright, cannot pled a right by baptism. 5. Wicked men what title and claim they had by baptism to Church-membership, and so to this Church-priviledge to partake at the Table of the Lord, they have meritoriously lost by the looseness of their lives. As a man that is admitted Burgess in a City, hath his ticket or instrument whereby he hath right to al● the privileges of the City, yet for some heinous crime committed against the City, all actual interest in city-priviledges is deservedly lost, his Burgesse-ticket seals nothing in this case, And shall we think that Baptism conveys such a right to privileges in the Church, as sin cannot after interrupt? may not men be debarred from the Lords Supper, because they have been baptised? by what right than can the Church cast any for any wickedness out by excommunication, from that whereto they have right? this were not right, yet deny the Church such a power, and while we may think to do a particular right, we shall be sure to do a general wrong. 6. Wicked men having so woefully abused one Sacrament, they may well be denied the other, That servant Mat. 25. being betrusted with one talon whereof he made no good use, what says the Lord when he comes? give him another talon trying if he will better use that? Not, Take that Talon from him, and give to him that hath ten talents, and cast out the unprofitable servant, Those there be who have not only not used, but miserably abused their baptism, being thereupon bold to break out in the more abominable rebellions against the Lord and his law. Luther tells of a virgin that would thus withstand sin and Satan, I may not, I am baptised: but how contrary are many, Baptiza●a s●● they yield to sin and Satan upon this, we may do so, we are baptised, out baptism shall bear us out, Baptism it is compared to Noah's Ark, 1 Pet. 3.21. men there are, who being in this Ark dare venture out into the deepest waters of damnable wickedness, what floods of filthiness soever they swim in, they do not fear drowning. And shall they have another Sacrament whereupon yet more to presume? O how contrary do many walk to the holy nature of baptism, and that holy ●ame put on them by baptism! O how often therewith have they lain down in the dirt, blacking that beautiful robe cast about to cover their nakedness, and cleanse their filthiness! Amb tom. 4. lib. de ijs qui initiantur m●ste i●● c. 7. Zanch. in explic. Ep ad Eph, cap 5. It was a custom of old when any was baptised, the Minister delivered a white garment to be put on, saying, Take thou this white, holy and immaculate vestment, and see thou bring it forth without spot at the judgement seat of Jesus Christ, whereupon one Muritta baptising one Elpidophorus who afterwards proved a profane wretch, he brings forth the white garment, and holding it up, shakes it against him, saying, this linen garment Elpidophorus shall accuse thee at the coming of Christ, which I have kept by me as a witness of thy Apostasy, O where will they appear who have taken their Baptismal coat and colours, tumbling therewith in mud and mire of monstrous sins! The Font whereat they were baptised, the book wherein their Baptism is recorded, shall rise against them, and the other Sacrament will but damn them yet deeper. O sad to be sunk to hell in the abuse of both these blessed Sacraments! 2. Obj. Children among us are in a promiscuous manner admitted to baptism: now why should Infants be received to one Sacrament, and their parents though wretched refused at the other? Answ. Answ. In pondering this I am put to a present stand, yet I bow my knees before the God of Heaven, and beg the guidance of his good spirit, my souls desire and prayer is to be led into all truth, I may err but I will not be obstinate, a little child with Scripture-sight shall lead me, yet until otherwise convinced I shall give out my thoughts in two things. 1. That the next parents though naught, and not themselves for the Sacrament of the Supper, yet their children may be admitted to Baptism. 2. That though their children be received to Baptism, yet they themselves for their own sins may be excluded from the Supper of the Lord. To make out the first, let us observe, how children are among us admitted to Baptism upon a double ground. 1. By virtue of somewhat to their remote parents. 2. By virtue of somewhat to their immediate parents, though in their practice perverse and naught. 2. That from parents remote whereupon we admit children to Baptism, is the covenant of grace, the promise of God made to their religious ancestors and their seed, from generation to generation, Act, 2.38. The promise is to you, and to your children, and to them that be afar of, Two things, 1. To your children indefinitely, not to your next children only, and there cease, but unto your children still, and childrens children. 2. To those who are afar of, that is, as Mr Beza interprets, Annota. mayor. to your children afar of, in remote ages to come: yet the promise runs and privilege reacheth from pious predecessors to far distant posterities, whereupon we administer to Infants the Initiating-seal of the promise though their next parents are impious, and for their impieties debarreable from the Supper of the Lord. When God made a covenant with the the creatures not to drown all flesh more by a flood, and set his bow in the cloud as a token he would not have it terminat in the next generation, but extend to perpetual generations to come, Gen. 9.12.15, 16. and shall we think that God will cut short the Covenant of grace to his servants and their seed because of the sins of some interposing? That forecited place Gen. 9 Rupertus allegorizeth, interpreting the rainbow to signify Christ and God's spiritual covenant in Christ, which notwithstanding the dark and black clouds of daily sins shall abide perpetual, and baptism as the visible sign the Lord hath set in the heavens of his Church, to assure the same. This only I urge that if God would have a covenant so inviolable that concerned a temporal benefit to creatures in common, O how Interminable than is that covenant which is made peculiarly to his children concerning eternal blessings? And as God takes care the covenant should continued, so some sign of the covenant. By virtue of this covenant so made to men long since, remote children yet are accounted holy. We consider such two ways. 1. In respect of the common condition of nature in Adam, so unclean, children of flesh, of wrath, of death, of the Devil. 2. In respect of the peculiar covenant of grace with Abraham, So children are holy, the children of God, to whom baptism may well appertain, Gen. 17.7. I will, says God to Abraham, establish my covenant with thee and with thy seed after thee, in their generations. The plural number without period. Every good man that ever was, is, or shall be, being the son of Abraham the Father of all the faithful, hath as large and lasting a part and privilege in the covenant (the same for substance) as Abraham himself had. It is to him and his seed, and seeds seed, in their generations. Whereby they are born, though in respect of corruption, filthy: yet in respect of the covenant, holy: Rom. 11.16. If the first fruits be holy, the lump is also holy: and if the root be holy, so are the branches. In the chapter the Apostle proves the conversion of the Jews, against which it might be objected, O they be a vile and wicked people. Grant, In regard of their own sinful condition, they be miserable: yet in regard of God's covenant made with their progenitors, their estate is recoverable. For if the first fruits be holy, the lump is also holy, and if the root be holy, so are the branches. The Apostle compares the ancient Patriarches to the first fruits and root, not in respect of their persons, but in respect of the promise made to them and their seed, as chrysostom before, and Calvin after well expounds it. The lump and branches are their succeeding posterities even to the present people of the Jews, to whom the covenant continues, with an entail not cut of, by reason of which they be called holy, and their case hopeful. Object. Ai, the next generation to Abraham. Answ. Yea, the same to generations remote, as not only the lowest boughs which are next the root partake of the nature of the root, but the highest twig that is farthest of from the same: so not only the next generation to Abraham, Isaac, and jacob, partakt of the privilege of the covenant, but also all the Jews that followed, though at the greatest distance, had a right to the same covenant with its sign and seal thereupon. Object. Thus it was to Jews who were branches of that root, but what is it to us Gentiles? Answ. Gentiles conver●ed, though they be not as the Jews, natural branches: yet they are engrafted branches, receiving the sap, moisture and fatness of the root as well as the rest, Rom. 11, Some of the native branches were broken of, and thou being a wild Olive wert grasted in, and made partaker of the root, and fatness of of the Olive tree. The Apostle opens a twofold estate of the Gentiles what they once were, what they now are They were a wild Olive, wholly barren. There be two kinds of Olive trees barren, one accidentally, so upon a goats licking it (as Pliny reports) the other naturally, Plin. nat. hist. lib 17. cap. 24. so having the shape and leaf of the true olive, but wanting the juice and fruits. Such were Gentiles with their leaves of moral virtues, somewhat like, but no right bred grace, yet than a●ter to the Gentiles is brought in a twofold benefit. 1. An engrafting into the right root, called to become one Church with Abraham and the Fathers. 2. A partaking of the root and fatness of the Olive-tree, that is, of all the privileges of the covenant made to Abraham, and enjoied by the Church of the Jews. That as they and their seed in their generations had a right to the covenant, and to circumcision the seal thereof, So believing Gentiles and their children on in their generations have right to the Covenant, and to Baptism whereby the Covenant is sealed. And as the Jews though their children were abhorred of God for their sins sake, yet they were beloved of God for the Father's sake, Rom. 11.28. That is for the promises made to their Fathers as the ordinary gloss renders it: so the children of converted Gentiles born in sin, and abominable to God, Propter promissiones patribus factas. yet for their father's sake though remote, and their interest in the covenant, God he accepts them, and we may boldly in baptism tender them to God, having also a title to the covenant, fit to be confirmed by Baptism, notwithstanding their next parents for their notorious naughtiness be denied the table of the Lord. 2. We accept children to the Sacrament of Baptism, Apolloni. middlebu. min. ca 5. Quest. 4. from somewhat considerable, about their immediate parents, though such whose wickedness worthily deserves the suspension of themselves from the Supper of the Lord, as 1. Wicked parents with us, though they transgress the covenant, yet they do not renounce the Covenant, as now Turks do, whose children therefore, should any of them be occasionally cast among us, though we should suppose some of their Ancestors to have been pious, yet seeing their parents nearer have so renounced and abjured the faith of Christ, and professedly disavowed and disclaimed the covenant of God, and so broken the course, the cause lies clear why for such children we should forbear their baptising, till themselves shall seriously seek it. Aliud est fidem violare, aliud est abjurare. But now scandalous Christians, though they do violate the faith, yet they do not so abrenuntiate the faith, so to abrogate and make all voided that no privilege should pass down to their posterity thereby. 2. Such wicked parents though they be not of the Church, yet they be in the Church. The visible Church is compared to a floor, wherein is both corn and chaff, Mat. 3.12. to a field wherein is both tares and wheat. Mat. 13.25. to a great house wherein are vessels both of gold and silver, and of wood and earth, 2 Tim. 2.20. It is like Noah's ark, Nec proper ma lo● bonos de seramm, sed propter bonos malos eijciamm. wherein are creatures both unclean and clean, like Jeremiahs' basket, wherein are figs some good, some very bad, we must help remove the bad from the good, not remove from the good, because of the bad, as Austin counsels in this case, and such bad meritoriously deserve immediately to be cast out, yet till by excommunication regularly carried they be cut of, they have some privilege for them and theirs, which turks and pagans possess not, sure as they within the Church are subject to some censures which those without are not, 1 Cor. 5.12. so they enjoy some advantages which those without do not. Their children may have the benefit of Baptism. 3. Those parents though they live in a sinful course, yet they live under a Gospel call, and so the promise is to them and to their children, Act. 2.38, 39 The promise is to you and to your children, even as many as the Lord our God shall call, Consider we a twofold call. 1. A direct call on God's part to man. 2. A reflect call on man's part returning to God. The Apostle says not. The promise is to them and their children, who answer Gods call, but to as many as the Lord our God shall call: Wicked men Echo-like that live under the word, do not speak back again to God, yet God speaks to them, and gives them a Gospel-call. A through effectual call it seems those had not Act. 2. for the Apostle bids them Repent, ver. 38. Yea, and that other expression, ver. 39 seems also to lay forth as much, To as many as are afar of, whom the Lord our God shall call: which Calvin, Piscator, with other Expositors interpret to be a brief description of the heathen Gentiles who are afar of in respect of the Covenant, as many of them as shall be called by the Gospel from Gentilism to Christianisme, the promise also thereupon shall be to them, and to their children, and to them thereupon may well appertain than the baptismal seal of the promise. A eal equivalent to this have men among us, though many do not walk according to that call, yet by virtue of that they have, they may lay some claim to the promises, both for themselves, and their seed. Object. How can promises pertain to men only so called, seeing godliness hath the promises, 1 Tim. 4.8. Answ. Promises are of two sorts, promises of grace, promises to grace: promises of grace to be received, promises to grace that is received. The latter looks in a peculiar manner to pious men, who as grace is received of them, so it is improved by them, whereupon to that grace they have much more is promised, Mat. 25, 29. The former refers to Gods elect, that live under the Gospel, though possibly for present their lives be lose and vain, yet as they have their part in the means of grace, So they have their right to those promises of grace that attend thereupon: and not themselves only, but their children also. To them and to their children there are Ordinances of grace with their promises: hereupon the parents abiding under the ministry of the word, their children be brought under the administration of baptism. 4. Those parents though they be wretched in the practices of life, Aliud est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Aliud 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. ye they be right in the principles of faith: they believe well, though they live ill, Jam. 2.19 Thou believest there is but one God, thou dost well, men believe the Scriptures are the word of God, they do well, they believe Christ is the son of God, They believe the duplicity of natures, and triplicity of Offices, and yet all one Christ: They believe well, at lest in respect of the matters believed, though not in respect of the manner of believing, yet they so believe as brings in this benefit to their children to be accounted holy, 1 Cor. 7.14. The unbelieving husband, is sanctified by the believing wife, and the unbelieving wife is sanctified by the believing husband, else were your children unclean, now are they holy: I shall open two things in the text. 1. What that believing is in the parent whereupon the children are reputed holy. 2. What that holiness is in the children, that comes upon the parents believing. To learn what this believing is, let us look a little into the state of Faith. Faith (as Augustine well observes) is taken in a twofold sense. Fides est interdum id quod credimus, interdum id quo credimu●, Aug. lively 13. de Trin. cap. 2. comb. lib. 3. dist. 23. Either for that which by us is believed, the object, or word of Faith, Rom. 10.8. Or for that by which we believe, the grace, or the act of Faith, 2 Thes. 1.11. The word of Faith is twofold. General, that is the whole revealed will of God. Special, that part of Gods revealed will, that relates to Christ, Eph. 5.26. The work of Faith is twofold. Internal, Actus fidei ●licitus. which is the renewing and purifying of the heart, Act. 15.9. Externall, Actus fidei imperatus, which is the reforming and well ordering of the life. Now persons may be said to believe according to faith in the first sense, though they do not reach the latter, though their hearts be not renewed, their lives reform, they have not the work of Faith, yet they hold the word of Faith, assent to, and are persuaded of the truths God reveals in his word concerning himself, his son, and man's salvation by him, and such are said to believe. Luk. 8.13. Act. 8.13.37. And thus the Apostle intends that text when he speaks of a believing parent, Aug. Epi. 89. ad Hilar. quest 40. Tertul. lib. 2. ad ●xorem. cap. 2. & 7. Loquitur de talibus infidelibus Pauius apud quos nec legis cultusque Dei nec Evangelij ut fundamenta ex●m rudera. Synops. pur. Theolog. either husband or wife, 1 Cor. 7. For the sense, that not only the ancient Fathers, as chrysostom, Tertullian, Augustine, etc. but also the current of late writers, as Calvin, Beza, Pareus, etc. gives of the text, lies thus. In Corinth though there were some professing the christian faith, yet others were still professed Infidels, abiding in their old heathenish idolatries, and this being sometimes the case of married couples, the scruple was not whether a truly regenerate husband, might live with an unregenerate wife but whether a husband believing Christian religion, might devil with an Infidel-wife or a Christian wife, with a heathen husband, or not rather to separate, as in Ezra. This doubt the Apostle resolves thus, that for married couples, if one professed the faith of Christ, though the other remained an Infidel, ye need not separate, ver. 12, 13. and than he gives the reason ver. 14. For the unbelieving husband is sanctified by the believing wife, etc. not in respect of his personal condition, for than he should not abide an unbelieving husband, but in respect of his conjugal relation: though he contin●e unclean towards God, yet towards his believing wife in the way of marriage he is sanctified, Tit. 1.15. this he further makes good, by that good influence that is upon the children, Else were your children unclean, now are they holy. For the childrens holiness what that is. Holiness here some distinguish it into actual and potential, denying the first, Aquin. and granting the second. But potentially the children of any parents, though never so unbelieving, are holy: God can make them so, Sure such children as are of believing parents, are said to be holy in regard of some present real holiness. Holiness therefore is again twofold, fiducial, and federal, Sanctit●i 1. ex foederis & fidei. Holiness of Faith, and holiness of the Covenant, let parents believe in the best sense, and have faith of the best sort, that is most holy, Judas. 20. yet they cannot transmit this holiness to posterity, to make their children holy, Therefore it must be covenant-holiness here meant, children are holy, that is, are separated from Turks and Pagans', Ezra. 9.2. being members of the Church comprehended in the covenant, Interessed in the promise, and for this very cause, as Beza upon the place affirms are to be admitted to Baptism, though their parents whose faith is good, B●za in 1 Cor. 7.14. yet lives being bad are to be debarred the Table of the Lord. 2. Grant such children be received to the Sacrament of Baptism, yet their parents may be refused from the Sacrament of the Supper, which may be easily evidenced as follows. 1. From the difference of these Sacraments in themselves, Baptism is a more passive Ordinance, it requires indeed a receptive capacity, and capable receptibility in the subject, which the child hath. The Lord's Supper is a more active Ordinance, and requires such personal activity, and actual ability to such things as sure such parents have not. 2. From the difference that is between such parents and their children, thus 1. The parents in their sinful condition are easily manifest. The sign at the door tells the state of the house, he that runs may read how wretched they are, whereas their children do not manifest such marks of misery: though not in judgement of infallibility, yet in judgement of charity wherever we see less evil, we may hope more good, and we may believe that even of profane parents, there be children God hath chosen. 2. The parents in their several corruptions are actually opposite, and by their filthy lives, do wilfully unfit themselves for the Supper of the Lord, and openly oppose the Lord of the Supper, and all its saving good to their souls: whereas the children do not lay themselves cross to the benefit of Baptism, actually to interrupt the blessing thereof, or the Lord therein. 3. From the rules of justice and equity, suiting with the grounds of reason and scripture, we may conclude this, that it is equal and just, the punishment of the parents should fall upon themselves to debar them the Supper of the Lord, but unjust and unequal the children should be punished for their parents sins, as to be deprived the privilege of baptism. God himself though sometimes he punisheth posterities for their parents sins in things that concerns their bodies and temporal being, yet not their souls in things that concern their saving good, Read Ezek. 18.2. and so on. Let not us for parents sins punish poor innocent infants, as to withhold that which tends to their eternal good, though it is just themselves suffer in the other Sacrament. 4. From other supplies that may be made to children, for their bringing to baptism, in case the parents be cut of by just censures, suppose parents cast out the congregation by excommunication, Amesi. lively 4. de conscie. c. 27. de bapt. yet Divines hold that in such case some other Christian friends may stipulate or undertake by promise for their children, and so to be baptised, the like for children illigetimate, but no such supply can bring in profane parents to the Lords Table, to partake upon others undertake, they yet palpably impenitent: or one parent may supply the place of the other, to tender the children to baptism. The believing mother makes up the room of the profane father, if the child may have right to baptism by the mother's title, than it is to be received to baptism, upon the mother's tender, whereas a wicked husband is not to be accepted unto this Supper, upon his wife's interest. So we see that childrens admittance to Baptism may and aught to be, yet their parents prohibited the Table of the Lord. Object. Object. All come to the hearing of the word, therefore why not all as well come to the Table of the Lord? Answ. Answ. To state this right, two things let us attend. 1. There are several persons to whom the word is to be preached, and so they to hear, to whom yet the Lords Supper is not to be administered, they being not to receive. 2. There be several reasons for which many must hear the word preached, while yet they may not receive the Lords Supper administered. For the persons to whom we hold out the word, and yet do not bring out the Sacrament, as 1. Despairers of the mercy of God, let a man be Magor-Missabib a terror to himself, his heart a hell of horror, his conscience an Acheldama a field of black blood, Augi● Psa. 4● tom. 8. fol. 280. so that as Augustine describes such a one flying from the field to the city, from the city to his house, from his house to his chamber, etc. no rest but as if infernal fiends in fearful shapes followed him, haling and pulling his perplexed soul as it's written, Polidor. Virg Ang. hist. lib. 25. Id credo non suesse somnium sed cons●ientia scelerum. how Richard the third so dreamt the night before his death, yet to such miserable men, God's mercy in the word may be opened. This course took those Divines that visited despairing Spira. 2. Opposers of the spirit of God, how did Stephen preach the word to the stiffnecked Jews, though they always resisted the Holy Ghost, Act. 7.51. than that oppose God's Spirit speaking in the word, because it crosses their filthy lusts and fleshly liberties. The case is common, with many as it is recorded of the Kingdom of Congo, they much embraced the Gospel at first, but when they found it restrained their carnal liberties, and would not allow plurality of wives, they opposed it as fast: when it is thus, yet we must out of the word instruct those still who oppose themselves, 2 Tim. 2.25. Isa. 46.12. Harken ye stouthearted that are far from from righteousness stouthearted yet harken; we must preach the word to them that reproach the word, Jer. 20.8, 9 look upon Christ himself, Luk. 7.30. 3. Relapsers from the grace of God, we see how Paul presseth the Apostate Galathians, throughout his Epistle, and how the Lord speaks to fallen Ephesus, Rev. 2.5. though men gone back far, yet the word may reduce them. Latimer in a sermon to Edward the sixth, tells of one so far fallen from the know● truth, as to mock and scorn it, yet recovered by the word, and brought in by repentance. 4. Seducers of the Saints of God, their words be perilous to others, Rom. 16 18. eating as a gangreen, 2 Tim. 2.17. Zozom. lib. 7. cap, 7. yet God's word may be powerful upon them, words with them of mere reason may avail nothing, except to prejudice, Lapidand● sunt haeretici sacrarum liierarum argumentis At. yet words of Scripture upon them pressed may prove profitable. Theodosius the Emperor desirous to reason with Eunomius an Arian Bishop, his wife Placilla the Empress hindered it, lest her husband should be seduced by his words to like of his heresy. Constantine in all the disputes before him with the Arians, would still call for the Word of God, as the only way, if not to convert, yet to silence and stop their mouths, Tit. 1.10, 11. 5. Perverters of the truths of God, men that mingle and mangle the Scripture: Yet the way of Scripture rightly stated and understood, is that way wherein with them it is our duty to deal. How did the Scribes and Pharisees wrong the sacred truths of God; yet see our Saviour rightly turns Scripture truths upon them: yea the very devil abusing Scripture, yet Christ uses Scripture against him, Ma●. 4. Indeed to pervert and wrist Gods written word, is a fearful sin, 2 Pet. 3.16. It is as Oecumenius makes it, as if the bodies of the holy pen men should be taken and tortured, their limbs racked, till murdered, yet towards men thus sinning by the word endeavour their good. So we have some of those several sorts towards whom there is good use, and for whom there is great cause ●hey should come to the hearing of the word, which yet are no way meet to communicate in the Sacrament. The use of the word for ●he good of such sinners, God in his word warrants, as we have seen in passing through the particular instances, but yet warrants not their entertainment at the Table of the Lord. Sicut fontes scaturiunt etsi nemo inde hau●iāt, ita postores non d●sinunt concionari etiamsi nemo proficiat. Chr●s, in Mat. Ho. 15. God requires of his ministers to preach the word, whether people will receive it or not, whether they will hear, or whether they will forbear, yet speak thou: Ezek. 2.5. In this respect chrysostom compares good pastors, to fountains that ever sand forth water or conduits that are always running though no pail be put under. But must we make tenders of the Sacrament whether any will receive it or no? Though men be obstinate, obdurate, desperate, Apostate, must we give the Sacrament to gain them? 2. Come we to the reasons for which many must hear the word preached, that yet may not receive the Lords Supper administered, those we draw to two heads. 1. Because of those things which the Sacrament doth more properly and necessarily require than the word does. 2. Because of those things which the word doth more properly and ordinarily effect than the Sacrament does. Those things that of necessity are more required to the receiving the Sacrament, than the hearing of the word, To mention but these two. 1. A right knowledge of the word. 2. A true faith in the Lord. To each man's meet receiving the Supper of the Lord, is necessarily required, A right knowledge of the word, because before any man herein eats or drinks, he must examine himself, viz. by the word. A man can take no true trial of himself, but by the unerring rule of God's holy word, yet neither can he make any such use of the word, if he be ignorant in the word: men must hear the word, that they may understand it, and be ●ble to examine themselves by it: yea it must not only be the touchstone, but the loadstone to draw men to self-examining, to which they are not only unable, but unwilling, they had need hear the word, they may be persuaded thereunto. Also true faith in the Lord Christ is necessary, or no meet receiving of the Supper of Christ. An historical faith to believe the reports of the word, and that what a man hears from the word, is the undoubted will and infallible truth of God, may work much to 'cause some profit by the word, when a m●n shall believe that those thundering-thre●ts, those heart-awakening woes are indeed the mind of God against sin and sinners, etc. it moves and amazes, but now to partaking in the Supper, nothing to be done without a further and more effectual faith: many have faith to believe God and Christ, that are re●ealed in the word, and so may hear with some benefit, but they have not faith in God, in Christ, as he is to be eaten in his Supper, and so cannot partake with any profit, but prejudice, and so had better forbear the Table of the Lord, though they may hear the word of the Lord. The present exercise of those saving graces of knowledge and faith, are not so absolutely necessary to the first hearing of the word, they being ordinarily brought in by the hearing of the word. The word gives knowledge to the simple, Psal. 19.7. and faith comes by hearing, Rom. 10.17, 14. The word must be attended that these may be attained. For the help of the Ignorant to knowledge, admirable are the condescensions of God in his word, making what is fundamentally necessary open and easy. The spirit in the word, as the Angels in Jacobs ladder, in some things ascending the capacity of the most learned, in other things descending to the capacity of the meanest, and most simple, whereas the Sacrament is exceeding sublime and mysterious: Adoro plenitudinem Scriptura. Tert. He that said I adore the amplitude of the Scripture, might have added, and I adore the altitude of the Supper. Here we stand and say, O the height and depth, etc. O great is the mystery. Every mystery is not a Sacrament, but every Sacrament is a mystery. The word Sacrament imports a thing both sacred and secret. In mini●● visibili maximum lat●●. O the treasures that are here hid and shut-up from common eyes. Chrysost. Hom. in Matth. Hom. 3. de Laza. The word as Chrysostom speaks, is open and easy to understand, exposed to the capacity of the most unwise. God hath so bowed down (saith he) the holy Scriptures, that when proud man will not speak low to little babes, August. Tra, 35. in joan. Enarrat. in Psal, 8. God doth. The word, saith Austin, is the candle and lantern God hath light up, and hung out, that none walk in darkness, but come to knowledge thereby. And for faith, God hath fitted the word as an instrument to help to that. The word doth us good, if God therein lays hold upon us. The Sacrament doth not good unless we therein lay hold upon the Lord, which is only by faith. The word serves for the publishing and proffering a part in Christ, peace, and pardon of sins. The Sacrament serves for the applying of these to our particular souls, which yet cannot be without faith, therefore this ordinance doth more absolutely require the present use of faith, and so lesser are found fit for receivers at the Table of Christ, than to be hearers of the Gospel of Christ. 2. Let us see some of those things the word of God doth more properly and ordinarily effect than this Supper of Christ, whereupon men are to hear, though not to receive. Aquinas upon the 2. Epist. to Timothy, 2 Tim. 3.16. affirms a fourfold effect of the word, as its proper fruits. 1. It evidences truth. 2. It evinces falsehood. 3. It pulls of from evil. 4. It draws in to good. The two former, saith he, are more speculative, and tends to the information of the judgement; the two later are more practical, and make for the reformation of man's life, they be all excellent works proper for God's word to produce, not so the Sacrament. Three things I shall propose, something suiting to these as proper effects of God's word. 1. Conviction. 2. Contrition. 3. Conversion. Conviction, Tit. 1.9. 2 Tim. 3.16. Of all errors it is hardest to convince a man of errors in opinion, yet this is done by the word. At the Council of Nice, there was a subtle Philosopher, that in dispute puzzled all the Bishops present, who were about 318. At length up steps a plain Christian man, and in the name of Christ, with the naked word of God, so convinces the man of his error, that before all he freely confesses it, as long, saith he, as men's words were only pressed, Ruffin. lib. 2. cap. 3. I could repel words with words, but what is weak man by his words, to withstand the word of God? I yield. Secondly, Contrition: It is God's word that pricks and breaks the hearts of hardened men, Act. 2.37. Jer. 23.29. Is not my word as a hammer that breaks the rocks in pieces? Here is law and Gospel as hammer and pillow to break the most flinty stone. It is a speech of Luther, as I remember, as often, saith he, as I read or hear Paul speaking in his Epistles, it is as if I heard the noise of thunder, shaking, and breaking my heart: and indeed the Gospel is the proper instrument to 'cause kind heart-breakings. Sacramentum hoc Lucharistia tunc opportunē celebratur quando corda m●●talium pradicatione panitentiae compuncta desiderio gratia Christi tene●●tur. Conviction of sin, and contrition of soul are works preparing to the Sacrament, not produced by the Sacrament, when a man is pricked in his soul for his sin, and his soul set with unsatisfied desires after Christ, than is he (saith Musculus) meet to celebrated the Supper of Christ. It is a broken vessel wherein God puts the oil and wine of sweet Sacramental comforts. Thirdly, Conversion, This the word doth, Psal. 19.7. The word of the Lord i● perfect, converting the soul. Augustine hearing a voice from heaven that bade him, take, L●●. 〈◊〉 conf. cap. 12. and read, whereupon turning open the new Testament, he fell upon that place, Rom. 13.13, 14. Which so s●nk into his heart as proved the means of his conversion, as he himself reports it. This Augustine as he was once preaching, by reason his memory failed him, beside his purpose, fell to reprove the Manichaeans, Possidon. de vita Augustini. and by a Scripture or two, not before thought of, to confute their heresies, by which means, Firmus a Manichaean was converted, as he after acknowledged to Augustine, blessing God for that Sermon. O the wonderful ways of God by his word, for the conversion of sinners: so that the most sinful men, may, and must hear God in his word, though yet unmeet to approach the Table of the Lord. Object. Obj. O but the Lords Supper is a regenerating and converting ordinance as well as the word, and therefore all aught to come thereunto. Answ. Answ. The Supper of Christ is not a regenerating and a coverting ordinance as is the word of God. This I shall endeavour to make good two ways. 1. By some distinguishing demonstrations. 2. By some establishing confirmations. To distinguish, and so demonstrate that the Lords Supper is not for conversion as God's word is, Note. 1. It is one thing to convert a wicked man from the state of sin, wherein he hath continued, and another to convert a godly man, from an act of sir, whereto he hath relapsed. The recovery of a good man after some sinful fall, is called conversion, Luk. 22.32. When thou art converted, etc. This reviving and restoring of grace first received in a Servant of God, suppose the Sacrament of good use, and great force, yet for conveying the first grace, whereby a wicked man is converted and brought in to God, this concerns not the Sacrament, but the word by the hearing of which the worst may be converted, Act. 28.27. 2. It is one thing to cause conversion, and another to clear conversion. A man converted and having in the word received that incorruptible seed whereby he is born again, 1 Pet. 1.23. which yet may lie more hid in the heart after coming to a Sacrament, it's made to spring more forth, whereupon he appears a convert more professingly than before. 3. It is one thing to be converted at a Sacrament, another to be converted by the Sacrament. Sacramentum habet vim impetratoriam gratiae, ration● orationum ministri & Ecclesia, etc. Guliel. Paris. Tract. de Sacr. We know when the Sacrament is administered there is some expounding, exhorting, preaching, praying, Minister and Congregation calling upon God, in the Name of Christ, suppose a sinful man's heart be wrought upon, yet than it is rather by somewhat at the Sacrament, than by the Sacrament itself. 4. It is one thing to be an ordinance that possibly may convert, another thing to be an ordinance properly to convert; if we grant a man may possibly be converted by the Sacrament, yet we deny the Sacrament to be properly for conversion, as the word is, or thus, It is one thing intentionally to convert as an institution, and another accidentally to convert as an occasion. That the Sacrament in its ordinary use is purposely appointed of God for sinner's conversion, as the word is, I utterly deny: though of some particular conversion, the Sacrament should prove an occasion, as other things may do. The visible works of the Lord, the holy lives, and courageous deaths of the Saints, Act. 7.60. Si Stephanus non sic orasses Ecclesia Paulu● 〈◊〉 haber●t. the fervent prayers of Gods suffering servants, etc. have been occasions of some conversions, Augustine ascribes the conversion of Paul, to the prayer of Steven, Act. 7.60. Act. 22.20. God's sore and sudden judgements upo● notorious sinners have occasioned the same upon some● Waldus, whence were the Waldenses, seeing among many met to be merry, one suddenly fall down dead, it struck to his heart, he went ●ome a penitent, and proved a precious man. Augustine reports how his father Patricius was wrought upon, August. conf. lib. 9 c. 9 and brought from being an impure Manichee, by the prudent carriage, and pious conference of his mother Monica. I meet with a story of one that gave a young prodigal a ring with a deaths-head, with this condition, that he should one hour dai●y, for seven days together look and think upon it, which bred a great change in his life. It were easy to instance in many things that have occasioned good in this kind, so may the Sacrament do, yet not be an ordinance proper to convert, as the word is. 2. To establish and confirm the truth in this case, that the Lords Supper is not that whereby is to be wrought the conversion of sinners, which I shall make good from three grounds. 1. From the ways of conversion. 2. From the kinds of conversion. 3. From the terms of conversion. 1. If the Sacrament converts sinners it must be by one of these two ways. Either as a natural Agent, by an inherent power; or, as a moral Instrument, by a derived power. The Sacrament sure doth not cause conversion in a physical way, Causa in acts posita impossibile est non sequi effectum. from its own vigorous nature and inherent power, for than when that cause is actually proposed, such an effect would be ordinarily produced, as appears is not. Not natural immediate cause, hath the effect going before, or long after. Conversion is before any Sacrament received in several, and in other they receive Sacraments, and yet the Lord knows, remain unconverted. Natural causes and their effects do so reciprocate, as bring but forth the cause, and soon follows the effect. But so the Sacrament works not upon Saints, where there is no such putting of bars, as may be conceived by sinners, yet how often is the effectual benefit thereof from them suspended? they find not the good a great while, yea it may be much of that they so much desired, they meet not with, which argues it hath no inherent power, as a natural cause to act from itself upon good, much less can be looked for upon bad. There is difference between a natural and a moral Agent, God conveys power to a natural Agent to do its own action, so to work from an inward principle of itself, as to bring forth such effects as pertain thereunto. This is not the case of the Sacrament: And as it hath not a power to work by way of inhesion, for the conversion of sinners, so neither by way of dispensation or elevat on of God, to that use in its ordinary course, as it hath not a power to convert from an absolute inherence, so neither as an instituted ordinance, set apart for that purpose. Second causes can effect nothing without the continued concourse of God, the first cause, carrying them to tha● end he intends. Instrumentum totum subservit actioni principalis agentis a quo dirigitur. Instruments only work, as they are appointed, assisted, and directed by the chief Agent; now for the Sacrament to convert, is not the work for which God hath ordained it, for which God attends or intends it. It hath not derived power for that purpose, should the Lord have meant it for this matter, he would have left some precept to enjoin the Minister to give, men to receive it for that end, some promise to accompany and encourage the use hereof for this cause: as he hath done for the word to dispense and hear that, that thereby sinful men may be converted and live, Isa. 55.3. Incline your ears, hear, and your soul shall live: Yea men for present dead in sin, yet the Lord hath promised they shall hear his word and live, Joh. 5.25. The hour is, the dead shall hear the voice of Christ, and they that hear shall live, hence we have warrant to sound the word of life in dead men's ears, but where is the warrant to put the bread of life into dead men's mouths that thereby they may convert and live? 2. Conversion for the kinds is twofold, as we find by its footsteps in the new Testament. A conversion from Gentilism to Christianisme. A conversion from the state of nature to grace. The later is more than the former: The former conversion may be, and yet men never come to the later, as it were easy to instance from divers in the Apostles days, who though they were converted from Paganism to Christianisme, yet were not converted from the corruption of nature, to a state of sanctifiing grace, now this conversion being the more excellent, it is the more difficult, yet if the Lords Supper be proper and prevalent to 'cause this conversion, which is the greater and rarer, why not apt and easy for to effect that conversion rather, which is lower and lesser. Yet 1. If so, than how was it that our Saviour sending forth his disciples to convert men to the Christian faith, out of the Pagan world, did not appoint them to administer his last Supper, as well as to preach the Gospel, and baptise, Matth. 28.19, 20. Act. 26.17, 18. God speaking to Paul, I sand thee to the Gentiles, to open their eyes, and to turn them from darkness to light, etc. How? by giving to them the Sacrament of the Supper? Not, by opening to them the doctrine of the Gospel. 2. If so, than were we to go to the Jews, Turks, Indians, to convert them to the faith of Christ, at our first entrance we were to administer the Supper of Christ, as well as to preach the Gospel of Christ, that being a converting ordinance, and a way for the first gathering a Church, as well as this. 3. The terms of conversion, are from sin and satan, to God and Christ, Act. 26.18. Now if the Lords Supper be set up in the Church to convert and turn men from sin, to God, than when we find men most desperate in sin, and distant from God, obstinate in sin, and most opposite to God; we aught to press them, not only to take good counsel from the word, but to take bread and wine at the Table of the Lord, to deal with them in this as in that, 2 Tim. 4 2. I charge thee to Preach the word in season, and out of season, that is, saith one, both to the willing and the unwilling. Yea, and so must we deliver the Lords Supper, urge it upon men, though no mind to it at all, if that it be as the word appointed for their conversion, yea and may not the Christian Magistrate go further? who in the Church, though he cannot force inward conversion to the faith, yet may compel to the outward means appointed for men's conversion, and so constrain people to partake at this Table. This than might colour that custom and constitution to enjoin all at 16. years of age, to receive the Sacrament: the thoughts of it makes my heart even quake, no doubt this hath been the damnation of divers. As the cruel Spani●rds forcing the Indians into the rivers, pretending baptism, and so caused the destruction of numbers. But to conclude, if the Sacrament be a converting Ordinance, give the word whereby it is ordained to convert, for as it must have a word of Institution, or it could never be a Sacrament, so it must have a word of Institution for what it works as a Sacrament. Object. As is the word so is this, a teaching, therefore a converting Ordinance. Answ. A teaching therefore converting, it follows not, if we respect even the word, its end in teaching is not only the converting of sinners, but the perfecting of the Saints, Eph. 4, 11, 11. Christ gave some Apostles, some prophets some Evangelists, some Pastors and Teachers, not some Pastors, and some Teachers, as in the rest, but joining them together, Pastors and Teachers, intimating (as Augustine and so Anselme expounds) two names but one office, importing how the Pastor's place is to reach. But as we observe who, so why. For the perfecting of the Saints, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. for the jointing of the Saints. The Greek word is from Chirurgeons who set limbs in joint being out of place, and bind up splittered bones that be broke, so as they may become strong and sound. When Gods Saints by their lesser slips are like limbs out of joint, or by greater falls are brought to broken bones, Psa. 51.8. Ossa anima spiritualia. Basil. than it's the Pastor's place by teaching to set, and bind so up, as after to be more strong and stable: Thus in the ministry of the word, the great end why we teach is, the good of God's Saints, to recover their relapses, to increase their graces, and so present them perfect in Christ, Col. 1.28. So the Lords Supper which we administer, its true it teacheth, to wit, the Saints of God, to see the love of God, in the death of Christ, to know and to apply the mercies of God, in the merits of Christ, it teacheth them the virtue of a crucified Christ, in conquered lusts, and quickened graces, etc. Ob. Baptism is a regenerating Sacrament, Object. and therefore so likewise is the Supper of the Lord. Answ. Answ. We grant that Baptism through the Spirit is regenerating, Joh. 3.5. Except a man be born of water and the spirit, etc. Christ says not, born again of the spirit and water, but of water and the spirit. He puts not water after the spirit, as fire is put after the Holy Ghost, Mat. 3.11. as if the word water, were only added to explain the spirit, the workings whereof are as water, so fire there is after the Holy Ghost, to show tha● its workings are like fire, intending by both but one thing, but water is set before the Spirit, thereby to import that another matter besides is meant, to wit the Sacrament of Baptism, the outward sig● whereof is water, and indeed baptism in ordinary course where it may be had, ●s of necessary use for regeneration and salvation. There- our Saviour speaking to Nicodemus, who was a man that might have Baptism, if he would, assures him, that except he was born again of the water of Baptism, Hooker. Ecclesia polit. lib. 5. 59 & 60. and the work therein of the spirit, he could not enter into the Kingdom of God. Hooker affirms that thus all the ancients were want to expound the place. And that Baptism is through the spirit a sanctifying and regenerating Ordinance, the language of other Scriptures speaks the like, Eph. 5.26. Tit. 3.5. 1 Pet. 3.21. But that therefore the Lords Supper is so, it follows not, nay rather therefore the Lords Supper is no regenerating Ordinance, because Baptism is, for as the Lord will have Officers so Ordinances for several uses in his Church, and not all about the same business, as we say of the four Elements, that one is earth, another air, etc. it is for the good of the universe, and that this is earth, and that air, is the pleasure of God the creator, so for the two Sacraments, that one is for regeneration, another for confirmation, is for the good of God's Church and chosen, and that this is for spiritual birth, and that for spiritual growth is from the pleasure of the Lord, the institutor. The Lord appoints two several Sacraments, to suit to two several subjects, and to serve for two several intents, Baptism being a regenerating Sacrament fits to Infants, who are subjects capable of the inward grace, therefore of the outward means. The Lord's Supper being a corroborating Sacrament, fits for men converted to, though weak in the Faith: God loves to work by means, now for the regeneration of Infants, there is no other fit Ordinance, whereof they are capable but baptism, Men grown, for their conversion and regeneration, there is the word preached, a proper Ordinance whereon ●hey aught all to attend for that end, Jam. 1.18.19. Of his own will begat he us, by the word of truth, wherefore let every man be swift to hear. The Sacraments as they are meet for several persons, so for several purposes. Baptism is the breeding Sacrament. The Lord's Supper is the feeding Sacrament. We must be bred before fed, and yet fed, being once bred: Baptism is once administered, it being sufficient we ere once new born. The Sacrament of the Supper is often celebrated, because we need frequent food. Baptism is a Sacrament more contract, the subject being capable of lesser receipts. The Lord's Supper is of a more enlarged compass, the subject thereof having larger capacities, grace once received though at first but little widens, as it were the soul, and so is meet for more. Baptism hath but one ma in business, the regenerating, washing, purging the soul from the stain of sin, hereupon one sign in this Sacrament sufficeth, to wit water meet to intimate its main work. The Lord's Supper hath more business than one, hereupon two signs are taken for this, to wit, bread and wine which do lively signify what this Sacrament concerns, Two things especially. The increasing of our grace. The enlarging of our peace. Bread represents that in Christ, which is to confirm and settle our souls in grace. Wine represents that of Christ, which is to comfort and settle our souls in joy and peace. In this Sacrament Christ comes forth more fully with his body and blood, that he may the more sweetly solace the souls of his servants, so we see the work of regeneration pertains to Baptism; the Lords Supper hath other glorious designs, that peculiarly concern the Saints of God. Object. Object. Unprofitable hearing the word is as great a sin, as unworthy receiving of the Sacrament, therefore if men be not suffered to receive, they should not be allowed to hear. Answ. Answ. Unprofitable hearing God's word, is a great sin we grant, Mat. 11.29. Heb. 2.3. woe than to that soul that adds to that this great sin of unworthy receiving the Sacrament, that man who falls between these two millstones, no marvel he be ground to powder. The ship wherein Paul was Act. 27. cast in a tempest, where two seas met, was without help broken all to pieces. ver. 4. O let men beware they do not plunge their souls where two such great sins meet, for how shall they than escape? Men guilty of the one have the more cause to keep of from the other, 2. Unprofitable hearing the word is not so great● sin, as unworthy receiving the Sacrament, which I shall clear from a fourfold cause. 1. Because unprofitable hearing is a sinful act, only in the manner, whereas unworthy receiving is sinful, both for matter and manner, men remaining in a bad estate, are bid to hear the word, it being a duty that concerns all. Three or four times in one chapped. we have this charge given, That whoever hath an ear to hear, must hear. Rev. 2.7. an● God threatens those who refuse to hear, Act. 3.23. so that men hearing, the act is materially good, being that which God commands, and the action is not to be omitted, but the Actor, and the manner of the action is to be reform. They do not sin because they hear, but it is their sin not to be bettered by hearing, but now for wicked men to receive the Sacrament, there being no word to warrant it, the very thing in the substance of it is sinful, besides those evil occurrences in the transaction that makes it more out of measure sinful. 2. Because natural men coming to the word, may possibly not be always and altogether unprofitable hearers: whereas so often as they come to the Lords Table they are certainly always and altogether unworthy receivers: they hearing the word, though they do not gain so much good as we wish, yet they have some benefit, they are not converted, yet they are restrained, and in many things reform, as Herod was by hearing of John, Mark. 6.20. they are not altogether won, yet they are often almost persuaded; as Agrippa was in hearing Paul, Act. 26.28, 29. so it's meet they hear still. Whereas wicked and worldly men, let us take them when we will at the Table of the Lord, they are all every one, altogether, every way unworthy receivers, sitting under a sad sin. 3. Because this unworthy receiving doth ever suppose unprofitable hearing of God's holy word. Both 1. Before the Sacrament, and 2. In and at the Sacrament. Whereas unprofitable hearing doth not so suppose unworthy receiving. Wicked men in that they receive the Sacrament unworthily, we may conclude they have often heard the word unprofitably. The word of God it doth always accompany the Sacrament, though the Sacrament goes not ever w●th the word, where the Sacrament is there is the word. A word of institution, and some words of instruction, of ordination and exhortation. At the Sacrament there is not only to be seen terrene signs signifying, but also to be heard, the divine word sanctifying, so that a man cannot sin against the Sacrament in unworthy receiving, but he also sins against the word by unprofitable hearing, whereas a man may sin against the word by fruitless hearing, and yet not sin against the Sacrament by wretched receiving, and so the sin less, being single, than when they both meet in action and season together. 4. Because in unworthy receiving the Sacrament greater mercy is abused than in unprofitable hearing of the word, and that in two respects. 1. If we respect the matter of mercy represented. 2. If we respect the manner of representing mercy. The mercy represented in the Sacrament for the matter of it, is surpassing. The word proceeds out of the mouth of the Lord, the Sacrament issues out of the side of the Lord, nearest his heart. In the word we have the say of God. In the Sacrament the sealings of God. In the word is the breath of Christ. In the Sacrament the blood of Christ. In the word we have the love of God, in the voice of Christ. In the Sacrament the love of God in the cross of Christ. The representing of mercy in the Lord's Supper, for the manner is very admirable beyond the way of the word. The most taking way upon the heart, is proposing, of objects to the eye, Lam. 3.51. Great sorrows on earth are caused by doleful spectacles, and the best comforts of heaven, lie in beatifical visions. At the Lord's Table there is not only sounds for the ear, but signs for the eye, not only audible documents, but visible elements, that we may not only hear of Christ, but see him, yea take and taste him, all the senses are met with, the more to move the heart, God helps the weaknesses of his servants, as Christ condescended to Thomas, Joh. 20.25. Come see the prints of the nails, put thy finger into the hole of my side, etc. thereby to strengthen his faith; and thus in this, and therefore where such mercy is abused, sin must needs be increased. So seeing the surpassing greatness of this sin of unworthy receiving, compared with the sin of unprofitable hearing, it may justly deter many from the Table of the Lord. Object. Obj. All with us have taken the covenant, therefore all may take the Sacrament. Answ. Answ. It's true, men among us have taken the covenant, and could we see in their course a care accordingly to keep it, it might be a good mark and means to commend them to the table of the Lord. History tells of the old Covenanters or Leaguers in France, who solemnly took an oath, the tenor whereo● runs thus, If I incline to contrary parties, If I make any marriage, enter any friendship, If I afford any help, or say to any of them; God speed you, that day let a thunderbolt strike me dead. And O the care in their after course, thoughts of their covenant, fears of the thunderbolt, held them in continual awe: were things thus with us it were something. But 2. For many among us, their taking the Covenant, is as no taking, for though they have taken it into their mouths, to vote for it, and into their hands, by subscribing their names to it, yet they never took the Covenant into their hearts, to love it, or into their lives to folllow it. They once took it, but they have untaken it again; what they once said with their mouths, they have often since unsaid with their lives, they have made a covenant with God and heaven, but live as if they had made a covenant with the devil and hell, Isa. 28.15. They have by abominable rebellions broken their covenant with God, and covenant breakers are no fit Sacrament takers. Those that go out from the covenant are not meet to come into the Sacrament. To come to the use of a Sacrament in the abuse of a covenant, to think of a Sacrament course under a covenant curse, such may rather look for judgements from God, than Sacraments from Christ. I have read of Vladisl●us King of Hungar●, having by covenant and oath, concluded with Amurathes of an inviolable peace between the Turks and Hungarians, Amurath the sixth Emperor of the Turks. yet after contrary, this Hungarian King proclaiming war with the Turks, and being in a hot battle where Amurathes was worsted, he pulls out of his bosom the articles of the covenant, spreads them and looking up to heaven, cries, O Jesus Christ, to these leagues thy Christians have sworn by thy name, and broken them again, If thou be God revenge this wrong, Instantly the battle turned, Vladislaus was slain, his Army put to the sword, annal Silesiorum. Chron. Car●on. lib. 15. and O the butcheries and bloudsheds that followed upon the Hungarian Christians. Those men than who have broken a solemn Covenant made more immediately with God himself, shall they think to come ●o this Table, and drink the blood of Christ? nay but rather that God to their adversary's should give out their life blood to drink, and in stead of their eating the body of Christ, God should cast out their carcases for the fouls of the air to eat. 3. The very covenant engages many to keep, and to be kept of from the Sacrament. Doth not our Covenant bind us to reform Religion according to the word of God, in doctrine, discipline, and the practice of the best Reformed Churches. Now to admit men in their known wickedness, to the Table of the Lord, crosses ●he word of God, and way of the Churches, this is not to reform, but deform Religion, this is not to conform it to the word of God, but to transform it according to the will of man, doth not the covenant require to extirpate profaneness and what ever is contrary to sound doctrine and the power of godliness, and will this allow profane men to press to the Table of the Lord? Doth not the Covenant enjoin, to go before others in an exemplary Reformation, to be humbled for our own, and other men's sins, etc. And yet may we embrace men in their sins, to sit down at the Supper of the Lord? Or doth not the covenant, as in other things, so in this, call for a stricter course than ever? Object. Object. If men be bad, they have the more need of all good means to make them good, therefore the Sacrament. Answ. Answ. Bad men indeed have need of means to make them good, but than it must be fit and suitable mea●s appointed for that end. Qui scelerate vivunt in Ecclesia & communicare non desinum putantes se ●ali communione mundari, discant ad emend tionem nil proficere sibi. Orthod. Cons Art. 7. c. 2. de Sac. The Sacrament is not the proper means to make bad men good, but good men better. God hath set apart means, some for the reformation of the bad, some for the confirmation of the good; now the proper means must be applied to each, or all in vain. Suppose a man in a dangerous disease, physic is God's Ordinance, and a good means for cure, but than it must be proper physic, suitable for that disease, or else it may kill, instead of cure, So in this. 2. The Lord's Supper in stead of making bad men good, bad men may thereupon become much worse, so it often falls out when such receive, from a double reason. 1. By reason of their own presumption, having been at the Sacrament they the more boldly cast themselves o● the occasions of sin, and if they be o●ertaken in some foul fault, it is but going to the Sacrament again, and all will be well, us a diseased man ventures into the cold, and wrongs his body with all diet, making account to recover it by a few pills, or a purge, at present or at spring. 2. By reason of God's just judgement, they profane the Sacrament, and God leaves them to their profaneness, they come in sin, and God lets them go out in sin, and go on in it, worse after than ever, God in stead of giving them Christ, he gives them up to their lusts, which they prefer before Christ. 3. To put men openly bad by the Sacrament, may be the best means to make them good, 1 Cor. 5.5. Deliver such a one to satan for the destruction of the flesh, that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord. A sad punishment so to be given up to the devil, yet thereby is meant a double good, the destruction of sin, and the salvation of the man, that thereby flesh may dye, and the spirit may live. A smart salve, but a sweet cure. A proper plaster for filthy sores. Object. Object. Thus to put people from the Table of the Lord, is an imperious novelty struggled for by men that still love and long to Lord it. Answ. Answ. To debar notorious sinners from this Sacrament, 1. It is no novel thing. 2. It is no imperious thing. To clear both, 1. Let us see how this is no new censure, if we look either to later times, or to remoter times. Convocations and Canons have concluded this as a charge upon the Minister, Canon. 26. that he should not in any wise admit any of his f●ock openly known to live in sin notorious without testifying repentance. In the Rubric of the common prayer Book before the Communion, it is thus enjoined. That, If any be an open and notorious evil liver, so that the congregation is by him offended, the Minister shall call him, and advertise him in any wise not to presume to the Lords Table, till he hath openly declared his repentance, and given satisfaction to the congregation offended. So if persons persist in variance, he must not suffer them to partake of the Sacrament till ●hey be reconciled: If one seek peace and the other refuse, the Minister shall admit the penitent person, but not him that is obstinate. Yea memorable is that which the commination against sinners in the Ser●ice-Book, mentions. How in the Primitive Church there was a godly discipline, that such persons as were notorious sinners, were put to open penance, that their souls might be saved in the day of the Lord, and others made more afraid to offend. In stead whereof, till the said discipline may be restored again (which thing, saith the Book, is much to be wished) it is thought good, etc. Yea if we go to further times the Ancient Fathers speak up full to this. Ambrose, Volo veniam reu● speret petat cum lachrymis, petat populi totius fletibus, ut ignoscatur obsecret & cum 2ᵒ ut 3ᵒ fuerit dilata ejus communis credat remissiu● se supplicasse. De poenit. l. 1 c. 1●. who lived in the times of Gratian and Theodosius Emperors about the year of our Lord, 374. saith thus, I will that he that is guilty and hopes for mercy, to seek it with tears of the whole people, and if twice or thrice he be yet refused at the Communion, let him think he hath repent too slightly, and go to his work again more throughly. When Theodosius the Emperor had commanded a slaughter at Thessalonica, and soon after offered to come to the Sacrament, Ambrose forbids him, Wilt thou, saith he, reach out thine hands yet dropping with Innocent blood, and with them lay hold of the blessed body of the Lord, or life them up to put that precious blood of Christ to thy mouth? Chrysostom is both vehement and abundant in this, Chrys. T, 2. in Mat. Hom. 83. Col. 670. who lived about the year of the Lord, 398. To the Lords Table, saith he, it is worse to admit a man openly polluted with sins, than a man bodily possessed with devils, referring to the custom that than was to keep of 3. sorts from the Supper of the Lord, Catechumeni, Energi●meni, Profani, and accounting this last the worst, Let him be, saith that Father, who he will, a Magistrate a Captain, a crowned King, if he come in his sins, he must be put by: Not small vengeance hangs over their heads, that will admit such men to the Supper of the Lord. I had rather give myself a sacrifice, than give to such men the Sacrament, thus he. So Cyprian, Cypr. Sermo. de lapsi. 50 pag. ●21 lib. 1. Ep. 3. lib. 4. Ep. 2. who was about the year after Christ, 240. exceedingly condemns the rash giving the Supper of the Lord to some relapsed from the fait●, and wretched in their life, and commends other congregations for care in this case, concluding that this holy ordinance doth not appertain to all Justin Martyr, who was about the year after Christ, 150. in his Apology for Christians to Antoninus the Emperor, writes thus, In our Assemblies we admit none to the Lords Supper, but such us being baptised, continued in professing the true faith, and leading such a life as Christ hath taught. His testimony is the more to be marked, living so near the Apostles times, not above thirty years after St. John, yet than th●s course was practised in the Churches of Christ, and so running along through centuries of years, I might multiply in late writers, Bilson in his Christian subject, and perpetual Church-government: Not only the lack of the word and Sacraments (saith he) but the abuse of either, greatly hazards the weal of the whole Church, yea casting holy thngs to dogs, etc. procures a dreadful doom as well to consenters as presumers, Divina maiestas & Evangelica disciplina exigit de publicis peccatoribus etiam petentibus sacra denegetur communio. 3●. pa. quast. 30. Art. 6. it being the way to turn the house of God into a den of thiefs, if profane ones be allowed to defile the mysteries and assemblies of the faithful. Yea I find Aquinas, The majesty of Church-discipline (saith he) should never suffer this, to let open, and known offenders presume to the Table of the Lord, so that to debar such is no new thing, and 2. Not imperious thing. A ministerial power to censure scandalous sinners, sure belongs to the Officers of the Church, though a lording power over due privileges, pertains not to any in the Church, such exercise of dominion our Saviour forbids, Mat. 20.25, 26. as may prove to any unjust or injurious, but shall there therefore no rule or authority take place in the Church? Bucer well notes out of those words of Christ in Matthew against Anabaptists, ●e that according to the will of God bears rule godly, Multi sum qui disciplinam imperium esse iudicans ac rationalem castigationem superbia as● signaniquum non sit imperium nisi ubi aliquid iubetur igiustum noc superbiae nisi ubi negligitur disciplina. doth nothing less than domineer or lord it, for he does most of all serve. In this we are the servants of the Church, not lording, but labouring for its good, i● purity (and peace, Austin speaks excellently to this, for it seems in his time there were those who opposed this power in the Church, and charged it to be an imperious pride, whereupon he says thus, there are many who accounted good discipline an imperious rule, and ascribe just censures to be the fruits of pride, whereas it is not imperious, but where somewhat is commanded injurious, nor is it pride but where due discipline is neglected and contemned. It's horrible pride in those that will not submit to Christ's government. When reformation begun in Luther's time, some profanely professed they had rather live under the dominion of the Turk, than where all should be ordered according to the will of God: such I fear, remain still that will not come under rule, though that which Gods word requires. Duty in this kind, the Apostle three times in one chapter commands, Heb. 13. Remember them that have the rule over you, ver. 7. Obey them that have the rule over you, ver. 17. Salute them that have the rule over you, ver. 24. Sure in the Churches of Christ, though none to lord over, yet some to rule over, Christ hath appointed: so some to be ruled. Obj. To put people by the Sacrament, Object. is a judging men's consciences, when God alone knows the heart. Answ. Answ. The true knowledge of men's hearts is twofold, to wit, 1. Intuitive, which is by an immediate looking in. 2. Arguitive, which is by a further going about. In the first sense, so God only knows the hearts of men, his eyes by an instant and direct inspection, takes at once an exact view of all the wind and corners of the crookedest and closest hearts, Pro. 15.11. In the second sense, so we know the hearts of men by fetching a compass, and comparing one thing with another, and by reasoning from one thing to another, we argue out the estate of men's hearts, Pro. 20.5. Counsel in the heart of man is as deep waters, but a man of understanding draws it out, let man's heart be never so great a deep, and the counsels of it lie never so low, yet the fiery and flaming eye of God, suddenly sees to the bottom. An understanding man can by reasoning and observing draw out the the heart in its counsels and colours by degrees. The inwards of every man's heart lies open and naked to the eyes of God, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the of a beast, when the skin is pulled of, the belly ripped up, and parts cut asunder, lie open to our eyes. Thus the Apostle expresseth it in the greek Heb. 4 13. yet we may by outward discoveries learn to know much of men's hearts. A twofold knowledge is here further considerable. A knowledge by the roots. A knowledge by the fruits. 1. By the roots, that is, by what runs within, the workings in and of the heart more abstractly, thus we know our own hearts by the thoughts. 2. By the fruits, that is, by what comes ordinarily out from men in their words and deeds, and thus we know other men's hearts, Mat. 7.16. By their fruits ye shall know them. And now accordingly we judge. If I would judge my own heart and estate, I will look first to what lies inward; and observe the workings and move of my own thoughts. If I would judge another man's heart and estate, I will look to that which lies outward, and observe the way of his words and works. There is a great difference between Gods judging of men and our judging of them. God judgeth of men's ways and works, according to the heart, and inward thoughts. If a man's heart be good or bad, so God reckons the man good or bad. We judge of men's hearts according to their ways and works, when the stream of a man's life runs puddle water, we judge the spring head in the heart, is unclean and naught. 1. We judge by their words of their hearts, for out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks, Mat. 12.34. The Physician looking upon the sick man's tongue, when he sees that foul, he concludes it is worse within, when men's tongues are black and speckt with oaths and lies, it argues a rotten heart within. It's a smoky house where ordinarily the smoke breaks out at doors and windows. By the words of men's mouths they bewray the thoughts and estate of their hearts, Act 8. When Simon Magus offered to buy the gifts of the Holy Ghost with money, than Peter knew his thoughts were bad, and his estate was naught, Pray that the thoughts of thy heart may be forgiven thee, for I perceive thou art in the gall of bitterness, and bond of iniquity, ver. 22, 23. 2. We judge of men's hearts by their works. The hand of the watch or clock without, show how the wheels within go. The heart is the fountain of all actions, Out of the heart proceeds, murders, adulteries, thefts, etc. Mat. 15.19. An evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart, bringeth forth evil things, Mat. 12.35. We read of Tiberius, when one pretended to the crown, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. joseph. de bello jud. lib. 2. cap. 5. and could not by many questions be tripped in his tale, he desired to feel his hand, and finding not there the delicacy and softness of a prince, but the hardness and brawniness of a mechanic, he soon discovered the truth, Let men pretend to Christ, yet if their hands be hard, if they be exercised in the works of wickedness, the workers we know be naught, and we judge them men unmeet for the Table of the Lord. Object. Mat. 7.1. Judge not. Answ. Rash and unjust judging of men our Saviour forbids, which as Augustine hath well observed, consists especially in two things. 1. When we see a man do good, Non reprehendamus ea quae nescimu● quo animofiant, nec ita reprehendamus qua manifesta sunt ut desperemus sanitatem. Aug. de ser. dom. in moni●. lib. 1. yet judge his internal meaning therein to be naught. 2. When we see a man do ill, and so judge his eternal being, that therefore he will never be good. When we judge a wicked man unmeet for the Table of the Lord, we do neither of these, we judge him from his ill actions, to be for present in an ill condition, what his case shall be for future, we enter not upon. Object. Object. Though men be wicked, yet there is no word to warrant their refusal from the Sacrament. Answ. Answ. To the Sacrament, Is there any word to warrant their acceptance? That which the word of God doth not embrace and allow, it doth refuse and forbidden. If the Scripture doth not approve their admission, it doth approve their rejection, as in other things so in this where God's word is not with, it's against. Quadam in Scriptures & sunt & dicuntur, quadam in scriptures sunt etsi non dicuntur. 2. Warrants for things are found in the word two ways. Formally in syllables. Virtually in principles, by explicit sentence, or implicit consequence: many things may have a sufficient Scripture-warrant, though not a direct express Scripture-word, To the case in hand, That professed Pagans', Idiots, mad men, persons actually drunk are to be denied the Supper of the Lord, the Scripture surely warrants it, yet where doth the Scripture expressly word it? The Gospel condemns all unworthy receiving, and declares that whoever eats and drinks unworthily, eat and drink their own damnation, 1 Cor. 11.29. and the Gospel commands all pastoral care to prevent sin, and by all good ways to preserve, and save the souls of such as are under charge, Act. 20.28. Now come to such as we may be sure will fall under this soul damning sin of unworthy receiving the Sacrament, if we admit them, to prevent so sure a sin, and so for a judgement, the Gospel well warrants our refusal of them: where there is in men an unworthiness in their conditions, there will be a certain unworthiness in their transactions, if sinful in their estates, than sinful in their acts, so that as a real unworthiness, secret and hidden, yet known to a man's self, should make him of himself forbear the Table of the Lord, so real unworthiness when it is visible and open gives from God's word a sufficient ground to them in place that know it, to forbidden those the Table of the Lord. And if God's word warrants that to be adjudged visible unworthiness, and debarrable from the Table of the Lord, which ariseth only from a privative cause, as want of wisdom in a fool, or use of reason in a frantic man, than without doubt the word warrants our judging that to be visible unworthiness, and sufficient to debar from the Lords Table, which also proceeds from a positive cause, to wit, open evils in wicked men. 3. God's word yet gives forth its warrant more fully not to suffer such sinful men to conscience with us at the Supper of the Lord. How the word forbids our communion with them, and commands our carriage towards them: Two things there are to be taken notice of. First, There is a private familiarity in ordinary converses. 2. There is a public fellowship for religious uses. Now our care and carriage towards wicked men, in respect of both these, lies thus. For the former the word of God requires, that we draw forth from among them. For the latter, the word of God enjoins, that we put them fo●th from among us. If we respect intimate familiarity in private converses, the Scripture calls us to withdraw from them, 2 Thes. 3.6. We command you brethrens, in the name of Jesus Christ, to withdraw yourselves from every brother, that walks disorderly. He doth not say, withdraw from the Congregation in which, or from the public Ordinances at which, 〈◊〉 disordered brother is, but from the disordered brother himself in respect of private society, and keeping him company so explained, I●. 14. Do not company with him, that he may be ashamed, to withdraw from the Congregation where he is, it doth cast shame upon them all, as well as him, which injustice the word not where warrants. If we respect public fellowship in religious exercises, and for the congregational use of holy Ordinances, than the way the word prescribes is, not to come out from among them, but to cast them out from among us, we must keep our stations still, and remove them, not ourselves. This course the Apostle appoints the Church of Corinth, concerning the incestuous person, 1 Cor. 5. In which chapter he speaks to the point in hand, two considerable ways. 1. By a figurative allusion in the 7. verse. 2. By an illative conclusion in the last verse. 1. The Apostle alludeth unto the figures and fashions, as the feast of the Jewish Passeover was want to be celebrated, to wit, with unleavened bread, Exo. 12. Now the similitude being thence fetched, we may think the Apostle therein had a principal aim to direct these Corinthian Christians the rather, touching the course that aught to be taken among them, for the more pure administration of the Supper of the Lord, it succeeding in the place, of the Passeover, and persuades to purge out the old leaven, that is, put out scandalous and vicious livers, that as formerly the Paschall, now the Eucharistical feast may be well kept, ver. 8. the reason is given in that leaven let alone it may sour the whole lump. Cum fratre in que vitia hac reperiuntur, non solum sacramenta sum edenda sedus communam escam decet, ut crubescat cum vitatur, & se corrigat. Amb. come. in 1 Cor. 5. One scandalous sinner let alone, may prove prejudicial to the Assembly, purge out therefore. etc. Let not profane persons be suffered to eat with you at the Lords Table, so Ambrose long since, and Diodat of late, understands that eating mentioned in the 11. verse, to comprehend. Because their leaven of wickedness, may leaven others, therefore they are to be purged out, and not to be eaten with, now an immutable reason makes an immutable command, so that this Apostolical injunction to the Church of Corinth, is obligatory upon all the succeeding Churches of Christ, where the reason falls. But 2. we see how the Apostle plainly concludes in the last verse, Therefore put away from among you that wicked person, The inference ariseth from somewhat immediately premised, to wit, their own constant way of judgement, which is exercised towards those who are under their discipline, reaching to them within their own jurisdiction. Do not ye judge them that are within? ye so do, and aught to do, therefore put away from among you that wicked man, some have translated it in the neuter gender, to be some wicked thing the Apostle requires the Corinthians to put away, Aug. lib. 3. cont. Par●●. cap. 2. so Augustine once expounded the text, but did after freely confess his error, Lib. 2. Retra. cap. 17. in his retractations putting it in the masculine gender, and referring it to a man, not a thing, put away that wicked man. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The Greek word for wicked properly signifies any evil one, and the Greek Article being added, it notes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one more notoriously evil, as the Devil, or some vile wicked man, hereby the Apostle teacheth, that every evil man is not so to be put out, but such as be more egregiously evil, as this incestuous Corinthian. We find how the Apostle phrases it in the 5. verse. To deliver such a one to Satan, etc. He that is such a one aught to be cast out from Church society, put away from among you that wicked man, and where the like cause is, this course must be used. Object. Object. The Scripture indeed warrants complete excommunication, and casting out from all Church-ordinances, but not suspension from the Lords Supper alone. Answ. Answ. If the Scripture warrants that great excommunication in the whole of it, A quatenus ad omne valet consequ●mia. than in all the lesser pa●ts of it, The whole implies the parts, The greater contains the lesser, and generals include their particulars. Omne majus continet in se minus. Excommunication and Sacrament suspension, are so related, that what word doth bring in the former, will bear up the latter. and if in the Church of Christ there be from the word a power to put wholly out, than there is a power in this or that to put by. I shall clear this more fully by considering the acts of disciplinary power in the Church, two ways. 1. In the kinds and g●adations of them. 2. In the ends and intentions of them. As in the Church there are several sorts and degrees of sinners, so in the Church there aught to be several sorts and degrees of censures, Nemo repent fit pessimus all among us are not alike evil, neither for matter, manner or measure, no man at first is a sinner in the highest degree, so no man at first is to have a censure of the higest degree, as excommunication mayor which cuts of, and casts out from all at one clap. And as for the intent, end, Gladius non inimici necantis sedmedici sanantir. and aim of executing Church-censures, it is for the amendment of sinners, all this power being for edification, and not for destruction, 2 Cor: 10.8. now means must be suited, both in quality, and quantity, as the end may be attained. So much blood is taken away in a disease as may recover the patiented, Tantum destinati sumen dum est quantum ad finem prodest. so much of an ingredient is put into a potion or medicine, as is proper for that man, and cure of that malady. So in exercise of Church-discipline, that and so much of that, as may restore the offender sufficeth, Supplicia non sunt multiplicanda sine necessitate. if a less penalty do it, no need of a greater, and for this course we have the warrant of the word, Mat. 18.15, 16, 17. If thy brother trespass against thee, etc. If upon private admonition he acknowledged his fault, go not further, or if being admonished before one or two more, in case the first have no force, if the second succeeds, there stop, if not rise on. Tell it the Church, and when it comes there, shall not the Church have power to proportion its censures as the plaintiff had before it came there, Judas. 22, 23. Of some have compassion putting a difference, and others, save, Perkins in loc. pulling them out of the fire. The Apostle herein prescribes the course the Church is to take in censuring offenders. Of some have compassion, how? by letting them quite alone, there is no compassion in that, but by suiting judgements to the state of delinquents, where the sinner is more curable, let the censure be more favourable, and where the sinner is more incorrigible and obstinate, let the censure be more terrible and violent. Others save pulling them out of the fire, which is applied to excommunication, of use in desperate cases, and so more seldom. In the Church of Geneva but two in 10. years struck with this doom, as Mr Beza reports. The ancient counsels of Rome had rods and axes carried before them. Rods as ensigns of their lenity if offences less, and offenders penitent. Axes as tokens of severity, if offences were greater, and offenders incorrigible. In the Church it's meet to have respect to offences and offenders, in inflicting censures, those whom a less reforms, spare the greater, we grant 1. Some to deserve the utmost to be cast out from all, to wit, word, Sacraments, and prayer. As God sometimes sees cause to cut of some men by taking away both word and Sacraments from them: Quomodo execidit eos Dominus? tum Dominus excidit, quando propterincredulitatem Evangelium aufert & Sacramenta. Olevian. and thus God is said to cut of those incredulous Jews, Rom. 11.20. so his Officers sometimes may see cause to cut of some men by taking them away from both sermons and Sacraments. It was a worthy expression of an approved Author, suppose any man, Bilson, Christian. subject. part. 3. pa. 63 64, 74. & 52. says he, be he a prince, if he will not submit himself to the precepts of Christ, but wilfully maintain either heresy or open impurity, the Ministers are to admonish him what danger from God is at the door, and if he impenitently persist, they must not suffer him to communicate either in divine prayer, or any holy mysteries, among the holy people of God, but wholly to be excluded the Congregation, Thus was Theodosius the Emperor excommunicated, whereupon Ambrose would not suffer him to enter into the Church of Milan, and it hath been the practice of the ancient Church to shut out of the Congregation of God's people, incorrigible persons, and not to allow them liberty to come within the doors. Yet 2. There may be some to be debarred from the Sacrament only, and to be admitted to the word and prayer, who are more corrigible and curable, Deus iustitiae gladlum oleo misericordiae exacuit. towards whom its good to whet the sword of justice with the oil of mercy, according to the commendable custom of the Church, in the most pure and primitive times, Iust. Mart. Apolog. 2. two sorts we read of, to wit, such who were called Catechumeni, Isiodorus in lexico. who were newly entered into the faith of Christ, not yet baptised, and others who were called poenitentes who for some offence were enjoined to do penance, both these though they might lawfully hear the sermons, and pray together with the rest, Chatechumeni exeunt●. yet they might not partake of the Sacrament, but after the Gospel read, and the Sermon ended, the Deacon was want to say, Go ye hence, ye may departed, Ite missa est. Qui non communicate, dei locum. Greg. dial's. lib. 1 cap. 23. Concils. Cart. 6. can. 6 con. Agathen. can. 60. Lapsi in haeresim agentes paenitentiam cum catechumeni egredi commonentur discodant so in Gregory's time, the Deacon used to cry, you that are not to communicate, give place: to this accords the canons of several Counsels, which required gross offenders, either in judgement or practice, to departed out of the Church, when the Sacrament went to be administered, though they stayed till other exercises were ended, one in this case runs thus, Those who like dogs have gone back to their vomit, we decree they shall join in prayer only with the faithful in the Church, Vide Ep. de cretal. Siricij. but be kept of from the banquet of the Lords Table, that by this correction they may both amend themselves, and be an example to others. chrysostom in divers places seemeth to divide the whole multitude into three sorts, whereof some were commanded away, Chr●. ad pop. Antioch. Hom. 61. and might not communicate, some departed away, and would not communicate, some remained still, who might and did communicate, the former he condoles, the second he condemns, and the last he commends. Whose pious practice it was, with great devotion to partake not only in the word and prayer, but in the Sacrament also. jewel. lib. 2. Artic. 1. de missa priv. Other writers report how in the primitive Church, as all the godly were received to the holy mysteries, Greg. Neocasarriensis, can, so by watchful discipline the apparent wicked and ungodly were removed, and that with great discretion, according to the enormity and quality of the faults. The greatest offenders were utterly excluded from the Congregation, as men not meet to be in the company of the godly, Others were suffered to enter into the Temple, and to hear the sermon, but to go out at prayer, Audientes. Others were permitted to be present at prayer, Cassiodorus out of Socrates Histo. tripar. lib. 9 cap. 35. stant rei, & velu t in lamentationibus constituti, & cum socra celebratio fuerit at impleta co●munio●em non percipiunt. Dionys. Ha. Hierar, cap. 3. but from the communion they were required to departed, of such it's said that during preaching and prayer, they stand mournfully lamenting. but when that evercise is over, they are willed away, without the communion, until they bring forth some more approved fruits of repentance. Object. Object. Ministers have been accustomed a long time to deliver the Lords Supper to all, why should they be more strict now, and people were want all to receive, why any refused now? Answ. Answ. This we shall consider and examine two ways. Collectively as the whole lies together. Disjunctively in the parts asunder. If that which is objected be taken up all together, the main strength lies in pleading custom, thereby to warrant a universal admittance to this holy Ordinance, the weakness of which shall be discovered from two causes. 1. Because such custom hath been cross to purity. 2. Because such custom hath been cross to verity. We find how from a plea of custom the pureness of this precious Ordinance hath been wronged and corrupted in two respects. 1. In respect of the Elements. 2. In respect of the communicants. Upon this pretence such things in this Supper for Elements have been taken up, and continued, as Christ never ordained. To instance in these heretics of old named Aquarij, because in the holy administration they used water only, and no wine, which doing they upheld from a long custom, Cyprian than alive wrote much against them, to refute the poorness of this plea, declaring how absurd it was, when in reason they were overcome, to defend themselves by urging the long custom. Upon this pretence also such persons at this Supper for communicants have been taken in and continued, as Christ never intended. How common hath it been when such days and seasons of the year have come. People merely out of custom have thought they must come to the Table of the Lord. chrysostom cries down such senseless conceits of several in his time. I see many, says he, Chrys. ad. Ep. Hom. 3. rudely and rashly press to partake of the body of Christ, more out of custom than conscience. If the time of lent, or day of Epiphany be come, they call to partake how unprepared soever they be. Thus hath it been with multitudes among us, if some great time, as Easter or the like come about, than of course and custom, they must not miss a Sacrament, making custom their Christ, and Easter their Saviour. Again where custom is without truth, it is only an ancient error, now this custom not alone destitute of, but opposite to truth, we may clearly conclude it. Tertullia's saying is sound and good. Tertul. come. Mar. l. 4. c. 5. That is truest which is f●rst, and that which is first is truest. Now if we look to the first administrations of the Supper by Christ, than by his Apostles, and so on in the primitive times, all were not allowed the Table of the Lord, as is already declared, since sinful men have ●een suffered at the Supper of the Lord, but from the beginning it was not so. chrysostom hath a considerable expression, Aquilarum non graculorum ha● mensa est, Chrys. Hom. 24 in●. ad Cor. says he, The Table of the Lord is that whereon the carcase is laid, we must not suffer chattering jaies to come thereunto, for only highflying Eagles are to feed thereupon, whom he excellently opens, we proceed to the parts of the present objection, which are principally two. 1. That which pertains to the Ministers giving to all. 2. That which concerns the Ministers receiving all. Ministers herein under charge are of two sorts. Some corrupt and vicious, others godly and gracious. If we consider, it is no marvel for Ministers, scandalous and wicked themselves, to admit wicked and scandalous men to the Sacrament. Had we had that clericalis disciplina, which learned Bucer did so often call for in King Edward the 6. days, it had prevented much evil in this kind: for want thereof, O the monstrous miscarriages that have been among many of this order, both in their personal and Ministerial places. To instance in this so black and blame-worthy the prostituting holy mysteries to profane men, but such Minister's practice is a poor precedent to abide by in this business. Come to Ministers holy and good, unto whom this common coming of all to the Sacrament hath been the heaviest burden on their backs, and these I reduce to two ranks. 1. Such as after a while, have eased themselves of it. 2. Such as have stood still, and groaned sore under it. Hereupon many Ministers of precious parts and spirits, that they might be delivered of this load, have been brought to forsake, some the calling, others the Kingdom, and to bid a final farewell to dear England; venturing Sea-voiages, to live in poor wildernesses, to pass through boisterous winds and waves, to devil among wild beasts, with many wants: Others that have stayed by it, how have they mourned under it, both to God and men! Hereupon at many a Sacrament, they have much straitened their own comfortable communion with Christ, through the uncomfortable communion of others, this very ingredient hath embittered the whole cordial: how with troubled hearts and trembling hands have they dealt out the outward signs, with lamenting looks lifted up to God, besides many secret cries to heaven for help in this very thing! Yea and beyond what sorrowful mournings they have made to God, they have given faithful warnings to men in this matter, that they might take heed of sinful receiving. O what beseeching with arguments, and denouncing of judgements, and standing in the way of wicked men, with God's word, as well as they might, to hinder their coming in to the crucifying of Christ, as the Angel of the Lord stood with a drawn sword, in Balaams' way, to affright his going on, to the cursing of Israel. Yea some have proceeded further in the present case, but how fare soever any with us have formerly acted, it is now meet we all do more, and be more exact in this matter. 1. Because these be times of sorer tribulation, when a Church or Kingdom is in trouble, the Lord looks some good should be set up, that was not in it before seen, as when a woman is in travel, all about her look for somewhat to be brought forth, that was not before born, Ezek. 24.6.12. we read what a woe God pronounces against the city, that is as a boiling pot by reason of a great fire under, but yet the scum remains in. O the hot fires of affliction over which we have boiled, and shall we not yet cast out our scum? have the winds been high, the tempest great, the ship of our state often ready to be broke, yet not all join to throw out Jonah? to purge Sacrament and assemblies of profane men, for whose sake these storms have lain sore upon us? yea and why should not such ●onahs themselves submit to be cast out, that so our sea might cease raging? Have we been beaten with God's rod, and yet not bow to Christ's Sceptre? It is reported of Grosthead once a Bishop of Lincoln, speaking of the Discipline in the Primitive Churches, against known offenders, calling them out to public repentance, and casting them out for incorrigible wickedness: which discipline, said he, is not like to be let into this Land, unless way for it be first cut by the blows of a bloody sword. A sword of blood hath cut and killed heaps upon heaps in this Kingdom, and yet are we awk to good ways: are not our necks still stiff? who yields to the yoke of Jesus Christ? 2. Because these be times of sadder desolations, and thereupon sinful men are herein the less sufferable. We read, Levit. 14. A house where the plague of leprosy was, if curable, the course was for the Priest to command the plague stones to be taken away, and cast out into an unclean place, without the city, and 'cause the house to be scraped round about, and the dust scraped of to be poured out without the city, in an unclean place, vers. 40, 41. But if the plague in a house were prevalent, and all the stones, mortar, and timber were taken with it, it was to be all broken down, vers. 45. This hath been the case of Churches and Kingdoms, in whom wickedness hath been so prevalent, and wicked ones so abundant, as no way with them, but pulling down. O that we could see if any course for our cure by scraping of, and casting out leprous and infected ones might yet be, lest we likewise be utterly broken down. Christian Churches who have held wicked men in their lap, God at length hath spewed them out of his mouth, Revel. 3.16. and because they would not cast out others, God hath cast up them, and laid them like a filthy vomit on the ground never to be taken up, and it hath been indeed observed that those Christian Churches, the Lord hath laid waist for indulging wickedness have never been restored or made up again. The seven Asian Churches that once were, are to this day a dreadful instance. 3. Because these be times of brighter illuminations, and therefore it is meet to stand at a greater distance, with the works and workers of darkness. Moore clarity requires more purity. Things good, the goodness of them is more seen. Things evil, the evil of them is now more known. Whereupon it is meet we be more exact to embrace the one, and to refuse the other. Luk 15.8. What woman having lost one piece of silver, doth not light a candle and sweep the house, etc. The house is the Church, the piece of silver lost in the house, is impenitent sinners living in the Church, the woman of the house, is the Pastors of the Church, her lighting of the candle, is their preaching of the Gospel to convert wicked men, the bosom with which she sweeps the house is that discipline which they exercise in the Church towards open offenders: Now its meet when the candle is burning, the bosom should be sweeping. O that now both might be brought and set up in God's house, the candle of clear doctrine, to dispel the darkness of ignorance, and the bosom of strict discipline to sweep out the dust of profaneness, and so all clear and clean. 4. Because these be times of greater Reformation, not of loser toleration; we are not to copy according to what hath been formerly lose, but to labour the amendment of all heretofore amiss. Consider we but the very censures of the Church, how they have been corrupted, abused and perverted, in two respects. 1. In respect of the men they have been inflicted on. 2. In respect of the matters they have been inflicted for. Those that this bow hath been bend upon, and these arrows let fly at, were still men most pious and zealous: carry on crows have been let come to the carcase, when all the powder hath been spent upon Doves and Pigeons, Quid est quod Ecclesiae gladius, viz. Excommunicatio, extrabitur pro re nihili, ut pro re nummaria? Gers. lib. de Eccles. defec. for some circumstantial, poor, pecuniary trifles forbidden the Table of the Lord: as Gerson complains, how in popish times the Ecclesiastical sword was want to be drawn for mere matters of nothing, etc. So since hath it been against God's dearest servants, when the vilest of the people have been fed with the bread of the Lord, and aught not this sad abuse to be reform, and so censures reduced and restored to their Primitive purity? We may well consider for things of this sort, Their first formation, their deformation, and their reformation. The forming of all at first was fair, Church-orders and Ordinances right and regular, but O the foul deformities that have fallen in since, which to us call aloud to labour a reformation, now the Apostle, Heb. 9.10. titles the time of the Gospel, the time of reformation, or the time of correction, as the Greek word signifies, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. and indeed if there be no disciplinary correction, there will be no Gospel-reformation. To close this part we plainly see, that however it hath been, yet now from the present seasons there are pressing reasons why Ministers should manage this Sacrament-matter much more exactly than ever, to set up and keep up such a quickhedge of holy discipline, as may keep of profane men from defiling the holy things of God. Object. The last part that lies in the objection, is the people's plea that they have all often received the Sacrament, and so no cause to be abridged now, to which we say. Answ. 1. The greatest part of people never yet received one Sacrament all their days, suppose they have often received somewhat of a Sacrament, to wit, bread and wine, the earthly signs and visible shadows, not the heavenly and invisible substance. Gregory of Valentia knowing that for some of his seven Sacraments there were no visible signs to be named, held there was no need of such signs to the nature of any Sacrament: Disp. 3. de sacr. qu. 1 & punct. 2, but truly if there were no such signs to be received in the Sacrament, the most of men never yet received any thing of a Sacrament. Not man can actually receive the Sacrament, but he must receive those signs, but a man may actually receive those signs and yet not receive the Sacrament. Godly men they virtually and effectually often receive the Sacrament, when they do not actually receive the signs, and wicked men they often actually receive the signs, and yet never virtually and effectually receive the Sacrament. 2. Have people often partaked of this Supper? how is it than that they are yet so unfit for it? A business that a man hath often done, he is dexterous and ready to, knows how to go judiciously and exactly about it: but O how awk and to seek are the most of men to manage this matter, any that proves them shall find them as unfit and unapt to this holy service, us if they had never come near the Supper of the Lord, their ignorance as dark, their faith as dead, their desires as dull, men wholly unmeet to meddle with these Sacramental mysteries. 3. Have they to this Ordinance been often admitted? truly they have for which the more to be humbled, for sure thereby the more guilt is upon them, and the more wrath is against them, the guilt of blood, and the wrath of God so much the more abides them, so often as they have been at the Supper of Christ, so often they have been guilty of the blood of Christ, 1 Cor. 11.27 I remember M. Greenham speaking of non residents wisheth that this Inscription or motto, might be wri●ten on their study-doors without, and walls within, on all their books they look on, beds they lie on, tables they sit at, etc. The price of blood, The price of blood. The like were to be wished for to all that have often been bad communicants, that in great letters it were written on their shop doors without, walls within, on all their wares, and whatever objects are before their eyes, The guilt of blood, The guilt of blood. O how aught this to affright and afflict their hearts, to be often guilty of the blood of God's dearest son, and Saints sweetest Saviour, once damning is too little for them that have done this deed so often. This at the last day will bring an increase of Judgement, not be a ground for argument, to say, Lord we have received many Sacraments, heard many sermons, Lord, we have often eat and drunk in thy presence, and thou didst often teach in our streets, to this is that astonishing answer, Departed from me ye workers of iniquity, Luk. 13. 4. Have people all in general formerly come to the Sacrament? So there is no particular person but upon condition may come again. It is not for men's persons sakes, but for their conditions sakes, whereupon we dare not admit them: let but their conditions be altered, and their persons shall not be hindered. As innocent Adam having changed his condition, and of good become bad, was turned out, not to eat of the tree of life, so the most sinful son of Adam, if he changeth his condition, and of bad becomes good, he may be taken in to eat of the bread of life, as while men's estates are not good, but visibly bad, we must bar them out, so when those very men's estates are not bad, but visibly good, we may bring them in. That profligate prodigal, Luk. 15. when he repent, and returned to his father, O what music and dancing in his Father's house? how was he feasted with the fatted calf at his Father's Table? and O the welcome that the wickedest man in the world may have to the Table of the Lord, if he humbles his soul, abhors his sin, forsakes his lusts, reforms his life, but if men remain in their manifest wickedness, we can by no means admit them, whatever they have formerly been, as in our persons we aught to grow up, and go on to greater degrees of purity and holiness, so in our Congregations, In Jacobs ladder the Angels of God were ascending and descending, none standing still: to stick in our old wonts, and make no progress in the practice of piety, becomes not Christian●ty. Mat. 5.47. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We must not only in good works do more, but do better, as our graces must be more refined from their contrary corruptions, so holy Ordinances ●rom opposite pollutions. Object. Object. Let Ministers admonish wicked men, and if after that, they will yet come to the Sacrament, of them in this case, is no more required. Answ. Answ. Suppose admonition with wicked men will not prevail, there must be found a larger power somewhere to inflict on such a further censure. Now what that power is, and where that power lies the opening of two or three Gospel-texts will tell us. Text. 1 Mat. 16.19. I will give unto thee (says Christ to Peter) the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven, etc. by the Kingdom of heaven whereof the keys are, is not meant any earthly or civil state, but the Church of Christ under the Gospel, for of that Christ expressly speaks in the verse before. By the keys of this Kingdom are meant several powers of the Church. He says not key, as if but one, but keys in the plural number, for of these there be two at lest. A key of Instruction. A key of jurisdiction. A key of doctrine, A key of discipline. To thee will I give the keys, in that note two things. 1. There must be some persons of such a function and calling as may exercise the power of both keys, power are in vain, except they be drawn into act, Hoc est quod dicimus P etrum gessisse personam omnium Apostulorū quare hanc Promissionem non uni P etro sed omnibus Apostolis factam esse & in illo omnes Ecclesia claves accepisse. Whit. de Pont Rom. and keys be to no purpose, without hands to use them. 2. To all such persons as Peter did represent and include, are these keys to be committed, which as Augustine and others expound, did signify not only all the Apostles present, but the Church in and with her due Officers and Ministers, to the end of the world, Mat. 28.19, 20. as may appear by the power here promised, and after actually given, John. 20.22, 23. To these Christ gives both the key of doctrine, for the unfolding of Scriptures, and the key of Discipline, for the inflicting of censures. Now in this key of Church-discipline there is sure some power of censure beyond admonition, 1. Because else it need not have the distinct place of a key, admonition might be reduced to the doctrinal power, and so be but one key, as those Scriptures declare where teaching and admonishing are conjoined in one sentence and service, Col. 1.28. Col. 3.16. 2. Because else it would not have the proper use of a key, if in it there were not a power, as to open the door and let some in; so to lock up the door, and shut others out, if only to be admonished, and so all taken in. Text. 2 2. Matth. 18.15, 16, 17, 18. If thy brother trespass against thee, admonish him between thee and him alone, if he hear not thee, admonish him before two or three more, if yet he hear not, tell it the Church, etc. The Church is by a Synecdoche, the lawful Governors of the Church, the Pastors and Precedents thereof, to whom the censures of the Church do of right belong. Thus chrysostom and Theophylact among the Ancients, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Pareus and Piscator among our late writers, expound the place. Christ saith not, Tell it to some power in the Church, but tell it to the Church, that hath power itself in an Ecclesiastical way to correct contumacies, and to inflict Church censures, some beyond admonition. 1. Because else the Church representative is able to do not more than the particular complainant hath done, for he hath admonished already, both single and with others, and so much may Christians do, as to admonish an offender, both divers together, as well as asunder, 1 Thes. 5.14. 2 Thes. 3.14. 2. Because else the Church hath not such sufficient ways to help itself, as the particular complainant hath. A private Christian offended, may admonish him that gives the offence, first alone, than before two or three: if yet no redress, he can seek help of the Church, make his appeal thither, now when t●e fault comes to the Church, if it can only admonish, having no power itself to go further, whether is it to appeal? if we think of the civil Magistrate, there was none professing Christianity for 100L. years after Christ, fit to friend the Church, and how unmeet some yet are, in some places to assist the Churches of Christ, is sad to consider: Christ, who proposed standing rules for future to his Church, left it very bore, if he allowed it only to admonish offenders, and than admit them in their offences. We know an offence when it comes to the Church, the measure of the sin is increased and extended higher, therefore the measure of the censure must be proportioned and enlarged further: and sure by the text, the Church offended doth more than admonish. 1. It is to do that which suited to the censures of the Jewish Sanedrin, for though our Saviour in the place doth not refer complaining Christians thither, for he lays down rules to remain, when none of this should be, yet he alludes to that for present, and would have that in his Churches, that might answer thereunto, their censure was more than to admonish, to excommunicate, to put out of the Synagogue. 2. It is to do that whereupon every particular member is to repute the party as a heathen and publican thereupon, not for Church society, but to be as an alien without, this argues more than admonition. 3. The Church doth that whereupon the offender stands bound in heaven, sure more than admonished. 4. The Church is to do its utmost that may gain the soul of the offender, for which there is a censure of the Church, beyond admonition, 1 Cor. 5.5. 1 Tim. 1.20. Text. 3 3. Text is Titus 3.10. A man that is an heretic, after the first and second admonition reject. Reject, The Latin word signifies to cast out again, suppose once out before while not professing Christianity, than so abusing, and declining Christianity, cast him out again, not only admonish him but reject him. The Creek word is said to signify the drawing one out of a city, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as an outcast, and translated to the Church, to note the casting out a man by excommunication, or cutting him of from the society of the Church, this must be done to a man obstinate in a false opinion, sure also to one obstinate in a soul conversation, and this Titus must do, not as a Prince or Magistrate, but as a Pastor or Minister. Object. Object. If any man come unworthily to the Lords Table, he eats and drinks damnation to himself, 1 Cor. 11. ●9. It is nothing to the Minister or to any other. Answ. Answ. Yes, sure it is something to us. For, 1. It is sin to us, if we do not what we can to prevent it. 2. It is sorrow to us, when to prevent it, we have done what we can. If men come to the Lords Table unworthily, and so receive their own damnation, if we may by good means preve●t it and do not, Zanch lib. 1. Ep. pag 66. it is sin to us. We violate charity, and be guilty of iniquity, saith Zanchy, to suffer a man to damn himself with a Sacrament, whom we might restrain, as to let a man with a sword, stab himself, out of whose hands we might keep such weapons of death. The Apostle Paul tells Timothy, that if he admits unworthy men to the Ministry, who are known, or upon trial might be known, he should thereby partake of other men's sins, 1 Tim. 5.22.24. The same shall we, if we admit men to the Sacrament, whose sinfulness is or may be known. 2. This same will be sorrow to us, either from what ourselves may thereby suffer, or from what such sinners do thereby suffer. By such an allowance we may bring on ourselves a sore vengeance. Eli because he suffered his wicked sons to offer sacrifice, to meddle in the Priest's office: O the dreadful judgement that fell both upon him, and his house: he admonished them, but because he restrained them not, 1 Sam. 3.13. by severely chiding them as he was a father, by punishing them corporally as he was a judge, by deposing them from their office as he was a high Priest, saith Diodat. God knows how ourselves may suffer if we restrain not such sons of Belial from the Banquet of the lord Euseb. lib. 3. cap 25. Eusebius reports of John the Evangelist, that he would not suffer Corinthus the heretic in the same Bath with him, lest some judgement should abide them both. Into the Bath of this blessed ordinance, we can with no safety to ourselves admit men known in their sins: suppose while we do our duty we quit ourselves of danger, yet sure the voice of each good Minister is as that of Queen Ester; How shall I endure to see the destruction of my people? they eat and drink damnation in this Supper to themselves. True, yet that which is damnation to them, is tribulation to him, their destruction is his affliction, their sin his sorrow, Chrysost in Matth. Hom. 6●. At inquit Calvinus Chrysostomum siquntus occidi me potius patiar quam haec manus Dei contem●poribus judicatis sancta Domini porrigat. Melch. Adam. de v●a Calvini. shall we think to administer to unholy men these holy mysteries, and no matter to us? There have been those who have thought this something. Chrysostom protested he had rather give his life to a murderer, than Christ's body to an unworthy receiver, and rather suffer his own blood to be poured out like water, than to tender Christ's blessed blood to a base liver: And Mr Calvin in this, resolving as he professed to follow Chrysostom what ever he suffered, denied Bartlerius and some other Servetians for their open unworthiness, Cogita quantis augustijs constringer is ●nam me absent posses celebrari hac conditione ut ad vos usque vel manibus reptarem. Ep. ad Farel. this Supper of the Lord, whereupon arose such violent opposition against him, that for aught I read he was forced to forsake Geneva for a time, at another time Calvin sadly complaining to his friend, upon the approach of a Sacrament, breaks out: O think, saith he, what straits of mind I am in, O that it might be administered me absent, or pass into people's hands some other way. Object. Object. It is the Ministers office to gather, it belongs to Christ at the last day to sever. Answ. Answ. We are to gather, but who? Psal. 50.5. Gather my Saints to me, those who have made a covenant with me by sacrifice, or above sacrifices, as Mollerus upon the place renders it, Saints, who beyond and above outward ordinances, have come up to inward obedience: O it's sweet gathering such Saints in to God and Christ, who being in covenant are fit for the seals thereof. 2. We are to gather sinners, but how? to wit by the preaching of the Gospel, not by administering the Sacrament, Ephes. 1.10. God having made known, What? not the mystery of this blood in the Sacrament, but the mystery of his will in the Gospel. Why? that thereby he might gather all into Christ. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Grotius. in ●p. 1.10. The word, to gather, doth imply how mankind by sin is as a decayed house, by the fall whereof all the pieces are scattered, till workmen come, and out of the rubbish repair, etc. God by the Gospel gathers men up, and restores them in Christ, this is the gathering way, Mat. 23.37. 3. If we may gather, than we must sever, as choosing of some doth imply a refusing of others. When David, 1 Sam. 17.40. chose five smooth stones to go against Goliath, it argues there were other stones he refused, as unfit fo● that business, so when some be gathered, there must needs be others severed. 4. Under the law, the Priests were commanded to separate and put a difference between the clean and unclean, Levit. 10.10. Levit. 11.47. Levit. 20.25. Ezek. 42.20. Object. That was for beasts, places, and things, the Priests were required to divide between the clean and unclean. Answ. Yea and a separation sure they were to make between persons clean and unclean, precious and vile, holy and profane, so as to remove the one from the other, Ezek. 20.37, 38. I will 'cause you to pass under the rod, and bring you into the bond of my covenant, and purge out from among you the rebels. Junius upon the place saith, God compares the people of the Jews to a flock, and himself to a shepherd, who as his sheep pass one by one out of the sheep-coat, by his rod he severs one from the other: so God received some, and rejected others, meaning to make his people more pure, he purged out persons most impure: this difference he puts by using instruments therein, or proposing his practice as a pattern for others to act the like thereby. The rod of good Discipline is excellent to make this difference, when people pass under it, and rebels put out by it, of which the Apostles speaks, 1 Cor. 4.21. Under the law, that the rules of difference between clean and unclean, did reach to persons, as well as places and things, is clear, Acts 10.14, 15, 28. Ezek. 34.17. and shall not the like liberty be allowed under the Gospel, to judge between people and people? 5. In the preaching of the Gospel we must sever and put a difference, so cut out the word, as that each man have his meet portion, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 recte & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 divide. Illyr. in locum. 2 Tim. 2.15. Rightly dividing the word of truth. The Apostle alludes to the practice of levitical Priests, concerning their sacrifices, thereby directing Evangelicall Ministers how to manage their Sermons, applying such Scriptures to the holy and humble, as are not fit for persons proud and impenitent, and may we make no difference in administration of the Sacrament, Cuicunque rei ponis signum ne confusa cum alijs a te non possis agnosci. Aug. in joan. Tr. 25. which being the sealing aught to be the most severing ordinance? 6. Our severing now is fare different from Christ's separating at the last day, in two things. Ours particular, His general. Ours temporal, His eternal. We in severing, judge only some persons, for some practices, known offenders, for foul offences. Christ in separating will judge all, close hypocrites, and close secrets. We sever and put out, so as upon repentance to receive in again, Christ so separates, as to set in eternal gulf between: so casting out as never to come in. Object. Object. If men desire the Sacrament, none are to deny them. Answ. Answ. It is not meet ever to give, what men desire to have: God to his servants gives what is good for them, Deus saepe dat iratus quod negat placatu●. not ever what is asked by them, to sinful men God often grants that in fury, which he would deny in favour. Thus had Israel a King, Hos. 13.11. Thus God gave Israel flesh, Psal. 78.29, 31. While the meat they desired was in their mouths, the heavy wrath of God came upon them. What parent will give the child the utmost it desires? to give a knife into a child's hand, is not so hazardous as to give the Sacrament into the hands of sinful men. 2. It is not the Sacrament many desire, but only somewhat of the Sacrament, viz. the outward elements of bread and wine, the bread of the Lord, not the bread which is the Lord, Joh. 6. When Christ spoke of living bread, some cried, Lord ever give us of that bread, vers. 34. but when Christ told them he was that bread, they murmured and went away. Luther tells of a great man that desired to accumulate Church-preferments, Luther in Hosea. pure bread and wine being at his table, he points with his finger to them saying, O those be things for which I love this kind of life: so its bread and wine, why many desire the Sacrament, as Tanners, they desire but the bark of the tree, so men desire the bark of a Sacrament, this appears to be all they desire. For, 1. Give them the outward signs a●d they are satisfied, having the bread and wine in their bellies, they bless themselves like Micah having got a Levite into his house, Judg. 17.13. never thinking whether they have Christ in their hearts or no. 2. Deny them those things, and their anger is up. In nature the concupiscible faculty of the soul is backed by the irascible, anger is moved, when desire is denied. Let the Minister deny bread and wine, O how they are disquieted: Let God withhold Christ, that troubles them not. When outward signs are not, a gracious soul desires Christ, Psal 63.1. I thirst after the, O Lord, in a dry and barren land where no water is: so such a one thirst after the Lord where no wine is, no Sacrament is; or when outward signs are, yet a sanctified soul is not therewith content, but longs after the Lord, he cannot be quie● with bread and wine in his hand, except he have Christ in his heart. Habeo Christum in charta non in cords. But as once Bernard complained, Ah me poor wretch, I read Christ, but I cannot reach Christ, I have Christ in my books, but cannot hold Christ in my thoughts. It's not alone Christ in the signs, but Christ in his soul, that a sincere saint seeks, Others they desire the loaves, not Christ, or let us judge the best we may, yet 3. What desires they have Christ-ward are but languid and lukewarm, flat and faint, whereas right Sacrament desires are strong, vehement desires, Psa. 42.1. As the Hart pants after the water brooks, so doth my soul after thee, O Lord. His desire to enjoy God in Temple-ordinances, was as the Heart's desire to water, which as Augustine opens the place, expresseth strong desires. Serpents tui vitia sunt, accide serpentes iniquitatis & desiderabis fontem veritatis. The Hart (says he) in grazing kills, and eats a Serpent, that so inflames the mouth, as no rest till it drinks at some water brook, whereby it is cooled and comforted. Thy Serpents, O man, are thy sins, kill them, and than thy desires will kindle, to drink of the springs of truth and life. Thus he applies it, and indeed while men's lusts are lively, their best long are lazy. The case of carnal men. 4. If their desires seem strong, yet than they are no ways well bottomed, nor well backed. Their desires have no good bottoming, they are not grounded upon a real sense of soul-wants, as to arise from self emptiness, or from a taste of spiritual sweetness, formerly felt in the use of the Ordinance, It's neither fruitful experience, nor cheerful expectance of spiritual good that springs these desires. Their desires have no good backing, the● are not seconded with suitable endeavours, their desires of a Sacrament do not set them on work to prepare for a Sacrament by soul-examining, heart-humbling, and the like. Object. Obj. All will be piously disposed when they come to the Sacrament, therefore it's pity to put any by. Answ. Answ. 1. All have not been so well disposed at the Sacrament, why than should we think all will be? One reports that knew a student in Cambridge, so popishly affected, at the time of the communion, he took the bread but eats it not, yet closely conveys it away, for which being soon after in horror of conscience, he threw himself headlong over the battlements of the College chapel & died. A credible Author witnesseth of a woman who was at the Sacrament in such malice, that she took the bread not eating a crumb, and touched the cup not drinking a drop, as she after boasted with a vow, the Sacrament should never come within her till one that had wronged her had made satisfaction to her: so some have come not being charitably disposed towards men, much less religiously disposed towards God: how ill the Corinthians were hereat disposed we read, 1 Cor. 11.18, 20, 21. 2. Not wicked man can be well disposed at the Sacrament, To be well disposed lies in two things. 1. To cast of sinful dispositions, and dispositions to sin, now can a sinful person put of sin upon any occasion? he can as easily shake of the skin from his back, or fling of his flesh from his bones, or pour his bowels out of his body, as put of sin from his soul for the lest season, a blackamoor may as well change his skin, or a leopard his spots, as the prophet speaks, jer. 13.23. Actus interminitur gradu● remittitur habitu● non amittitur. As a godly man may interrupt actions of grace, but habits and inward dispositions thereunto remain , so a wicked man may stop the actions of sin for a season, but inwardly the habits and dispositions thereunto abide strong unstirred. 2. To be at any time well-disposed, is to put on gracious dispositions, and dispositions of grace, no sinful man can ever do so: outside forms of godl●nesse may be put on and of, when inward powers and principles are most remote. Our shadows are longest when the sun is lowest, who of himself can call a good thought into his mind when he will? 2 Cor. 3.5. and can a wicked man be well-disposed at his pleasure? 3. Suppose some languid velleities, some leaning inclinations, some bubblings up, and a few faint affections be found, these are poor things to posture the soul in a safe way for a Sacrament-work, Logicians put a difference between dispositions and habits. Habits are hardly attained and hardly removed, Dispositions easily come and easily go, and truly according to rules of divinity, some sleight and sliding dispositions some little heat of affections, are but poor preparations to a Sacrament, how often are men afterwards worse? as water once warmed becomes more cold, and ice broken something thawed in the day, free●es the more hard at night. Those mentioned, Heb. 6.4, 5. had some dispositions for a time to good, but yet after proved irrecoverable Apostates, etc. 4. Have men such good dispositions when they come to the Sacrament? Truly such Saintlike dispositions are their silent damnations, they hereby condemn themselves. Is it good to be religiously disposed for and on a Sacrament day, and why is it not good every day? Is it fit than to be devout, and why not meet always? At that time to lift up hands to God, and at other times to lift up heels against God, how absurd is this? 5. We are not to forethink what their case may be at that present, on such an extraordinary occasion, but what is their common course in their ordinary conversation, Mat. 7.16. By their fruits ye shall know them, and must judge them, not by their leaves of outward expressions, nor by their buds of some good dispositions, which take them at some solemn times as fits of devotion: but by the usual fruits which the tree of their lives do ordinarily bear. At a Sacrament they will seem very devout, how vile soever at other times. The Habassines are very religious on a Sacrament day, Brerew. ●nq. cap. 23. ●66. Melch. Ad. in vita Mel. having taken it they will not spit till the Sun set, It is said of the Italians, they so devoutly receive, as believing God to be in the bread, but otherwise live as if they believed no God to be in Heaven. And the like do the lives of profane men speak, how fair soever they carry it in this Sacrament service, A conduit on some great day runs wine, but water is that it ordinarily runs with. Thus here. To conclude, beyond what is pleaded by others, there is one thing wicked men ordinarily urge for themselves, and their coming to the Supper of the Lord. Object. Object. All men have their faults, those who are allowed to the Lords Table have their hypocrisies, pride, passion, cove eousnesse, malice, and such like sins, as well as we; why should they be accepted, and we refused, or we refused, and they accepted, and not rather admitted all alike? Answ. Answ. 1. You think they have such sins in them as they have not, and that they are such offenders, Perfidus mendax impostor Apostata tuba rebellionis. Lutherus apud illo● Diabolus ●st, sed Christus regnal & vivat. as they be not, whom yet you except and object against. We read of Luther that the common charge against him was, to be a man false, perfidious, treacherous, seditious, the trumpet of rebellion, a seducer, an Apostate, etc. thus have others of the servants of God, yea the very son of God, been accused of crimes whereof they were clear and innocent: wicked men being foully infected with these plague-sores themselves, they would have none thought sound. It's storied of Nero, himself being unclean, he did think there was no man chaste, it's ordinary for wicked men being loath to father their own bastards, to lay them at other men's doors, that while they can 'cause others to be suspected, themselves may pass without suspicion, I mean, those sins which they are themselves deeply guilty of, they would feign fasten upon the most faithful Saints of God: no wonder they think the godly for they think God himself to be like them Psa. 50.21, These men as they will not think those things in themselves to be sins, which are, so in others they think those things to be sins which are not: in themselves pride is but decency, covetousness good husbandry, etc. in God's Saints their zeal is anger, their appearing for God, hypocrisy, and the like. 2. Say such have some evils in them, yet than they have excellent graces, which you have not. It's true the best Saints like the best men's books have their erratas, but yet than there is a great deal of good solid matter besides, The most godly though there is an old man which they have not quite put of, yet than there is a new man which they have put on, Qui Christum induit omnem simul in universum virtutem induit, omnemque gratiam habet, Chrys. to wit Christ with his graces: grant there are some as painted sepulchers, Apothecaries boxes, and like the Egyptian temples gay and gorgeous without, and within nothing but ugly objects: yet God ha●h his sincere Saints, who though mean it may be to outward view, yet by reason of rich graces are all glorious within, Psa. 45.13. As the Tabernacle that was covered with rams-skins and badgers-skins, but within curious work, costly silk, and ●eaten gold. God's people are compared to a cloud, Heb. 12.1. and truly they much resemble that cloud which guided the Israelites in their way to Canaan, which had a dark side and a bright side, the Egyptians could only see the dark side of the cloud, and so mistake: thus wicked and worldly men can only see the dark side of the Saints infirmities, not the bright side of their graces, and hence they err in judgement, but now I pray learn this truth, those men you malign though they have some evils, yet than they have such precious good things in them as you have not, and therefore may well be accepted where you are not. 3. Say they have such sins in them, yet than they bewail them daily, Perpetuis lachrimi● obruit ora dolour which you do not, and so may be meet for that mercy which you be not, you sin and sorrow not, when you should tremble and not sin, you sin and not tremble: let the misery of your sin increase, yet you accounted not yourselves miserable, Nihil miserius miser● non miserante scipsum. whereas God's Saints cry out of this misery most, Rom. 7.24. You at the best do but seem to repent whatever your sin is: Poenitentiam non agunt sed fingunt. Salu. Tundens pectus & non corrigens vitia illa consolidat, Aug. you swear and cry God forgive, with a blow upon the breast, and no bruise upon the heart, so that sin by this is but more settled in you, and you in sin, whereas the servants of Christ look upon God's broken laws, with broken hearts, Psa. 51.8. They sin, but yet with a great difference from other men. There are three things distinguish them. Resolution before, Psa. 39.1. 1 joh. 3.9. Natus ex Deo non faecis peccatum sed patitur potius, Reluctance in, Rom. 7.19. Repentance after, Mat. 26.75. Whereas alas! other men before sin, they resolve but little, in sin they reluct less, and after sin they repent lest of all, Rom. 2, 5. Rev. 2.21. Let a godly man fall into sin, Peccavi Domine & paenitet me peccasse. and he riseth by repentance, and runs in to God, and cries, Lord, I have sinned, and it reputes my soul I have sinned. As wicked men if they have or do any good, they are after it the worse, the more proud, insolent, impenitent, negligent, so the godly if they do any evil, they are after it the better, Videle fratres magis placuit humilitas in malis factis quam superbia in bonis factis. Aug. the more humble, penitent, vigilant, diligent: and we read how the poor Publican humbled for his sin was accepted, when the Pharisee proud of his good deeds was detested, Luk. 18.14. Let none wrangle than because God's Saints find acceptance to the Sacrament, Terret me to ta ●ita mea nam mihi apparet aut peccatum aut tota sleri●itas. Anselm. when themselves are refused, for though they sin, yet for it they are humbled, when in it others are hardened, they tremble at it, when others triumph in it, 4. It's not such sins you condemn them of, for which you are kept of from the Sacrament, to wit, secret sins in the heart, as pride, covetousness, and the like, but other outward evils in your lives, as excessive drinking, swearing, whoring. In the best governed town or city, it's not every disease, sore, or sickness, that men are shut up for, and excluded society, but the plague: neither is it every sin men are shut out for, from the Sacrament: but for sins of a larger size, A quibusdam in coena domini perceptio Eucharistiae negligitur quae quia eadem die ab omnibu● fidelib●● (exceptis ijs qui pro gravibus criminibus inhibitum est) percipienda est. Ecclesiasticus usus demonstrat: quum etiam poenitentes eadem die ad percipienda corporis & sanguin● dominici sacramenta reconcilientur, Orthod cons. Art. 7. cap, 3. Lorinus in Psal. Gladius paenae acerbitatem erga vicinos, arcus paenae celeritatem erga remo●●● mo●strat. Chrys. which are not suddenly slipped into, but ordinarily lived in, and such as argue an ill estate. Wicked men may do some particular good, yet their common course and general condition naught, a sweet apple may grow out of a crabtree stock, and a fair flower out of a stinking root, so a good act for the matter, from a man whose estate is naught, and his beaten way bad: likewise a godly man may do some particular evil, yet his ordinary way good, and life strait, to which it's meet to have respect, and such as are of a sinful conversation, have in this no cause to object, yet 5. Let such as profess religion fall foully in point of scandal, and 'cause the name of God to be blasphemed, truly they must be debarred as well as you, until they testify repentance. We find how in former times there were two chief instruments of use in war, The sword and the bow. The edge of the sword to cut of those who were nearest, and the arrow of the bow, to strike those which were most remote. Thus in discipline we shall not only have a swift arrow to le● fly at profane men that are most distant, but a sharp edge to strike such who by profession approach nearest when ●hey offend. A scandal in a Saint is l●ke the Eclipse of the Sun, it must not be let pass. 6. As God said to Cain when he was wroth, because his brother Abel was accepted in sacrifice, so say I to you in this matter of the Sacrament, If you live well and do well, shall you not also be accepted? yes yes, why stomach you the admittance of such to the Sacraments, do you walk with them in the ways of the Lord, and you shall partake with them at the Table of the Lord. Use. Thus having dispatched what may make for the rectifying of things in point of judgement, I proceed to discover what may make for the regulating of things in point of practice, for the keeping pure this precious Ordinance, by keeping of impure, ignorant and impenitent persons, for which purpose I shall call upon several sorts to contribute their most vigorous assistance, and for this end I declare two things. 1, Who are they that are herein to be active. 2. What is that that is herein to be acted. The persons among us that in this case aught to act, are of two sorts. 1. Those who are more public, Officers in the Church. 2. Those who are more private, members of the Church. Church-governors are to execute Church-censures, as the Ministers of the Gospel, and others chosen and appointed for that purpose. Public Ministers as they must be the light of the world, so the salt of the earth, Mat. 5.13, 14. The light of the world for clearness of doctrine. Curabit pastor ut pleb● ipsa viros graves timentes Dei ac boni testimonij deligat, quorum cura & vigilantia disciplina Ecclesiastica ad ministratur. The salt of the earth for exactness of discipline. For this well managing they are to look out others to join in labour with them. The Pastor says Musculus well, must take care to find out among the people grave and godly persons by whose vigilance and concurring diligence the censures of the Church are to be administered. Assemblies and Sacraments in purity preserved. As God set Cherubins at the door of Paradise, to keep of apostate Adam, he might not enter to eat of the Tree of Life, so Christ sets officers in his Church to keep of unmeet persons from coming in to eat of this bread of life. Jehu in policy commanded a great sacrifice to be offered in the house of Baal, and appointed fourscore men with this charge, to see that none of the servants of the Lord were there, but the worshippers of Baal only, 2 King. 10.23. On the contrary at the Sacrament in God's house, officers must see there be none of the known servants of sin and satan, but the wor●hippers of God only. As valiant soldiers keep a castle against any intruders that would take it, so must Church-Officers keep the Sacrament, whe● unmeet men press to receive it, Tom 2. Chry. in Matth. Hom. 83. or to use Chrysostoms' similitude, they are to keep this pure, as a man would keep a pleasant spring clean, whereat he useth to drink, not letting the feet of filthy beasts and swine no puddle it. These all must help to bring in to Christ, such only as Ashpenaz to Nebuchadnezar, Dan. 1.3, 4, 5. Those of the children of Israel that were without blemish, wise and well nurtured to eat in the King's Palace, provision there made. We distinguish of a twofold power of the keys, the one concional, Trelcat, Just. Theol. lib. 2. pag. 287. Pareus in 1 Cor. 5. de Excom. Eorum qua conveniunt Presbyteris, vi ordinis Pre●byteralis alia conveniunt singulis personaliter alia conjunctis collegialiter. Forb. Irenik. lib. 2. cap. 10. sec. 13. pag. 191. the other judicial. The former is proper for Pastors alone, whose calling it is, by the Preaching of the Gospel, to shut and open the Kingdom of heaven. The later belongs to them, with others joined with them, to wit the keys of jurisdiction, or external discipline, this pertains to the whole Consistory or College Ecclesiastical, who are in government, to administer Church Discipline, lest the holy things of God be prophanened and defiled. This disciplinary power is needful to the well-being of a Church, that the purity of it be not corrupted, nor the peace of it disturbed, by the permitted mixtures of unmeet men to the mysteries of Christ. For the civil sword, often the edge is too blunt, Vid. Ames. de conscien. lib. 4. cap. 29. pag. 235. and the point is too short: Church rules are fit to go beyond human laws; as Christian piety, beyond civil honesty. Now this power of jurisdiction in the Churches or Congregations of Christ, 1. It is not in any single Minister alone. 2. It is not in the whole body of any people. 1. Christ hath not committed this power to one, Cuncti claves regni caelorum accipiunt, & ex aequo super eos Ecclesiae fortitudo solidatur. Hier. lib. 1. advers. jovin. but to many. As we say against the Papists, that none of the keys were committed to Peter alone, but to him with the rest of the Apostles. So these keys of disciplinary regiment in the Churches of Christ, are not to any Pastor alone, but to him with ot●er Elders, as Feoffees in trust for the good of the whole, is this power committed. And a marvellous mercy meets that Minister, where are meet coadjutors in this, to be joined unto him. Onus Angelicis humeris formidandum. There is no work like that of the Ministry, a burden that might make the shoulders of Angels to quake. When God hath put a pious Pastor into a Congregation, and shall say of him, as of Adam when he had placed ●im in Paradise: Clavis doctrinae data est uni subiectiuè, non unitati● nisi obiecti●è, clavis discipline data est Ecclesiae & subiective & obiective & data est non uni sed un●tati, etc. It's not meet for the man to be alone, I will make him a help meet for him, I will provide such a company of choice men, who shall be assistant to him for correcting the bad, and guiding of all for good: Alas, to leave this on any one, however furnished. It may be said to that Minister, as Jethro to Moses, Exod 18.18. Thou wilt surely wear away, both thou and the people with thee, for this thing is too heavy for thee, and thou canst not perform it thy self alone. Yea himself will be forced to say to the people, as Moses to Israel, Vid. Cartwr. in Annot. super Act. 156. Deut. 1.12, 13. I myself alone cannot bear your cumbrance, your burden, and your strifes: Take ye wise men, and understanding, and known among your Tribes, and let them rule over you: Nor doth God in all his word lay such a weight on the back of any one man: but other provision is made. 2. The Juridical power of the keys, Act. 25.6. Non dicit totam Eccles. sed Apostoli & seniores. Calvin. is not committed to the whole body of any people promiscuously. If all were rulers, than where be the ruled? this would both deface the beauty, and disturb the order of the Church in every place. There must be beauty, what a deformed thing were the body if all were eye, or all tongue, or the feet to stand in the room of the arms? so here. There must be order. Two things prejudice the Church, when no order at all, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. or order according to the will of man; but order according to the will and appointment of Jesus Christ is safe and sweet. If the whole multitude should exercise such judiciary acts of casting out, and the like, than the woman must usurp authority over the man, contrary to the express command of the Apostle, 1 Tim. 2.12. Therefore where ever the simple right of this power is primarily placed, 1 Tim. 5 17. Duos ordines Presbyterorum fuisse inde apparet, alij Presbyteri erant doctores, alij tantum seniores quidam & prudentiores populi qui una cum doctoribus gubernabant Ecclesiam, etc. Illyric. cla. script. pag. 970. Nonnulli praepositi sunt, qui in vitam & more● eorum qui admittuntur inquirant, ut qui tu pia committunt eis communi caetis interdicant: qui vero ab istis abhorrent, ex animo complexi, meliores quotidie reddant. Origen. tom. 3. cont. Celsum, in Philoc. ca, 18. Interp. Tari●. the execution of this Church-regulating-power concerns some, not all, Matth. 18.17. Tell the Church: There is the Church plaintiff, to wit the members, and the Church defendant, to wit the officers, that is, Ministers and others, as assistants. 1. For Ministers, Act. 20.28. Take heed to the flock over which the holy Ghost hath made you overseers, 1 Tim. 3.4, 5. If a Minister knows not how to rule h●s own house, how shall he govern the Church of God? 1 Thes. 5.12. Know them that are over you in the Lord, Heb. 13.17. And for others with the Minister to rule in the Church as Governors, read, Rom. 12.8. 1 Cor. 12.28. 1 Tim. 5.17. The Elders that rule well, are worthy of double honour. According to which place, what was the practice of the Primitive times, we find affirmed by credible witnesses: We shall but read what is attested by, and translated out of Origen, who lived about 200. years after Christ, it was a known order in the Church to have another kind of Presbyters beside who applied themselves to Preaching, that did attend discipline, whose place was to censure manners, to cast out offenders, and so preserve Sacraments pure, that with us the same care may be kept, let me beseech by these motives. 1. For the Lords sake. 2. For the Church's sake. 3. For the Kingdom's sake. 4. For Congregations sakes. 5. For the Sacrament sake. 6. For the Saints sake. 7. For sinner's sake. 8. For our own souls sake. For Christ's sake. If we admit whom we know unmeet to these holy mysteries, let us but think both what a great displeasure, and great dishonour it will be to Christ: displeasing because it will pervert his gracious purpose to his people to have this peculiar to them. A special token of his love and care towards them above others he intended herein, and indeed the way of Christ's love to them in this is admirable, to feed them with his own blood, and let others famish. We read of a man condemned to starve to death in a prison, Valeria Maximus. lib. 5. his daughter getting leave to visit him once a day, so she brought nothing to eat or drink, she preserved him a long time unknown, by milk he sucked from her breast. Christ, that none of his members might starve, let's them have this breast to suck, but when it shall be drawn out to all it lessens Christ's affection, and altars his intention, who meant this milk only for his own children: Because he would not like some mother, saith Chrysostom, Chry. ad pop. Antioch. Hom. 60. put out his babes to nurse, but suckle them, and bring them up by his own breast, yet neither so as to nurse others children. To suffer the known sons of satan to suck at this breast, to sit at this board, is also a great dishonour to Christ. I have read of Ingo an ancient King of the Draves and Veneds, who making a stately feast, appointed his Nobles, at that time Pagans', to sit in the Hall below, and commanded certain poor Christians to be brought up into his presence Chamber, to sit with him at his table, to eat and drink of his Kingly cheer, at which many wondering, he said, he accounted Christians, though never so poor, a greater ornament at his table, and more worthy his company, than the greatest Peers unconverted to the Christian faith, for when these might be thrust down to hell, those should be his consorts and fellow Princes in heaven. Aeneas Silvius cap. 20. Europe Aven lib. 3. Annalium. And truly a few poor Saints, they honour Christ at his Table, whereas multitudes of men great in wealth, and wickedness, are but blemishes at this board, and spots at this feast, Judas 12. O for Christ's sake suffer no such at this Supper of the Lord. It is reported of that renowned Mr Fox, such was his zeal and love to Christ, that he would never deny any beggar that asked him an alms for Christ's sake. This is the prevailing argument with God, be it with us. 2. For the Nations sake. There is nothing more provokes God against a people than prophaneing his pure and precious ordinances, when they shall not only abound in what is filthy, but abuse what is holy, and be corrupt in the best things, than comes the fierceness of God's fury. There were two things in the old world that brought the destroying flood. All flesh had corrupted his way. The earth was filled with violence, Gen. 6. Corrupt in respect of God's worship and service depraved. Violent in respect of injurious dealing between man and man practised: to grow corrupt in God's ways of worship, brings a flood. Venerable Bede in his Ecclesiastical History of England, reports that about the year of our Lord 420. The Britons having been long afflicted by Irish, Picts, and Scots, God gave them great rest, peace and plenty, as had not been heard, but they more than ever contemned his word, profaned his Sacraments, not only the people vile, but the Ministers very lose in their conversations and ministrations, whereupon came a plague that the living were scarce able to bury the dead: The Saxons of Germany who came first in for their help, broke out upon them in bloodshed, drove them into a corner, and all this came, saith that reverend Author, for their hateful sins against Gods holy Ordinances? may we not read upon the forehead of the late bloudsheds, that have been in this Kingdom, the guilt of Christ's blood that lies upon this Land through sinful receiving the Sacrament? The judgements of God often suit to the sins of men, that by the punishment we may know the offence. Josephus reports that not long after the Jews had crucified Christ on the cross, so many of them were condemned to be crucified, that there was not place enough for crosses, nor crosses enough for the bodies that were to be hung thereon. O let us herein prevent Christ's second crucifying, not dealing out the Sacrament to such as to do it, will do what in them lies. We read the Roman Emperors strictly forbade the transportation of oil, wine, and pleasant commodities to barbarous nations, lest they being drawn in, mischiefs to the state might follow. Let us not administer bread and wine, such precious things to profane men, lest to the land worse yet follows. 3. For the Church's sake. To put out unmeet men at lest from the Table of the Lord, is the way to make the Church beautiful, healthful and fruitful. This defaced the glory of Nebuchadnezars Image, Dan. 2. that having a head of gold, it had feet of clay and iron: Shall the Church have a bright head and black feet, will not this be a blemish? Let us make much of the gold, and not mix therewith iron and clay, this will be the Church's glory, honour, and health. Evil men, saith one, are in the Church, as ill humours are in the body, when they are purged out, the body recovers health and strngth, is eased and refreshed: So when such men are put forth, and cast out, the Church is much relieved and revived, becomes more able to bear and bring forth fruit unto God. The course God took with his Vineyard to make it fruitful, Isa, 5. He fenced it, gathered out the stones, and planted it with the choicest plants. God's Church must have a fence, else every swine comes in: the scandalous, those stones of offence must be gathered out, and Gods Saints, as choice plants, set in place, and than we shall see good fruit. 4. For each Congregation sake, suffer not such men to sit at the Table of the Lord. Achan took the wedge of gold, and the Babylonish garment, whereupon it went ill with the whole camp of Israel, think we what may befall the whole assembly of people, especially if we knowingly allow filthy sinners, to take the holy Sacrament, such as in the ways of their wickedness hold fellowship with devils, to have herein any fellowship with Christ and his people, O how abominable. Cambden reports of Redwald King of the East Saxons, that in the same Church he had two Altars, one for Christian Religion, and another for sacrifices to devils, if we promiscuously receive good and bad to the Lord; Supper, we make as it were two tables in one Church, so far as concerns God's Saints, there is the table of the Lord: so far as concerns sinners, there is the Table of devils: Zanc. Epist. lib. 1. ad pr. Fr 3. de Exc. That the Apostle 1 Cor. 10.21. pleads against Idolaters, learned Zanchy extends to all impenitent sinners, who are not, says he, to be brought in to the Table of the Lord, because they be not broken of from the Table of Devils, lest God thereby be provoked, ver. 22. O how will it than provoke to to turn the Table of the Lord into a Table of Devils? as all wicked ones may well be called, Joh. 6.70. 5. For the Sacrament sake suffer not this, it is an honour to the Ordinance, to have here a Table of Angels, not of Devils, for virtuous men to be about the board of the Lord is a grace, as it was to Solomon's bed to have a guard about it of valiant men, Cant. 3.7. will not the presence of profane men prove a prejudice to each part of this precious Ordinance? utinam substantia nostra incorporetur sanctu, ut in ijs ad gloriam resurgat, non peccatoribus in illis enim resurget ad gehennam. Cor. a lapide so defile purity and deface beauty, as to occasion complaints both from creature and Christ. One brings in the creature groaning out their desires thus, O that we might ever serve such as are godly, O that our substance might be incorporated into Saints, that so we might rise with them to glory, for if we be incorporated into sinners, we shall go in them to hell: if we suppose the creatures of bread and wine, so to moan and groan to be eaten and drunk by wicked men in their ordinary way, much rather may we think it than when they are herein elevated and raised to a high and holy use: yea and this a way to put Christ himself to an open shame, Heb. 6.6. and 'cause him to complain to have his Table crowded about, his holy Ordinance defaced by profane men, so that as it was said, Mat. 22.10. whose image and superscription is this? it may be applied here whose Ordinance is this? The glory, honour, and beauty of it is hereby lost. One reading Mat. 5.44 l●ve your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, etc. broke out, either it's not the Gospel of Christ, Aut hoc non est Evangelium aut nos non sumus Evangelici. Whita. conc. ad Cler. cant. or we are but ill gospelers, when this holy Ordinance is abused and misused, we may say, sure it's not the Sacrament of Christ, or we no Sacrament-Christians, either it is not the Ordinance of Christ, or we no friends to Christ's Ordinance, to let the lustre of it be darkened, and its beauty blemished by base and vile men. 6. For the Saints sake suffer not such men herein to be joined unto them, to tie a living man to a dead man hath been the judgement that some malefactors have been condemned unto, and it's a sad one. O let us not here in this case couple together Gods living Saints, and men dead in their sins, to bring in beasts to feed with men at the same board, doth not reason and humanity abhor it. When we read of Nabuchadnezzar and bruit beasts feeding together, he was not as a man, but as a beast, so let religion and christianity teach us this, that to the Lords Table where the Saints eat and drink, we do not admit such men, as the Scripture compares to beasts, Psa. 49.12. Psa. 80.13. It were better says chrysostom to be a beast, Melius est esse iumenium quam comparari iumento. than to be like a beast, men than that are so, are unfit to have society with Saints, at the Supper of the Lord: It's prophesied when the Church shall be restored to peace and purity, Isa 35.9. No Lion shall be there, nor any ravenous beast found there, the unclean shall not pass there, but the redeemed of the Lord shall walk there, etc. God hath promised Ezek. 38.24. There shall be not more a pricking briar nor a grieving thorn about his people, let not us set briers and thorns among God's vines, nor let them root in Christ's garden among his flowers. 7. For sinner's sakes, as we tender the eternal good of their souls, suffer not this: to allow them liberty to the Table of the Lord, will but harden them in sin, and hasten them to hell, they will but embolden themselves to persist in sin, and think if they come to a Sacrament, thereby to satisfy all. It is reported of Lewis the second, that he used to wear a leaden crucifix in his hat, and every time he swore an oath, or did any villainy, he would take it in his hands and kiss it: and than swear again the more impudently, and sin over and over the same with greater confidence. So wicked men strengthen themselves in their wickedness, thinking how often so ever they do ill, if they come and receive the Sacrament, all is well, though hereby also they bring upon themselves swift destruction: so that all such may well fear the receiving the Sacrament should prove to them as the gold of Tholosse to them that took it, who all perished in the possession of it, the History of which Possidonius reports. Ahab would have Naboths vineyard, though he drew on himself the guilt of Naboths blood, but it was his ruin, 1 Kin. 21. men will have the Sacrament of Christ, though they are thereby guilty of the blood of Christ, and draw down their own damnation: men press to the Sacrament unprepared, as a horse unarmed rushes into the battle, but his death is so much the surer and sooner: suppose through the patience of God utter ruin is respited for present, and unworthy receivers reprieved for a while, yet than some other dreadful judgement betides them, God strikes them with hardness of heart, blindness of mind, worse than that wherewith he smote the sinful Sodomites, when from all quarters they pressed to break into Lot's house, and take the two Angels, Gen. 19 to prevent this evil do we our utmost. 8. For our own souls sakes, admit not unmeet men to communicate in these holy mysteries: that this may be the more effectual, Let us observe two things. 1. The duty required of us. 2. The danger incurred by us. The duty that the danger may be prevented. The danger if that the duty be neglected. We must herein either come under duty, or under danger, our duty is to give this blessed bread to children, not to dogs, Mat. 7.6. Give not holy things to dogs, nor cast ye your pearls to swine, lest they trample them under feet, and turn again, and rend you. Here are persons of two sorts described, dogs and swine, matters of two sorts proposed, holy things and pearls, actions of two sorts prohibited, give not neither cast, and reasons of two sorts rendered, lest they trample them under their feet, and turn again and rend you. Some by dogs understand Infidels and unbelievers, by swine sectaries and heretics, by holy things the two Sacraments Baptism and the Lords Supper, by pearls the mystical sense of Scriptures, etc. Others by dogs understand men erroneous in their judgements and opinions, by swine, men vicious in their practice and conversations, by pearls Gospel-cordials, by holy things bread and wine ●n the Supper sanctified for a holy use, which we aught not to give to such persons upon those perils. 1. Of pollution to the things, lest they trample them under feet. 2. Of affliction to ourselves, and turn again and rend you. We read of two Donatist who coming to Thipasa, Opiate. Meltuit lib. 2. cont. parenianum cent. 4. cap. 6. a city of Mauritania, and entering where the Sacrament was administering, took the bread and gave it to their dogs, but those very dogs immediately growing mad turned upon their own Masters, rending and tearing them with their teeth. God knows how sorely we may suffer from those sinful men, to whom we give this holy Sacrament. We know the severe punishment cast upon Eve, who not only herself eat the forbidden fruit, but in that she gave her husband Adam to eat thereof, Gen. 3.12, 16, O let not us suffer sinful men to sit and eat with God's Saints at the table of the Lord, lest thereby we draw down upon ourselves much sin and sorrow, when despairing judas came making his miserable moan to the high-Priests, saying, I have betrayed the innocent blood, they slighted him answering, what is that to us? Look thou to that, not, was it nothing to them? did not they give him money to do it? If an unworthy receiver shall come trembling to us, and cry I have betrayed innocent blood, shall we put it of with a what is that to us? when we put that into their hands whereby it is done, surely just blame abides us. If any man under the Law left his pit open, so that his neighbour's beast falling into it, was harmed by it, he must be responsible for it: if we under the Gospel shall leave this Ordinance open to all, so that those who are more like beasts than men, come to it, and are prejudiced by it, must not we answer for it? Let us all upon whom this charge is laid, set ourselves to the utmost to oppose the approach of such persons to the Table of the Lord, Come, let us up, and be doing, what is to be done, and how I reduce to two heads. 1. For matter we must mind some actions. 2. For manner we must mind some cautions. The actions for matter we are to mind, are two. 1. We must examine carefully. 2, We must determine faithfully. We must examine that we may determine, and we must determine when we have examined. We must search before we censure, and look in before we lift out, Thus did God with fallen Adam, before he turns him out of Paradise from eating of the tree of life, he comes to him questioning of him, Gen. 3. Adam where art thou? who told thee thou wert naked? Hast thou eat of the tree that I forbade? what is it that thou hast done? and after he dooms him, and drives him out: before we cast any out of the Congregation, or put any from this bread of life, we are to examine exactly, to try the truth of things that we may be sure to bind those on earth that God will bind in Heaven, Mat. 16.19. It is the observation of Cyril upon joh. 18.12. how the Jews first took Christ and bound him, and after inquired the causes against him, &c, an ill pattern for us to follow, before we bind let us beaten out truth, and see if there be sufficient cause that require such a judiciary course, let us know what is not sufficient matter to warrant such an Ecclesiastic censure in these four things. 1. Every declamation is not enough. Against some person there may be a flying report, a running noise we may not pass our censure upon. God heard a cry to Heaven of Sodom's sin, yet before he proceeds to judgement, read what he resolves, I will go down now and see, whether they have done altogether according to that cry which is come unto me, and if not that I may know. Gen. 18.21, Every rumour will not bear out a censure, but let us examine and see, and so proceed. 2. Every accusation is not enough, there may not only be a talk abroad, but one may come in and personally accuse another, yet that not sufficient to put one ●ut or presently by the Sacrament. It's not a man's justifying himself, nor another's accusing him, that can well bottom this business: julian who after proved the Apostate, one Delphidius accusing another before him, which he could not prove, the party denying the fact, Delphidius answers, if it be sufficient to deny what is laid to one's charge, who shall be found guilty? julian answers, And if it be sufficient to be accused, who can be innocent? 3. Every imagination is not enough: not only what is said by some others, but we ourselves may suspect a man for such a matter, yet suspicion not warrant suspension, many things are which seem not to be, and many things may seem to us to be, which yet indeed are not: we may think both the guilty innocent, and the innocent guilty, therefore we must not cashier before we inquire, Culpa lata Culpa levis, but be able to convince before we condemn. 4. Every aberration is not enough, no man will put his servant out of his family, or his son from his Table, for every small offence. There be lighter and lesser evils, whereupon in this case we cannot cast out little sins, do make men liable to great personal dangers, though not to these ministerial censures. The smallest sins that are unrepented of, idle words, and the like, will bring a man under the judgement of Christ, Mat. 12.36. though not this judgement of the Church. Christ for those will shut men out of Heaven, and cast them down to the Devil at the last day, but we must not herein shut Heaven against men, or deliver them up to the Devil for every error in judgement or practice, yet when evils grosser and greater be fiercely professed, foully practised, and fully proved, we have just matter to conclude upon, and to exclude such sinners from society with Saints in the Supper of the Lord. The cautions which for the manner we are to mind, shall come forth in fourthings. Our putting herein by, and casting out, must be carried on. 1. With deliberation, beware that in such censures we be not praecipitate to do any thing hastily, but see that our proceed be well considered, and all our progresses prudentially poized. This Church censure must not be like joabs' sword, which upon every motion was want of itself to fall suddenly out of its sheath, but deliberately drawn out by degrees. It's observable when God was to take the Prodigal into his house, he ran, Luk. 15.20. When to turn Adam out of Paradise, he walked on in the garden, Gen 3.8. his motion herein was more slow, we must not cast out or cut-off, but gradually and with good advice. 2. With detestation abhorring not the person of the offender, but the condition of the offence: not as it said of one, He hated the tyrant not the tyranny, but what we do herein, be it with hatred against the sin, not the man. Not abhorring them that are evil, but abhorring that which is evil. Rom. 12.9. The Apostle in the former verses having spoken of gifts and governments in the Church, he than adds this, to guide the managing of all ●n a meet way to love the persons of men unfeignedly, but to hate the evil practices of men abundantly: Abhor that which is evil. The Greek word imports extreme detestation, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. which is aggravated by the composition, as chrysostom observes, who also refers this 9 verse to those before, to order all therein prescribed, so Rollock also understands the verse. Look likewise that we detest that evil or any degrees thereunto in ourselves, for which we contest against others: that we suffer not any of that in ourselves which we censure in others. 3. With moderation, Beware while we pursue sinful actions in others, we be not transported with sinful passions ourselves, of wrath and anger, but manifesting a spirit of meekness. Sic vigilet moderatio ut non do●mim disciplina. Aug. The snuffers of the Tabernacle were made of pure gold: so Church-censures must be kept pure, burning with fervour, not blacked with anger. let not us be so moderate as to let Discipline sleep, or therein to be slight, for so a moderation of censures, may prove the murdering of sinners, not cutting of the gangreen-limb is the death of the man. 4. With lamentation, Beware that we be not hardened against men in our hearts, though we find them hardened before us in their sins. We read of a Judge that never pronounced a judiciary sentence of death, but tears fell faster from his eyes, than words from his mouth, when the incorrigibleness of men call by an Ecclesiastical sentence to cut men of, and put them away from among us, it's not unmeet for the tears of our eyes to express the Troubles of our hearts, and to let execution of censures be with expressions of sorrow, so shall we manage this matter meetly. Dilexi virum qui cum corpore solueretur magis de statu Ecclaesiarum quam de propr●s vel negotijs angebatur. The civil Magistrate who is to reform abuses in worship, to keep pure the holy things of God, that all be carried piously and peaceably in the Church, is herein to bring in his help. I love the man, he is more solicitous to reform the Church than to preserve himself, etc. says Ambrose of Theodosius. Magdeburg. c●nt. 5. I have read of Anastatius the Emperor, how God ●hot him to death with a hot Thunderbolt, because he was lukewarm for the Church, and not zealous to root out the Arrian party. That unmeet persons be put away from these precious things of God, let likewise the Magistrate be fervent. Zanchy in an Epistle to Prince Frederick the third, does much quicken his zeal, and beseech his assistance in this, God turning Adam out of Paradise, did not only set Cherubims at the garden, to keep the tree of life, but also a flaming sword to turn every way, Gen. 3.24. The Christian Magistrate is to be a nursing Father, and a nursing Mother to the Church and Children of God, Isa, 49.23. Now a great part of the nurse's care is to see to the food of the child, Magistratus si malus tentator tum est. Si bonus nuritorinus est etc. Aug. serm. 6. de verbis Domini, Sec. Mat. that the child have its fitting food, and that which is good and wholesome, and that dogs come not in to eat up the childrens milk. The Christian Magistrate is to feed the Church imperatively, and causatively by requiring others so to do: he is to command that the breasts be drawn out for the children of the Church to suck, and to forbidden that no black mouths be laid to this blessed breast: Custos utriusque tabulae. Three Tables he aught to be a careful keeper of, the first and second Table, and a third to wit the Lords Table, that God's olive plants may peaceably sit about it, and wicked ones debarred from it: if he aught to extend his care, that the first Table be well kept, than the last as a branch of that: must he not suffer such as would advance a breaden God, and may he endure such as abuse the bread of God: must he be against those who blaspheme the name of the Lord, and not against those who profane the Table of the Lord? doth he well to remove crucifixes out of the Church, and shall he let crucifiers alone in the Church? Sons of Belial, Deficie●●● coniunctione magistrat●● potest aliquod Ecclesia extra ordinem facere quod ordinarie non potest: & deficiente ecclesia a suo efficio potest magistratus extra ordinem procurare ut Ecclesia ad officium redeat, etc. jun. Anima. in Bellar. de Concil. lib 1. c. 12. no. 18. Nulla est res tam Ecclesiastica quin aliqua ratione pertineat ad iurisdictionem magistratus nec ulla causa tam secularis modo ab Ecclesiae membro praestetur quin quaetenus observantiam erga Deum respicis pertinere possit ad Ecclesiasticam gubernationem, Ames. Med. Theol. lib. 2. cap. 17. who as much as in them lies by a sinful receiving, crucify the Lord of life. The care and courage both of Magistrate and Minister is no more than need in this matter. If Church-officers be defective in their duties, the Magistrate must put out the more vigour and valour to preserve the Ordinance pure: as if the Magistrate be remiss, the Church-officers aught to be the more active to beaten back Sacrament abusers, and if in this either withdraw their duty, the other must stir the more extraordinary. But a mutual conjunction is most excellent. The work is great, yet might there be this twofold union, no doubts, nor difficulties should make me despair, to wit, A union of power. A union of spirits. As the two milk kine went together the same way to carry on the Ark of God, so if these two, Magistracy and Ministry go together to help on the government of Christ, and this needful discipline which concerns the Sacrament, if hands and hearts may join in this, how well will things be? let not one put it of to the other, but both concur as the cause requires, which will be well pleasing to God, and profitable to the Churches of Christ. I proceed to persons more private, Sort. 2. of whom there is also somewhat required, that this pure and holy Ordinance may be kept up, and carried on in its purity and holiness, that unmeet men may be removed, and good discipline promoted, their duty I reduce to two heads. 1. They are not give their free consents. 2. They are to make their just complaints. Their free consents they are to give when by Church-officers there is an execution of due censures, and indeed the averseness of people hereto, may much prejudice the practice of Discipline herein. Augustine writing against the Donatists, says that in some Churches the body of the people was so corrupt that they would not assent to the execution of censures, which hindered the casting out of offenders, but herein people's forwardness may prove a great furtherance. Cyprian writing to Cornelius a Roman Bishop declares how ready the people were to approve the excommunicating and casting out of the lapsi, those in time of persecution had fallen from the faith, though very loath to yield their consents for the receiving of them in, though they professed repentance. Zanch. de redemp. in pr●ce. 4. lib. 1. pag. 756. Zanchy speaking of that question, by whom excommunication is to be exercised among other things, in answer compares the government of the Church to the Roman Commonwealth, which had the dictator's, the Senate, and the Quirites, the most difficult things were determined by the former, Pa●eus de Excom. poris. 5. & in 1 Cor. 5. with the consent of the latter, and he shows that the Church government in respect of Christ is a monarchy in respect of the Presbyters censuring an Aristocraty, and in respect of the people consenting a democraty, which in the case he concludes requisite. Musen. loc. come. de ministris verbi Dei, in tit. de potestate ministrorum pag. 377. Pareus proposing some conclusions concerning the same censure in the Church, says that though the Pastors and Presbyters for order sake, are to have the chief place, yet they must call on the Congregation for their concurring consent. So Musculus in his common places speaks much to this purpose. The people do greatly fail in their duties, when they withdraw their consents, especially when things be put to the vote. The Saints are said to judge the world, 1 Cor. 6, 2. In that they shall be as witnesses, assisters, observers, approvers of the judgement, Christ shall pass at the last day, and Calvin says well to the case, Hoc addo illam esse legitimam in excommunicando homine progressionem si non soli seniores scorsim id faciant sed approbante Ecclesia in eum modum ut plebis multitudo non regat actionem sed observet us ●estis & custos. Institu. lib. 4. Qui proximi mala conspiciunt & silentio praetereunt quasi conspectu vulneribus usum medicaminis subtrahunt. The people are not by the multitude to overpower any just proceeding against offenders, but what the Elders orderly do, they are to attest, and approve, and thereby also the judgement is theirs, and private Christians must consent either to the casting out, or to the coming in of offenders, to consent to their admittance is sad, The Jews stoned Stephen, but Paul stood by, and consented to his death, Act. 22.20. Wicked men herein crucify Christ, and others consent to his death who will not consent to restrain them from that which is the cause of his death, yea 2. People are to make their complaints and to call for just discipline Isa. 59.4. When they see or hear of foul offences, not to conceal them, but seek their redress, Augustine speaks well, They that see their neighbour's sins, and are silent, and so no censure take place, is as if they should see ulcerous sores, and withhold the use of meet medicines. Hereby also they pull upon themselves the burden of other men's sins, Leu. 5.1. If a soul sin and hear the voice of swearing and is a witness whether he hath seen it or known it, if he do not utter it, than shall he bear his iniquity, If a man hears words of treason against a prince, and discovers it not to some Magistrate in 24. hours, himself is judged guilty of treason, what than to conceal words of blasphemy and treason, against the most high God, Pro. 29.24. whoso is partner with a thief, hates his own soul, he heareth cursing, and bewrays it not, Mar. 1. It's a sin to be an ea●-witnesse of blasphemy, and not wilingly bewray it, 2. That he which is so silent, makes himself partner with that sinner whom he so concealeth, Leu. 29.14. Before the blasphemer was stoned, all that heard his blasphemy were to come, and lay their hands on his head, why? sure to discharge themselves of that guilt which else they had contracted by hearing of him, if they had not declared against him. Ever mind that Gospel command Mat. 18.17. Tell the Church, inform Church-officers of Church-offenders. Christians that will quit themselves as becomes them, must be careful herein, otherwise themselves will suffer. Here may a great question fall in, viz. Object. How a profane person present at the Sacrament doth defile and infect others? To which I answer. Not physically, but morally, Answ. not the bore presence of sinners with us, but the prevalence of some sin upon us, two things attend sin, fault and filth, blame and blot, where there is fault there follows filth, and where there is filth there is first some fault whereof the defiled party is guilty, as now when profane persons partake in the Sacrament, godly christians who communicate, may come in fault, and under guilt two ways. Efficiently. Deficiently. 1. Efficiently, when they say or do what they aught not in reference thereunto, as if in their minds they approve their presence, much more if with their mouths they pled for their admittance, speak, yea urge arguments that may make for such promiscuous mixtures, and lay down what may encourage the coming hereto of carnal men without any disciplinary difference, this contracts guilt, and than 2. Deficiently, when private Christians neglect to say and do what they aught. rue ad c●nam accedam non scrutandum est qua quisque conscientiae ad eam mecum accedat sed de mea ipsius conscientia mihi laborandum est. Ita● & cum adulteris, & cum homicidis & cum sceleratissimis quibusvis, modo nulla mea culp● sit, Quod non placet non nocet. Si adcoenam castus & sceleris purus accessero, nihil illorum impuritas mihi nocuerit dicam etiam amplius si vel Turcam vel judaeum pastor quispiam adm●t●eret modo quantum in me est agit● tota illius facti culpa in illum recideret, nec ego propterea cunctanter ad mensam Domini accessero. etc. Beza Ep. 2. pag 28. 29. In this case consider there is a fourfold duty required of particular Christians, which if they discharge they come not under any fault or guilt, let who will be present, but if they fail of those duties (I do not say fail in) therein they sin, and therewith are defiled. 1. Duty is towards the sin itself, of such men's partaking, that is to dislike it, and in their hearts to hate it, I hate the work of them that turn aside, says David, Psa. 101.3. it shall not cleave to me, as if he should say, If my heart rise not against such sins, if I should not dislike and hate them, some blot would cleave to me, but now not. 2. Duty towards God, to pray and mourn in prayer for the presence of such men at this precious Ordinance: Marry the mother of Christ, his Disciples and friends saw Christ despitefully used, and crucified on the cross, yet it was no sin of theirs, no evil cleaved to them, for it grieved their hearts, and so when God's Saints do sorrowfully lament the sin of such as crucify Christ at his Supper, there is no defilement falls on them, they are free and shall receive signs of savour, and Gods marks of mercy, Eze. 9.4. 3, Duty towards such miserable men as do in their prophanensse approach the Table of the Lord, that is, to exhort, admonish, reprove them, Eph. 5.11. Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them; implying strongly, that if there be a reproving of them, there is no fellowship with them: and so there is no infection by them. 4. Duty is towards governor's, to wit to inform them of such offenders, thus the Christians in Corinth, and Thessalonica did inform the Apostle of such in those Churches, 1 Cor. 11. ●8, 2 Thes. 3.11. let these duties be observed, and you are free. Beza excellently in this case concludes, that let wicked men be present at the Sacrament, yet God's Saints become not filthy because not faulty, having done their duty, they are not guilty: no sin, no soil. Having complained to God and men against offenders, and in their places done to the utmost to keep of such unmeet men, there is no sin whereof they are guilty, nor soil wherewith they are filthy. Those in authority that will not discharge their duty, must bear the blame, and wear the blot, profane men are to be put by, and cast out, yet if to do it be not my office, it being not done, it is not my offence. The Apostle tells the Church of Corinth, that the incestuous person let alone, would be as a little leaven to sour the whole lump, 1 Cor. 5.7. If we suppose a present infection upon the Church, than it was thus. The public Officers were defiled because they had not put away that wicked man from among them. The private members were polluted, because they had not mourned, or made means that he which had done this deed might be taken from among them, vers. 2. so that if private Christians do not complain, and seek the removal of unmeet men, than thereby they are defiled, but if they mourn to God and men, that such may be taken away, however they are free, both from fault and filth: if wicked ones be with them at the Table of the Lord, they are not thereby defiled. I● is not the naked presence of profane men can herein pollute the people of God, for if that alone were infectious, these things would follow. 1. It would be so in one ordinance as well as in another, it would be as hazardous to have them present at the hearing of the word, as at the partaking of the Sacrament. 2. It would be so by one sinner as well as by another, it would be as prejudicial for a close hypocrite to be present, as another wicked man. Than the presence of Judas at the first administration cast defilement on all the disciples, whereas supposing him present, we will not think all them defiled thereby. When Judas with the rest were all together at Supper, Joh. 13. Christ saith unto the disciples, yea are clean, but not all, vers. 10.11. The unclean one, made not the rest unclean. 3. It would be so at one season, as well as at another, how should Gods Saints ever meet with any safety or security, if the sole presence of any one unsanctified man should always prove such a prejudice. 4. It would be so to one Christian as well as to another, harm hereby to him that hath been most diligent in his duty, as well as to him that hath been most remiss, but let private persons be persuaded to pursue their duty, and they shall escape all danger. Execution of Church censures is not to be by any private member, or single Officer. I would they were cut of that trouble you, saith Paul, Gal. 5.12. He did not undertake to do it alone, 1 Cor. 5.4. When ye are gathered together, and my Spirit, in the name, and wi●h the power of Christ, to deliver such a one to satan. Let us each go as far as we can, if others will not concur, we leave the sin at their door. Against this course several objections lie cross which I shall in the next place seek to remove. Object. Object. Though men have been wicked and profane, yet suppose they come and profess their repentance for sin past, and promise' amendment for future, must not such be received to the Supper of the Lord? Yes sure. Answ. Answ. 1. Suppose they have been profane and yet profess no repentance for any evil past, nor promise' any redress for future, but stand as stocks and stones, stupid and senseless, miserable men, not commiserating their immeasurable misery, we may therefore mourn for them, because they cannot mourn for themselves: Hoc plaugo quod te non plangis. Hieron. Tom 1. fol. 231. As once Jerome condoled the obdurate condition of Sabinian. Sure such must not be received to the Supper of the Lord, much less men resolved in their sins. 2. Suppose such professions and promises as now they may make, have from them by former experiences ever proved false and fruitless, must we still trust bore words? God hath cast them down by sickness, they have said as much to get of of that bed, as now to get in to this board, to come out of that trouble, as now to come in to this Table; How sorry they had sinned? how resolved to reform? As when Nabuchadnezzar besieged Jerusalem, the Jews promised to set their servants free, but not sooner had the King removed his siege, but they bring back their servants to bondage, Jer. 34.10, 11. So when God hath laid siege to them by some close affliction, they have professed fair, and promised much, but the siege once raised, they have returned to their wont wickedness, who would believe such lying words? 3. Suppose they profess and promise', yet in their professions and promises, they manifest monstrous Ignorance, and thereby are found unfit? They profess repentance, but cannot tell what repentance is, they say they are sorry for sin, and yet can give no account what sin is, or what God is they have sinned against, they promise' amendment for future, ignorantly taking it for grant, they can either by their own power amend, or procure power from God at their pleasure. Luther reports of one Sta●pitius a German Divine, that he often promised God, and vowed against a particular lust, but was as frequently foiled: he after discovered, how being ignorant of his weakness to perform all his promises had been passed in self-confidence, etc. whereupon he miscarried. Carnal men in their making promises to reform their whole lives, we may easily find how grossly ignorant, and so self-confident they be, how little they know of their own infirmity, and inability to any good, etc. how they know nothing of fetching grace by the way of the covenant of God's grace in Christ: So while we should let them in for their promises, we must keep them out for their ignorance, this being more foul, than the other fair. 4. Suppose sinful men profess and promise', yet in their open protestations they have their secret reservations, they sometimes say well, but O that there were in them such a heart, Deut. 5.29. Such men in their professions and promises, Aug. conf. lib. 8. cap. 7. are like Austin once in his supplications and prayers, he acknowledges he prayed against concupiscence, Malebam expleri, quam extingui. but with a fear, God should hear him in his prayers, and that secretly he desired rather to fulfil his corruptions, than God fulfil his petitions: so they promse but with fear God should hold them to their promises, profess their repentance, but are afraid God should force them indeed to repent, their hearts still go after their wickedness: so that what ever is uttered, until their condition be altered, there is but little weight in such words, whereupon to accept them to the Supper of the Lord. 5. Suppose they so profess repentance, and promise' amendment, as according to the rules of the word they may be judged indeed to repent, to be ingenious, and real, than they aught not to be kept back, yea if for any scandal they stand excommunicate, they aught to be absolved and received into this communion of Saints, as soon as such repentance appears. I have met with a story, and it is a sad one: Dionysius B. of Alexandria, writing to Fabius B. of Antioch, reports of one Serapion, a man who a long time lived (viz. in the Church of Alexandria) without blame, but after in persecution denied the faith, yet at length was sorely afflicted for his sin, made mournful complaints, entreated to be received to the Supper of the Lord, with sore and bitter cries, but none gave ear, and being still kept of, the old man fall; into a dangerous disease, and for some days lay senseless, but than coming to himself again, Vid. Euseb. lib. 6. cap. 43. O how he weeps because he had been denied the Sacrament of Christ, yet with sad blames of himself for his sin, he gives up the ghost, and dies. God forbidden if men be sincerely sorrowful, and seriously mind amendment, that they should be refused from the Table of the Lord, nay we shall rather encourage their coming, and glorify God in them. Object. Object. Though men have been vile and vain, yet let them come to this Table, God can in a moment ●hange their hearts, and so make them meet for this Supper. Answ. Answ. 1. We doubt not of the power of God, but that God can in a moment make a mighty change upon the hearts of the most miserable men, yet that God than will do so, what warrant to expect it? There is a twofold power of God. Scaligor. Exerci●a. 365 Sect. 8. Absolute and Actual. By the former God is able to do all things. By the later he doth no more than agrees with his will, Voluntas ●ius potesta● eius. for his will and power hold equal pace, neither are these two properties in God, as those two disciples of Christ, going to the sepulchre, one out-running the other, Joh. 20. Now that wicked men may come to the Lords Table, and that God will there, by his power, make such a present change: Zanch, lib. 3. ca 3. d● Nat. Dei. What ground to expect it? Neither do I speak here but of God's operative will, which ever concurres with his actual power, and that these should than meet to effect this matter in a moment, why should we think? Considering these things. 1. God reveals no hints of such a thing in his word, which is the transcribed copy of his will, and the ordinary rule of his works. 2. The common course of God's workings towards the creature have not been ordinarily instantaneous, God could have made the world in a moment, but he took six days to do it in. God could expedite all his pleasure in an instant, both in us and for us, but he takes time to accomplish his purpose. 3. State right the case of carnal men in this mighty and marvellous change, how wide the terms are asunder, to bring from nature to grace, from death to life, wherein God usually goes by degrees, as the subject whereon he works is made capable to receive his impressions, Joh. 16.12. Men, the worse they are, the longer settled in sin, the more they oppose grace, and are crossly indisposed thereunto, the more slowly comes in and goes on the great work of God in the change of their estates. In natural generations, the more vast the creature, the more slow the production, an Elephant ten years in the womb, for a man grown up great and gross in sin and wickedness, yet to have such a good change all of a sudden is a rare wonder. Christ when he raised Lazarus from death to life, that had lain but four days in the grave, he groans, and over the grave he groans again, Lazarus comes not presently forth, Joh. 11. and shall men who have lain many years rotting in their sins, have such a sudden resurrection? I remember a question Austin propounds, whether they whom Christ shall find alive at the last day, shall not die at all, or in their passage to Christ in the air, die and instantly live again? In answer he inclines to the latter, saying, such have their death, and be again with a marvellous celerity revived, but this seems otherwise, 1 Cor. 15.51. and so truly to think of men dead in their sins, yet in the day of a Sacrament, with a sudden celerity, to be made so alive by grace, as to meet Christ aright at his Table, is a mistake. 4. A wicked man at the Table of the Lord is out of his way, and out of God's way too, viz. Wherein God ordinarily works that mighty and marvellous change, for that is the way of his word, wherein by the effectual energy of the spirit of grace, Christ is form in the soul, and the soul transformed by beholding the glory of the Lord in that glass: 2 Cor. 3.18. and therefore to admit a wicked man to the Table of the Lord, looking there for such an instant change to be wrought by God as to make him immediately meet for the Lords Supper is senseless, but Lastly, To make men meet for the Table of the Lord, there must not only be something done in them, but by them, as there is work for God to do in men, so there is work for men to do towards God, now though God can do his work in an instant, yet men to do their work must have a time, as to examine themselves with reflects upon their sins to stir up soul-humblings and hungrings, etc. which they must do who would receive this Supper aright, there must not only be some workings of God's grace in the man, but some co-workings of the man by the grace of God, which will require time; some seeds, habits and principles of grace, God may instantly cast in, but for a man to act from those principles, and to draw out the due exercise of grace for a meet communicating, is not so easily or instantly done. Object. This casting out and keeping men of from the Sacrament, will so provoke them, as may occasion sad tumults and troubles, and cause discords, disturbing the peace of places and persons, Ans. Answ. 1. Potius quam aliquod regno & gloriae Christi decedat ruat non solum pax sed calum & terra. Melius est dissidium pietatis ortum causa, quam vitiosa concordia. Rather than any thing should fail or fall of the kingdom, glory, and government of Christ, let not only peace go, but heaven and earth go too, says Luther, and better is dissension for piety and purity sake, than corrupt communion and concord says Hierom, when Christ was born Herod and all Jerusalem was troubled, Mat. 2.3. should not Christ therefore have come? 2, Why should any be provoked when this course is not till men's own wickedness procures it unto them? Christ whips the buyers and sellers out of the Temple, but the whip was made of their own cords, brought in to tie their breasts with, joh. 2.15. Men put forth for their sins, must blame themselves. It's storied of Apollidorus the tyrant how he dreamt that the Scythians came and plucked him out of his bed, pulled of his skin, and cast him into a seething caldron, where his own heart cried to him, Thyself is the cause of these thy sufferings. If men be put out, what they suffer is of themselves, Being their own sin is the cause, they should take it penitently, and it being the just punishment of their sin, they should take it patiently. Lam, 3.39. 3. If wicked men will be hereupon enraged, they shall thereby add sin to sin. It's their sin to need this censure, Veniat veniat verbum Domini & submittemus illi sexcenta si nobis essent colla. Baldas● minist. Ger. in Ep. ad Oecolamp. and it's their sin next not to submit to this censure, when they need it: as one to Oecolampadius said of the Gospel of Christ, so should each one say of the Discipline of Christ, let it come, let it come, and we will submit, if we had hundreds of necks to put under, on the contrary sure such as in wrath rise up against it, whatever troubles to others they 'cause, it will be to themselves in the close, as Samsons foxes who set the Philistian fields on fire, themselves perished probably in the flame, jud. 15.4. 4. It is far better to occa●ion wrath in the bad, than grief to the good. Let men in their wickedness be received to the Supper of the Lord, and we thereby 'cause a double sorrow to God's dear Saints, it's their sorrow to think of the sins such men have committed, and it is again their sorrow to see such men admitted in their sins. We may suppose one for: will be displeased, better offend many bad than one good, Mat. 18 6. He that offends one of the lest that believes in me, better a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he drowned in the depth of the Sea, from the greek its aggravable more fully, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. importing, such a millstone, not light and little, that a man's hand can turn, but one so great and heavy, as requires the strength of a horse to stir it, yet better to have this hung about a man's neck and drowned therewith, etc. than to offend the meanest member of Christ. 5. While we avoid provoking of men, and occasioning troubles from them, we shall be sure to provoke God, and cause worse troubles from him, yea hereby we may come to suffer sore both from God and men. We read of the Jews in Constantine's time, Chrys. in orat. contra judaeos. when they sought to bring in their ceremonies Christ had cast out, and to build up their old Temple, the Lord had thrown down, Amb. lib. 5. Ep, 2●. the Emperor with his army, slew many, and made slaves of the rest: yet after in julian's time attempting the same worse befell them, God fought against them from Heaven, fling balls of fire that broke their work, burnt their tools in their hands, and coats on their backs. If we yet will bring in such persons or things to corrupt the worship of God, as are begun to be cast out, and build up old customs in corrupt communions, that are in part thrown down, Gehennan de c●elo misit● Sal. in Gen, 19.24. though a sword be already upon us, yet more miseries may remain even from men, if not far worse for God to fight against us, to fling hellfire from Heaven into our hearts, to have controversies with our consciences, if not with our kingdom, to set them in a burning flame will be fearful, better the fury of men fall upon us in the discharge of our duties, than the anger of the Lord, in the neglect of the same. Object. Object. O but there are many bad, and we are but few, how shall we dare to debar them? Answ. Answ. 1. Are they many? the more harm and hazard for them, to be at the Sacrament, one dead fly mars the ointment, one Achan troubles all Israel, what than to have a box full of flies? a camp full of Achans? multitude of sinners is the magnitude of sin. 2. Are they already many i● if they be indulged and let alone they will be more: when we see heaps of weeds and nettles in a garden, we pluck them up, lest seeding and rooting they more increase: let these alone and our Congregations will become like the sluggards field, Pro. 24.31. nettles covering the face thereof, and thorns thick in every corner. 3. Are they many? there may be the more hope by our fervent and faithful endeavour in this Discipline to do good to some: though among many its likely there will be those who thereupon will be hardened in their sin, and more desperately enraged: yet some other thereby may be humbled for their sin, and effectually converted, that as he said, If I had not perished I had perished, so some man may say, If I had not been cast out, I had been cast out, If I had not been delivered to Satan, I had not been delivered from Satan, thus where there be many sinful, we may the more hope hereby, to be a means of much good to some, which is the end of such censures, 1 Cor. 5.5. 4. Are they many? yet there be more with us, than against us, as Hezekiah quickened the courage of his servants, when a numerous host of Assyrians came against them, 2 Chro. 32.7, 8. With us is the Lord our God to help us, and one God is more than many thousand men, Josephus reports of Herod the King, that in a speech he once made to his army, josephus' l, 15. cap. 8. he had among others this quickening Passage, perhaps some of you will say, that right is on our side, but the greater number on the other side, ah! how unworthy is such an expression of my followers, for those with whom justice is, with those also God is, there neither wants multitude nor fortitude, Think we in this case how Christ for our encouragement says the same to us, and bids us set one God against many thousand sinners. Object. But they are great men that offend, and are unfit, and how dare we put them in this by? Answ. Answ. Be they great men sinning, the greater is their sin, and the more harm is thereby done. In a word if the lest letter be blotted, it's the less legible, but if the vowels therein be defaced its all marred. Great men says Augustine in the world, Aug. de civ. Dei, l. 4. c. 3. are as vowels in a word, if they be blurred with sin, the more mischief is done, the more meet to be restrained, the more cause to keep them from the Table of the Lord. 2. Are they great? this may be a means to make them good, and O how great will that good be, when greatness and goodness meets. The good examples of great men are to others as the particoloured sticks to Jacobs sheep, Gen 30.39. causing them to bring forth the like, Let us herein what ever men be, take the course Christ hath appointed, powerful it may prove for the good of the greatest men, who being themselves good, may occasion much good in many others. 3. Are they great? there hath been as great as they kept of in the present case. Ambrose in this stoutly withstood the Emperor Theodosius, Qui secutu● es errantem sequere poenitentem Theodorit Hist. l. 4. c. 17. he pressing that he might partake, excusing his own foul fact, by David's doing the like, to which Ambrose replies Thou hast followed David transgressing, follow David repenting, and than think thou of the Table of the Lord. 4. Are they great that will be offended, if they be refused? there is greater than they that will be incensed, if they be received: Better displease mighty men than an Almighty God, Luther hath some such like expression as this, Nihil est tentatio vel universi mundi & totius inferni in unum conflata ad eam quam Deus contrarius homini ponitur. If all the troubles of the whole world, and all the powers of Hell were mustered together against us, it were nothing to this, to have the great God become contrary to us. 5. The greater the men be, the greater will all our zeal appear to be for God, while we withstand them, and herein protest against them; a little fire will fasten upon straw, and small sticks, but a great fire seizes on the greatest blocks. Lastly, Wicked men being many and mighty, the more need of united strength against them, all in office to agreed in a close accord: Magistrate and Minister conclude as Joab and Abishai, 1 Chron. 19.12. Object. Object. But they are my kind neighbours, and good customers, I am loathe to appear against them. Answ. Answ. 1. See if you can a forehand prevent public censures, by private admonition. 2. Better hazard a good customer than hazard a good conscience, peace in thy heart will be beteer than pounds in thy chest. 3. They are not kind and good to thee if they would have thee neglect duty, Qui phr●neticum ligat & qui lethargicum excitat ambobus molestus sed ambos amat & verè amicus est. Aug. de ver. D●m. Serm. 59 and so sin for their sake. 4. If they be kind and good to thee, be thou so to them, are they kind and good to thy body and outward estate? be thou kind and good to their souls and spiritual estates. If to a Sacrament thou sufferest them to come in their sins, and thereby damn their souls, art thou kind and good to them? nay is not this great unkindness? wilt thou so serve a friend? Meli●r est misericordia punicus quam crudelitas parcens. Correptiones amici grata sunt acul●o● habens dolorem non habent comp●ngimur censorijs sed delectamur benevolentijs. Ambros. Better is correcting mercy than sparing cruelty, saith Ambrose. 5. Thou mayest not, as thou fearest, hereby lose them, but gain them rather, that by this they may become better neighbours and friends than before, and a day may come, such a one as thou now hold'st back, may say to thee, as once David to Abigail, 1 Sam. 25.32. Blessed be God, and blessed be thou, and blessed be thy advice which kept me from being guilty of Christ's innocent blood. Let the righteous so smite me: The wounds of a friend are better than the kisses of a foe, Psal. 141.5. Prov. 27.6. Object. Object. But if I say or do any thing to keep such of from the Sacrament, it will be accounted malice spite and hatred. Answ. Answ. 1. Eccles. 11.4. He that observes the wind shall not sow, and he that regards the clouds shall not reap. He that meditates discouragements, neglects duties. But 2. If thou sayest and dost nothing in this case the wicked will make an ill construction, they will conclude you are like to them, and like well of them, as Psal. 50.21. These things, saith God to the wicked, thou hast done, and I kept silence, and thou thoughtest I was altogether such a one as thyself, but I will reprove thee etc. so do you appear against them lest they so conclude. 3. Better they charge you with malice and hatred of them, than God with love to them, and helping of them in their wicked ways, Noli frater, noli obsecro non te decet etsi aliquem forte deceat: si tamen quicquam deceat malos Emeritum certe non decet defendere Optatum in malu. Aug. ep. 168. ad Emeris. 2 Chron. 19.2. O saith the Seer to Jehoshaphat when he had complied with Ahab, Shouldst thou help the ungodly, and love them that hate the Lord? therefore is wrath upon thee from the Lord. A wicked man, as a man, is to be loved, but as wicked it's meet to hate him: It ill becomes any to be wicked, and it will worse become you any way to defend their wickedness, which you do when you omit your duty, and will not declare or proceed against them. But to prevent such a charge of malice, 1. Neither say or do more against one than another, but be impartial against all, spare neither friend nor foe. 2. Do not make too much haste, before there is just cause, nor delay too long when the cause is just: When a matter hath lain long unquestioned, or uncomplained of, and after brought out, it's more suspicious of spite, therefore act timely herein. 3. Do all you can, Sive claims, dilectione claims, sive corrigas, dilectione corrigas ad disciplinam: fiant omnia dictante charitate. Aug. in joh. Tract. 7. in all other offices of love to them, and friendly courtesies for them, though in this you are against them, and for your own satisfaction do this all in love, complain in love, and do not seek private revenge, in public censures: Jehu's fault in this was foul, Hos. 1.4. and when your own hearts can witness what bowels of compassion you bear to them, mind not what contrary clamours are made by them. Object. Object. But I shall be accounted a busy body let me only inform against them. Answ. Answ. Better the world accounted thee a busy body, than God and his Church esteem thee an idle body that will not act any thing towards the public good. The just reproach of a busybody you shall not need fear, only observe these rules. 1. Do not stir thus for every small matter, but what is gross and scandalous, Eccles. 7.21. Take no heed to all words spoken, etc. 2. Do not strive for a public penalty till thou seest private means prevails not Matth. 18.15, 16. Than tell the Church. 3. Do not move further than the compass of thy own place, let thy oars row within thy own boat, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Comp●sita vox ab alieno & Episcopo, i e. Inspector●. Eras not busy in other men's matters, 1 Pet 4.15. 1 Pet. 4.15. Keep within thy own orb, and therein with all agility act to the utmost. No element we say is heavy in its proper place, let no Christian, public or private, move heavily in his own place or station, but bestir yourselves for God in this case of Christ. Object. Object. But I am entreated to let such a one pass to the Sacrament, and not restrain or complain, and how shall I deny? Answ. Answ. God commands and desires the contrary, how canst thou deny him? You cannot dispense wit a duties upon any entreaties. Let me give you a famous instance, that something suits this case. I have read of Charles the Emperor, and two great persons once in this Kingdom, Cranmer and Ridley, soliciting King Edward the sixth, Act. and Mon. 2. pag. 553. that his sister, the Lady Mary might have the Sacrament in the popish way, he stood out denying and pleading the cause with them, they still pressing their carnal arguments, he burst out into bitter tears, sobbing and beseeching them to say not more, whereupon they went their way, professing the young King had more Divinity in his little finger, than they in their whole bodies. The more purely the Sacrament is celebrated, the more unmeet are all impure persons to approach thereunto, no persuasions therefore should procure our allowance thereof, hereby our Christianity, fidelity, fervency, and sincerity, will be the more eminently set forth, when against all entreaties, we resolutely resist their admittance unto the holy Table of the Lord, and when against all discouragements we zealously persist in purging Sacraments and Assemblies from what is impure and impertinent. Lastly, Object. O but this disciplinary course in the Church, of casting out the scandalous, and keeping out the irreligious, hath divers times been attempted, but the work found so hard and hazardous, accompanied with so great dangers and difficulties, as it hath been laid by with laughter from some, and left of with shame and sorrow in others. Answ. Be it granted that this business of Excommunication, and sequestration from the Sacrament, Theolog proplem loc. 112. de excom. pag. 340. have been often attempted, but poorly prospered. In some Churches of Germany, it was, as Aretius observe, by some studiously endeavoured, but the work was hindered, the promoters discouraged, and all vanished without any good success. In this Land, what endeavours have been to reduce this discipline, they that are acquainted with the history of times can tell. But what of this? 1. There have been times when this hath been enterprised and prospered, and those the first and best times: How prosperous and vigorous this course was in the times both of Origen and Cyprian, Origen contra cells lib. 3. Cyprian ep. 12. & 55. & 59 64. & ep. 68 instances are plain and plentiful ●n their learned writings: How severe and strict Discipline was than against scandal, and to debar the scandalous from the communion and Church-fellowship, is clear, with the good successes therein, and issues thereof, though in these last and worst times, oppositions have been high, and interruptions great. 2. Good things through opposition have for a time ceased, yet after, most happily succeeded, established and flourished. The building in Ezras and Nehemiahs' time, by power and policy, by reproaches, lies and disgraces, was wholly for a while interrupted, yet afterwards effectually finished. 3. The more frustrate former attempts have been, the more glorious may be the effects for future, the more glory may rise to God, and rest on us, it will the rather be our crown and comfort to possess that which others reached after, but could not attain to, Gen. 38. We read when Tamar was in travel with her Twins, that one put forth his hand, and hopes was he would be by and by born, but he drew back, and in stead another came forth, who for his violent breaking out, was called Pharez, A Breach: yet after his brother that appeared first, was born, his name was called Zarah, his birth being as the rising of the sun, with facility and beauty, so the Hebrew word is interpreted by some. When good Discipline hath been at the birth, what opposite break out hath there been? how hath it been forced back? yet when it shall come forth, it may be called Zarah, it will be to the congregations of Christ, as the rising of a glorious sur. When the sun sets, night follows, and than all the wild beasts with boldness creep forth, but when the sun rises, they are forced out of the open field, and made ●o lie down in their dens. 4. This course hath been undertaken, but broken of, the causes whereupon may well be enquired. Psal. 104.22. 1. A cause in offenders may be proposed. 2. A cause in Reformers may be supposed. In offenders the cause hath been more positive. In Reformers the cause hath been more privative. Offenders so various, violent, desperate and disobedient, not bowing their necks to the yoke of Jesus Christ, but as an excess of evil in them, so a defect of good in others. Reformers who have begun this business have ceased the service. 1. For want of diligence, loathe to take pains to pursue it, and unweariedly to abide by it. 2. For want of patience ●o endure the difficulties wherewith they have been beset in the onset of service. 3. For want of prudence, wisely with discretion, caution and moderation to manage this matter. 4. For want of concord not cordially agreeing to carry on this course, officers and offices, differing, the swords civil and Ecclesiastical clashing. 5. For want of courage, sin in others hath been above zeal in them. Suppose upon some of these causes the work hath ceased, it's no warrant for us: let us be diligent, patiented, prudent, let us have concord, courage to carry on this work of God. Luther speaks excellently to Melancton, who was apt to be disheartened with doubts from difficulties and fears, from foes, and so to cease the service they had undertaken. If the work be not good, why did we ever own it, if it be good, why should we ever decline it? Why, saith he, should we fear the conquered world, that have Christ the conqueror on our side? Are we in respect of our places to appear for God against sinners? let not our fear be above our faith and fervour: what if the work be hard and hazardous? The King of Navarre once told Beza, Pelago se non ita commissurus, quin quando liberet pedem refer posset that in the matters of Religion and Reformation, he would launch not further to sea than he might be sure to return safe to haven, if the winds and waters were rough, Beware we of this and let us resolve to sail on what ever we suffer. I conclude with these two proposals. 1. The greatest opposition against any good course is ordinarily at the entrance. It is, and ever hath been the main and most elaborate design of the world, as St Cyprian observes, Cyprian Serm. de stella & magis. to strangle Christ in his cradle, and kill him ●n his infancy, when he gins to be shaped and form as in the first conversion of a sinner, and reformation of a Church, let us therefore now look for no less. 2. The more opposition there is against any good course, the likelier at length to succeed. In Dioclesian's time under whom was the last and worst of the 10. Persecutions, though than Christian Religion was more desperately opposed than ever, Russin yet it prospered and prevailed more than ever, so that Dioclesian himself observing the more he sought to blot cut the Name of Christ, it became more legible, and to block up the way of Christ, it became more passable, and what ever of Christ he thought to root out, it rooted the deeper, and risen the higher: thereupon he resolved to engage not further, but retired to a private life. This discipline of Christ that concerns the Sacrament, let us pursue it, prospero it shall, though it goes on hardly and heavily a while, let us maintain our places, and keep our ground against sinners, as the stars in their courses fought against Sisera. The cause is the Lords: The comfort will be ours: The good to God's Church will be great. Take away the dross from the silver and there shall come forth a fair vessel for the finer, Prov. 25.4. The exhortation next is to you (my dear neighbours and friends) freely to submit yourselves to good government, herein, Heb. 13.17. Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves. The Apostle uses two words to set forth the duty of people to their Pastors, Obey and Submit: there being two sort of things which they aught to come under, their Sermons, their censures, obey them Preaching, submit to them punishing: obey them in the course of sound doctrine, submit to them in the course of just discipline. I have read of Ambrose, that once being about to leave the Church of Milan, the people of the place flocked about him, laid hold of him, protesting they had rather loose their lives, than loose their Pastor, beseeching him to remain and promote among them, the Gospel and government of Jesus Christ, professing and promising their ready submission thereunto. The like let me beseech you to, whom I dearly love in the Lord, that Sacramental discipline to which you are to submit, I refer to 3. heads. 1. To be examined whether fit. 2. To be refused if found unfit. 3. To be directed you may be fit. 1. You are to submit to meet examination, this is agreed, all are not meet to be admitted to the holy Table of the Lord, many for ignorance, as also for other wickedness, aught to be debarred, but after things well weighed and proved: Now must we try and so take heed whom we refuse? and must we not try to take heed whom we embrace? must we examine lest we err in rejecting, and had not we need examine, lest we err in admitting? An unmeet man hath more wrong to the Sacrament to be accepted, than a meet man from it to be debarred: let a good man be refused, he suffers that which God will sanctify, and it may be sufficient for him to have that mentally, which he cannot have Sacramentally, God accepts his desire, and will supply his Sacrament-absence with the more of his own presence: let a wicked man be received, he commits that sin, and contracts that guilt, which had he been suspended, had been prevented. Submit than to this necessary course of due examination and trial before the Sacrament, for the discovery of your necessary knowledge or debarrable ignorance, in that point. I principally press it. 1. In household government, it is the duty of domestic rulers, to examine such as are under their chaage. Pareus in loc. It was Abraham's praise to have so many catechised servants in his family, Gen. 14.14. servants well instructed in matters of Religion, so the word is rendered. The words that I command thee, thou shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thy house, and thou shalt teached them diligently to thy children. Deut. 6.7, The Hebrew word is, thou shalt whet or sharpen them to thy children, by repeating them, and causing them to repeat, as in a catechetical way: and are not those who are Governors in the Church, and have others under charge, to extend care in this kind? 2. In civil courts trial must first be made, and than sentence passed, witnesses examined, than the innocent cleared, and offenders punished, Titles tried, evidences produced, and proved, and after vardict given, etc. much more meet is this in all Church-proceeding, else a greater wrong may be done, in matters that concern the soul and spiritual estate, than in things that only refer to ehe world, 3. In other callings those that are to deal with you in inferior matters, you allow to examine and question you, the Physician before he gives you physic asks many things, you willingly answer, and open your griefs, and as well as you can tell the whole state of your bodies, and may not he that watcheth for your souls, and seeks your spiritual cure, inquire and examine? 4. In other cases you are content to come under the questions of others, though those upon whom you may be accidentally cast: If you lose your ways in a journey, if any that may direct you inquire, whence you come? whether you go? etc. If you loose your estates by casualty, if any that may supply you, inquire your case, examine your wants, your answers are ready, and will you be a verse herein that tends to your internal and eternal good? 5. Unwillingness hereunto its an argument of an ill estate, he that is loath to have his house searched, it's a sign he hath therein some ill gotten goods. It's a suspicion a man's gold is not weight, being loath to have it brought to the scales, On the contrary, it is a comfortable evidence of a hopeful condition, to submit to trial and examination. A good scholar that hath it in him is willing to be examined, though a dunce or non-proficient have no mind to that matter. 6. The undergoing of this, may be your peace and comfort, your praise and profit, hereby we may be able to give testimony of you, and of that meetness we find in you, to communicate in the Supper of the Lord, whereby both yourselves and others may be the more satisfied, your confidence and comforts increased, your knowledge and experience enlarged, and others by your means encouraged. The posing and examining a good Scholar is his advantage, discovers his reading, adds to his learning, he comes of with applause and honour. 7. Better be examined by men before, than to be questioned by the Lord, and your own awakened consciences at the Sacrament, or after: for God to find you out and fall upon you there, as on him without the wedding garments Mat. 22. with a Friend how comest thou in hither? how dared thou presume to this precious Ordinance? or as God came upon Adam, when he had eaten forbidden fruit, with where art thou? what hast thou done? Here are questions will more amaze, than any your Minister can put. Saul boasted he had done the Commandment of God, O but the sheep bleated, and the oxen lowed, a man thinks all is well, he hath been at the Sacrament of Christ, but by and by his conscience bleats and lows against him, a worse business than an examination or suspension. 8. Why should not you give an account to them, that must give an account for you? Heb. 13.17. It's the Apostles argument to urge people's submission to their Pastors, they watch for your souls as they that must give an account: God will one day inquire, and Christ will question with us, what our care hath been of you, our pains with you, our prayers for you; We must be more exactly answerable to God for souls, than ever Jacob was counteable to Laban for sheep: and may not we take an acount, who must give an account? 9 We require no more than what hath been the practice of the best Reformed Churches, Consuetan est ut qui per atatem inque doctrina catechetica profectum ad saecram coenam, primum admittuntur, etc. Zepperas polit. Eccles. l. 3. c. 8. p. 721. If any were to be admitted to the Supper of the Lord, they were such as had been well instructed and examined in the doctrine of Catechism, and their proficiency being found by some in office more privately, they were than presented to the whole Church, being required publicly to give testimony of their knowledge, and make confession of their faith, and so come in to be accepted at the Table of the Lord. 10. God's servants examined by adversaries, have spoken freely with peril of life, to points of Faith, when they knew their answerings made way for their sufferings. Gordius a martyr being about to be examined before his adversaries, his friends advised him to conceal himself, and not let his tongue declare what he did in his heart believe, yes, says he, its fit my tongue that was made for God, should speak for God, though it be with the loss of my life, I will give an account of my faith, if called thereunto. O what sad examining Gods Saints have patiently suffered, Read that little book of Martyrs the 11. of the Hebrews, some were tortured, examined upon the rack, ver. 35. Others were tried with cruel mockings and scourge, for, 36. Thus was Paul examined, when every question was with a blow that drew blood, Act. 22.24. 2 Cor. 11, 24, 25. yet admirable were the answers he gave, and confessions he made, of which we read both, Act. 24. and Act. 25. at large, yea Christ himself gave excellent answers, even to betraying questions, Mat. 22.35, 36. and before Pontius Pilate, witnessed a good confession, 2 Tim, 6.13. and will not you do this in a friendly way? 11, and lastly, see if the word of God do not warrant some to examine, and others to answer in discovering cases, Rev. 2.2. I know thy works, says the Lord, unto the Church of Ephesus, how thou canst not bear them that are evil, what than? why cast them out? before trial be made, not, thou hast tried them, which say they are Apostles, and are not: tried them examined them, as some reads it, pierced into them as the Greek word imports, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. by close-searching questions: and this the Angel of the Church practised, and was praised for, what the Lord commends he commands, 1 Pet, 3.15. Be always ready to give an answer to him that asks a reason of your hope, with meekness and fear. To confess Christ the Gospel clearly requires, Luk. 12.8. Cyprian puts a difference between confession and profession. To profess is for a Christian of his own accord, to utter his own belief: To confess, it's to make answer to demands, made by those in authority, who question our Creed. We find a threefold confession in Scripture. A confession of praise, Heb. 13.15. A confession of sin, 1 joh. 1.9. A confession of Faith, Rom. 10.10. With the heart man believes, and with the mouth confession is made, to wit, the tongue confesseth what the heart believes. If we do not confess the faith, we deny the faith: being examined of our faith in Christ, if we do not confess him, we deny him: Mat. 10.33. He that confesses me before men, him will I confess before my father in Heaven: but he that denies me before men, him will I deny before my Father in Heaven. There are but these two, him that confesses, and him that denies. Cyprian tells of some who loath to deny, yet loather to die, accepted from the Magistrates, scrolls testimonial of their abnegation, though they did not expressly deny him, yet they not expressly confessed him, they were enjoined public repentance, as those that denied him, Phil. 2.11. Every tongue shall confess that jesus is the Lord, all shall speak it out together as the greek word notes, and so when examined by such as be over you, you must freely confess, yea you aught before your acceptance to this holy Supper, willingly to undergo, and cheerfully to answer, as examination is made. Object, But this examining and questioning of men and women, and requiring their answers, will bring back auricular confession of use in popish times. Answ Why so? sure were it not through ignorance (to charge not deeper) this argument would never have been urged, It's their ignorance not knowing what that auricular confession of old was: and it's their ignorance or not knowing what that confession is, which we in this case call for. Confession indeed we desire, Non dico ut confitearis conservo tuo peccata tua dicito Deo, qui curet ea, Chrys. in Psa. 50. but no way such as in popish times was practised, and long since exploded, and expelled. That Sacramental or auricular confession. 1. It was of sins only. 2. Of all secret sins, even inward thoughts. 3. It was done privately in the ears of the Priest only. But now the examining of people, and the confession we expect thereupon, 1. It is not so much of sins and iniquities, as of needful qualities and abilities, to tender you meet for this Supper of the Lord. We inquire of your knowledge, faith, repentance. etc. It's not bad fruit but good fruit that we look for and ask after. Quid mihi est cum hominibus ut audiantsecretas confessiones meas quosi sanituri sint animae languores m●os? Aug. Agnoscitreus Ignoscis Deus 2. Suppose search be made for sin, and we call to confession, it's not of secret sins known only to God. The inward evils of the heart they are only offensive to God, and it's enough to confess them to God, Psa. 32.5. What have any to do to hear your private confessions, who cannot cure your inward distempers? God gives remission, to him make confession, 1 Io. 1.9. yet La quae conserentiam gravant exponere Ecclesia nostra consulit consolationis gratiâ, Che. part. 25. 3. The confession we mean in this matter, is not to be made in the ears of the Minister alone. 'tis true there may be some case wherein confession to one single in secret, may be meet, as when some close sin lies heavy upon conscience, and dreadfully distresses the mind, but than 1. We do not bring in such a confession by any coaction, but the party is herein free not forced, nor 2. Do we limit it to a particular man, but one skilful, faithful, and pitiful, to open the troubled heart unto, and when ease can no way else be had, Solatium vita habere cui pectus a perias. happy is he that hath a friend he can unbosom himself unto: such a confession may sometimes be meet before the communion, which as it is not to be too far extended, Haec confessio nec nimi● laxanda, nec nimis astringenda est. Carol. Imp. so neither wholly neglected, excepting this case, the confession we intent is not required to be made to the Pastor privately, or any other particular person, but a confession either less or more public: less public as to the Pastors and their assistants convened for the managing of Ecclesiastical discipline, who aught to inquire of scandals, and to be informed of the state of their flocks, Pro. 27.23. Moulin doth excellently commend this as a usual practice among all the reformed Churches in France. It's trus there is a confession that sometimes aught to be made more public, to wit, of men's public sins, before they come to the Lords Supper, as in the Council of Nice, Conc. Nic. can. 11. was prescribed to them, that in the persecution of Licinius had sacrificed to Idols, Euseb. Eccl. hist. l. 9 c. 38. The Emperor Philip that slew Gordianus earnestly desiring to partake of the Sacrament of the Supper, but was denied still he stood in the place of the penitentiaries, and made public recognition of his sin: and truly a confession either more or less public of many, its meet to require, Confessio fa ad ostensionem panitentia non ad impetrationem venia. not for the obtaining of pardon, but to testify the truth of repentance, men that are not ashamed before others to profess their wickedness and blasphemously to bark against Heaven, Non erubni profiteri blasphemias meas & latrate adversus te, Aug. conf.. whoever hears: and shall such be ashamed to confess their wickednesses in the hearing of others? to such I say, give glory to God, and make confession of your sins unto men, Iosh. 7.19. Those whom John did admit to baptism, being men they made confession of their sins, Mat. 3.6. Quisquis verbum confessionis in ore habet & in cord non habet, aut dolosus est aut vanus, qui vero in cord & non in ●reant superbus aut timidus. Bern. and why may we not expect the same from such who upon conviction are to make confession, or to receive no allowance, to this Ordinance, because of their palpable pride and impenitency. O they that have lived without God in the world, ignorant of, and opposite to Christ, would they rush in, and not so much as meet with a question at door, not be examined either concerning sin, or a Saviour, how they repent of the one, and what they believe of the other? It must not be. Object. Object. But the Apostle bids every man examine himself, and so eat and drink, and is not that sufficient? Answ. Answ. True, Self-examination is a necessary antecedent to the Sacrament, but what hope is there that they will examine themselves, who when others in a friendly way would examine them, they are unwilling yea, and unable to answer. 2. Men must examine themselves that they may the more promptly and prudently answer, when they are examined by others: you will be the more apt and able to give an account to others, having first taken an account of yourselves, 3. All are apt through self-love to deal slightly with themselves, in examination of themselves, and so the more need to be examined by others. A man is loath to dig into himself, but willing enough to indulge himself. 4. Men through self-deceit are prove to presume and conceive all is well, no need to examine: He that is first in his own cause seems just, but his neighbour comes and searches him, Pro. 18.17. seems just and innocent, not only to others, but to himself, and in his own esteem, till another comes, and discovers that whereof he was not ware. In civil law it is said to be a rule, who might be presumed parties (as household witnesses) their testimony is invalid and ineffectual. Truly a poor testimony hath that man in matters of his soul, that hath only the witness of his own deceived heart, seduced by the subtleties of Satan, assuring all is well let others examine, and they may witness, but they cannot give testimony, except they first take trial. 5. However others examine you, yet you must examine yourselves, however you examine yourselves, yet its meet others examine you also, some must examine you to give themselves and others satisfaction with whom you are to join, you must examine yourselves that in yourselves you may be the more fully satisfied, that into the fellowship of Saints you are fit to be joined, We must examine whether you are meet in the court, and accounted of the Church: you must examine whether you are meet in the sight, court, and accounted of God, we must examine your knowledge in points of religion, you must examine whether that knowledge we praise and approve, be sanctifying and soul-seasoning and saving or not, we must examine so much and so far as matters may be knowable to us, you must examine what further may be known by you, to wit, the estate of your hearts towards God, which we cannot search, nor shall we judge, God indeed searcheth and judgeth your hearts and thoughts, we do not. There are three things God reserves to himself. The revenging of wrongs, duty. 32.35. The glory of events, Pro. 16.33. The searching of hearts, jer. 17.10, yet though no man can search another's heart, each man may, and must search his own heart, Psa. 77.6. I common with my own heart, and my spirit made diligent search, I swept my own spirit with a bosom of trial, as it's rendered by some, and this as at other times you aught to do, so especially upon a Sacrament approach. Io. Buxdorf. Sinag. juda. cap. 11. As the Jews before the Passeover use to make an exact search into every corner of the house for leaven, so must you before this Supper search into every corner of your hearts for sin, and yet still submit to the trial of others, that we may examine and see whether you are furnished with those qualities which are of ntcessary use in this Ordinance. The Roman fencers before they were to enter the theatre, in a gladiatory combat, were want to carry their weapons they were to use first to the governor, for him to prove them, and allow them, as fit for that exercise. It's meet your knowledge, your faith, and such like graces, which you are to use at the Table of the Lord, be proved and tried by such as are appointed thereunto, to see it they are such as are fit for this Ordinance. When josephs' Officers came to search jacobs' sons for their Master's cup, Gen. 44. they all took down their sacks and willingly submitted themselves thereunto, ver. 11.12. so do you when the Officers of Jesus Christ be to search and examine you in this case, yield yourselves thereunto with willingness of mind. Object. Object. But this is to be dealt with like children, what, must we be catechised? Answ. Ans. 1. Too many are as children, and therefore its fit that they should be dealt with like children. 1. As children for wilfulness and stubborness they need rods of correction, 1 Cor. 4.21. What will you, shall I come to you with a rod? A rod of Church discipline, they were worthy therewith to be chastened. 2, As children for weakness and ignorance they need words of instruction, in the very rudiments of religion: need of milk and not of strong meat. Rudimenta quibus pueri erudiuntur, Heb. 5.13. need to be taught in catechetical principles, so as to answer back again with a lively voice, whereby such principles may be the more piercing, and take the deeper impression, as the word to catechise, imports, taken from the echoing of a voice, or whetting of a knife forward and back again, giveth it a sharper edge, and makes it more easy to cut, and such a course of catechising is of good use in the Church, 1 Cor. 14.19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. In the Church I had rather speak five words wherewith I may catechise others, so the Greek reads it, Gal. 6.6. Let him that is catechised communicate to him that catechizeth, it is the same word in the Original. 2. You must be all like little children in a laudable sense, or no entrance into life everlasting, Matth. 18.3. Except ye be converted and become as little children, you cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven, that is, you must be humble, lowly, tractable, submissive to rules of good discipl ne, which when once you be, you will not refuse to be instructed or catechised in the knowledge of God, or any thing that concerns your good. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We read how Theophilus was catechised, Luk. 14. and so Apollo's, Act. 18.25. and it was their honour, not their shame so to be. 3. We shall not deal with you herein as children, but with respect to your age and place, and you may ca●l it not examining or catechising of you, but a friendly conferring and discoursing with you about God, his being and working, and will, made known in holy Scriptures, about man, his innocency, apostasy, and recovery; his generation, of God, his degeneration in Adam, and his regeneration in Christ, concerning the Sacrament, etc. Let us speak together in a sweet and loving way of these things. Object. Object. There is no such questioning or examining before the other Sacrament, why before this? Answ. Answ. Those who were grown men, having been bred up in paganism and after converted to the Christian faith, before they were baptised, they were examined, and had such like questions as these put to them. Dost thou renounce the devil? I do renounce. Dost thou believe in Christ? I do believe. Dost thou promise' obedience to the Gospel? I promise'. So Philip examined the Eunuch, than baptised him, Act 8. 2. The same virtually is yet done to infants, being we inquire of their parents or others in their behalf. 3. We actually examine persons grown up, before a Sacrament, because through years they are able to answer, which infants are not, and reason for them why they should, which for infants is not, they having given outward offence, manifested visible and audible ignorance and vanity, therefore meet they give open testimony of their knowledge, faith, obedience, etc. 4. Some difference is between the two Sacraments, that may satisfy in this as is already shown. Secondly, Trial being thus taken, and you found unfit for the Table of the Lord, you are to be refused, and so remain, submitting yourselves thereunto, until you are duly prepared for a meet partaking thereat: and surely such men will fall under a great evil hereupon, who shall not patiently submit hereunto, if any shall oppose herein, the evil will be found to be great. 1. In respect of the causes whence it will proceed. 2. In respect of the effects which it will produce. An opposition, or non-submission to a just censure in this, It must proceed from some evil of sin, as suppose pride and ignorance, or the like. A double error is ordinary in the judgements of men, either they think all generally are the jure to receive the Sacrament, and so dislike if any be put by, or if not all, yet they think so well of themselves, that each one of them for their parts aught of right to receive, and so storm at a restraint, as a wrong. If notice be given of a Sacrament, each one is apt to conceive himself fit to be a guest: As when Haman heard of one to be raised to honour, he presently thought himself was the man, Ester 6 6. When men hear, that from the Sacrament some are to be debarred, they say not as the disciples, Is it I? Is it I? or as those, Act. 2.37, What shall we do? But as Peter to Christ concerning John, What shall this man do? Men have ordinarily, either a low esteem of the Sacrament, or a high esteem of themselves, they think the ordinance may well descend to them, or they well ascend to the ordinance: being ignorant of the worthiness of the Sacrament, and the unworthiness of themselves, and so are highly displeased when they are justly debarred. This also will produce sad evils, both of sin and punishment, men that will not patiently subject themselves to just censures, they thereby aggravate their sins, and bring themselves more under some sad stroke from God. Socrat. Schol lib. 1. cap. 25. Church history reports of Arius that wretched heretic, Alexander B. Constantinople. how much he was incensed against Alexd, for casting him out, and denying to admit him to communion, Eusebius B. Nicomedia, Arius stirred up Eusebius who threatened Alexander, that if he did not take him in by such a day, himself should be cast out from his place and banished, and such a one should succeed him, who should admit Arius to Church-fellowship. Holy Alexander goes into the Church, cries to God in prayer to prevent such a ones admission, and behold in the evening of that day Arius was taken away by an execrable judgement in his sudden death. The good man pressed God with tears before the Communion-Table that he might not come there, God struck him with a dreadful blow, his blood and bowels gushing out, he instantly died. Men that will not submit themselves to meet chastisements, pull down upon themselves more dreadful punishments, submit yourselves therefore, that you may be sure to escape all such destroying evils. Object. Object. But if others religious and pious be at the Lords Table present, we hope all will be well with us for their sakes. Answ. Answ. 1 Grant the presence there of good people, yet never the better for you, either to prevent your sin or your punishment. As the bore presence of the bad cannot make the Sacrament bad to the good, not more can the bore presence of the good make the Sacrament good to the bad. Naturalists writ, that the Unicorn comes to the water, puts in his horn, and than all the beasts follow, and drink together without danger, it's not applicable here, the same Sacrament, physic to the good, poison to the bad for all that therein, the one to God acceptable, yet the other abominable. Though Moses and Samuel stood before me, my heart cannot be toward this people, cast them out of my sight let them go forth, Jer. 15.1. 2. It may prove the worse for you, sin thereby the more increased, God thereby the more incensed, not only because of what you partake of, but also because of whom you partake with, for God requires all corrupt mixtures to be removed, as from his service, so from his servants. The man that crope in among the wedding guests, without the wedding garment, Matth. 22. O the fury that fell upon him there, Bind him hand and foot, take him away, cast him into outer darkness, where shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth, vers. 13. Better bear a Sacrament-suspension, than to hazard such a sad rejection. Object. Object. But this is strictness too much to be striven for, and niceness more than need. Answ. Answ. Not so, as may be easily seen, For, 1. Think we how exact the very heathens have been even in their sacrifices to keep of persons profane with a procul hinc. Tu geniter cape sacra man●● patriosque pen●●es: M● bell● extento digressun & caede recenti, Aterectare nefas donec me flumin● vivo, A●●●ero— Virg. 2. Aemad, That saying of Aeneas, in the Poet, to his father when he came from the war, is a clear proof, Father do you meddle with the sacrifices, but as for me its a sinful thing to touch them till I have wasted myself in the fountain: Hence the heathens had one, ever appointed to cry out to the people, when they came to sacrifice, All you that are unclean, be gone, etc. 2. Consider not only what hath been the light of nature in the hearts of men, but what is the strength of nature in the bodies of healthy men: such vapours and humours as are obnoxius and peccant, nature ejects and works out of the body, and the more forcible nature is, the fewer of such distempers it leaves: see how each part herein helps itself: the head by sneezing, the lungs by coughing, the veins by swearing, the stomach by vomiting, etc. and shall not a strict course be allowed in the Church to remove what offends with submission thereunto? 3. The exactness of former ages in this service of the Sacrament hath exceeded. Origen in. Levit. Hom. 13. Origen calls the bread and the cup in the Lord's Supper, The holy of holies, unto which only holy ones are admitted, the unholy excluded. Chrysost. in epist. ad Heb. Hom. 17. And Chrysostom reports, that in the Primitive times, when ever this Sacrament was administered, a Deacon stood up and cried in the open Assembly, Holy things to Holy men, Holy things to Holy men: thereby debarring all others unholy, and raising the hearts of the holy. 4. This is the highest service under the Gospel, and so requires the more axactnes, the next thing to be done is drinking wine with Christ in his Father's kingdom, Mat. 26.29. Object. Object. But this refusing us from the Sacrament, will be a great shame to us, How shall we bear it? Answ. Answ. 1. Bore refusal from the Sacrament is not a shame, but to deserve to be refused, therein lies the shame. Shame accompanies sin, as the black shadow the body: where there is no sin there is no shame. If through a miscarriage of the keys, a man be unjustly suspended, it's his affliction, but not his sin, and so no just cause of his shame: but when a man for his sin is deservedly put by, that is a just ground of shame. Negatively, for you not to have necessary graces, this is your shame, you have long had the means of knowledge, yet some of you have not the knowledge of God, I speak this to your shame, 1 Cor. 15.24. You have heard many Sermons of faith in Christ, and yet you believe not, this is your shame. Positively to practise contrary courses, to pursue sin and wickedness, whereby you are made unmeet for this holy Ordinance, this is your shame. 2 For such as are under ignorance or scandal to be accepted to the Sacrament, would be a far greater shame, than their putting by can be, because that only would be a shame to themselves, but this a shame to many more. A shame to the governor's and government, to admit such unmeet men. A shame to the whole Congregation among whom they are admitted. Now is it not fare fit for shame to fall upon a pr●vate person, than upon a public Congregation? and is it not more meet that an offender should bear his own shame, than others innocent to be cast under it? It's said, 1 Cor. 11.14. that its a shame for a man to wear long hair; or to nourish his hair long, so in the Greek: Now when a man will not suffer his long uncomely locks to be cut of, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. he nourishes them, and that is his shame: When a man shall nourish his filthy lusts, and by mortification not endure them to be cut of, it ●s his shame, when Church Officers with the razor of discipline shall not cut of offenders, but indulge and nourish them it is their shame. Better for transgressors to abide blushing under their own shame by suffering a just censure, than for o●hers to undergo the shame of sinful slackness to censure when the cause is just. 3. It will not only be a shame to you to be put by the Lord's Table for your sins, but it will be a soul shame for you to appear at the Table of the Lord in your sins. Brethrens, I ask you, saith Augustine, Is it a shame to go and sit at the table of an earthly Lord, August. de Temp. with filthy and dirty hands, and is it not a shame to be at the Table of this heavenly Lord, with unhallowed hearts, unsubdued lusts, and unreformed lives? the other is a shame before men, this a shame before God, Angels and Saints. Would not you think it a shame to sit naked of bodily garments at an ordinary feast among neighbours? and is it not a shame to appear naked of all soul attire at this extraordinary banquet in the presence of the Lord and his holy Angels? O what silencing shame and confusion of face was that man struck with, who was found at the wedding, without a wedding garment, Matth. 22.12. but for a man to be found there, all filthy and defiled with sinful pollutions, who can utter that shame? If the linen upon the Communion Table were black and foul, the bread mouldy, the wine-cup all dusty, etc. would not you cry shame upon some? and will it not be a shame for yourselves to be there all soiled with sin? You would have the vessels there made clean, saith Chrysostom, for your use, and should not you there be more clean for the Lords use? 4. If you think of shame to be put forth from the Sacrament, and from a few of God's servants in communion on earth, among whom you may be after received, think than what a shame it will be at the last day, to be shut out of heaven, and from the society there of Saints and Angels for ever. For Christ at that day to say, Chrysost. Hom. ad pop. Antioch. Departed from me, a thing more terrible, saith Chrysostom, than a thousand hells. O than to be cast of by Christ with an I know you not, to have the door of heaven shut upon you, so as no arguments will ever open it, will not this be a shame? Yet this prove your portion among other sins, for this sin of unworthy receiving the Sacramnnt. 5. To be put here to shame may be your advantage for future: If men sin and suffer for the same, it is good to be ashamed, it is a shameful sin to be a shameless man, for to be as Caligula was, who said of himself, he loved nothing better in himself, than that he could not be ashamed: O how much doth it move God to wrath, to find sinful men without shame, Jer. 3.3. but on the contrary how well was God pleased when he saw Ephraim ashamed? Jer. 31.19. Quantum displices Deo immunditia peccati, in tantum placet Deo crubiscentia panitentis. Bern. So much the more as God hath been displeased with the blackness of sin, the more will he be well pleased at the blushing of the sinner, and bringing of him to a penitential shame. He that hath not been ashamed to commit sin, had need take the more shame in his repentance for sin, and indeed one end of Church censures is to make men ashamed. If any obey not our word by this Epistle, note that man, and have no company with him, that he may be ashamed, 2 Thes. 3.14. Object. Object. But the refusing us from the Sacrament, will not only be a shame to us among men, but a very great trouble to us in ourselves. Answ. Answ. 1. Disparagement among men, and disquietment in yourselves, would you avoid them in this case? O than remove the cause aforehand, be not such as for your sins may deserve this censure that brings trouble and shame: Be not ignorant and scandalous: Be not opposite and obstinate, Search for wisdom as for silver, and knowledge as for hid treasures, Prov. 2.4. and than add to your knowledge temperance, and to temperance, patience, and to patience, brotherly kindness, 2 Pet. 1.5, 6, so shall you find friendly acceptance at this Supper, both from God and men, and so escape all such shame and trouble. 2. You say the putting you from the Sacrament will be a trouble to you, and truly good reason it should, for we hope such a censure you shall never lie under, unless drawn down by your own sinful deserts, and being justly punished its meet you be troubled: To lie under censures and sufferings for sin insensible, is an addition to sin, and an ill condition in the sinner. 3. Your trouble of mind hereupon may prove very profitable, such troubles may bring forth sweet cures and comforts to your souls. The Angel troubled the waters, and than it cured those that stepped in, Joh. 5.4. It's the Lords method and manner to trouble men's minds first, and than come with healing in his wings, Malach. 4.2. Your trouble for being put by one Sacrament, may be a means to prepare you for many, and that there may be so good effects of such troubles, take ye heed of these things in trouble. 1 Beware your wrath do not overcome your grief, that that fire in you do not dry up this water, that anger in you against such as have censured you, do not prevail above sorrow in you, who by them be so censured. 2. Beware you be not more affected with the censure for your sin, than with the sin for which you come under censure. Let not the penalty so much afflict as your iniquity: be more disquieted at your transgression, than at your suspension. 3. Beware your dolour do not prevent your labour, that sorrow do not so swallow you, as to hinder your seeking of God, and setting about all good means for your amendment, 2 Cor. 2.7. 4. Whereas you speak of trouble, to be kept of from the Sacrament, know this, that for you in your sins to receive the Sacrament, will bring about in time a far worse trouble to your souls: woeful trouble may well arise upon your receiving, as yourselves will say, if you consider two things that you may expect when ever you so receive. 1. You will fall short of the greatest good. 2. You will fall under the greatest evil. Is not this ground of trouble to come to the Supper of the Lord, and to go without the Lord of the Supper to eat the bread of the Lord, not the bread which is the Lord? God not give you any of his son to eat, you miss the main meat at the Table, It's said of the Ravens, they feed not their own young, till they be feathered black, as themselves be black: but by a strange providence they a●e preserved, Psa. 147.9. Men not black but bright, holy as God is holy, in a Sacrament such God will feed, now for you to have only a little bread and wine, no● a crumb of Christ, nor the lest drop of his blood, this will one day undoubtedly trouble, for no Christ no crown, none of his blood on earth, none of his bliss in heaven. 2. The evil you will come under of sin and punishment will increase your trouble. An unworthy eating and drinking at the Lords Table, to use the Apostles phrase consider 1. What is criminal in it. 1 Cor. 11.27. Superblaillic quia homo potius in sua quam in Dei potestate esse dilexit, Furtum, q●ia quod non suum raptavit, sacrilegium quia quod sanctum alienavit, homiciduum, quia seipsum praecipitavit, fornicatio quia integritas humana serpentina persuasione corrupta est, etc. Aug. Enchir. ad Laurent, c, 45 Placitum sugiendum ubi ab osculo incipitur bellum & p●●pacis indicium pacis rumpitur sacramentum. Aug. Sacrilegium quasi sacriladium. Tribus modu committi potest velin personamvel in locum. vel in rem, Aqul. 2. 2ae. Qu. ●9. 2. What is penal upon it. The fault and the guilt. For the fault or offence its foul, though few think so, As that sinful eating of Adam in Paradise may seem but a small matter in the judgement of man, but in the eye of God a whole volume of iniquity was in it, pride, disobedience, rebellion, treason, theft, sacrilege, murder, and many other sins, lay in the belly of this mother sin, as Austin well observes: so this sinful eating in the Sacrament, may seem to some a small offence, but in that so many sins meet, as make it exceeding sinful. Here is pride, else no man in his wickedness would so presume, and here is rebellion and treason against Christ his crown and dignity, a fair pretence there is indeed of love and loyalty to Jesus Christ but it is but like the treason of Judas which was brought on by a kiss, and so the fact more soul, their hands and lips adore him, but their hearts and lives abhor him. Here is theft and sacrilege. To take away the communion cup, or the linen from the communion Table: O that we will say were horrible and a high offence, what than to take bread and wine set apart and sanctified by the Lord, Quicu●que cum peccat● mortali hoc sacrament●● sumiti●currit sacrilegium tanquam sacramenti violator. Aquin. 3a. pa. for this holy use with wicked and unwashen hands? Read that close c●tting query, Rom. 2.22. Thou that abhor rest Idols, dost thou commit sacrilege? Remember Achan with his wedge of gold, and Babilonish garment, but to rob God and sacrilegiously to venture on these holy things of God is worse, and here are murders more cruel, than any Chronicle can compare: for Samson to destroy himself, though therewith he destroyed the enemies of God some dispute the fact, but here for a man to kill himself, Adorantes Dominum neque ita ut est dignum ea viventes non senti●us so reos fieri Dominicae mortis, etc. Ans and therewith likewise as much as in him lies, the dea● son of God: O matchless murder, O tremble over that in the 1 Cor. 11, 27.29. but ●aving spoken somewhat before of Adam's eating the forbidden fruit, what a dreadful sin was that; let me a little further compare that and this, The fruit of that tree some conceive was sacramental, wh●ch made the fact more fearful, to profane God's Ordinance by a sinful sacrilege, but however lay these two sinful eatings together, and this may seem in some things to exceed that. That was against God a creator, this against Christ a redeemer, now it's more to redeem a soul than to created a world. Bonum gratia unius est maeius quam bonum natura totius universi Aquin. 12 ae. Qu. 113. Art. 9 That was against the word of the Lord: this against the blood of the Lord, there was guilt of the blood of man, but no guilt of the blood of Christ. That struck at the covenant of works: this with wrong reflects on the covenant of free grace, that sinful eating was but once done, this often, even as often as wicked men receive. The ingemination of sin, is the aggravation of sin. That being the first sin of man, there was no sin the punishment of which might affright from it: this is a following sin, and sad judgements have been already inflicted even for the same sin, to warn others from it, 1 Cor. 11.30. For this cause many sick and weak, and many sleep in death: However by a virtual influence and reference, that sin had a large extent, yet in person it was actually done but by few: but this sinful eating is actually done by many in their own persons, and multitude of sinners, it increases the magnitude of sin; That was the occasion of Christ's coming into the world, which though it was for his abasement, yet for his advancement also, together with much glory to God, and good to his Church, by the birth and death of Christ: hence some have said, O happy sin, etc. but O the dishonours done to God and Christ, by this eating, O who would not fear to fall under this sin, If I should further compare this sin with all the pardonable sins of the sons of Adam, Cruciate, damnate, torquete, atterite, nos quoties a vobis metimur toties plures efficimur; nam sanguis Christianorum semen Ecclesia est, Tert. Apologet. would not this transcend? Amongst them can there be a greater than oppression and persecution of God's people to death, yet by means of such bloudsheds the Church hath more flourished? that blood hath been seed, but here the guilt of Christ's blood who doth not quake to carry? The beating and killing and stoning the servants is some what, but this is the heir let us kill him, that is worse. For julian to take his own blood falling from him, and cast i● up as into the face of Christ, was woeful: but for a wicked communicant to take Christ's own blood as it were from his heart, and fling it into the face of Christ, O fearful. I proceed in short to ●hat which is penal. Dreadful dooms do attend this sin, besides what after follows. When the Ordinances were more carnal, the punishments upon disobeyers and abusers were more corporal: now those are more spiritual, these are so also. Peccatum quod i●●stū videtur habet paenam pedissequam, 〈◊〉 nemo de admisso nisi aemaritudiu● doleat, aut cacitate non doleat, Aug. Blindness of mind, hardness of heart, and a reprobate sense for present, and damnation hereafter for ever, 1 Cor. 11.29. He eats and drinks damnation. Damnation? what hels of horror are in that one word, no tongue cantle. A curious painter desired to draw out the tortures of the Spanish Inquisition, took a board and all besmeared it with blood, intimating, they were unexpressible. So to declare what are the torments of eternal damnation is impossible. Qui discordat a Christo nunquam manducat carnem eius nec bibit sanguinem: etsi tantae rei Sacramentum ad iudicium suae perditionis quotid è accipit. O fear, and fly, think if God should set upon you at the Sacrament, and there seal this damnation to your souls: and assure yourselves your sin herein it will be so great, God will remember it in judgement both here and hereafter: For a small sip of wine in a Sacrament-cup, O the dreadful cups of God's wrath whereof you must ever afterwards drink, in all which this sin of unworthy receiving the Sacrament, Non est pana supra Israelem in qua non sit uncia vituli. will bring in the most bitter ingredient. The Jews have a proverb That there is no punishment comes upon Israel in which there is not one ounce of the golden calf, meaning, that that was so great a sin, that in every plague God remembered, that that had an influence into every trouble that befell them, so may you expect that in every punishment you shall after fall under, there will still be an ounce in it of a polluted Sacrament, this will add to all your troubles on earth, and torments in hell. When you shall come to this holy Ordinance, Hildebrand. dictus Geo. 7. and not consider what it requires, when you neither can or will answer according to what it commands, what can you expect but a dreadful damnation to follow? I have read of a Pope who demanding of the Eucharist resolution of divers questions, as the Gentiles were want to do of their Idols, and receiving n● answer, cast the Eucharist into the fire. O fearful profaneness! If you receive the Sacrament again and again, yet having no regard to answer that holy administration with a holy conversation, and God thereupon fling your immortal souls into infernal flames. O righteous vengeance, or if God do not presently cast down your souls to hell, suppose he brings up hell into your souls by terror of conscience, cast into that case of Judas when he had betrayed the innocent blood, you must not think to fall under so great a sin, but you must also fall under some grievous judgement. It hath been a custom when any was charged with a crime, Corpus Domini nostri jesu Christi sittibi ad probationem. The Sacrament was given him with these words, Let the body of our Lord Jesus be to thee a trial of thy innocency or guiltiness. Upon this ground supposing that some eminent judgement would soon seize upon the guilty: You come to the Sacrament, God secretly says, The bread thou eatest, and wine thou drinkest this day, let it be to thee in the effect, as thou art in thy estate. Be it unto thee in its working, as thou art in thy walking, what would this produce? You may be amazed to meditate. O than rather than run this hazard, submit to this censure of refusal from the Table of the Lord, Better endure such a just chastisement, than fall under such sin and punishment. 3. Submit yourselves to be directed in such ways, whereby the worst of you may yet become meet, and worthy to communicate at this holy Table of the Lord. And what I call you herein to consider, I reduce to two heads. 1. To encourage your submission. 2, To enlarge the direction. Your submission may be encouraged to the use of good means by such motives as these. First, Though you have ●een most unmeet and unworthy, and therefore justly refused, yet using such means, you not only possibly may, but certainly shall become so meet and worthy, as to be readily received. The Apostle first wrote to the Corinthians, to put away from communion among them the incestuous person, and after wrote to them to receive him into their society again, 2 Cor. 2.7. being prepared by penitential workings, for that whereof he was before unworthy. It was the error of the Novatians and Donatists of old, That such as were cast out of the Church for adultery or apostasy in times of persecution were never to be restored: Aug. lib 5. cont. Dona. Cypr. lib. 4. Epist. 22. which opinion both Augustine and Cyprian reproves. One simus who run out of the family of Philemon, yet after being reform, we read how affectionately Paul writes to receive him in again. As there may be just cause for men's casting out, so there may be cause as just for their taking in again. Secondly, Though in the case of the Sacrament, you can by no means be meet or worthy in respect of a worthiness of adequation, yet there be ways whereby ye may be worthy, in respect of worthiness of approbation, such is the transcendent excellency of the Ordinance, you can never be absolutely meet or worthy, yet you may be accepted so; meet and worthy in the account both of God and good men, and for this do you strive to be accounted worthy of the Sacrament of Christ as to be accounted worthy of the kingdom of God, 2 Thes. 1.5. Thirdly, Though you may not by the means you use become immediately so meet and worthy, as some others are of this Ordinance, yet you may be so meet and worthy as to deal safely in this service, as David had divers Worthies, and all did well in the wars, though some did excel the rest, 2 Sam. 23.19. Fourthly, Though some will not submit to the means, but remain unmeet and unworthy, yet if others of you will go the right way to work, you shall be embraced, notwithstanding as men meet and worthy; those that will not, either they must be forbidden, or approach at their own peril, while they are eating and drinking at the Table, they may expect an hand-writing upon the wall, as appeared to Belshazar, when abusing the vessels of the Lord, with a Mene Mene Tekel, etc. and better a power to forbidden them, than this peril to abide them, plunging them into a perplexed posture, how ever you shall be found to have so much weight and worth as to meet with a sweet welcome at the Table of the Lord. Fifthly, Though you have had some trouble and sorrow being cast out for your unworthiness, the greater will be the joy and comfort, when you shall come so in, as to be accounted worthy. The prodigal out from his father's house, was sore afflicted, but O the meat, mirth and music that was made at his return, father and friends, they all rejoice: O the joy to Pastor and people, upon your admittance, what think yo● will than be the comfort to you yourselves? When the Sacrament to them that be in the gall of bitterness, shall be as the bitterness of gall, it shall be to you far sweeter than the honey and the honey comb. Sixtly, Though the very means you are to use to be esteemed meet and worthy at this Table, be very tedious, troublesome, painful and unpleasing to the flesh for present, yet the spiritual good you shall after gain, will abundantly recompense. I read of one about to suffer martyrdom, putting one leg into the fire, cries, the flesh shrinks and says, Thou fool wilt thou burn and need not? the spirit answers, Hell fire is hotter, wilt thou venture that? The flesh saith, Wilt thou leave thy friends? The spirit answers, Christ and his Saint's society is better, etc. When you are about such means as may make you meet for a Sacrament. The flesh perhaps will say, Wilt thou put self to shame, and sin to death? The spirit may well answer, To eat and drink damnation is worse, The flesh say, Wilt thou forsake thy old lusts and lovers? The spirit may answer, Communion with Christ and his members is better. It was an excellent courage in Ignatius, I am the wheat that the teeth of beasts must grind, it matters not, Iren lib. 5. Contr. Val. so I may be pure bread for my master's tooth; let fire, racks and pulleys, yea and all the torments of hell come upon me, so I may win Christ: Thus do you resolve though it cost you blushing of face, break and bleedings of heart, cuttings of soul, and killings of sin, yet you will willingly under go all to gain Christ, that he may be the pure bread whereof you may eat at his Table, and that will excellently answer for all, thus though some of the means it may be you must use to be made me: and worthy to partake at the Table of the Lord, be tedious to the flesh, and contrary to nature corrupt, yet there is that in Christ will well answer the cost, O than submit to such means, whereby you may be accounted meet and worthy, ●oth of God and men that are good. That God may accounted you so, in the way of his mercy. That men may accounted you so, in the way of their charity. And seeing I have begu● to discourse to you, who may be refused even by men as unworthy and unmeet, I shall declare to you how you may be received, even of men as meet and worthy. To direct you herein, two things I propose for your practice. 1. Sorrowfully to confess evil past. 2. Seriously to promise' good for future. Nemo eru bescat paenitentiam agere qui non erubuit panitenda commi●ere. Scandals and open evils whereby you have given public offence, thereof you must make penitent and public confession, such as have not been ashamed to practise and commit sin openly, should never be ashamed to repent and confess sin openly, saith Augustine. It's no shame publicly to pass from evil to good, as Ambrose once spoke to Valentinian. We read of one Eccebolius in the primitive times, after a sad revolt, comes to the congregation, where once he was a member, cast himself upon the threshold, with tears crying to the people as they passed in, Tread, Calcate me salem insipidum. Euseb. lib. 7. cap. 1. tread upon me unsavoury salt, etc. It might rend the most rocky heart to read the penitential expressions and confessions of Origen, as translated by Jerom, and related by Eusebius, who being excommunicate for his denial of Christ, miserably bewails it, Nihil est quod pudori esse debeat nisi non fateri. Ambr. de paenit. lib, 1. cap. 16. lib. 2. cap. 10. Aug. in lib. 50. Homil. Hom. 49. Cyprian. lib. 3. Epist. 17. Origen. Hom. 2. in Psal. 37. passionately pressing the people to pray for him. Ambrose in his 1. book of Repentance, and chap. 16. excellently opens this, perswadeing offenders to public bewailing their offences, and not to be ashamed, except not to confess their sins, and to beseech the whole Church to pray for them, and so to admit to communion. Augustine and Cyprian before him, and Origen before them both, clearly declare, that in their times, such was the course of the Church in this case, and Zozomen fully affirms the same order in use. Rei terram sese pro nos abijciunt cum planctu & lamentatione, Episcopus occurret cum lachrymis & ad parimentum lamentando prevolvitur & universa Ecclesia multitudo lachrym is suffunditur. Zozom lib. 7. cap. 16. They, saith he, that have offended come forth into the midst of the people, and fall down flat, with weeping and lamentation to the ground. The Minister comes to him with tears, and falls down also, and the whole multitude of the Church is poured over and over with tears, etc. Thus the Emperor Theodosius, who having commanded a massacre in the city of Thessalonica (upon the murder of one of his servants) when seven thousand in the space of three hours were butchered, was after required, Ruffin. lib. 2. cap. 18. and did manifest his public repentance in the presence of all the people, and this before he could be admitted to the Lords Table. The public penitential confessions of King David, in the business of Bathsheba and matter of Vriah, remains upon record, from whence Mr Hildersham on Psalm. 51. doth abundantly press this practice in the Church, both from Scripture and reason, to whom I refere those, who in this would be more fully informed, and that others to this may be more effectually-inforced. There is only one thing I conceive may most probably be questioned by some, viz. Whether it be not sufficient for men to confess their sins in secret to God only? Answ. To clear truth in this, there is something to be granted, and something to be denied. We grant that men's confessing their sins to God in secret, it is to be preferred for a threefold cause. 1. Because thereof is ever an absolute necessity. 2. Because therein is the more certain sincerity. 3. Because thereby is more spiritual commodity. The necessity is hereof absolute, it's not possible for any man to do well in the things of God, that will not confess his sins in secret unto God. Sincerity is more certain. In confessing our sins to God publicly before men, we are more prove to play the hypocrites, secretly argues more uprightness, commodity more spiritual; that wherein man is most plain, therewith God is most pleased, and that wherewith God is most pleased, thereby man is most profited. O the peace and pardon God speaks to the soul that in secret sincerely sighs out confession of sin, notwithstanding we deny that confession of sins in secret to God alone is all that is required, there are cases wherein more is called for, to wit, to confess sins to God before men, yea to confess sins against God unto men; and sure than to confess unto men such s●ns and trespasses as are against men, may well be practised amongst men. To acquaint you with some cases, consider sins whether against God or men, are of two sorts, either private or public. Private sins known to God, but unknown to men, yet must be confessed to men in a two fold case; as first, in case they so burden the conscience as no ease is had; it's some medicinable cure of heart grief, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nazian. eig. ●arm. ad Episc. to pour out words to the air, faith Nazianzen, much more to pitiful and faithful friends, Jam. 5.16. 2. In case the evil of a private sin so redounds to the hurt of many, that God pursues it to bring it to light; It aught publicly to be confessed, Josh. 7.19. But than public sins, or sins known to men more or less, must be confessed publicly as they be known and do offend. If an offence be given to a particular Christian, the offender must confess it, Luk. 17.4. If thy brother trespass against thee, and turn again, saying, I repent, that is, confess his sin and express his sorrow for the same, thou shalt forgive him; sure than if an offence be given to a Congregation, the offender must accordingly frame his confession, and so seek his reconciliation, and after received to communion. Concil. Nic. can. 1●. They were enjoined by the Council of Nice, who had sacrificed to idols in the persecution of Licinius, to make their public confession, or no admission. 2. It is meet you publicly promise' good for future. In the book of Nehemiah we read of the people of Israel, having by sinful mixtures soiled themselves, they first publicly confessed their sins, chap. 9.2. and next they entered into an oath with a curse, to walk in God's law, to observe and do his commandments, chap. 10.29. Publicly swearing themselves to God, and than after they went and offered great sacrifices, with great rejoices, chap. 12.43. An oath excellent to keep you of from sin, and keep you in to God. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Septum. The word in Greek for an oath, is derived of a Greek word that signifies a hedge, which if once a man have set about himself, he must not break thorough. An oath is either assertory, whereby men witness truth to what is in doubt, or promissory, whereby men oblige themselves to what is their duty. Such an oath David publicly promises himself to God by Psa. 119.106. and this is seasonable to do upon a Sacrament occasion thereby to attain the more free admission. Si nihil contra adferatur admittitur quidem fed non nisi solenni pactione cum Deo & cum Ecclesia, Spondet vero Ecclesia se ambulaturū prout sanctam illam communionem decet, disciplinae illius Ecclesiae subiacere velle, etc. Qui ad sacram coenam primum admittu●tur fidei confessionem coram totam Ecclesiâ publicè edant, Zep●pol. Ec. l. 1. c. 14 p, 158 Thus M. Parker a man of eminency for learning and holiness, who though born in England lived and died beyond sea who reports the practice of reformed Churches, not to take any to the Lords Table, but with a public promise. Yea with him Zepperus and other approved writers witness the same, from whom I shall further acquaint you, with what is required in the best reformed Churches of all that come to communicate at the Table of the Lord, in two things. A public acknowledgement of true faith. A public engagement unto good life. Confession of faults of some. Confession of faith of all. But of this Confession I have spoken before. I shall only counsel you thus to engage to good life, and so be received to Sacramental society. In Athens every one that was admitted to the freedom of the city, Pugnabo pro sacr●● & folus & simul cum alijs, Melanc. came to a public place, and engaged by oath to maintain holy things alone, and with others, and shall any eat this pious practice, to possess this privilege in the Church. The Germane Princes by solemn promises, protested they would cleave to the Gospel preached by Luther (and hence they were first called Protestant's) taking the Sacrament thereupon. justin Martyr who lived about 150. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apol. 2 reports of three things required of such as were to the Sacrament received, newness of birth, soundness in faith, and promise' of good life. Isa. 56.6, 7. The sons of the stranger that shall join themselves to the Lord, to love him and serve hom: and shall take hold of me by covenant, them will I bring to my holy mountain, and make them joyful in my house of prayer, their sacrifices will I accept. But as for you that are yet in your sins, whether more open or secret: O how feign would I prescribe you all some course whereby you may not only pass with men, but with God, as a people proved and approved of the Lord for this precious Ordinance. For truly if you are such as are only received of men, but rejected of God, your case is sad; suppose a man should be debarred from thi● Table, Quid obest homuni, si est de illa tabula delere veli● humana ignorantia quem de libro viventium non delet in iqua conscientia? Aug. yea thrown out of the Church unjustly, when yet his heart is right and strait, his conscience clear and clean towards God, what real hurt hath he? God makes it up, but suppose a man shall be embraced and brought in, yet God abhors: for his heart is wretched, and his conscience is foul towards God, and what good hath he? The man in the Gospel without the wedding garment, the servants admitted him, and they laid no restraints upon him, they saw nothing that c●ld for censure, but takes him in without scruple: O but the Master of the Feast comes and finds him naked, he commands him to be bound hand and foot and cast into utter darkness, ah poor man I whatever liberty he had to come in, yet for want of a wedding garment on his back, he cannot get out, but with chains and fetters on his feet, Mat. 22.11, 12, 13. Est, 6 the last, it's said The King's chamberlains hasted to bring Haman in to the banquet, which Ester had prepared: but in the 7. chapter we find, that he being there, when the King came to know the wickedness of his heart, and bloodiness of his mind, in conspiring the death of his Queen and all her kindreds, it's said, The King's wrath was up at the banquet of wine, and he risen in a rage, and would not rest satisfied, till Haman was had out and hanged up, You may be such as God's Ministers may think so well of as to hast you in to this banquet, which the Lord hath prepared, but yet God that knows the wickedness of your hearts, and sees here as it were a conspiracy against the life of his son, and that while you are eating and drinking, you are guilty of Christ's body and blood, God's wrath is up at this banquet of wine, while Haman was at the banquet, Ester stands up and petitions the King, that if she found any favour in his eyes, O let my life be given me, etc. for I and my people are to be slain by means of this wicked Haman, etc. O for Christ Jesus to stand up before his Father the King, and accuse you, while you are at the Sacrament, If ever I have found favour in thy sight now preserve me from wicked hands, think how hereupon the wrath of this great King will be up, and what ruin to your souls is like to ensue: well learn how to prevent his in time, you know that for want of 〈◊〉 settled government we have been long kept without this blessed Sacrament: I hope there are among you, who lament after the Lord: and the Lord hasten the desires of your hearts, and the Lord help us to prepare for what we desire, I have already shown you what more towards men (when called thereunto) you aught outwardly and openly to do. I shall now tell you what also towards God, both outwardly and inwardly you aught to be, that herein God may accounted you meet to communicate. The directions I shall give you, I shall take from that course which good King Hezekiah prescribed to the Priests and the people in his time to prepare them for the Passeover, which they had been than long without, Read 2 Chron. 29. and the 30. chapped. Accordingly there are two things required. 1. To be humbled. 2. To be hallowed. Your hearts must be humbled, as those of Asher, Manasseh, and Zebulun, 2 Chr. 30.11, who at home humbled themselves and than came up to Jerusalem to celebrated the Passeover. In private I pray you, practice soul-humbling duties, that so you may be prepared for the Supper of the Lord. I speak to you who are for present impenitent, stiffnecked, and stonehearted, the Lord give you to be humbled for two things, that by your sinfulness this sweet Sacrament of the Supper of the Lord, 1. It hath been corrupted, and 2. It hath been interrupted, You have corrupted the holy Sacrament of the Lord, Tit. 1.15. to the pure all things are pure, but to the impure and them that are defiled all is made unclean. Though holy things have not sanctified you, yet you have polluted holy things, their sin was foul, Mal. 1.12. That said the Table of the Lord was polluted, O what is their sin than that do not say the Table of the Lord is polluted but yet they have often polluted, and by sin defiled the same? O what a dreadful thing it was Numb. 19, 13. To defile the Tabernacle of the Lord, and is it now nothing to have defiled the Table of the Lord? look how the Prophet complains, Isa, 28.8. All places are full of filthy vomits, yea the Tables are unclean: for men to defile their own Tables is ill, O what than to defile the Table of the Lord? 1 Sam. 2.17. by reason of the sins of Elies' sons, men abhorred the offerings of the Lord: Sacrifice which the Lord commanded was abhorred of men, like a loathsome thing, because of their sin by whom the Sacrifice was offered: Incensi odor de immundorum manibus rep●datus est pro faetore, & iram non fratiam pra sumptio meruit, Cypr. de can. Dom. this is bad, but what is it when the Lord shall abhor his own offering? consider the first of Isay, Incense from men of foul hands and hearts, is an abomination to the Lord. In stead of a sweet smell, it hath a stinking savour, and provokes God to wrath, to 'cause the Lord to loathe his own Ordinance, O sad! O be humbled deeply before God for this. Again as through your sins you have corrupted, so you have interrupted this holy service, for this also be humbled. The former hath been the cause of the latter: water that runs into narrow pipes, while all is kept clean, it passeth freely: but when the water is thick and muddy, and pipes and passages foul, than the course of the water is stopped, pure and good blood, goes easily into all parts of the body, and into every vein: but when the blood is corrupted, its free course is hindered: O it's our corruption of, that hath caused an interruption in the course of the Sacrament, O the fearful defilements of this pure Ordinance, in all the parts of the Kingdom. The Lord remove all our mud that these waters of the Sanctuary may run clearly and freely. The Lord cure our corruptions that so there be no obstructions, but as a Sacrament, so Christ's blood in the Sacrament may pass abundantly. O let us look back and weep bitterly in that we have thus broken of the way of this Ordinance: O how God was displeased with those that trod down the pastures, and fouled the waters with their filthy feet, that so his flock could not eat or drink, Ezek. 34.18, 19 O must not God needs be angry with you, who by your sins have pudled this water, have stained and so stopped these streams of God? Gen. 26. we read that Isaac had no wells open to water his flocks, for the Philistims had stopped up all the wells of water, which were digged in the days of Abraham his Father: your sins and the sins of the land have stopped up these wells of water, that the flocks of Christ in divers Congregations of the Kingdom have at this day not where to drink, jer. 5.24, 25. yet say they not in their hearts, let us fear the Lord that gives rain, and reserus to us the appointed weeks of the harvest. Though your iniquities have turned away those things, and your sins have withholden good things from you: O that you would yet fear the Lord, who gives you the rain of his word, and can reserve again for you the appointed months for the Sacrament, though for a while your iniquities have turned away those things, and your sins have hindered such good things from you. Nay by this means Gods dear children have been deprived of their bread, this refreshing food of their souls, A sad case in the book of the Lamentations, when children have cried to their Mothers for bread, and they had none to give them: little infants have laid their hands in their mother's bosoms, but could find no milk in their breasts: what soundings, faintings, and fall down in the streets of the City, etc. Read the 2. of the Lamen. 6.12. and is not this heart-lamenting matter when the poer hungering Saints and servants of God have cried for this bread, and their Ministers not know how to give it them? Divers poor Congregations have neither Ministry of the word, nor administration of Sacraments, Cant. 8.8. We have a little sister, and she hath no breasts, what shall we do for our sister? The God of Heaven help in this case, and there be others who have only one breast, the word preached, but not the Sacrament administered. Amazons veint qui mazam non habent. Amazons a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. mamma ducitur nomen. Hinc Servi●● notat Amazones A taliano uni mammas vocari. history reports to the praise of those warlike women of Scythia, that they cut of one breast, that they might the more dexteriously draw their bows in battle, and only one breast left to bring up their children. I cannot but record this on the contrary with grief (and with tears more ready to fall from my eyes, than words from my mouth) to think of Congregations like women with one breast: It's a joy to a good Minister as to a loving Mother, when there is two full breasts to draw out for the child to suck, and its a trouble when one is dry. The Lord fill both our breasts with good milk: O let us be humbled that our sins have done us this wrong, I fear the other breast should be taken, away too, for our wantonness, worldliness, way wardness, wickedness, the good Lord prevent. O mourn in secret for your sins, that have so corrupted and interrupted the course of the Sacrament. I have before told you what public sorrows, public sinners are to express, O now learn what private remorse aught to abound between God and all your souls. Bodily wounds are worst when bleed most inwardly: but wounds of godly sorrow are best, that bleed more in the heart, than is wept out at the eyes: O go aside and cry, strike Lord, Lord strike this stony heart of mine, that out of this hard rock waters of sorrow may gush: public sorrow without private, argues hypocrisy, and is never pleasing to God, as she that hath rotten inwards, Magis culpa digna est quae ad laudein lachrymas fundit quam quae pulchritudinis causa coloribi● faciem suam pingit. Chry. Home●. in Mat. a black heart, but paints herself with colours, that she may have a beautiful face, is hateful to God: but more abominable is he or she that hath a hard unbroken heart, yet can water the cheeks in the presence of others with tears, Mal. 2.13. They covered the Altar of God with tears, yet in heart were impenitent sinners, and God abhorred their sacrifice. Would you be accepted of God at the Sacrament? O go first and deep much in secret, and mourn because you can mourn not more, the more the hear● is thus torn the more entire it is, Non est cor integrum nisi sit scissum and the more meet to receive Sacrament sweets. This is the first thing, Be humbled. 2. Be hallowed, you must be sanctified and holy as many of you as would be meet for this holy service, 2 Chro. 29.15, 17. 2 Chro. 30.15. see what sanctifying there was of persons and things, to prepare for the Passeover, O do you consider what sanctity and holiness is required to prepare you for the Supper of the Lord. Now in this hallowing lies a twofold holiness, both which must concur, that you may be holy, and so fit for this holy business. 1. Relative. 2, Positive. Relative holiness takes in two things. 1. A separation from sin. 2, A dedication to God. 1. You must be separate, Est. 6. you read how the Passeover being to be kept, it is said that all such as had separated themselves from the filthiness of the heathen of the land, did eat, and kept the feast seven days with joy, and we see how Ezra after exhorts, chapped. 10.10, 11. He stands up and says to the people of Israel, Ye have indeed transgressed, yet now make confession unto the Lord your God, and do his pleasure, and separate yourselves from the people of the land, and all the Congregation answered with a loud voice, so must we do, and so do you, O separate ye yourselves from sinful courses and company. There is a good Schism and separation that cuts asunder the cords of corruption, that breaks the brotherhoods of wicked men, though there is a schism and separation, that is very bad, which breaks the bonds of Christian unity, and rends Christians from society one with another. Christ will separate at the last day, but who? The sheep from the goats, and not the sheep one from another, who are they which dare do that now which Christ himself will not do? nay dare do that which Christ himself hath undone, Christ came down from Heaven to break down walls of separation, Eph. 2.14. and they build them up again. All the time Christ walked upon earth, he did not leave behind him the lest footsteps of such separations, as of late hath been every where peremptorily practised, Nor yet any of the Apostles that came after him, we read, Act. 19 9, that when Paul had for three months, been preaching publicly at Ephesus, Divers were hardened and blasphemed the way of the Gospel, than he departed from them, and separated the Disciples. He separated the Disciples from them that blasphemed, not the Disciples one from another, and this after they were hardened, and so became incurable, 2 Cor. 6.17. Come out from among them, and be ye separate, from whom? There were some in Corinth continued professed Idolaters, those who were converted to the Christian faith, must come out from among them and be separate, for what agreement, saith he, hath the Temple of God with Idols? ver. 16. so separate, I beseech you, as to cease all sinful converse with profane men, if you love to live among dead men's tombs, you are not fit for the Table of the Lord. In this Supper as the Elements, so the Communicants must be separate from common and corrupt uses. 2. You must dedicated and devote yourselves to God, 2 Chr. 29.31. Than Hezekiah said, now you have consecrated yourselves unto the Lord, come near, and bring sacrifices and thanksofferings into the house of the Lord, 2. Chro. 30.8. Be not stiffnecked as your Fathers, but yield up yourselves to the Lord, and than enter into his Sanctuary to serve the Lord. Thus do you resign up yourselves unto God, and than come to this holy Table: all and each of you I exhort, O give thyself to God, and that Truly without dissembling Timely without delaying, and Totally without dividing. An unsound Christian is as the false mother in the Kings, that would have the child divided, he is loathe to give himself wholly to God: whereas a sincere Christian takes these two parts, body and soul, and doth as the poor widow in the Gospel with her two mites, Luk. 21.3. throws them both together into the Lord's treasury, devotes them both to the Lords service: when you are willing to go, and put all into the treasury of the Lord, than you are fit to come to the Table of the Lord. I suppose when you shall be at this Supper, you will desire to have both Elements, bread and wine, and both things signified, Christ's body and blood, O than give both body and soul to God: If you would not have a half Sacrament, nor a half Saviour, O let not God have a half soul, and a half service, but give yourselves wholly to God, 2 Cor. 8.5. O thus separate yourselves from all sordid uses, and consecrated yourselves to God, for all holy purposes, that you may be meet for the Table of the Lord, O arise with the prodigal, Luk. 15. Luk. 15.18. (Surgam) quia ●acebat (& ib●) quia longè aberat (ad patrem meum) quia sub principe percorum erat. Aug. and leave feeding with the devil's swine, and come home (how distant soever you are) to God, and sue to be one of his servants, for ever to live in the bonds of obedience, than you shall have bread enough, and meat enough to your bread, a whole fatted calf, vers. 17.23. Thus much for that relative holiness required. I proceed to positive holiness, Sanctitas duplex, seminalis & germinalis. in respect of which you aught to be holy also, and this is two fold, Habitual and Actual. 1. Habitual holiness, that is, the infusion of such divine graces whereby you may be fitted for the service of God, whereunto you are devoted: Anima & spiritus, i e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. my prayer is with the Apostle, 1 Thes. 5.23. The Lord sanctify you throughout in soul, in body, in spirit, Matth. 13.33. The parable tells us of the woman that took her leaven and laid it in three measures of meat, till the whole was leavened: The Lord lay such a holy leaven of grace in these three parts, body, soul and spirit, that the whole man in each of you may be leavened, and you may be sanctified throughout, that God by his Spirit would come down and break a box of holy spikenard in your hearts, that the whole house might be filled with the sweetness of that odour, Joh. 12.3. That God would pour that holy oil upon your heads, that may run down to your beards, and to the skirts of your garments, that you may be all over anointed of God, Psalm. 133.2. 2 Cor. 1.21. That your hives may be full of the honey of heaven, your hearts filled with the graces of God, and than 2. Actual holiness: To make you meet communicants, it's not enough to have grace in you, but there must be a holy exercise of all those graces in you, ready to put forth in all practical employments and improvements. Soldiers while they lie still in their quarters are of little use, and do little good, but when they are drawn out and march forth in their ranks and places, than they be fit to go upon service, and ready to encounter an enemy in the field: while graces lie idle in the heart, they are to little purpose or profit, but graces drawn out in exercise, are prepared to any holy service. When ever you are to come to a Sacrament, you must strike up a call, and beaten a march to your graces aforehand, and so come and close with Christ in this ordinance. Non semper sancti sunt qui loca sanctorum tenent sed sancti sunt qui sanctorum opera sanctè exercent. Hier. O know that you cannot in this, or in any other ordinance, act holily without this actual holiness, such a holiness you aught to set a-work in all your works, even in common actions, in ordinary eatings and drink, you aught to hold forth holiness, much more when you come to eat and drink in the Sacrament. Zach. 14.20, 21. It's prophesied, how upon every pot in Judah and in Jerusalem, should be written Holiness to the Lord, much more on the pots in the Lord's house. O I beseech you be holy, and indeed holy: a visible sanctity, though inward hypocrisy, may give you admittance among men, but there must be holiness with uprightness, or you can have no acceptance with God. In a man's body, Melior est in corpore digitus vivus quam oculus vitreus. Aug. in Psal. 130. when each part must act in its place, the little finger that hath life, is fit for service than the glass eye that is only for ornament: and truly when Christians shall be to act in this Supper-service, it's better to be a sincere Rahab, than an unsound Judas, Christ-man may permit him, but Christ-God abhors him. An hypocrite in his most glorious work is abomitable to God, whereas a true Christian in his poorest employment finds favour in his eyes. O do not appear only, but be in heart really holy, you that intent the holy Table of the Lord. An hypocrite in this business may pretend great tenderness and strictness, O how afraid lest any guilty of Christ's blood, should partake with him at the Sacrament, when yet the guilt of Christ's blood may lie upon his own soul without sense, Matth. 27 6. Qualis haec innocentiae simulatio, pecuniam sanguinis non mittere in arcam, & ipsum sanguinem mittere in conscientiam? August. joh. 18.28. for his hidden and secret sins: as those Jews, when Judas restored his thirty pieces, Matth. 27.6. they would by no means have the price of Christ's blood lie in a chest, when yet the guilt of this blood lay on their hearts without any remorse, O gross. They would not defile themselves by coming into the common Hall on the preparation day to the Passeover, but to imbrue their hands in Christ's innocent blood they scrupled not. O they must not eat in vessels unpurified, O what washing of pots and pans, but the meat they eat ●n these was polluted with oppression and intemperance, Matth. 23.25. Woe to you scribes pharisees hypocrites, ye make clean the outside of the cup and platter, but within all is full of bribery and excess. O for God's sake see you be sanctified and holy, Quid tuum altar? me●● tua spiritualis. Quid spirituale tuum sacrificium? omnis bona operatic. Quod t●um Templum? mundum cor in quo Deus habitare amat. Chrys. both within and without: You are not fit for the holy Table of the Lord, till you are indeed the holy Temples of the Lord. Be humble, be holy, these must pass inseparably upon you: first be humble, than hallowed, a building of holiness is not set up in the heart, but the strong holds of the devil, by true and through humblings of heart are battered and beaten down. The Jewish Rabbins report, Vide Hier. ad Fabiolum de 42 mans●nibu● mansione. i. that the same night that Israel departed out of Egypt towards Canaan, all the Idols and Idolatrous temples in Egypt, by lightning and earthquake were broken down: and truly at that very time when men go forth from their natural estate towards heaven, in a way of holiness, all the synagogues of satan and idols of jealousy in them, are by soul-enlightenings, and sorrowfull-heartquakings broken down: O I beseech you submit to this way of God with you, and work of God in you, as ever you desire to be seen with acceptance at the Supper of the Lord. To conclude, It's reported of Mr Bolton now with God, calling for his children on his deathbed after some speech to them, he ends, and I hope there is none of you will dare meet me at Christ's tribunal in an unregenerate estate: O that I might thus close my counsel to you, I hope there is none of you will dare meet me at the Lords Table in a sinful estate. If yet you will unhumbled and unhallowed, come into this tent, and as Sisera, Judg. 4.19, 21. take the milk and the butter, I have told you of the nail and the hammer. The Lord is free and I am free, the hazard be upon your own heads. The last branch of the exhortation refers to such of you as are the sincere servants of God, and true disciples of Christ: seeing the transaction of this Supper-service of right belongs unto you, see that you transact this service of the Lords Supper aright, to which end I shall labour with your souls in things of two sorts, viz. 1. To propose some nforcing persuasions. 2. To prescribe some informing directions. The arguments whereby I shall quicken your care in this case follows. 1. Consider the necessity of a right celebrating this Supper, its needful that in a meet manner you be made partakers thereof, and that from a twofold cause. 1. Because Christ's words command it. Necessitus praecepti. Necessi●● medij. 2. Because your wants require it. Christ in express words commands that this service by his servants be done. Do this in remembrance of me, Luk. 22.19. wherein Christ doth not only enjoin the action, Do this, but declares the reason, In remembrance of me, the more to encourage Christian obedience. I have read of one who willingly fetched water near two miles every day, Cassianus. lib. 4. c. 24. for a whole year together, to pour upon a dry dead stick, upon the bore command of a Superior, when no reason could be given for the thing: how ready than should you be to obey the command of Jesus Christ in this service of the Sacrament, when he gives for the action so sufficient a reason? Do this, that thereby you may remember me. Yea besides this the duty is necessary, by reason of your own necessities, There is a great difference between the Saints being on earth and their being in heaven, hereafter in heaven you shall be so abundantly filled with the immediate presence of God and Christ, as to want no Sacramental supplies, or any communion-cordials, neither souls or bodies shall ever feel the lest hunger or thirst there. Christ Jesus before his death was hungry and thirsty, needing meat to eat, or water to drink, Mat. 4.2. Joh. 4.6. but after his resurrection, though we read he did eat, yet it was as a work of potency, August. not of necessity. After the resurrection, and in the state of glorification, we shall not be necessitated out of hunger or thirst to eat or drink, hunger and thirst suppose a vacuity, emptiness, or absence of what the appetite desires, and so a perplexity, trouble and pain to the party thereupon, which is not suitable to the full satisfactions and perfections of heaven, but pertinent to our indigent estate here on earth, while we are in this wilderness world, we shall have our wildernesse-wants, as our bodies so our souls will need their several meals. Every Christian here is a traveller, his way may be rough, and his journey will be long from earth to heaven, from mortality to immortality, and so need of frequent refreshments at the Table of the Lord. Every Christian is a soldier, his battles may be hot, his enemies will be great, he had need have good diet in his quarters, that may cheer his spirits, and keep up strength and courage. Our Father Abraham having fought with those conquering Kings, Gen. 14. rescued Lot, and recovered all the spoil, Glass, Philol, sacra, pa. 423 Melchizedec brings him out bread and wine, considering his want after so hard a work: Some make this a type of the Eucharist, and the truth is we may allude thereunto, for after our conflicts and combats, we the children of Abraham shall much need such bread and wine, and Christ our Melchisedec hath herein mercifully provided for us, we need the Sacrament though not as a Saviour, yet as a means of salvation, let not any attribute too much to the Ordinance, not yet too little. We need Christ as an agent, and the Sacrament as an instrument, we need no more but Christ in a way of merit to procure good for us, Via duplex meriti & medij. yet we need the Sacrament as a way of means to convey good to us, in the supply of our wants. And are not our wants many that are to be supplied? our weaknesses many that are to be supported? our enemy's mighty that are to be subdued? Are we not soon seduced, easily conquered, hardly recovered? Are we not fainting under crosses, feeble in our graces, fickle in our purposes, and frail in all our performances? needing Sacramentall-succours, and corroborating-cordials: so we see what need there is aright to celebrated this Supper, and solemnize this holy service, Two things I suppose may hereupon be questioned. 1. About the long omission of this Ordinance in many places. 2. About the free exercise of this Ordinance by many persons. 1. Is it necessary? why than hath this service in several places been so long neglected? Object. Answ. Answ. 1. There were times when the Sacraments of old, viz. Circumcision and the Passeover, though of necessary use, yet had among the Jews their long intermissions, Josh. 5.2, 3, 4, 5. 2 Chr. 30.2. 2. The command of Christ to celebrated this Supper, Aquinas 12ae quae. 71.5.5. is an affirmative command of which the rule hath been. They bind to a perpetual preparation, and continued disposition, and to actual observation and real execution, as often as good occasions are offered, God's servants cannot at all times be receiving the Sacrament, yet at all times they should be disposed towards it, breathing after it, complaining over the wide intervals of it: The Sacrament is Christ's chariot in and by which he rides into the souls of his servants, at the long delays of which it becomes every Christian to cry as the mother of Sisera, jud. 5.28. Why is the chariot so long in coming? and why tarry the wheels of the chariot? 3. There are that think it better to delay an Ordinance of God, than to defile it, and that the delaying of it that we might not defile it, is better than the defiling of it, jest we should delay it. The delaying of it opposeth more directly, only the circumstance of time interrupting the frequency of it. The defiling of it opposes the very substance or thing, corrupting, the purity of it. So to blemish the lustre is to abolish the life, and to deface the beauty, is to destroy the being. 4. The service of the Lords Supper, though it hath been suspended in some places, yet it hath been so supplied in others, as that such who have had right to it, and been sensible of the want of it, have comfortably partaked in it, and hearty blessed God for it. 5. The servants of Christ when they have not found Sacraments actually instant by soul meditations, they have made Sacraments past to be present, as those beasts who are not ever taking in fresh food, yet they are ever chewing the cud, and as it were eating what they have eaten over and over again, Leu. 11.3. Deut. 14.8. 6. God may suffer this Ordinance to be long suspended that people's need thereof may be the more apprehended, that by its long vacancy they may learn both its excellency and its necessity. Of many good things we never so know the worth as by the want, nor feel the want as when the things are wanting. Mercies long continued are much contemned, but having had their absence, we more pr●●e their presence, Amen in this. Object. 2. To receive the Lords Supper, say it is necessary, yet we doubt some will resort to it, we shall not dare to join with, and therefore for us, is it not better to forbear? Answ 1. Perhaps some may be there which should not, only through your neglect, in that you know some scandalous evil by them, but will not complain of them, or orderly appear against them, yet your selves abstain for their sakes, whereby you run under a double blame. 1. To conceal their sin, which you aught to declare, Deut. 13.8. Pro. 29.24. 2. To forbear that service which you aught to perform, 1 Cor. 11.24. Yourselves will voluntarily keep out, rather than help to have others regularly cast out, and so fall under evils worse than whereof you are ware, but 2. Suppose no endeavours of yours be neglected, if yet unmeet men are admitted, you do not join with them, but they with you, for you to join with sinful men in sinful matters would bring guilt upon you, but if some bad men will join with you in good matters, it proves no prejudice to you. To celebrated the Lords Supper is a work in itself exceeding good, and if others that aught not will come and go as far with you, as the outward act, its evil to them, but none to you, having to your power opposed their presence. 3, Take heed you do not neglect an undoubted duty, to escape an uncertain danger. A peril merely supposed will not warrant the admitting a practice clearly imposed Let due discipline be vigilant and diligent to remove unmeet men, yet some may remain to be admitted, which you may imagine are meet to be refused, yet no sufficient objection against them can be produced, and so the harm you fear by them, is merely supposed. It is not what our thoughts are of a thing, that makes it lawful or sinful, but what the thing really is in itself: Vzzah conceived he aught to stay up the ark, yet the action was evil, as he feels by the sequel, you may think for such a cause you aught to stay from the Sacrament, and yet offend God in forbearance, you omit a duty that is certainly required, to avoid a danger which is not certainly incurred: Unmeet men in God's sight may be at this Table, and yet no real peril or prejudice to you: See pag. Indignitas duplex est vel receptoris vel receptionis. but to make up a more full answer to this, you may find something for satisfaction before, 2. I proceed to a second Argument to awaken your care for your right receiving the Sacrament, who are Christ's servants indeed, which is to consider that an unworthy partaking hereof by you is both possible and perilous. 1. Possible, towards this Ordinance there is a twofold unworthiness. One in respect of the men who are the partakers. Another in respect of the manner of partaking. The former is ever found among impenitent sinners. The latter may befall the Saints of God, and that from a twofold cause. 1. Because of their own negligence. 2. Because of their enemy's diligence. You that are Gods servants and children, yet through your own neglect may here become guilty of unworthy receiving two ways. 1. If you do not work out your duties. 2. If you do not work up your graces. If your duties be not by you wrought out before you come at the Table of the Lord, but like the foolish virgins you sleep, not trimming your lamps, or preparing your oil to meet Christ the bridegroom at this wedding Feast, you labour not in God, seeking soul-searching duties aforehand. It is no marvel for a carnal man to say as he Luk. 16.3. I cannot dig, and to beg I am ashamed. Not dig by serious examination. Nor beg by ardent supplication. For wicked men to have no mind to heart-digging duties, who cannot abide a soul-searching nor conscience-digging Ministry, this is no marvel, and for them to be as bad at begging, having no skill or will to press God by prayer to prepare them for the Table of the Lord; in this no wonder: but for any of God's people not to put forth themselves seasonably in this digging and begging is abundantly blameworthy: for want of which they prove in receiving unworthy. Again if your graces be not by you wrought up when you are come to the Table of the Lord, if you do not orderly act each grace in and at this Ordinance, rise up by faith, mount up in the spirit, seek to clasp Christ in Heaven, and to compare his throne with inflamed affections, but set soul-sluggish in this service, you become unworthy in receiving, through your own idleness and negligence. 2. This same may be helped further forward through your enemy's industry and diligence. Satan to prevent your sweet, and procure your smart, hath his ways and wiles to work your woe, and to occasion miscarriage, See how the Devil dealt with Eve, she having a mind to taste the fruit, he puts her on eagerly to eat, allows her no time to pause, having made the motion, he plies it, gives her no leave to go aside to consider in her , consult with her husband, or inquire of God, but without any ado eat she must: so Satan may praecipitately hasten you upon the Sacrament, hindering those antecedaneous duties, that should prepare thereunto, causing such sleightness before, and flatness in, whereby you become in receiving yet more unworthy. This is possible. And as it is possible, so it is perilous for any of the people of God, to partake unworthily at the Table of the Lord, considering therein two things. 1. The concomitant sin. 2. The consequent judgement. The sin of unworthy receiving is great by whomsoever it is, because it ever carries in company such a sin, as must needs add a sad aggravation to it, viz. A guiltiness of Christ's body and blood, 1 Cor. 11.27. Whosoever shall eat this bread, and drink this cup of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. Now for any of you to be guilty of Christ's blood, there are two things that heighten the sin. 1. The eminency and greatness of his person. 2. The proximity and nearness of his relation. Look we upon Christ, and his person is eminent both for greatness and goodness, upon his thigh is this name written, The King of Kings and Lord of Lords, Rev. 19.16. yea Christ is now a King in his throne crowned and exalted to the highest honour, Phil. 2.9. ●o be guilty of such a King's blood, is black especially for you who know how excellent he is, Cant. 5.10.16. and to whom he is so nearly related, your friend, your kinsman, your husband, your brother, your Father: for a wife to be guilty of her husband's blood, a son of his Father's blood, a fearful sin. When Caesar was wounded to death in the Senate-house, Brutus coming for his blow, Caesar looks him in the face, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. saying, What and thou my son? how may the Lord look a Christian in the face, thus guilty of this bloody fact, with a Wha● thou my son? We read of the son of Croesus, who though before dumb, yet seeing one about to stab his Father, cries out with a clear and shrill voice, O man kill not Croesus': 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Herodo●● & Aul. Gel. thus would it become Christians to cry to others in this case, but to do the thing themselves is dreadful. For Christ to go show his Father, lo these are the wounds that I received in the house of my friends, Zac, 13.6. Yea from the hands of my friends on a Sacrament-day. When the jews shed Christ's blood, though they thought not of it, yet there was need of it, and good by it: hereby sins pardoned, souls purged, God pacified, but herein to be guilty of his blood, what need? what good? Constantine going to war against Maximinus was struck with a leprosy all over, Ni●ephoru● Cali. l. 7. c. 33. some to seduce him from his religion, told him the only course for his cure, was to bathe him in a pool, full of the warm blood of innocent children, wherewith he was taken at the first, children gathered, executioners prepared, the day appointed, but O the dreadful cries of the Mothers, the Emperor's mind changed, the thoughts of the thing amazed him, he resolves to abide the malady, and not to try such a medicine: O what an astonishing sin to be guilty of the innocent blood of Christ? The judgement that follows is fearful, 1 Cor. 11.29. He that eats and drinks unworthily, eats and drinks judgement to himself, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Zanch. in conf. su de Relig. Chrys. in cap. 16. ●ph●. 10. Judgement, some would have the greek word to signify rather temporal castigation, than eternal damnation, and applied to God's people: that is more proper and so the Apostle after explains it, ver. 30. yet it may imply the utmost evil, as deserved Judgement to himself, He that is guilty so against Christ, the evil thereof redounds to himself, that is, not to any other man, say some: but so it may do, If I know an unworthy receiver, have some power to restrain him, yet do not, Evil will be to me if another knows, yet moves not to hinder such a sin, it may bring evil also on him, but the unworthy receiver eats the evil to himself, that is, no real hurt rests upon Christ, though the man be guilty of Christ's body and blood, yet no proper violence or prejudice reacheth to Christ, but all the hurt is to himself. The misery and mischief that ensues is to himself. O do you fear unworthy eating and drinking at the Table of the Lord, It was a sinful eating in the beginning of the world, that brought in worlds of misery upon all mankind, it should make all men to the end of the world, awar both what and how they eat. I say not this to fright you from, but to 'cause you to be more cautelous in this holy service, wherein there is so great hazard of miscarriage, even amongst Gods own servants. 3. The utility of the Sacrament when received aright, should also quicken your desire thereof, and your care therein, There are some have found sweet fruit every month on this tree like that Rev. 22.2. And indeed hereby is gain lying in a twofold good, which the faithtull may find. 1. There is present good they may be possessed of. 2. There is future good they may be prepared for. 1. God's people are sometimes actually possessed of much good, by a meet receiving this Sacrament, for hereby they possess Christ, and in him all good. Ille habe● omnia qui habet habentem omnia. The Apostle 2 Cor. 11.33. reports how when some sought him and desired to apprehended him, he was let down from a window in a basket, and so escaped their hands. God's Saints in another sense seek Christ, and being desirous to apprehended him, he is let down as it were from the windows of Heaven, in the Sacrament, and they receive him to the joy of their souls. Dr. Tailer the Martyr, blessed God for his prison, because there he got great soul advantage by, and sweet soul acquaintance with the Angel of God, M. Bradford, as he calls him. O how may a Christian bless God for this Sacrament, where he gains soul-advantage, and most sweet acquaintance with Christ Jesus the dear son of God, who herein becomes what ever is good to the souls of God's Saints. So that their hearts and lives upon receiving this holy Sacrament have been like the Egyptian fields upon the overflowing the river Nilus, flourishing and fruitful: their souls have been as it were fatted with marrow, fired with zeal, fenced with courage, and filled with comforts, having feasted with Jesus Christ their dear Saviour in this Supper. Hence at the Sacrament their souls have said as the Disciples when they were with Christ at his transfiguration in the mount: O its good being here, and in their desires have cried, Lord, evermore give us of this bread. They refreshingly find that every crumb of this bread, every dram of this grace, every drop of this peace, which they receive from Christ in a Sacrament, hath a sea of sweetness in it. As the Jewish Rabbins were want to say that upon every letter of the Law, there hangs mountains of profitable matter, O the Ocean of benefit and comfort from a little of Christ in this Supper! hereby the poor have been enriched, the weak have been revived, the sad have been refreshed, and such as have come militant, have gone triumphant away: longing for mother Sacrament day, when they might meet with such sweet morsels of mercy, and though (as one professeth) such had rather die than once eat at an Idols Table, yet are glad if they may often eat at the table of the Lord, out of the sweet experience they have had of benefit by it, and comfort in it. Though they eat the bread of adversity, and drink the waters of affliction, a Sacrament supper sweetens all, as one little spark of a troubled conscience can drink and dry up a sea of worldly comfort, so one spark of spiritual comfort from Christ in a Sacrament, is able to drink and dry up a sea of worldly sorrows and sufferings. Let believers come to this conduit, and by faith turn the cock, and they may fill their pitchers up to the brim with wine: they may go away with their hearts us full of precious comforts, as ever they can hold, and is not this a marvellous mercy? especially when sad distresses have set upon their souls before: to comfort up a distressed conscience, is a greater work in Luther's account, than to raise the dead to life: yet this may, and sometimes is done to the souls o● God's Saints in a Sacrament. O what mountings of mind, in soul-solacing ascents, yea what heart-reviving converse hath an humble Christian with God and Christ in this precious Ordinance? wherein God opens his bosom, and Christ his bowels and blood, and much makes himself known, Luk. 24: 35. He was known of them in breaking bread, As he sat at meat with them, he took bread blessed it, broke it, and gave them, than were their eyes opened, and they knew him. O the illuminations, manifestations, consolations, confirmations, that God's servants receive from Christ by and through a Sacrament. The comfortable communion a believer hath with Christ in this Ordinance, is more worth than all the world. That noble marquis being offered a great sum of money to go from Geneva to Italy answered, Galeacius Caracciolus. Let their money perish with them who prefer the richeses of the earth before one day's communion with jesus Christ. Eucharistia immortalitatis alimonia, ad sanand●s infirmitates medicamentum, Cypr. de caena dom. Corpus Christi est aegrit medicina, dehiles confortans valentes delectans, languorem sanans & sanitatem servani, Bern. O medicinam omnibus consulentem, omnia tumentia comprimentem, omnia tabescentia reficientem, necessaria custodientem perdita reparantem deprava●a corrigentem, Aug. de ago Christi●. The communion a Christian hath with Christ upon one Sacrament-day, the comfort fort of it is beyond compare, besides other concurring comforts, and soul-soveraign benefits that abound by this means, diseases cured, strength increased, health preserved, hopes established. The poor lame cripple, Act. 3. by means of the Apostle of Christ, was recovered his ankle bones, received strength, and receiving strength he went away leaping and praising God: O thus a meet communicant finds and feels by the Sacrament of Christ for the salving and saving good of his soul: you have read of the woman who touched Christ's garment, what good she got, O to take aright Christ's Sacrament, what benefit it brings, yea and the good it prepares for is admirable, all a believers pains before to prepare for the Sacrament is nothing to the future gains the Sacrament prepares his soul for. Blazacium Plin, l. 18. c. 10 History reports of a country in Africa where the people's industry hath an abundant reward, for every bushel of seed they sow, they receives a 150. fold increase after, O consider your labour shall not be in vain, do what you can, plough and sow, be it in tears to fit your souls for the Sacrament, the recompense first and last will be great. Pet hoc fi● hom● ad actionem promptior ad laborem patientior ad amorem ardentior ad fatiendum velocior ad resistendum fortior, Bern. Te calicem sanguinis Christi bibere ut possis & ipse propter Christum sanguinem fundere, Cy. lab. 4. Ep. 6. The Sacrament be to you as Isaacks Gerar, Gen. 26.12. as Israel's Canaan flowing with milk and honey. The Sacrament doth apt and dispose to be more diligent in service, Patient in suffering it prepares Christians both for the cross and the crown, for the troubles of earth, and the triumphs of heaven: by drinking the blood of Christ, we are made more courageous to shed our blood for Christ Cyprian shows how the Martyrs in the primitive Church, when they were to appear before the cruel tyrants were want to receive the Sacrament, and thereby they were fired with zeal and fervour, filled with faith and fortitude: thus Augustine also reports, Vid. Aug. in joh. Tract, 17 perhaps the Saints at the instant do not find those springings of spirits, leapings of heart (as John Baptist in the womb) when not the mother of the Lord, but the Lord himself comes to them in a Sacrament, yet afterwards they cannot but cry, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Archimedes & Andreas, joh. 1.41. I have found him, I have found him, at that present possibly not feel such sensible joys, yea suppose at the time of the Sacrament they should rather sit trembling with fear, and apprehensions of their own unworthiness, etc. as Jobs children when they were eating and drinking wine in their eldest brothers house, the devil occasioned a great wind to blow upon the house: it may be that God's children even at a Sacrament, when they are eating and drinking wine in their elder Brother's house, satan may raise such blustering winds of misgiving fears, and heart-trembling doubts, as may much molest them at that time, yet even thereby they are made more meet for future comforts, which afterwards are so much the greater, their joys the fuller, and their faith the firmer, sooner or later you may expect to receive sweet soul commodities by a right receiving the Sacrament. 4. The excellency of the Sacrament in itself calls for the more exactness in the transaction of it, and to 'cause the more care in all your carriage about it. Excellent is this feast in two respects. 1. In respect of the master of it. 2. In respect of the matter of it. For the master of this feast and author of this ordinance, it was Jesus Christ: when the soldier with his spear pierced Christ's side, there came blood and water; water representing baptism, Vid. Aug. in Psal. 40. Chrys. in joh. hom. 48. & alij. and blood the Sacrament of his Supper: Both Sacraments they issue out of Chris● and are set up by Christ. In reference to Sacraments old and new, there were three things required. 1. To accomplish. 2. To abolish the Ancient. 3. To establish others in the room, and all this hath Christ done. Eiusdem potestatis est constituere & destituere. It was Christ that could take down the one and set up the other. It's for him to institute 〈◊〉 Sacrament, that can animate a Sacrament, put life and power into it, this only Christ. Dat esse & operari. It's Christ that can set an ordinance a working, therefore fit to se● it up in its being: Well the Sacrament is of Christ, and therefore excellent. Manna was in itself an excellent food, and so much the more excellent, in that it came from God, and not by the ordinary course of nature: and is not this blessed Sacrament excellent, which comes from Christ who is God blessed for ever? Rom. 9.5. Caelum & Christus non patiuntur hyperbolen. Christ and Heaven are so excellent as they can never be set forth too far, O than this that proceeds from Christ is surely excellent: O the preciousness of Christ, in compare of him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. a Christian may well accounted all other things but dross, dung, and dogs meat, Phil. 3.8. The woman clothed with the Sun treads the moon under her feet, Rev. 12.1. Siquis temporalia Christo praeponat, non est in eo fundamentum Christus, Aug de civ. well if Christ be so excellent, the Sacrament which is Christ's Ordinance hath in it a real excellency. 2. Come to the matter of the Sacrament and in that respect its excellent; this is twofold. 1. The visible and external, matter. 2. The invisible and internal matter. For that which is outward and elementary, to wit, bread and wine, O these are excellent; take them in their ordinary use, but than set apart for this holy purpose, they are more precious. As the consecration of wood and leather, put greater excellency upon them, than gold and silver had that were not consecrated. Panis est doctrinalis victualis sacramentalis. Take but bread in its common use, and it's of worth some would derive the latin word from a greek, Panema 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multi indinem salutum magnitudinam solaminum plenitudinem omnium bonorum. which ●s very comprehensive, and carries in it ●ll for necessity and abundancy that good is, O than for this Sacramental bread which signifies and sets forth more and higher matters, and so the wine it's an excellent creature to heal, to cheer, refresh, and the like, take it in the Sacrament, it transcends for its signification sake. But I rather speak to the spiritual matter of the Sacrament, for that is surpassing precious, Come to the body and blood of Jesus Christ: Christ (says one) is not as a mother that puts forth her child to nurse, but in the Sacrament he feeds us with his own precious blood: whence is this O sweet Jesus that thou should give thy own blood to drink? una guttula plus valet quam caelum & terra. Lu. O how precious is this blood, 1 Pet. 1.19. One little drop more worth than heaven and earth, as the guilt of Christ's blood nothing more formidable to abide upon us, so the good of Christ's blood nothing more comfortable to apply to us, It hath a justifying, sanctifying, mortifying, mollifying power, and therefore of great price: The soul of man is excellent, that is redeemed by Christ's blood, Magna res anima qua Christi sanguine redempta est, etc. Bero, and the blood of Christ is excellent, that is able to redeem man's soul. By this read sea of Christ's blood our souls pass to our promised Canaan, and all our spiritual enemies are drowned thereby: God hath his black book of our sins, but a read line of Christ's blood drawn thorough makes all unlegible: Lord says one I am amazed, I know not what to do: but I put Christ's blood between thy wrath and my sins, and so forth, Christ's blood is the key that opens Heaven's door, or else the very truth is, we were all shut out, thus you see the excellency of Christ's blood and that must needs be excellent, where the virtue and value of Christ's blood comes. O but see these excellent things as united in a Sacrament, the outward elements, Sanguis Christi clavis paradist. and heavenly grace's bread and wine: Christ's body and blood, food both for soul and body. Behold in this Sacrament Christ and the creature join, Heaven and earth meets together. The external signs have their excellency, but the things signified do far surpass. Bread and wine are things that admit mutation they altar and change, Christ is immutable, the same yesterday, to day, and for ever, Heb. 13.8. and that which is Christ's is like Christ, not subject to change. Bread and wine are things that admit diminution, the more is taken of them the less remains. Alimonia haec non distribuendo minuitur sed potius ministrando augetur. B●rn. Non esurientes animas sed esuriem ipsam pas cunt animarum. Pern. Psa. 107.9. Christ the spiritual food how many soever partakes, there is never the less left, whole Christ continues. Bread and wine cannot feed the hungry and thirsty soul: Christ indeed is precious for this spiritual purpose: Give me Christ or I die, says the poor panting Saint: Earthly things will rather feed hunger, than feed the hungry, O but Christ his body and blood suits and satisfies all such desires, that the most enlarged soul saith, I have enough in Jesus Christ. Quid prodest regium alimentum si ad gehennam pascat. Tert. Bread and wine are precious things that may beseem a Princely Table, but yet thereof a man may eat and dr●nk and die eternally: what avails kingly fare, if it feeds, fits and fat's for hell? O but now Christ is such food, such bread, as whoever receives him, Habit vitam aeternam scit in pretio in promisso in prim●ijs. lives for ever, Whoso eats my flesh and drinks my blood hath eternal life, Joh. 6.54. he hath this life already. In the outward elements it may be possible to put poisonous ingredients, Interijs nefarie necatus veneno per infectum panem sacrum etc. vide Platin. in ●it Clemen. poison may be conveyed into sacramental bread or wine, to the death of the receiver, as we read of Henry the seventh, so murdered by a monk, Agrippina poisoned her husband Claudius, by mingling poison in the meat he most loved to eat: but now the spiritual food in the Sacrament is not capable of any such harm or hazard to him that takes it; Credo vitam aeternam, & edo vitam aternam. such a one may say not only I believe life eternal, but I receive life eternal. Thus we have the excellency of the whole Sacrament, and the surpassing excellency of some part: O than let this move you to mind you how you go about this matter. The Sacrament is a rare and rich treasure, O seek it with all your souls: Quid est scriptura nisi quaedam amoris epistola viventis Dei ad creaturam suam? Greg. Quid est Eucharistia quaedam amoris tessera morientis Christi ad Ecclesiam suam? What is the Scripture says one but a love letter sent by the living God to his creature? I may add, what is the Sacrament but a love token given by a dying Christ unto his Church? A cabinet of jewels more worth than cupboards of plate? And is the Ordinance so excellent? O how unseemly than to hung this jewel of gold in a swine's snout: O than how God's wrath must needs be provoked, to see profane men press upon this precious Ordinance: History will tell us what sad events have followed upon the insolences of sinful men against the things of God, Tacitus Hist. lib, 5. as for defiling the Lords Sabbath and his Sanctuary: O what than to profane the Lords Sacrament, so pure and precious a treasure: nay we find in antiquity of some polluting but the sepulchres of the Saints, resolving profanely to take them up ●o search for treasures, supposed to be hid therein, God made fire to rise out of the earth, josephus. Antiqu. l. 12 13. & lib. 11. cap. 11. and devoured them on a sudden: O let herein transgressors tremble: If God's wrath like fire breaks out of the earth, to consume such as wrong but the sepulchers of his Saints, what fire and flames of fury will God 'cause to come from Heaven to burn up such as abuse the Sacrament of his son? in which indeed are hid rich treasures of real excellencies out of their reach. Now than this being so excellent an Ordinance, its meet none should meddle with it, but excellent men, and such are only God's Saints in the sense of the word, Psa. 16.3. Gloriosius est nomen pietatis quam potastatis. Pro. 12.26. It's only grace that doth truly ennoble. It was a good expression of Theodosius, that be esteemed himself more honourable in that he was a Christian, than that he was an Emperor, and more advanced to be a member of the Church of Christ, than to be a head of the greatest Empire in the world. Well than, gracious men are the most glorious men, and they that are Gods excellent servants are fit for this excellent Sacrament let others avoid, In this garden are divers rich flowers, not for spiders and frogs to creep on, but for Bees to suck honey out of. 5. And lastly, Ponder your propriety in this precious Ordinance: This Sacrament is yours, and all the precious pearls to be found in this Gospel-cabinet are yours: Mat. 7 6. Cast not your pearls, It may be the torment of Devils, the wonderment of Angels, and amazement of all wicked men, to meditate your peculiar propriety herein, and it aught to be your care and comfort to consider hereof, poor cottagers cannot abide enclosures, but would have all lie common, and not any man to any thing more right than another, but rich men are careful to maintain their fences, and keep up their interests: Wicked men would have this Ordinance to lie open to all, and no fence about this field wherein Christ the treasure lies hid, like that in the parable, Mat. 13.44. yet it concerns Gods Saints to preserve the hedge, and to stand for their peculiar interest, and to mind two things in respect of their undoubted right towards this blessed Sacrament of the Lords last Supper. 1. The clearing of it, and 2. The claiming of it. Certitudo duplex, vel objects, vel subiecti. As you have a sure title, so make your title sure; that as the thing is certain in itself, it may be so to you: this will inflame your desire, provoke your care, and increase your comfort. You are not much taken when you look over the inventory of another man's goods; but let a rich man's last will and testament be brought, wherein you hear yourselves have large legacies given, O than your affections are up, and you long to have that in your hands: ●adem est ratio de non apparentibus & non existentibus. well, know what a legacy of love Chris● hath given you in his last will and Testament. This Sacrament of his death is yours, yet if you are ignorant of it, it is as if you had no such interest in it. O endeavour to clear this estate, that your understandings may not be clouded with any darkening doubts, Demonstratio qua nihil relinquit, aut inevidentiae in re, aut formidinis in intellectu. and so take the Sacrament with trembling hands, and mis-giving hearts, as if you had no part nor portion in this Gospel-priviledge, which is peculiarly yours by a double right. 1. By a right of promise. 2. By a right of purchase. You may enter upon this Ordinance as your own by promise: See how Peter would encourage the converted Jews to the Sacrament of Baptism, because the promise is to them, Act. 2.38, 39 and you may challenge the Sacrament of the Supper, as your own by virtue of God's promise, 1 Tim. 4.8. The promises of God they are of two sorts. Either such as concern the end of Faith. Or such as concern the means helping to that end. Now as by virtue of a promise, salvation as the end is yours, so by virtue of promise the Sacrament as a means helping to that end is yours; Qui destinat ad finem destinat ad mediatendentia ad finem. for as means and end are both concluded in the purposes of God, so they be both included in the promises of God. God's promises of good to his people are considerable two ways. Either as they are absolute and free, in respect of their first framing. Or as they are conditional in respect of their after fulfilling. For the former as soon as ever we have right to the promise, which God hath of mere grace made, we have a true and real right to that good to which the promise refers, but further when the condition of the promise required on our ●art is faithfully performed by us, and for present effectually found in us, our right is more ratified, and becomes more perfect and complete: take but one instance near the matter in hand. There is a promise of filling the foul with constant supply of spiritual food upon condition the soul be kept up in a hungering and thirsting frame, Mat. 5.6. Blessed are they that hunger and thirst, Or, they that are hungering and thirsting, so the Greek runs, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after the participle of the present tense, intimating, that when ever this is found, the present dispositions of your souls, you are blessed, and may expect spiritual repletions as your own proper good by promise, 2. By right of purchase, and here let me guide your motion in three things. 1. Go out to Christ's death, and behold therein the full attainment of all good for God's Church. Note here two things in the death of Christ, Satisfaction, whereby the debt being paid, Solutio dedebiti redundantia merit● evil is removed. Acquisition, there being an overplus of merit remaining, good thereby is procured. Christ did by his death merit all such good things for his Church, as the great love of himself and his Father thought fit to confer both in grace and glory. 2. Come back to the Sacrament, and there see a containment of all good in some kind, which Christ by his death hath purchased whatever is savingly good for present or future, is some way either represented or transmitted or assured, in, by and through the Sacrament to the souls of God's Saints. The primary and general good is union and communion with Christ: The secundary and particular are those rich mercies that arise from those depths and seas of grace and glory: peace and comfort which are from Christ as streams of honey from a rock begun on earth, and filled up in heaven. Than 3. Turn home to yourselves, and there see what entertainment you may give to all this good, truly you may apply all with joy, as your own portion, you may take both the lamp and the oil, both the golden pot and the heavenly Manna therein, as your own, by a purchased interest, I mean the whole Sacrament, with the earthly and heavenly part, you may hence receive as your peculiar right: Such is the love of the Lord Jesus, Aug. in Psa. 102. lege de amore pelicani erga pullulos languentes. that Pelican-like in his death he hath let out his own blood, and in this Sacrament he applies his blood with all the blessed benefits of his bloody death, to heal and help up the drooping souls of his dear Saints, and they may close in with all these comforts, as their own by the foresaid right of promise and purchase. Christ's death is yours, therefore the Sacrament that shows his death. The Covenant is yours, therefore the seals of the covenant: You are of God's Family, therefore the Family food is yours: You have right to a Sacrament when none administered, Ius ad rem, Ius in re. and when it is you have right in it. It is your bacquet and all therein is yours, Christ the vine is yours, Christus meus & omnia. therefore the grapes are yours, Christ once yours all is yours, Christ the main of the Sacrament is yours by an undoubted right two ways. By donation, and By relation. Your right to Christ is clear, because he is freely given you of God. As Christ hath a right to the Saints by virtue of God's gift, Thy they were and thou gavest them me, Joh. 17.9, 11. Non ex debito sed ex dono. so the Saints have right also to Christ by virtue of God's gift, Isa. 9.6. Believers have Christ given them of God four ways, whereby they receive a full right. 1. Christus datur nobis, datur prae nobis, datur prae nobis, datur in nobis. He is given before them as a pattern for their lives, 1 Pet. 2.21. Joh. 13.15. 2. He is given for them in the sacrifice of his death. Galat. 2.20. Ephe. 5.2. 3. He is given to them in the Ministry of the word, and of the Sacraments. 4. He is given in them by the habitation of his holy spirit. 1 John. 3.24. Surely than Christ is of right theirs, and the Sacrament their assured right. Whose such a lordship is, to him belongs the writings, deeds, conveyances, privileges, rites, and all immunities. So here. 2. Christ is your right by way of relation: Relationes sunt minimae entitatis sed magna essi cadiae. Every relation carries some propriety in it, and privilege with it: but none like that which is conjugal between man and wife: and this relation lies clear betwixt Christ and his Church, Hos. 2.19, 20. The marriage knot brings a marriage right: A mutual interest to enjoy each other, both at bed and board: and doth not the spiritual contract between Christ and every believing Christian convey as much? O than know your right, and observe all good ways of a due entrance upon, and partaking of, that which is your right. I proceed than to those directions which are for your guidance about this great Ordinance. For by your careful course in this way of the Sacrament, you may enjoy your right. Now than consider as there are three times wherein your duty is concerned, so there are three things wherein your duty is contained. The times towards this Sacrament that concerns the exercise of duty, are before, at, and after. The things that contain your duties, which about this Sacrament are to be exercised: are repentance, faith, and obedience. Repentance before. Faith in or at, and Obedience after. When I place repentance before faith, I intent not thereby to state the method of God's first working these in the conversion of a sinner: but only the manner of working these, in and by a converted Christian upon this solemn occasion of receiving the Sacrament: we live in an age too apt to catch up disputes, and study rather to be polemical than practical Christians. I begin with repentance, the renewed practice of which is preparatory to this precious Ordinance. Mark three things. D●cet ●ratio Dominica nos esse quotidia nos peccatores & totam vitam esse paenitentiam. 1. In general the whole time of our life is to be a time of repentance. The Lord's Prayer (saith Luther) that leads us daily to pray for pardon of sins, teacheth us that we are daily sinners, and that we aught all our days to repent. Quid restat O peccator ni si ut in tota vita tua deplores totam vitam tuam? Anselm in his meditations confesseth that all his life was either damnable for sin committed, or unprofitable for good omitted, and at l●st concludes: O what than remains, but in our whole life to lament the sins of our whole life. This becomes all Christians. Aut iterati dolores cruciabunt ●anitentem vitam meam aut cruciatus aeterni vexabunt animam meam, Aug. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ap●um est omne bonum loci● & temporibus su●● & laudabilia quaeque sordes cunt nisicongrua sede potiantur. 2. There are some particular seasons, when especially we should be in the practice of repentance. It's wisdom in a Christian to understand, and than to apprehended the most meet times for the managing of meet matters. It's the Apostles counsel, Eph. 5.16. to buy up all the fairest opportunities, so the Greek, word renders it, to transact his necessary businesses in the best times. All the work we are to do in this world, the Lord hath fitted to prope● places and seasons, which if we do not observe, each good duty doth lose its beauty, Ecc. 3.11. see what is the praise of a man, Psa. 1.3. He brings forth his fruit in his season, his fruit, proper to his place, and in his season, in the due time for that fruit, ●o than there are some more especial seasons to set about this work of repentance. There is a time to mourn, and a time to rejoice, a time to weep, and a time to laugh, Eccl. 3.3. Before our receiving the Sacrament, is a fit season to set about the business of repentance: O than to put in practice the parts of repentance, are as apples of gold in pictures of silver, O than its good to set this work upon the wheels, than to be serious in the work of repentance will 'cause us to feel the want of the Ordinance, and by feeling the want, we after find the worth. Sharp things are apt to move appetite, and the more hungry we are the more meet we are for to feed ●n the Sacrament, Cibis acc●rimu accrescitur appetitus. Than the soul is in a fit posture by faith to take in Christ, when first by repentance it hath thrown out sin. Where the burden of sin hath first caused the bitter groans of repentance, there is a fitness to come in the Sacrament to Christ for deliverance, Illi ad Christum vocantur qui sensu peccati premuntur & pro pacificanda conscientia laborant, & illi soli sunt qui cum fructu ad Christum veniunt. Musc. in Mat. ca 11. when repentance hath made the wound, than Christ in the Sacrament is ready to make the cure. O than before you come to take the Sacrament of a broken Christ, go and prepare the sacrifice of a broken heart, Christ's heart and side was pierced and stabbed, to let out his blood, Si vis Christum cognoscere si vi● ipsum accipere sicut se fiegit, ita te frange Ber. Hom. de duo. disc. cuntibus ad Em, and shall not thy heart be pierced and struck to let in the blood of Christ? I remember what is reported Ridly said to Latimer, when they were to suffer martyrdom for Christ. Come my brother, let us be content to take a hard breakfast, our dinner, and o●r Supper will be the sweeter: so are we to receive the Sacrament of Christ. O than, come my Brother let us be content, to take a bitter breakfast of heart-breaking repentance, the Lords Supper will be the sweeter, and our Supper with the Lord the more delightful. If we would find Christ to our comfort in the Sacrament, make a sorrowful search for him before. Pharoahs' daughter being come down to the river to wash herself, she found Moses laid in an Ark of bulrushes. O let us go down first into the river of repentance, and wash ourselves and than come and see, come and take up Christ in the ark of the Sacrament, in the elements of bread and wine: Joseph and Mary than found Christ in the Temple in the midst of the Doctors, when they had spent some time before, and sought him sorrowing, Luk. 2.48. Let every man in this matter mind these five things following. 1. Separation of himself: having a desire to come to the Sacrament, and there to enjoy Jesus Christ. Pro. 18.1. Separate thyself from thy company in the world, from thy calling in the world, from the cumbersome cares of the world, go aside from all, and be as if thou hadst no shop, no wife, no child, etc. As Abraham going to sacrifice Isaak, leaves Sarah and servants and all. It's said of Sauls father, 1 Sam. 10.2. he left his thoughts of his Asses, and cried, what shall I do for my son? so do thou lay by all mindings of earthly matters, and say, O what shall I do for my soul? and what shall I do for my Saviour? 2. Scrutation of himself: O make inquisition each into his own heart and life, before he approaches the Table of the Lord O look look to two things. 1. What sin there is opposite to a Sacrament. 2. What grace there is requisite for a Sacrament. 1. Go down into the sides of thy ship and seek out sleeping Jonah, and by repentance cast out sin, than thou art fit to come to this shore, Lay the Bible before thee, take the candle light of clear Scripture with thee, and seek all the dark corners of thy deceitful heart, that is apt to colour and cover sin: I would not have you go to search for sin in your soul (that falls in your cellar, Psa 119.105. Ex hac lucerna accende & tu lucernam ut ucceat interior oculus tuus qui lucerna est tui corporis. who is ready to blow up all) without the lantern of God's word, nor yet to take a dark lantern of obscure and doubtful Scriptu●e to discover your sins and examine yourselves by. 2. What grace requisite for a Sacrament: O consider and see to that also, Luk. 14.28. which of you intending to build a tower, sits not down first and counts whether he hath sufficient to finish it, so if you intent to partake of Christ in a Sacrament, O sit down first and consider how you are accommodated for so great a business, with all useful graces. As soldiers when to go to a combat, than they look for their weapons, ●ub up their armour, make all bright, and fi● for service; O so do you when to go to a Sacrament, see you have the whole armour of God, O rub up all your spiritual pieces, look all be clean, and well scoured by repentance, and so fit for the Ordinance 3, Humiliation of himself, and for what he finds amiss, in respect of sin present, or grace absent. O this is indeed the main of repentance, when by repentance we have cast down ourselves, than come and by faith take up Christ, Gen. 24. We read of Rebek●h when she was among the servants, she road upon her Camel, but when she was to come near to Isaak, she light down to the ground and covered her face. So how ever mounted, yet when thou art to approach near Christ in the Sacrament, go down frow thy Camels back by soul humbling repentance, and cover thy face with shame, and so draw near, this is the way to receive, not only Christ, but the fullness of Christ. If a man would convey water from a fountain in his field to a cistern in his house, he lays the leads and pipes low in the ground: Christ is the fountain thy soul is to receive the fullness of all grace from, and the sweetness of all peace in, through his ordinance, as the means of conveyance: O than see that thou humblest thyself to the ground, and lie low by unfeigned repentance. O do not you say repentance is a hard work, that is for them who still stick fast in their sins, and that have no principles of grace in their souls. Luther confesses that before his conversion, he met not with a more displeasing word in all his study of divinity, Paenitens de peccato doset & de dolore gaudet. than Repent, but afterwards he took delight in the work, to sorrow for his sin, and than rejoice in his sorrow; the like let it be with you. Say not you have repent already; truly. Homo ipsius paenitentiae panitere debet. Salu. 1. We have need to repent of our repentance, not to repent because we have repent, but because our first repentance was no more, our penitential sorrows not greater. The smaller fine the Tenant pays at his first coming into a house, the more rent he must pay after, at usual times: Alas, our repentance was so little at our first coming into Christ, juanis est paenitentia quam sequens culp● coinquinas quia nihil prosunt lamenta si replicae ●ur peccata, & nil valet a malo veniam poscere, si mala de novo velis iterare. Aug Iterùm peccavi Domine & iterum poenit●e me peccasse. that we had need have other times, before Sacraments and the like, to enlarge our repentance. 2. We have often sinned since our repentance: and sins after repentance are worst, and of them most need to repent. All your sins before conversion, not like those since: and will you come to a Sacrament in them, without repenting of them? Having had sins after repentance, we had need have repentance after sin: O sad where sin is the last: It's good to have repentance follow sin, Paenitentia est mala praeterita plangere & plangenda iterùm non committere. Ambr. Deus paenitere dicitur non quia est in Deo commutatio paenitentia, sed quia ad modum panitentis se habet. &c Aquin. in Rom. Luk 15.7. Gaudium in caelo non super uno peccatore paenitentiam cogitante aut super uno paenitentiam dicente sed super uno paenitentiam aegente. S ella. Deus est qui consolatur flentes curat dolentes, reficit paenitentes. Chrys. Nemo ad Deum precans & flens accessit, qui non, quod postulavit, accepit. Chrysostom. but to have sin follow repentance, and so to remain, is miserable. O repent, repent. If ever you think aright to receive the Sacrament, O prepare by repentance, do not only as if you did repent, but repent indeed. It's well for us that God seems sometimes, as if he did repent, when yet there is no penitential change in God, no repenting grief in God, O but it will be ill for us to act only somewhat like repentance, and not actually and in truth repent; O do not only think of repentance, and have some words that way, but do the work truly, and throughly, this shall 'cause joy in the heavens, and joy in your hearts. Our Saviour at the Marriage, Joh. 2. furnished the guests with plenty of wine, but the pots there, were first filled with water: O let us fill the pots of our hearts, with the water of repenting sorrows, and the Lord at the Sacrament will turn all into the wine of soul-reviving comforts. 4. Supplication unto God. Petition God with tears and prayers, O let us aforehand sand out our ships of prayer to sea, God knows with what rich lading they may return upon a Sacrament day, than may they come like Bees laden with honey into the hives of our hearts, and fill us with combs of comfort. O pray, pray, and see that all your prayers carry fire and water in them, fire of zeal, and water of sorrow. The more the waters of the deluge increased, Quanto est qui libet sanctior & desidery sancti plenior tanto est in orando fletus uberior Aug. the higher was Noah's ark carried: O these waters of repenting prayers, will raise thy heart to heaven, and the nearer thou are so brought to Christ, the fit to receive him in a Sacrament: Go to God, and look backward upon that sin thou desirest God in the Sacrament to seal the pardon of, and grant thee power against look forward to the Christ, ●●e grace. that the Sacrament thy soul woul● feign partake of, and converse with, and beg with tears, Pr●ces suadent lachryma cogunt in vicibilem vincunt, omnipotentem ligant. jero. the Lord cannot deny thee, thus thou shalt overcome God, and than come fetch Christ home in a Sacrament: God while thou art sitting at the Table, shall stand at heaven gates as it were, and say secretly to thy soul, thou hast sought Christ, behold, there he is, O than to have justice look out, and mercy pled, O let us embrace this man, he hath abhorred himself let us spare this man, he ●ath not spared himself: let us now forgive him his sins, he hath with grief confessed his sins, justitia de cae●o prospicit misericordiae precat tanquam Dei dice●tis, parcamus huic homini quiae ipse sibi non pepercit ignoscamus quia ipse agnoscit, & quia ipse conversus est ad puntendū peccaetum suum convertam●s & nos ad liberandum eum Au. in Ps. 84 he hath turned himself by repentance against his sins, now give him deliverance from his sins, Christ shall pled with the Father, to be at peace, and O let us save that man, he hath condemned himself: At the bar of God's justice Christ shall pled his own blood, and his death, that thou mayst live: At the bar of God's mercy Christ shall present thy tears, and prayers, and God than give his sweet smile upon thy soul. O be encouraged therefore before you go to the Lords Supper, to cry to the Lord by prayer, thus I pass the fourth thing requisite for every Christian that would merely communicate, to wit, invocation or calling upon God by prayer with the inmost affections as the word well imports. Invocaere quasi intus aut in se vocare, Ansel. 5. Obligation of himself to God, this becomes every one, yea all that would partake aright, Jer. 50.4, 5. Going and weeping they shall go to seek the Lord, saying, Come, let us join ourselves to the Lord in a perpetual Covenant, O how seasonably may this practice be applied to a sacrament occasion? We read of jacob Gen. 28. when he was to go to Padan-Aram to take a wife, how solemnly he vowed himself to God, Magnum quoddam est & salutare bonum, votum, atque aniorarū mosita●um fir●ma custodia intissimumque praefidium, Chrys. when you are to go to this holy Ordinance to take Christ, bind yourselves to God, draw up the indentures and covenants aforehand, and than seal them in the Sacrament, when God seals his Covenant to you; O thus go to the Sacrament, your so●s being safely guarded, strongly armed, girt and bound up firm to God in holy vows and covenants. Thus you have all the parts of renewed repentance, which every true Christian aught to practise, that prepares for the Sacrament: and I beseech you set to all this with lowly and humble hearts: hearts laid in the dust are fittest for Christ, Isa. 6●. 2. Those herbs and flowers rise highest in the Summer, and with the greatest beauty, that in the winter have shrunk lowest into the earth: and those Christians are like to rise up highest with most glorious joys in the Summer-day of a Sacrament, who have before shrunk down lowest in the wet winter work of repentance. Jacobs sons when they went to Egypt, they first met with rough usage, they were imprisoned, perplexed, and in great straits, but after joseph makes them a feast, gives them all messes of meat, they eat and drink and are merry with him, Goe 43.31. joseph makes them first to remember their sin, Gen. 4●. 21. With bitterness of soul they consider their not regarding their brother in the bitter anguish of his soul; and than O what revivings of comforts doth he afterwards cause. Thus Christ our joseph will have us pass through some rough work of renewed repentance, Magna amaritudo peccati, quae tantam amaritudinem peperit. have our souls embittered in the remembrance of the bitterness of his soul once for sin, and than comes this feast of fat things where they eat and drink, and are merry in the Lord. O the Benjamin messes of blessings and mercies, Christ there gives out to them, and so for ever gains their heart. Well, would you have those comforts given you in great measures at the communion? O than give yourselves to this whole work of searching, sorrowing, fasting, praying, etc. Ester desires others, and resolves herself to fast and pray, and than says she, I will go in to the King, If I perish, I perish; but O what favour she found, etc. let this be the course of every Christian, O repent, Esto parv●● in oculis tuit ut si● magnus in oculis Dei, Aug. entreat, lie down, look up, and than say, now will I go in to Christ at his Supper, If I perish, I perish: but when thou hast been low in thy own eyes, thou shalt be high in his. To close I shall only desire when you have done what you can in this case, take care of your thoughts in two things. 1. That they do not sink too low, nor 2. That they do not rise too high. Let them not be so low as to say, Though I go to this Supper, yet sha●l I not meet Christ: let them not be so high as to say, now I go and I cannot miss Christ, let me repent, weep, pray, promise, it's all in vain, Christ and I shall never come to close: however or whatever I have done, I shall go and come a Christlesse creature: Beware of this diffidence, or thus, I have now examined myself, acknowledged my sin, wept, prayed, covenanted, therefore I cannot miscarry: my preparations have been such. I am sure to speed well, and to come back full of Christ from his Table. Beware of this confidence: It was a good observation of Augustine, he says. Other vices are in sins, Caetera vitiae in peccatis superbia in rectè factis maximè timenda, Aug. but pride and high confidence is most apt to creep in upon duties well done: when we have much humbled ourselves we be prove to grow proud in ourselves thereupon to go to the communion in the strength of our own preparations, O go renouncing all empty, lowly, hungry, humble, selfdenying, to this Supper of the Lord, and the Lord prospero you. Go as if you had not shed one tear, made one prayer, thus shall the first work be well finished: viz. the work of repentance that goes before. I proceed to the second thing requisite at the Sacrament, to wit, faith: it is true, Christus auditu est devorandus intellecturuminandus corde sitiendus: & fide digerendus Tert. de resurrect. there is use of other graces, and happy is the man that hath his quiver full of them; but I may say for faith, as David of Goliahs' sword, There is none like that. The main of this Sacrament work lies upon faith: As fire is to the chemic, so is faith to the Communicant, there is nothing to be done without it; Faith says to all that come to the Sacrament, as our Saviour said to his Disciples, joh. 15.5, without me you can do nothing, viz. pleasing to God, or profitable to yourselves, Non dentes ad mordendum acuimus sed fide sincera panem sanctum frangimus & manducamus. Cypr. de caena Do. As the angels that came to destroy Sodom, said to Lot, We can do nothing thou thou art gone, Gen. 19, 22. so may Christians when they are met to receive the Sacrament say to faith, we can do nothing till thou art come, The faculties of the soul, the graces of the spirit, the promises of the Gospel, do nothing if not faith. And 1. As this is one thing considerable that in the Sacrament nothing can be done without faith, So also there is a second thing to be considered, which is, that in the Sacrament all may be done by faith. As Luther says of prayer, Est quaedam omnipotentia precum. so may I say of faith, it hath a kind of omnipotency in it, its able to do all things. There is nothing meet to be done at the Table of the Lord, Tantum possumu● quantum credimus Cyp. but faith is able, and by faith we are able to do it. Read the 11. of the Hebrews, and see, if there be any thing in the whole course of a Christian, to which he is not fitted by faith, and than draw it to the particular case. Well, but when I speak this of faith, in reference to the Sacrament, its meet to inquire two things as touching faith. 1. What Faith it must be. 2. What faith must do. Faith which is of this concernment in the business of the Sacrament, it must carry with it these two pertinent properties. 1. It must be a man's our Faith. 2. It must be a man's actual Faith, Or the faith that is a man's own in act, not another's faith: As the Prophet says, Hab. 2.4. The just man lives, so say I, the just man receives by his faith, his soul receives benefit in the Sacrament by his faith: Dormit fides & Christus d●rm it. Aug. and not by a dead faith, or a dormant faith, but by a vigorous and lively faith, awakened to its work: It must be a Christians own faith in exercise; and the more full of vivacity and activity a man's faith is in the Sacrament, Efficaecia Eucharistiae non aequaliter se habet quoad omnes fidel●s sed pro ratione fidei communicantium, Orig. the more is like to be his souls advantage by the Sacrament: the more agility in the one, the more efficacy in the other. Well than remember it must be thy own particular faith, and thy own practical faith that is required in this of the Sacrament, to make thee an approved Communicant. It is not required of all that partake in the Sacrament, Ad Dei dignitalem spectat ut quibus fidem aetas denegat proptiā gratia concedàt prodesse alienam: nec Dei iustitia propriam ab his putat exigendam fidem. quos novi● propriam nullam haebes re culpam, Be. they should have the same strength of Faith, but its needful they all have the same truth of Faith: each one a true faith of his own to set a work, though weak. Suppose in receiving Infants to the Sacrament of Baptism, there is a respect had to the faith of others, though they have not actual faith of their own, the case differs. For first the greatness of God's grace may admit them to the mercy of actual baptising, though the littleness of their age cannot admit them to the duty of actual believing, Christ by his spirit in Baptism may comprehend them, though they by faith cannot at all apprehended Christ. 2. They have no actual fault of their own, God may rather dispense● with the want of actual faith of their own; as by faith they cannot actually embrace, so by sin they do not actually oppose. Moore might be added in the Infant's behalf touching Baptism. Ad nutritionem spiritualem requiritur non tantum habitus & dispositio fidei; sedactus etiameius exercitus & exercitativita ut non omnes fideles semper digni sunt convivae in hac caena nisi fidem quam habent exercent, Am. ca 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. though they have no actual faith of their own; but for us in the Sacrament of the Supper, it is another matter; Every one of us must have a proper faith of his own to employ, not only the seed, habit and disposition of faith, but faith in its excited exercises. The prayer which prevails at the throne of grace, jam. 5.16. is an operative and working prayer, so the Greek reads it, and truly the faith that avails at the Table of Christ, is an energetical and actual faith, stirred up to such workings as suits the Sacrament: Moses hand lying in his bosom was leprous, but at length pulling it forth, and stretching it out, it was made well: Again, O see at the Sacrament this hand of your faith lie not folded up, as it were, in your bosom, but stir it up and stretch it out, and than it shall be well with you. It is not the Hawk that sits still hoodwinked upon the fist, but the looking, flying hawk upon the wing that doth the service. O it is a winged working eye-viewing faith that will do us service in a Sactamant, as not a faith that lies still in our hearts as an idle habit, or like a sluggish servant in a house. But I pass on, particularly to propose what faith is to do in the Sacrament, to wit Two ways, 1. Towards the Subject. 3. Towards the object. The subject of faith is the heart or foul of a sincere Christian, towards which Faith at the Sacrament is to do two things. 1. To empty it. 2. To open it. To empty it of evil thoughts. To open it in good desires. 1. Faith is to empty the Christians house of such ill guests as make their untimely visits, his heart of those incursions of unmeet thoughts, that are apt to come in at the Sacrament, and if they be not cast out of the heart, Nihil est in nobis corde fugacius quod a nobis (a Deo etiam) toties recedit queties per pravas cogitationes defluit, Greg. will carry away the heart: The heart through these thoughts is apt to fly and fling of from God, and the business in hand: Satan a● such a time sets in, and suggests what he can, to draw out the mind in idle excursions, and impertinent cogitations, and the more the service is solemn, and the soul is serious, the more Satan is subtle and sedulous, job. 1.6. There was a day when sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord, and Satan came also amongst them: The Devil upon a Sacrament-day, will get in among the children of God, when in this great service, they come to present themselves before the Lord, to puzzle their hearts with improper thoughts: to some he comes in as a roaring lion, Magis vereor serpentem gliscente● quam leonem rugientem. jam. 1.14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Metaphora sumpta a piscatoribus qui bamis suis escam placidā imponunt, tit pisces capian. with heart-amazing thoughts of a man's own unworthiness by reason of sin, and wretchedness to meddle in such sacred mysteries; too others as a cunning serpent (which is most common) with some heart taking thoughts of profit or pleasure; and so entice the soul aside from the service, as the fish is drawn on and at length plucked out from its Element by an eye-alluring bait, jam. 1.14. Mat 12.47. we find when Christ was in a place where he was earnestly set about his Father's business, one comes in to him, and says, Behold thy mother and brethrens stand without, desiring to speak with thee; but he would not away from his work: so thus when a Christian is fully bend in this blessed business of God, Satan comes to the soul with a whisper, behold such a man, or such a matter of the world, a wife, a child, a friend, again, stands without, desirous to speak with thee, Cor meum side fixum a Christo meo crucifixo nihil est quod trahat, Buce. and so get of the heart from the good in hand; but all such motions, the power, practice and prevalence of this grace of faith aught to repel: As a ship at sea with a leak, as the water comes in, there is one pumps it out: the soul at a Sacrament would even soon be sunk, by sinful and unseasonable thoughts, but faith helps cast them out: be the thoughts perplexing? etc. Faith must hint that good from God, and love from Christ, as to expel them: Faith takes up a promise, and force them away; as Abraham by his hand drove away the b●rds, that would needs come to interrupt him in his service: Gen. 15.11. so a Christian by the hand of Faith, must drive out these disturbing thoughts from his soul at the Sacrament. Be t●e thoughts more pleasing, faith must catch up that in its hand from the word, a menace, a promise, a precept, the remembrance of which may 'cause him to bewail and to repel these thoughts from the heart, eye lifted up in a sad ejaculation, Vellem fervire Domine sed cogitationes non patiuntur, Lord, now how feign would I serve thee, and vain thoughts will not suffer me, Faith must declare that there is enough in the Ordinance, to take up all the thoughts: other matters to meditate upon more profitable, more comfortable, more needful, more fruitful: The death of Christ, the love of Christ, and the like: alas! for unbelievers at the Sacrament, Excellous sensibile destruit sensum. their minds may be are amazed at the height of those mysteries that they think of nothing; as a Clock wound up beyond its ordinary pitch, stands still: or else their thoughts fall flat to the earth upon the bore bodily things, the bread and wine before t●em, or else they let them fly out upon some other vain object, or as foolish archers shoot away their arrows at random, their thoughts running upon no particular thing. In believers ill and vain thoughts in Sacrament time intrude, but faith turns them out, and takes in better: O let this be your care, Numb. 9.10, 13. A man in a journey was not to eat the Passeover, his mind and thoughts would be unsettled: O see your hearts be not in a journey but at home, minding the matter at hand, when you are at a Sacrament, and O stir up faith for your help in this case, to cast such bold guests out of the house of your hearts. And as faith aught thus to empty the heart, Bonum quod vere credimur valde volumus. so 2. Faith must open the heart in holy desires. The affections of the soul are of two sorts. Those wherein the soul is contracted, as in grief and fear. Those wherein the soul is dilated, as in joy and desire. And as in worldly griefs and fears, the soul is contracted by unbelief, so in spiritual joys and desires, In desiderio illo pij animi suspiria inenarribilia & gaudtum ineffabile mirificè coadunantur, suspiria inquam gaudium quae ne ipse quidem, qui ea sentit, potest plenè enarrare, Ro. in joh. the heart of a Christian is, and aught to be dilated by the exercise of Faith set faith on work at the Sacrament, it will encourage a Christian in his desires, and so increase desires in the Christian. O the promises, says faith: that are to desires, and to such as hunger and thirst, Mat. 5.6. joh. 7.37. Thou hungrest and thirstest, says faith to the soul, be of good comfort; O how wonderfully is the heart enlarged with desires unspeakable, and joys unutterable hereby. This one key of faith unlocks all the doors about this house. Faith gives the soul the sight and sense of it wants, and so springs desires after suitable supplies from God in Christ. Let a man have good in him, Ille non est bonus qui non vult esse melior. yet he finds the want of good, and desires to be better. Faith at the Sacrament doth well to bring and present to the soul, as it were a new fresh written bill of all its wants; and the soul finds want of power to support it, want of wisdom to direct it, want of mercy to preserve it, want of comfort to refresh it, and the like. Than further faith reports the fullness of God through Christ, to make up all that is wanting to the utmost; thereupon the heart is stirred up, and stretched out, in strong desires for such enjoyments: O says jacob to his sons, why sit you gazing, and perishing in want? there is plenty of corn in Egypt, hast you down. O says faith, there is abundance of all good in God; yea says the soul by the Echo of faith, In my father house is bread enough, and shall I perish for hunger? I now come for bread, will my Father give me a stone? no, not: I have sinned, yet I am a child, and shall not I eat of the childrens bread? though I have forgot my duty, Et ubi nunc est pater ille, potentissimus, dulcissimus & liberalissimus nunquid potest oblivisci filium uteri sui? absit absit, Ber. parab. de fill. reg. will my father forget his bounty? no, not: O now how the soul is open in desires, now it pants, breaths, and even breaks with longing to bathe itself in the blessed streams of Gods free grace, and Christ sovereign blood. O when a Christians faith like Aaron's rod, though before it hath been too too much as a dry stick, yet now at a Sacrament it buds and blossoms, and bears such good fruit of gracious desires; Blessed is it. But secondly, See how faith is to work in reference to the object. The object of faith is Christ, and in reference to Christ, faith at the Table of the Lord, aught to do two things. 1. To look out for Christ. 2. To lay hold of Christ. Faith at the Lords Table must look to Christ, and set the soul into an unsatisfied way without Christ. The two Mary's when they came to the sepulchre of Christ, they saw the linen lying, and there were Angels standing, but all this not content them, they looked for the body of Jesus, and not seeing that, they were perplexed: They have taken away my Lord, says one, and I know not where they have laid him: Amulus non valet quicquam, haereditas est quam quarebam, Bern. de caena dom. I●●. etc. I says the Angel, I know whom you seek, jesus which was crucified. So a true Christian is at the Sacrament of Christ: let him see there Ministers standing, and the bread and wine presented, O that not content him. It's the body and blood of Christ his faith looks for, Jesus of Nazareth which was crucified, Valde protestatus sum me nolle sic satiari ab eo, Melch. Ada. in vit. Lu. The believer says concerning the outward elements, as Luther of worldly preferments, I earnestly protest, I will not be put of with those things, Lord, says Abraham, what wilt thou give me so long as I go childless? Gen. 15.1. so says such a man, Lord what wilt thou give me if from this Sacrament I go Christlesse? Sicut mea non tibi placent oblata nisi mecum, Sic honorum tu●rum contemplā●io reficit no● sed non satiat nisi tecum. Bern. Lord says the soul, I know it is not some signs of good from me only, which will please thee, but thou requirest myself: so it is not the naked signs in this Sacrament can satisfy me, but I must have thee thyself or I die, if I live, Lord, my life will be a death, thou mad'st me for thyself, and if I may not now enjoy thyself, Fecisti nos Domine prote & inquietum est cor nostrum donec veniat ad te, Aug. my heart will be unquiet, and my life uncomfortable, thus doth the soul seek Christ at the Sacrament, and thus it becomes a Christian by faith to look for Christ. I have heard it reported credibly of a Christian man, Quid petis O judat ut Deus tribuat tibi panem? panem dat omnibus, dat quotidie dat semp●r. etc. Christum crucifixime crede Christum quaere, etc. Amb. Ps. 118 Serm. 18. who in the night dreaming the day of Judgement was come, was so possessed; that he risen and run out into the street, and looking up to heaven cried, where is my Christ? where is my Christ? O when indeed the Sacrament-days come, a good Christian by faith is so affected, that in his heart he looks up, and in his secret thoughts cries, O where is my Christ? Quicquid mihi praeter illum est, dulce non est, quic quid mihi vult dare Dominus meus auferat totum & se mihi dat, Au, Enar. 2. in Psa. 26, Christum ipsum desidero accipere & non ●d solum sed accedere ad sacro sanctum eius lateris vulnus, ostium arcae, quod factum est in latere, ut totus inremusque ad ●●er jesu, Bern. de amore Dei, cap. 1. where is my Christ? To behold the cutward elements will content others, but Christ himself in them is he which a believer looks for. When jacob saw the chariots and the wagons which joseph had sent his spirit revived, but yet with the sight of these his mind was not satisfied; O says he, my son joseph liveth, I will go see him before I die; he loves to look into that chariot wherein he may go see joseph his son. A Christian when he sees the bread and the wine, those good creatures sent and set before him, his spirit may revive, but his faith works on, O says he, my Saviour lives, now let me see him before I die, than he comes to clasp Christ as old Simeon the babe in his arms, with 〈◊〉 Lord now let thy servant departed in peace: O if now he might never return to ●ee his house more, Apprehensio Christi per fidem duplex Alia est originalis quae apprehenditur ad un●onem de novo integrandam Alia est secundaria quam apprehenditur Christus ad consolationem ex union percipiendan or to see wife or child more, he could be content to go out of the world in that sweet enjoiment of Jesus Christ, which is the other thing faith at the Sacrament doth towards Chr●st, viz. 2. It is to lay hold on Christ. As little Zacheus in the sycamore tree sees Christ, and than soon comes down and takes Christ with joy into his house; so a believer by a little faith sees Christ in a Sacrament, and than receives him into his heart with joy. When Gods Saints come to solace and satiate themselves with sweet Sacrament-comforts, they are not, they must not be satisfied by faith, only to set their eyes upon Christ, Cum ad mensam Domini calestibus cibis satiandus accedis corpus & sanguinem Christi, men tu oculis aspice, cordis man● suscipe & haustu interiori assume, etc. Euse. Emisenus, but also to set their hearts upon Christ, not content only with the eye of the mind to look on Christ at a distance, but with the hand of the heart they labour to lay hold upon Christ, and to partake of his presence, and may they but find such favour with God, herein to receive Christ as a gift from God, O what Hallelujahs and heavenly Hosannas are their souls ready to sing! We read, Mar. 6. how there was a day when King Herod made a Supper for his Courtiers and Captains, and Herodias dancing so pleased Herod, whereupon says he to her, Ask what thou wilt, and I will give it thee, she being instructed of her mother, O give me, says she, the head of John Baptist by and by in a charger, she craves john Baptists head, rather than half a kingdom, The King to grant her request commands of the head of john the Baptist, and gives it to her in a charger, which she takes and carries home to her mother's house with much joy. So there is a day when the great God makes a Supper for his children and servants, than the believing soul secretly dances and pleaseth God, whererpon he proffers, what wilt thou desire and I will give it thee? than the soul being prompted by this mother grace of faith cries and craves, O give me but now the body and blood of Christ in this Ordinance, O a Christ rather than a Kingdom; neither is it grievous to God to have this the request, Et vos qui accepturi estis sacramentum salvatoris pedes fide tenete, lachrimis lavate, crine tergite corde tongite, Chr. in Mar, hom 14. but straightway he gives Christ's body and blood to the soul in the Sacrament, which by faith it receives as from the hands of God, and carries home with sweet comforts of heart, Cant. 3.4. O how the heart by faith hugs and kisses not only the face, but the feet of a crucified Christ, being ready to wash them with tears of joy, yea and is willing to do further, like that woman in the 7. of Luke, who having washed Christ's feet with the tears of her eyes, for a wiping towel she takes the hair of her head, now a Christian by faith flies high at Christ, comes up to Christ, and takes a conjugal hold and a Covenant hold of Jesus Christ, with a my beloved is mine, and I am his, Can. 2.16. Faith draws the soul in to Christ, and Christ into the soul: Faith it is a mounting grace, to meet Christ, Faith is an eager grace to close in with Christ, Faith is as that Disciple which outran his fellow, and came first to the sepulchre to find Christ. Faith stirs up much ●ove to Christ and Christ bears much love to faith, Ad Eucharistiam accedimus ibi contemplamur Christum pendentem in cruse, Ibi in sinis Christi recumbimus, ibi in in ipsum cor Christi intro spicimus quod sit misericors quod nobis mortem peccatoris, &c, L●●. they never meet, but O what mutual embracements each of other, Faith embraceth Christ as Christ embraceth faith: Faith is as that beloved Disciple, when other graces stand waiting to do their service for Christ, Faith lies in the bosom of Christ, when joseph saw Benjamin, than O the comfortable close between him and his brethrens, O says he, I am joseph your brother whom you sold into Egypt. Be not grieved in yourselves, etc. than they weep in one another's necks for joy, but especially he falls upon Benjamins' neck and Benjamin on his neck, and he first kisseth him, and than kisseth all his brethrens. When Christ sees faith at the Sacrament, O what sweet closes are there between Christ and each believing Christian, he secretly speaks, Q●●● Christo suavinis Apprehensio cutus est cum suavi●a●● magna & gaudi●●●●credibili ni res planesuavis est ea quae apprehenditur Ro. in joh. Patent mihi viscera per vulnera & intravi, Aug. Cruse haremus sanguinem sugin●us & inter ipsa redemptoris nostri vulnera figimus lingu●. Cyp. de ●e●. dom. Fear not, I am Christ your elder brother, whom your sins put to death, But be not grieved, you are come to seek Christ, Behold I am he, I am thy everlasting and everloving Father, draw near, touch me, take me: and O what fall as it were in another's necks now is! O the kisses of love that pass at this present, O what break of gold rings as it were for tokens of strong affections on both sides, O now faith puts her hands into Christ's wounds, yea lays as it were her mouth close to the wounds of Christ, and sucks in sweet blood with an holy hunger and thirst. In English Chronicle, we read of Elinor the wife of Edward the first, the King having gotten a wound by a poisoned dagger, she sets her mouth to the wound to suck out the poison, venturing her own life, to preserve her husbands; Were it to suck poison, a Christians love is such to Christ as could be content to suck it out: ●s sometimes when Christ is wounded with the poisonous tongues of blaspheming men, a Christian could be willing to draw it all upon himself, Sug● quod pro●e factum est & cresces ad id quod est, Aug. in Psal. Ta●●●̄ quisque sibi recipit, quantum vase fidei colligit, Aug. In primitiva Ecclesia ut unanimitatis iudicium ●num magnum panem & omnibus sufficientem offerebant: quod adhuc Graeci servare dicunturr. Frangimus & dividinius unum panem in multas parts, ad designandam unio●emcharitatis accipi●ntium. Ans. 1 Cor. 10. Sancta illa ●nius & eiusdem pa●is & poculi pacifica distributio com●rdiam Evangelicam & unitate ●ere dentibus divinam tanquam unâ en●●itis praedicat & praescribit, &c, Dionys. Eccl. Hier. cap. 3, Hier. lib. 3. super Ep. ad Gal. to take it of from Christ, Heb. 11.26. Psa. 69.9. sure than to such precious and so al-preserving blood by faith from the wounds of Christ as presented in a Sacrament, the believing Saint is bend with an holy greediness. Thus you see how faith is to work, and a Christian by faith towards Christ Jesus in a Sacrament: O let this be our care, and it shall be our comfort: There is yet one way more wherein faith aught to work at the Sacrament, tha● is in a way of love to those which are Christ's for Christ's sake. Faith it works by love, Gal. 5.6. and faith at a Sacrament works up love in a most lively way. Faith in the Sacrament presents the love of God in the death of Christ, and than makes this inference: That if God have so loved us, we aught to love one another, 1 Joh. 4.11. The Lord's Table must be like Gideons Altar, judg. 6.24. Jehovah-shalom, The God of love and peace, is there, and it becomes the people present, to be knit together in love and peace. The Lord's Supper itself is an Ensign of unity, and a bond of charity, 1 Cor. 10.17. We being many are one bread and one body, for we are all partakers of one bread, Many grains of corn are there knod into one loaf, and many grapes of the vine are mixed into one cup. Thus in the Sacrament we read a lecture of love and brotherly unity, the Sacrament is like one of St john's sermons, which as is reported, what ever was the doctrine, yet this was one use, My little children, love one another, and when through age he was feign to be born up by two, and could only speak a little, be would stand and double this, O my little children, love one another: Thus the Lords Supper is never administered, but it calls for love. This voice is to be heard in every Sacrament, O my friends, eat and drink, and love another: Indignè manducant ●ui corpus & sanguinem Christi in sacramento manducam & bibunt membra antem ejus Evangelio non agnoscunt, Aug. we should never be at this love-feast without a love-fire. Faith at the Lords Table as it should draw out much love to Christ, so it should draw down much love to the members of Christ: As the ointment upon Aaron's head went down to his beard, and to the skirts of his garment, or as the box of spikenard when Christ was at a great Supper in Bethany, Joh. 12. Marry broke out of her love to Christ, pouring it out upon Christ, it spread down to his feet: and filled the whole house with the odour: faith upon a Sacrament-Supper pours out that love upon Christ, Beatus qui te amat & alios in te & propter te nam solus is nil charum amittis cui omnia chara sunt in eo qui non amittitur, Aug as descends to his meanest members, and becomes a sweet savour both to God and men: Faith assures the soul in the Sacrament, that there is nothing lost by this love, but that blessed is he who loves Christ, and those who are Christ's, in Christ, and for Christ's sake. O than at the Sacrament-season, and upon the Sacrament-occasion, let our faith thus work by love to Christ, and than to the purest and poorest members of Christ: Among ourselves who communicate together, let our love abound, forget all old grudges, and forgive what ever injuries we have received from any of our fellow-brethrens. When Luther had woefully wronged and reviled Calvin, well says Calvin, Etiamsi Lutherus millies me Diabolun vocet, ego tamenillum insignem Dom●ni servum agnosco, etc. Let Luther hate me, and in his wrath call me Devil a thousand times, yet I will love him, and acknowledge him a most precious servant of God: O this is an excellent temper for a Christian, to answer others wrath with love: O this is commendable always, but especially if faith at the Sacramrnt can give this strength of love, its laudable, labour it I beseech you. I have done with the duty of faith at the Sacrament, and proceed to what becomes the care of a Christian after the sacrament in point of obedience: Concerning a Christians obedience that is fit to follow his receipt of the Supper of the Lord, I refer things to two heads. 1. The kinds and parts of it. 2. The qualites and properties of it. Obedience hath two sorts and two parts, all coming within the compass of each communicant, for sorts, Obedience is either Active, or Passive. As we need the concurrence of both in Christ, to wit, active and passive obedience, to complete a Saviour for us, Christus nobis natus & d●tus non solum auferre peccata patiendo sed etiam afferre iustitiam faciendo, so Christ requires the concurrence of both in each Christian, to complete a servant for him: and as whoever would have Christ for his Saviour, so whoever now hath Christ in the Sacrament, must consequently be careful in both, And first for active obedience. Now this obedience is nothing else but the echo of a man's way unto the voice of God's word, when our practice answers to what Gods precepts first speaks. Now the commands of God are of two sorts. 1. His negative commandments, that forbidden what is evil. 2. His affirmative commandments, that enjoin what is good. Accordingly, there are two parts of active obedience meet for every communicant to mind. Cease to do evil, Isa. 1.16, 17. Learn to do well, Isa. 1.16, 17. Abhor that which is evil, Rom. 12.9. Cleave to that which is good, Rom. 12.9. 1. Hath God spoken peace to thy soul in a Sacrament? O than return no more to folly, Psal. 85.8. Indeed its ordinary for a sinful man, when he comes to a Sacrament, to say as it were to his sins, like as Abraham, when he went to sacrifice Isaac, said to his servants, Gen. 22.5. Abide you here, I and the lad will go yonder and worship, and after return again to you. An hypocrite may seem to be very severe against his sins, upon a Sacrament solemnity, but afterwards indulge them as his darlings. History reports, Brisson de Reg. Pers. lib. 2. that it was a custom among the Persians', to keep a great Festival one day in a year, wherein they would all go out in companies, and slay all the serpents and venomous creatures they could meet with on that day, but after willingly let them alone, to swarm till the revolution of that day again. I need not speak, men's practice will explain this to your hands. Let a dog eat never so much good meat, yet he is apt to lie down and tumble in the stinking carrion that he next comes near. Admit a profane man to feed in the Sacrament, yet you shall find him upon the next occasion, lie down and tumble in the puddle of pollution; from the Lord's Table, to the devil's trough, and there fat up their filthy lusts. As the prodigal, when he had received his portion, than he went to his harlots, and wasted all in riotous living: so a wicked man, having received the Sacrament (not his portion) he runs out into all excess of riot. Christian's aught to be the more exact in the course of their lives, having been at the Table of the Lord, to abandon all sin, and keep a strict hand over all their ways, Deferve de ch●ractere ●●●natur, de qu● militans honoratur. August. jest turning as a swine to the mire, that which should be the beautiful badge of their honour, prove the black character of their shame. O beware, now expect corruptions and temptations will be stirring and striving. Have we been at the Sacrament, no doubt the devil will do his utmost to draw us aside into sin. It's observable, when Israel had eaten Manna from heaven, and drank water out of the rock, than came Amalek to fight against them, Exod. 17.8. When Christ had been baptised in Jordan, than he was led into the wilderness to be tempted: the Spirit of God had descended upon him like a dove, than came the spirit of satan against him as a lion, God had said, This is my beloved Son, than saith the devil, if thou be the Son of God. Have we been at the Sacrament of the Supper to the comfort of our souls? than expect the devil will mount his ordinance, and play upon our souls from the gates of hell with strong assaults, Pharaoh like, endeavouring to drive us into some read sea, to force us into some sad sin, and so inbitter our sweet. O than take heed, the rather, when we have received good we be not drawn into evil. The wise men when they had been with Christ, and done their homage to him in the house, they returned not to Herod, but went back another way: O when Christians have been and embraced Christ in the Sacrament, Immutatio via est, Emendatio, vita. they must not return to sin, but go another way than perhaps before they went: Before in a way of formality, pride, impatiency, after must go in a way of fervency, humility, meekness, etc. 2. The second part of active obedience is to abide and abound in well doing, M●lites Sacramento erant iurati & obstricti ad praestandum soli imperatori fidelitatem & obedientiam. this care is required of every Christian after the Sacrament. In the Sacrament they have as soldiers, bound themselves in a military oath, to obey Christ as their captain, and to fight under his colours: O than see you serve the Lord Christ. The Sacrament carries with it the force of a covenant. The Latin word may well signify an oath, for indeed, such as have aright taken the Sacrament, have taken a sacred oath and covenant, and what doth this after require? but careful and constant obedience, as that to which we have bound ourselves by solemn covenant. Christians that come in to the Sacrament, they take both a positive and negative oath, to renounce the devil and all deeds of darkness, and to yield dutiful obedience to God all the days of their lives; to cast down all weapons of war, whereby they have fought against the Majesty on high, and as sworn soldiers to Christ their captain, for ever to march under Gospel colours, and not to love their lives unto death in Gospel causes; now who but a peridious fugitive, will fly away after sworn engagements? O you that have subscribed your names, and listed yourselves in the Lord's Register, and taken the Sacrament thereupon, O stand to your vows, and be valorous for God, strenuously striving to exalt Christ, his cause and Kingdom in the world. C●●●●t. Mag. ce●. 2. c. 6. History reports, how this hath been the ancient custom of pious Christians under persecuting Emperors, to meet, and by the Sacrament to bind themselves for ever, to fly what was evil, and follow, what was good; and sure this hath been ever their religious care afterwards, to pursue their covenants, and to fulfil their engagements. Herod's oath to the Damsel, which he made at his great supper, in the presence of his nobles that sat with him at the table, he would make good, and shall not we much rather make good our oath, wherein we have sworn ourselves to God, in the presence of Angels, and such as sat with us at the Table, partaking of the Supper of the Lord, who else will witness against us? Luther reports of a godly maid, who when the devil would draw her from her pious course to sinful practice, would beaten him of by her baptismal vow, I cannot: I must: I am a Christian under covenant: however satan solicits, let us not only fly evil, but be according to covenant, full of good works: As those sheep after washing, every one bore twins, Cant. 4.2. O see that after a Sacrament we sit not down in security, and slacken our duty. Luk. 12.16, 19 The rich man's ground yielded largely, than saith he, Soul take thine ease, thou hast goods laid up for many years. Good Lord prevent, but we are apt, if an ordinance brings forth plentifully, to sit down and say, Soul now take thy ease, thou hast now richeses of grace, store of joys; Soul thou hast now had sweet communion with God, and filled thyself with refreshing comforts in Christ, take thine ease: Now thou mayest neglect prayer a while: whereas prayer and every good duty should be the rather doubled, according as the ordinance hath been blessed. The rich man's fields bringing forth plentifully, he resolved to build his barns bigger; O let us, when God in a Sacrament hath enlarged his hand in mercy, enlarge our hearts in duty; let our lives be better, and our obedience greater; let us up and be doing for God, beyond whatever we did. Samson having taken and eaten honey out of the dead carcase of a lion, the Spirit of the Lord came so upon him, that after that, he went and did most valiant deeds all the days of his life. When you have taken and eaten that which is better than honey out of the crucified carcase of the lion of the tribe of Judah, O that than the Spirit of the Lord might so descend and abide upon you, that in the strength thereof, you might go and do valiant things for Christ and his cause. Elisha when he had received the mantle and spirit of his Master Elijah, he went and wrought wonderful works: Have you in the Sacrament received the mantle and Spirit of your Master Christ? not only the outward elements, as the mantle he was wrapped in, but the spiritual substance, the same Spirit that dwells in Christ, O than you must on and divide Jordans, leap mountains, look devils in the face; O go and do glorious things for your good Lord and Master Jesus Christ, who hath done far more for you. Quid nos pro domino 〈◊〉 bon● facere con venit, e●● ille pro mali● serum tan●● seceri●? Salvi. O what a shame for the devil to triumph, and as it were to outbrave Christ with the fervency of his followers, and the slackness of Christ's servants; as for mine, I never died for them, I never gave body or blood to them, as Christ hath done for his: As once God said to satan, Hast thou considered my servant Job? etc. So for satan to say to Christ, Hast thou considered such and such of my servants in the world? I feed them with husks at my trough, thou feedest thine with rich dainties at thy Table, and yet mine are more active, forward, and more full of obedience to me, than thine are to thee: mine are more fat and thriving in sin and wickedness, than thine in grace and holiness. O let there be no cause of this from you, but be abundant in all welldoing, be flourishing in grace, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord, Rom. 12.11. Thus for the parts: Now for the properties of practic obedience, take two. 1. See it be well grounded. 2. See it be well bounded. 1. Take care your obedience be well grounded, not as corn on the house, that withers for want of good rooting, Principiam obedientia duplex est principium a quo scilicet spiritus Dei, & principium quod scili●et spiritus noster renevatus. Ille cor nostrum vendicat qui suum pro nobis dedit. Amor meus pondus meum eo feror quocunque feror, Aug. O it's good when it proceeds from God's spirit in our spirit: Every act of obedience coming from God's spirit working in our spirits, Ro. 1.9. is very well-pleasing to Christ. In all obediential acts, he requires an obediential heart, and that all our obedience springs from the hear●, Rom. 6.17. and than it takes upon the heart of Christ: Christ was hearty in all that he did for us, and he expects the same it all that we do for him: O to have a heart possessed with love to Christ, and from thence to sand forth obedience to Christ, this becomes every Christian communicant. Regula proportionis paritatem habet cum illa re cuius est regula. 2. See your obedience be well bounded according to the rule of the word, That it be not short not over, go to the utmost of the rule and not further, It's not obedience that goes beyond the rule of Scripture; The rule of God's word, and the way of man's life, must hold their proportion, not more, but what ever God's word requires must be your care to acomplish, Your obedience as it must be cordial, so it must be catholic; the Lord must be obeyed in all things, Obedience must be universal, both in regard of the subject and object: O it's well becoming a Christian, to lay this charge upon his whole man, Quicquid propter De● fit aqualiter fit. as Marry the mother of Christ did upon all the servants at the Feast, Joh. 2.5. Whatsoever the Lord saith unto you, do it. Eyes, ears, hands, heart, lips, legs, body and soul, do you all observe, and what ever Christ says unto you, do it, this comes well after a Sacrament. We read of joseph of Arimathea, when Christ was crucified, he went in and begged of Pilate the body of jesus, and than took it down from the cross, and laid it in a new sepulchre. Have you before the Sacrament gone in to God, and by the prayer of repentance begged the body of Jesus? and than at the Sacrament have you by the power of faith taken it down as it were, from the cross, and laid it in a new heart and spirit? O than see that you after make it appear by walking in newness of life, and yielding up yourselves in newness of obedience to the Lord, all the days of your lives. The right ordering of this business of obedience, keeps up the soul in a constant communion with Christ, as if every day were a Sacrament-day; It holds the heart in a Sacrament frame against the next sacrament time. I pass on to passive obedience, for that also appertains to all such as partake of this Sacrament. Had it not been ●or a suffering Christ, we had neither had Sacrament nor Saviour, let us hence learn to suffer for Christ. The parts of passive obedience are two. 1. The privative in loss of comforts for Christ. 2. The positive, in enduring dolours for Christ. And in both it becomes al● that partake in the Sacrament of Christ, to be content to suffer for Christ: The losing and leaving of creature accommodations for Christ, to this we should be willing, if it be the will of God, and his call that requires it. I have read of one who being tempted with offers of money to desert his religion, gave this excellent answer, Let not any think that he will embrace other men's goods to forsake Christ, who hath forsaken his own proper goods to follow Christ. Read the Apostle, Phil. 3.8. he speaks of himself (as Calvin observes) as having been like one in a sea tempest, that had cast out all his precious wares and goods for Christ's sake, for whom; says he, I have suffered the loss of all: the like in stormy times must we yield unto for Christ. Christ Phil. 2.7, 8. made himself of no reputation. He emptied himself, so the Greek signifies, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. he stripped himself naked of all, and was obedient to the death, even to the death of the cross: now as at the Sacrament we have a commemoration of it, so after the Sacrament a conformation to it, and imitation of it, as cause requires, would well beseem every servant of Christ Nothing lost by losing for Christ. Be content to undergo any positive pain for Christ; Mercatura est quadam aminere ut maioralucr●ris. Tertul. O what did Christ suffer to make food for our souls in a Sacrament, whatbreakings and bleedings? what immeasurable miseries and unparallelled passions? whoever hath or do commemorate Christ's sufferings at a Sacrament, shall find them different from all ours, two ways. 1. In respect of their intention or meaning. 2. In respect of their extension or measure. The sufferings of Christ we●e intended as propitiatory of the wrath, and satisfactory to the justice of God, which the sufferings of no finite creature can be: The sufferings of Christ were extended and drawn out to that degree, as no creature in suffering can sustain, he bore that cross, as had it lain upon the back of my man or Angel, it would have crushed him down to Hell, and swallowed him up for ever; and shall not the meditation of such unsufferable sufferings for us, make us willing to suffer something for Christ, and with Christ? It is true, Christ's personal sufferings in his human body, as Mediator, are fully finished, Heb. 10.14. but Christ's general sufferings, in his mystical body the Church militant on earth, are yet further to be filled up, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Col. 1.24. thus Christ suffers still, and we are to suffer with Christ, and for Christ: of this cup we must all drink, each member his measure, every person his portion. I remember an excellent expression of Ambr. o that God would turn all the adversaries of Christ, and his Church upon me, that they might bend all their weapons against me, and satisfy their thirst with my blood, so Christ and his Church might go free; to have such a spirit prepared for the cross, it well becomes Sacrament-Christians, and Christians who at the Sacrament have fruitfully minded the sufferings of Christ. 2, For the properties of passive obedience; when ever you suffer, it is meet to mind three things to make up your sufferings good. 1. A good cause. 2. A good call. 3. A good course. A good cause to suffer in; a good call to suffer in that cause: and a good course or carriage of yourselves in suffering for that cause whereunto you are called, 1 Pet. 2.20, 21. miss one, mar all. If the cause be good, yet if the call be not good; If your call be good, yet if your carriage be not good, it spoils all: they all met in the sufferings of Christ, so they should in the sufferings of every Christian: see you suffer for a good cause, Blessed are they that suffer for righteousness sake, Mat. 5.10. For thy sake we are killed all the day long, Psa. 44.22. Augustine speaking of the death of Christ, and the two thiefs, concludes, It is not the likeness of the cross, but the goodness of the cause that makes a Martyr. See your call be good to suffer, when sinning and suffering lies before you, so as one you must yield to; if you would avoid sinning, you must embrace suffering: either you must omit obedience active, or you must submit to obedience passive; now God gives you a call to suffer, and you are to choose affliction rather than sin, Job. 36.22. see your carriage be comely under the cross, behaving yourselves in suffering both valiantly and patiently. Lactantius boasts of the brave spirits of the Martyrs in his time. Our children and women (not to speak of men) flames of fire cannot fetch tears of water, nor all their sufferings force a sigh. A religious commander, shot in battle, when the wound was searched, and the Bullet cut out, some by pitying his pain, he replied, Though I groan, yet I do not grumble, In all this Job sinned not, nor charged God foolishly. This is to be as one prepared by the Supper of Christ to suffer for Christ: and that you suffer with courage Christianlike, take but two helps. Praevision, and Provision. Forethink of suffering, chrysostom suffering under the Empress Eudoxia, tells his friend Cyriacus, how he armed himself aforehand: I thought, will she banish me? The earth is the Lords: Take away my goods? naked came I into the world: will she stone me? I remembered Stephen: behead me? john Baptist came into my mind: &c, Thus forethink: And store up graces, promises, experiences, cordials, etc. against a suffering time. Thus see to your obedience first active, than passive, and truly he that will not do well, will never die well for Christ: If you do not serve Christ in life, you will never suffer for Christ to death, O than devote yourselves to both, resign yourselves to God in service and suffering, Rom. 12.1. Hath the Lord given himself down to us in the Sacrament? Sacrificium est sacrum in fide factum. O than let us give up ourselves to the Lord as a sacrifice. Between a Sacrament and a sacrifice there is this difference: In a Sacrament we receive from God, in a sacrifice we offer to God. The best thing that we can receive is the Lord himself in a Sacrament, Psa. 51.17. Non vult Deus sacrificium trucidati pec●ris sed vult sacrificium contriti pectoris, Aug. and the best thing that we can offer is ourselves to the Lord as a sacrifice, both by doing and suffering, and no less the Lord expects. It is not the sacrifice of a slain beast, but the sacrifice of a living Saint the Lord is delighted with: O be you such wellpleasing sacrifices to God in all holy and humble obedience; O manifest the strength of a Sacrament in the life of obedience, and in obedience to God all the days of your life. Our whole life in this way, Melanc in Psa. 119. says one, may, and is meet to be, a perpetual Sacrament and each obedient Christian, a continual Communicant. But herein who would not be amazed to meditate, the good Lord forgive us; we are apt to think when a Sacrament-day is over, all Sacrament-duties are over, as if when the Ordinance were at an end, there were an end of the Ordinance: I remember a good man coming from a public lecture, and being asked by one, whether the Sermon were done? answered with a sad sigh, Ah, It is said, but not done, Lord help us, we are ready to be, when the discourse from the Pulpitis finished, as if the Sermon were done, and when the bore business at the Table is dispatched, as if the Sacrament were done, and we done with the Sacrament. Let me close in few words. 1. Of caution. in this present case. 2. Of counsel. in this present case. O let me in love admonish you to beware. 1. You do not trust in, and rest on the bore act of receiving the Sacrament, either with a rest of confidence, or a rest of contentation. It is the expression of a precious man, A good work trusted in, is as mortal, as a sin unrepented of, We are ordinary desirous of, and perhaps diligent to prepare for a Sacrament; our thoughts are active, our hearts hot, and our affections fervent at the Sacrament, and than we think all is well, the work is well done, and away we go. In the 1 Sam. 4. we read of the Israelites when the Philistims came against them, they cried out to bring the Ark of the covenant into the field, and that should save them, and when they had got the ark of the covenant into the camp, than they shouted, and in that they trusted but what follows? the Philistims fight, and the Israelites for all that fly, and fall before them, ver. 10. and so on: the story is sad, we conceive if this Sacrament of the covenant be brought into our Congregations, than we shall be safe, and when we have this present amongst us, and pertaked of by us, than we sit down satisfied, and rest contented, but the sequel is sad, Thus to rest in the service prevents much good, and procures much evil. A twofold good is prevented. Hereby, neither the Sacrament after it, doth us that good, nor we do not that good after the Sacrament, as otherwise would. The Israelites trusting in their bore view and looking upon the brazen serpent, it became a Nehushtan, a thing of naught: so if we trust in our bore receiving the Sacrament, it will 'cause the Sacrament to become a Nehushtan, a thing not doing us any good. Hence we come to cast by what would become us after the Sacrament: we do not watch, and work, we do not after act upon a Sacrament, because we rest in the act of the Sacrament: yea there is much evil hereupon: Moses while he kept his rod in his hand, he did great things, but when he laid it by, it became a serpent: if we lay by the Sacrament, no marvel if it proves like a serpent, having a sting following our neglect: O let as keep up the Sacrament in our hands and hearts, by a well improvement of it, and we shall do great things by it; now confidence in the first act, will 'cause negligence in the future, and therefore beware of that, trust not to your bore being at the Sacrament, and than cast consequent care by. 2. As take heed of restings in the Sacrament, so of renting after the Sacrament. This also is very prejudicial to the practice of subsequent obedience, the more firm and close Christian union is, the more apt and able we are both to do and suffer, the more sweet and easy will both active and passive obedience prove: O than when by a sacramental bond we have been brought together, let us not after descent and fall asunder. All acts of religion aught to bind but no religious act like this. There are two things, the thoughts of which they are as weights that sink, and as darts that strike my very soul through and through. 1. That Christians who live together in the same place, Religio a religando & significat omnia illa pietatis & unitatis officia, quibus Deo & proximo obligamur, Lactant. l. 4. cap. 28. should use divers Tables, and divide and separate one from another in this service. 1. That Christians, who so live in the same place, though they use one and the same Table, yet they divide and separate one from another after this service. The first is sad and sinful; This the Apostle blames among the Corinthian Christians, who as they had their separated preachers, Vid● Par●. in Ep. 1 Cor. 11.21. Adeo divisi erant ut invicent communicare sacram coenā non dignarentur, singula factiones id agebant ut alia aliam praeverteret. Paulini verbi gratiâ primi vementes suam cunam celebrabant non expectatis Petrinu, Apolloneus, etc. Vide Pareus in locum, Dominus instituit suam coen●m ut esset communio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 totius Ecclesia. Pareus. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Dionys. Caena 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a communione vescentian Plut. & Isio foe their separated Suppers, as one party was of Paul, another of Apollo, another of Cephas, so it seems they did communicate apart in the Supper of the Lord, those of Paul by themselves, those of Apollo by themselves, and so those of Peter by themselves, 1 Cor. 11.21. In eating, every one takes before other his own supper: which may be meant, not only what they did in their love feasts, but also in this: each company seeking to preven● other, that they might partake apart, none staying for those who were more truly Christ's, nor yet one for another, but striving to be asunder, and this Paul calls their own Supper, because herein they crossed the institution of Christ, who appoints it to be a communion, wherein the Church gathered should communicate together. But celebrating it in such a separated way, it was their own Supper, not the Lord's Supper, it being not only a corrupting, but a perverting the Ordinance in the Apostles opinion. The Lord redress this in our days: that any dissensions should set Christians at such a distance, that they cannot sit together at the same Table, to partake of the Supper of the Lord; O sad, that when we eat one food, we cannot eat it in one fold as becomes Christ's flock. But than secondly, this is likewise to be lamented, Vnum sig●● habemus, quare non in uno ovi●● su● muss? Aug. T●. 7 Serm. ad pleb. Caesariem. that Christians who live in one place, sit at the same Table, and communicate together in the Lord's Supper, should yet afterwards fall asunder, and by discords rend one from another's who is it that bewails not such breaches between brethrens? O the infinite scandal of such dissensions, a good man that is deeply affected with this, would be content to heal such wounds with the loss of his life. Quis non v●tâ suâ redima● submatum istu● infinitum dissidij scandalum. Buc. O I beseech you all to preserve the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace, and seek, you that have joined in one Sacrament, to be of one soul, as the primitive Christians, who broke bread together, were so bound up together, that though a multitude, yet of one heart, Act. 2.42. & 4 32. The Sacrament should be a uniting Ordinance, to knit those in love together who do not live together. Paulinus speaks excellently to Augustine in an Epistle, It is no marvel though we both that are absent be yet present together, and being unacquainted, yet know one another, seeing as we have one head, so we live by one bread, Non mirum si & absentes adsumus nobis & ignoti nosmet novimus cum unum habeamus caput uno pane vivamus una perfundamur gratia, una inc●damut ●ia, Paulin. Ep. ad du. 33 Luther to the Pastors of Stratsbur. Noluis ha●● laudem adversa parti concedere, quod pacis & concordiae studiosiores quam ipse essent, etc. we are poured over by one grace, meet together in one Christ, and walk in one way. O than much rather, you whose tents God hath pitched together, you do not only eat one bread, but you eat it at one board; O study you to stick together, and to stand fast in brotherly unity. It was a high expression of Luther, I desire to maintain Christian concord, as I desire Christ should be to me propitious, and I scorn it, that any should take this praise from me, to be more solicitous than myself of peace and unity. O such a disposition would well beseem all God's Saints, who have been together at the Supper of the Lord, and learned this lesson which is there so plainly taught: O you that have sweetly sat and eat together the Sacrament of Christ, do not you break about intricate or inferior things, that may refer to Christ: would not the Jews have been to blame, who having lovingly eaten together the flesh of the Paschall lamb, should after fall out about the bones? I leave it to the thoughts of Christians, thus much by way of caution to dissuade you from some things that may hinder your obedience so God after the Sacrament. I come briefly by way of counsel to persuade you to some things which may ●…urther, and help forward your obedience which after the Sacrament you own to God; to instance in two. 1. Consideration. 2. Congratulation. 1. Consider after thou hast been at the Lords Table, how all was there, how God wrought in thy heart, and how thy heart wrought towards God: when God had been making the world, he looked back upon all the work, and what he had done each day, and saw that all was very good, Gen 1. last. so it will well become a Christian when he hath been partaking the Sacrament, to look back upon all that business: its good to reflect, and take an exact view of every day's work, but the work of a Sacrament-day, to look over that and consider, was not all very good than? O keep it so. It's said, Gen. 2.1.2. that God having finished the earth and the heavens, be rested, how? surely though from the work of actual creating, yet not from the works of effectual preserving what was created, Joh. 5.17. My father works hitherto: so a Christian man when he hath at the Sacrament been acting about earth and heaven, discarging his duty both about the earthly and heavenly pa●t of this Ordinance, and finished his work in both, though he rests a while from actual receiving, yet not from careful preserving what there he received: and O thus do; what life, warmth, strength, heart-inlargements, and soul-refreshments you found at the Sacrament, remember and labour to preserve all after in vigour. When God at the creation had set the world in a good frame, was it not his desire it should so after continued? O when at the Sacrament your hearts have been set into a good frame, take care they so continued: if you reflect and find there was not that good, those comfort and quickenings at the Sacrament you desired, you had need be the more fervent in following duties. Physic at first taking, lies still in the body, but warm broth after received sets the physic a work. Go aside and take some heart-warming prayers, and the sacrament may divers ways after work kindly thereupon. 2. Congratulation; Thanksgivings to God may both animate the mercy, and facilitate your duty. Glory se●t up, brings grace down, and grace makes all easy, whether doing or suffering; O what blessings and praisings of God becomes Christians after this Ordinance for ever? when Christ road in triumph, Mat. 21. not only those that went before, but those that followed after, sung, Hosanna to Christ, blessing him in the name of the Lord, Hosanna in the highest: so when Christ rides in triumph, upon the free administration of this Ordinance, not only those duties that go before, but much rather all those actions and affections that follow after, should sing Hosanna to God and Christ, blessing and praising the name of the Lord, Hosanna in the highest. O follow Christ afterwards, as David the ark, leaping and dancing, what says sinful Israel? Hos. 2.5. says she, I will go after my lovers, that have given me my bread and my water, my wool and my flax, my oil and my drink, so do you say, I will go after my dear and loving Saviour, who hath given me not only bread and wine, but his own flesh to eat, and his blood to drink: yea and follow after him, not heavily and sadly, but with rejoices in him, praisings of him, and cheerful thanksgivings to him. Dear Christians would you be thankful to Christ, walk humbly, live holily, for truly the life of thankfulness lies in the lives of the thankful; have you been at the Sacrament, and there remembered how Christ's death was a propitiatory sacrifice for you? than do not after forget how your lives aught to be a gratulatory sacrifice to God. Be thankful to God, vocally, vitally, and votally: tender to the Lord, what possible praise you can, both with lips and lives, and let your hearts wish it were more than both can express. As your desire was before the Sacrament to enjoy Jesus Christ, so let a holy fear be after, lest by any neglect you lose Christ whom you did there enjoy: as your care should be at the Sacrament, not to leave Christ behind you, as joseph and Mary did, Luk. 2. so let your care be after, you do not let Christ behind you, forgetting your duties towards him, and observance of him: not only see that you set your eye on Christ at the Sacrament, but that you keep constant your eye upon him afterwards; as there was than a taking of him, so after a walking with him; as Elisha went along eyeing Elijah, looking on him, and talking with him, when a chariot of fire, and horses of fire, came and parted them as●nder, and took up Elijah to heaven, Elisha looks up after him, and cries, M● father, my father, the chariots and horsemen of Israel. If black clouds, or fiery assaults shall seem to separate Christ from thee, yet walk with him as fare as thou canst, and than look after him when thou canst not walk after him, and cry, My father, my father, the Saviour and Redeemer of Israel: O thus see your carriage be toward Christ, after you have conversed with him in the Sacrament: O be not remiss in these subsequent duties. I read, Guliel. Linwood. lib. 3. de Custodia Eucharistiae, etc. how it was an ancient custom in England, when popery prevailed, what an unwarrantable care there was after the celebration of the holy Sacrament, for to preserve the remaining elements? The bread and wine left, they use to hung up in a clean canopy, and to look to with all diligence: O that piety might so prevail all over England; that there might be among all that profess themselves Christians and come to the Sacrament, this comely and commendable care after of remaining duties, to hold them forth in all holiness of life, with pure consciences and clean conversations; for which purpose my soul● desire and prayer is, that God from heaven would so bless you, that you may live to his praise and glory however, for ever, Amen. Amen. AN APPENDIX, OR A Brief addition annexed to the foregoing TREATISE, Containing some few things yet further requisite to be known, as relating to the Supper of the Lord. IN relation to the Lords Supper, there are requesites of two sorts to be considered. 1. The communicants. 2. The concomitants. Or else, 1. The subjects. 2. The adjuncts. For the subjects of this Sacrament, or who they are that are meet communicants therein, make but a reflect, and you shall find a full report. For the adjuncts at this Sacrament, or what they are that are meet concomitants thereof, look on a little, and I shall give you a full account: or if you please, the things of two sorts considerable, that concern the Sacrament of the Supper, are; 1. Some more substantial. 2. Some more circumstantial. Those things that are more substantial, I have largely discoursed in the foregoing tract. Those things that are more circumstantial, I shall briefly dispatch in this short postscript. The circumstances about the Lords Supper to be received that I shall observe, are two. 1. The place where. 2. The time when. For the place, it's twofold 1. The place in which. 2. The place at which. If you look at the Lords Supper and inquire. 1. What is the place ●n which it aught to be received: And 2. What is the place at which it is meet to be received. It is answered by proposal of a double place. 1. The Temple place. 2. The Table place. The place of the Temple, is the place in which the communion aught to be reeeived. The place at the Table, is the place at which this Communion is meet to be received. 1. For the place in which it aught to be administered and received, is the place of the Temple, or a Temple place: let none take offence at the phrase. I pass by the ancient acceptation of the word, Temple, as we do the word Priest. It's reported, that when the Priests of the Jews petitioned Titus the Emperor for their lives, Decet Sacerdotes cum templis interire. they had no answer but this, It is meet that the Priests and the Temple should perish together: and truly, in an ordinary sense, as they lay before Christ among the Jews, so let the names of Temple and Priest perish and be forgotten together. There is another interpretation of the word Temple, that I take too, even as it refers to place, and I conceive the sense is significative. By a Temple place than, I mean an ample place, Templum a ●uor & amplum. or a place that is liable to open view, not a close corner shut up from sight: To speak plain, the place appointed for God's public worship, where God's people openly congregate and communicate, in opposition to private corners. In such places the Lords Supper aught to be received, where the word is publicly preached. The Scriptures of the new Testament clearly put a difference between private houses and public places, forbidding that to be done in public, which is required in private, 1 Cor. 11.22. Have ye not houses to eat and drink in, but d●spise ye the Church of God? And on the contrary, commanding that in private which is forbidden in public, 1 Cor 14.35. Let women ask ●heir husbands at home, for it is not permitted to them to speak in the Churches. And for the matter in hand, that text before cited, 1 Cor. 11.22. Have you not houses to eat and drink in, Theodorit. Theoph. l. Oecame. ●ut despise ye the Church of God: Chrysostom and some other good Interpreters after him, from thence say, that therein the Apostle reproves the Corinthian Christians, because they did celebrated the Lords Supper privately in separated parties, when they should have appeared publicly together: They had indeed their own private houses allowed for their ordinary eating and drinking in, apart one from another, but to transact this service asunder in their several societies and sects, it was to contemn the public, where it aught openly to be performed together: It was to despise the Church and people of God, with whom they aught herein professedly to partake; yea and this was in the Apostles accounted, to corrupt and pervert the Ordinance of Christ, and to make it to be but their own supper, not the Lord's Supper, as vers. 21. The Lord's Supper, Simul ●i●imus quia simul vivi●●●. Aug. that was to be received in the open Congregation, when the whole Church should publicly convene and communicate together, but they receiving privately and separate from others, St Paul calls it, every man's own supper, and not the Supper of the Lord, vers. 21. Augustin, Epist. 118. ad januar, cap. 5. Augustine also and Pareus long since, carries these reprehensions of the Apostle, as occasioned upon the miscarriages of the Corinthians, in and about the celebrating of the Supper of the Lord, as now, Suppose they did it not in their own private houses properly, ye● interpretatively; for though they might come and do it in the place for the public, yet they did it not publicly together in the place, but one before another, and so one without another in their private parties, all one, as if in private places, and this was their blame. But I come to lay down some grounds, from whence to evince and evidence this, that the Lords Supper is by God's servants to be celebrated together in the public place of God's worship. As 1. The preaching of the Word, and administrations of the Sacraments, are notes whereby the visible Church is to be discerned, therefore they are acts which aught to be openly and visibly performed. The Church of Christ is that woman clothed with the sun, Revel. 1●. 1. Is as a City or Beacon upon an hill, to be seen, but how? not by its invisible graces, but by its visible ordinances. It's true, the Church at some time may be not more actually seen than the sun behind a cloud, or a village in a valley, Non semper visa etsi semper visibilis. but yet when ever it is seen, it is in and by the open use of these means. And sure this lies upon all of us to maintain, as the reality, so the visibility of the Church. We are all to do all that in us lies, to prevent the clouding and hiding of the Church of Christ; we are to keep up to our utmost, the splendour and clarity of the Church, that in its brightest colours it may be as visible as possible, and this is done two ways. 1. By the exemplary purity of private Christians. 2. By the apparent purity of public ordinances. The word purely there preached, and the Sacraments there so administered, do exceedingly set forth the Church to its open view. Augustine, Calvin, Zanchy, Aug. de civ. lib. 11. cap. 1. Calv. Instit. lib, 5. cap. 1. Zanch. de Eccl. Trelcat, lib. 2. cap. 14. de Eccles, and almost all our late writers, do unanimously conclude, that these are the manifest characters of the militant Church of Christ, whereby it is made visible, and therefore these are to come forth, and not to be cloistered up in obscure corners. It is a sad time, when the Prophets of the Lord must be fed with bread and water in a cave, 1 King. 18. It is a time of great affliction, when the Church is forced to creep into some close place; as Athanasius (that great ●ight of the world) constrained by the Arians to hid himself for six years in a deep pit, Euseb. lib. 20 cap. 18. Trip. Hist. lib. 5. cap. 3. as Eusebius reports; no coming forth to preach the truths of Christ, or to set to the seals of Christ in ope● public assemblies. Thus in Tertullia's time, as he reports, such was the cruelty of tyrants, that the poor Christians were driven to meet in holes and woods, and to communicate in caves; Veritas non querit angulo. Veritas nihil cr●bescit nisi abscondi. yet this we may ●ay, that it is with the true Church, as it is with the truth itself, it may be thrust into a corner, but of itself it seeks no corners; It is ashamed to be hid, it is ever desirous to come forth in a public profession and participation of ordinances, not only to hold fast, but to hold forth the truth, and openly to seal to it. 2. Consider it is that whic● doth abate and abase the honour of the ordinance, to carry it into private, when public administrations are allowed and professedly practised by the people of God. Things, the more excellent they are, the more apparent they aught to be: what ordinance more excellent than this? 3. It is the way to deface and defile the ordinance, to bring it into secret places. In a dark cellar, there may soon be water mixed with this wine. Ordinances are ordinarily never more perverted, and by seducers sinfully corrupted, than when they are most obscured, and secretly transacted. As cunning thiefs, if they can draw a travelling man from out of the broad beaten roads of ordinary passing, into loan houses, narrow lanes, darkwoods', and the like, than they misuse him, rob, strip and destroy him: so when subtle seducers can once draw the public worship of God, or any part thereof, out of the open places of ordinary recourse, into close corners and loan houses, than it suffers sore: and indeed this is observable, that seducing spirits seek to win all into secret; Matth. 24.26. Our Saviour foretells of false prophets, how they would cry up a Christ in private: Behold he is in the secret chambers, but believe them not. Deceitful tradesmen that would put of bad wares, love to lay them forth in dark and close shops. You have some, whose property and practice is just like that of the harlot, Ita miseris cordibus occulta haereticorum verba eò magis sapiwt, quò cum reliquis communitèr non habentur. Gregor. mor. lib. 23. cap. 17 Prov. 9.14, 15, 16, 17. Passengers that are going on their ways, she calls in, saying, Stolen waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant; but read the peril thereof in the close of that chapter: O than if you would not yourselves be deceived, nor suffer God's service to be defiled, keep word and Sacraments in their proper places of public dispensation. Ponder, Prov. 8.2, 3. and Prov. 9.2, 3, 4, 5. Cant. 1.7. Cant. 3.2. 4. It is the honour of the Church, and terror of the adversaries, to manage and maintain each ordinance in public; when any of these be carried ●nto corners, hurried and hidden in holes, than the enemies of the Church triumph; when they are brought forth and ma●e useful as public instruments, than the Church triumphs, and the enemies are struck with terror: The Church of Christ is than terrible, when she is as an Army with banners, Cant. 6.4, 10. When the soldiers lie still in their quarters, and the banners are set up in close corners, the Army is not than so terrible, but when the soldiers march out, and meet in open fields, and there display their banners together, than is the terror. The application is easy. 5. Consider, Civil government, and acts of public judicature, were want to be in the gates, open and public places; and still we know there are many things of that nature that must be done in open court or not valid. Judges and Justices fit not in private houses to discuss and decide law cases, and the like, but upon the open benches, at Sessions and Assizes; and shall we draw into private the public administrations of the Gospel? No. 6. As for this ordinance of the Lords Supper, Aquinas 30 pars Art. 3. Quaest 83. it is a representation of the Lord Christ's suffering: now Christ did not suffer in a corner, nor in a private house, but openly without the gate of the city, where might come a full concourse, Heb. 13.12, 13. Therefore the resemblance and remembrance of the same is to be open and public, and not carried in a private way. 7. We know, that in the time of the old Testament God would have his people publicly to serve him in the Tabernacle; their Sacrifices were not to be offered and eaten in every p ace, but only in the place the Lord had appointed to put his name there. Read, Levit. 17.3, 4, 5, 6. Deut. 12.4, 5, 13, 14, 17, 18. Obed Edom did well to take the Ark of God into his house, but it was when it could not be settled in its proper place, 2 Sam 6.12. O mark, when did King David dance? but when the Ark was brought from Obed Edom's house, and set in his place, even in the midst of the Tabernacle, 2 Sam 6.17, 18. The place for the public service of God, which afterwards was done in the Temple. The Sacraments than were not to be administered in private houses. The party to be circumcised was to be brought forth before the Lord. The Sacraments and the who●e service of God under the Gospel is more glorious, and the glory thereof more worthy to appear in public. If it be objected. Object. Object. The Israelites did eat the paschal Lamb in their houses, Exod 12. Answ. Ans. 1. The Israelites were than in Egypt, and had no liberty to make any public meetings for that end. 2. God commanded the paschal Lamb should be eaten in all the houses of the Israelites at one and the same time, and that in effect was as much as if it had been public in the same place. 3. Afterward it is clear the course was at the Passeover for the people to come together, and so to celebrated the same publicly, 2 Chron. 29. Object. Object. 2. The example of our Saviour is objected, who first instituted and administered this his last Supper in a private house. Answ. Answ. The acts of Christ concerning the Institution of this Sacrament, was of two sorts. 1. Some essential and permanent. 2. Some occasional and transient. The essential acts of Christ that remain to be observed may be comprised under that express command of Christ, Do this, etc. beginning first at these words, Christ took bread, and when he had blessed it, he broke, etc. All which circumstances delivered by precept the Church succeeding is tied to observe. The occasional acts I call those which accidentally fell out by occasion of the Passeover, whereupon Christ when he did institute his Supper, took only his own family, and betook himself to a private house, or suppose occasioned by reason of the hatred and malice of his adversaries who were many and mighty, he goes with his disciples up into a private chamber, and there ordains this Supper to prevent violence and disturbance. 2. Though it was a private room, yet it is said to be a large and spacious room, which may carry somewhat in it for our purpose, Luk. 22.12. The good man of the house shall show you (such Christ to his disciples that he sent into the city to prepare the Passeover) a l●● go upper room furnished, there make ready. Why a large and spacious room? no need in respect of the present number there to meet and communicate; for we know they were few, but it might be to signify that the Lord would not have this communion confined and narrowed up for future. The disciples were the type and representative of a greater number of persons than themselves, of the whole people of God and Church of Christ now to be begotten to God in Christ, and so the chamber might well be a resemblance and model of a greater place than itself, even of the largest meeting places, where Congregations multiplying, and the Churches of Christ increasing, should gather to celebrated this Supper together. And if other particulars in the place did shadow out something as is agreed, why not this? It is said in that it was a borrowed room, it set forth, that Christ would not have the Sacrament to be carried in a pompous way, it did point out Christ's poor condition and that his Kingdom was not of this world. In that it was an upper room, it set forth the divineness of the Sacrament, and the duty of lifting up the hearts of the communicants. In that it was a prepared room clean and ready trimmed, it was to teach the purity of the Sacrament, and what preparedness is meet for Communicants. And in that it was a spacious room, why should not the amplitude of the chamber hold forth something also, and though it might direct to somewhat else yet why not to the case in hand. 3. If the practice of the Apostles, Object. and primitive Christians be objected, of whom it is said they w●nt breaking of bread from house to house, Act. 2.46. Answ. Answ. It is true, breaking bread, by a Senechdoche, is sometimes taken for the whole service of the Lord Supper, but the best expositors I have met with do not so interpret that place in the Acts. 1. Some affirm that breaking bread from house to house, to be meant of the liberality of the rich to the poor, when the Christians had spent the day in public duties of piety, than they closed it with duties of pity, and works of charity, the richer sort out of their bounty broke bread from house to house, where the poor wanted it; according to that Isa. 58.6. Is it not to break thy bread to the hungry, and to bring the poor? 2. Some explain it of their private familiarity and frugality at their common Tables, in their ordinary meals, no sumptuous banquets, but sober and temperate in their diet, sincere and upright in their love; the end of the verse ●elps out the fence, They eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart: as they use to meet together in the Temple for to perform public worship, so they met and broke bread together at home to declare their mutual friendship. To conclude than, as for the Lords Supper you have seen the place for the participation of it. Administration of Sacraments is a part of the public Ministry, and therefore as it aught not to be done by a private person so nor in a private place. It hath been no small evil of our age, to ●●eight public Ordinances. It is recorded of the Albigenses, that they exceedingly despised the public Sacraments, polluted the Temples defaced the Bibles with their urine, and excrements, and other filthy actions, laboured to make odious the public places for God's service; but God's sore Judgements pursued them, though they for a while prospered and prevailed, insomuch that they spread into a thousand cities, yea almost over all Europe: yet after they diminished apace, a hundred thousand of them were slain, partly by war from men, partly by fire from heaven, at one time. 2. The place at which the Lords Supper i● meet to be received, is the Table-place, or at the place of the Table: to make good this, take these following demonstrations. 1. For Pastor and people to partake together at the table, is most agreeable to the first institution. The room that Christ directed to eat the Passeover in with his Disciples, it was to be a chamber ready furnished, Luk. 22, 12. and it was so; Now among other furniture, it appears there was in the chamber a Table, at which Christ sat down with his Disciples, and where it they did eat, Luk. 22.21. Behold the hand of him that betrayeth me is with me on the Table. Joh. 13.28. When Christ had given Judas a sop, he commanded him to do what he did quickly; now says the text, No man at the Table knew for what intent Christ spoke this to him. Grant that this was at the eating of th● Passeover, that Christ with his Disciples were thus together at a Table, yet than its clear, Christ continued his place both in the chamber, and at the Table, till the whole service was done: At the Passeover and at his Supper (as for aught we read) he continued his posture of sitting; so it's likely, in both he continued his place at the Table, for one did so immediately follow the other, that there doth not appear to be any time for removes. It was meet that at that time when the Sacrament of the Passeover was to expire and die, the Sacrament of the Supper that was to come in the room, should instantly take life and breath; and it is evident by two Evangelists, that there was not the lest time between, but as they were eating the Passeover, Christ did instantly institute and administer to his Disciples his last Supper, Mat. 26. Di●d. in loc. Mar. 14.22. And 〈◊〉 they were eating, Jesus took bread, etc. While he and they were remaining at the Table together, he dispatcheth both: so that here is no rising in the administration, neither to go from person to person, or to speak particularly to each, but sits and says, once for all to all: Take ye, eat ye, drink ye, etc. all, etc. Thus the first transaction of this Supper service was at a Table, Christ and his Disciples being thereat together: And upon this eating and drinking at the table it was, that by way of similitude Christ tells his Disciples, Lu. 22.30. That hereafter they should eat and drink with him at his Table in his eternal kingdom, only alluding to that action, they had now done together at the Table. 2. For Communicants to partake at the Table, is most agreeable to the ancient custom of the primitive times. Nun Christus pasci●? mensa ips●us est illam medi● constituta● Quid ca●sae est O a●dientes j●● mensam vide●ti● & ad ep●las non accedatis? Aug. de verb. Dom. secun. ●oh. Serm. 42, Augustine, who lived about the year 400. or 420. thus rebukes some of his hearers. Doth not Christ proffer you food at his Table? and is not his Table set in the midst of you? O why do you only look at it, and do not rather live at it, co●e to it, and eat of the banquet there. And again thus, The Sacrament of Christ's body is prepared in the Church, and received at the Lords table, of some to life, and of some to condemnation. chrysostom, who lived about the year 398. plainly describes the order of the Communion, as in his time, thus, Chrys. in 1 C●. 10. Ho. ●7. These reverend mysteries, being once laid forth on the Table for all the communicants to receive, the rich hath no more privilege there than the poor, but all alike come, and there take part of that spiritual meat? The Minister stands still, and waits for all, Considera quaeso mensa regalis est apposita Angeli mensae ministrantes ipse rex adest & tu procul ●scitan● adstas approp●nqua & demensa participa. even for the poorest of all. Again thus. See I pray how the Table is prepared, the Angels as attendants about the Table; yea behold the Lord and Master of the Feast himself 〈◊〉 at the Table, and standest thou gaping at a distance from i●, draw near to it and partake at it. Doctor Fulk affirms out of Gregory Naziazzen, who lived about the year 380, who saith, that in his time the Communion Table was so set, that men might come to it, and place themselves round about it, and so partake at it what was prepared on it. Eusebius reports of Dionysius of Alexandria, who lived about the year 157. Euseb. l. 7. c, 8 that he hath these words in an Epistle unto Xistus B. of Rome, speaking of one that was not satisfied in his Baptism, says he, I having known him, that for a long time he had often been present at the Lo●ds Table, and there lifted up his voice, and sounded Amen with this rest, after he had heard the public thanksgiving, and there put forth his hands and received that holy food as it was laid forth for him with the rest, I durst not again baptise him; I bade him be of good cheer, and still bodily approach to the Table of the Lord, and partake of the communion of Saints. Clemens Alexandrinus, who was the Master of Origen, who lived about the year 200. after Christ, saith, That in that Church where he was a Presbyter, the manner was for the people to stand at the Table, Videl, of Alexandria. Stromat ●i. 2. Eius partem s●●●re. and there ev●ry one himself to ●●ke his part, being prepared, and divided; and this course was than common, as other Authors witness, But 3. The receiving at the Table, is also most agreeable to the present practice of the best reformed Churches; as Scotland, New-England, and in all the purest Congregations of our present reforming-times this way is used. The Minister goes not up and down with the bread and wine in his hand, to find out communicants scattered about in their several seats, but Minister and people together at the Table, he first receiving, than those next him, and so the Elements handled from one to another, the Minister remaining in his place, the Elders by and about the Table, taking care that every one receive his part in his place. Thus in the Dutch and French Churches at this day; And what respect we aught to have to the pious patterns of reformed Churches, let us remember the first article of our Covenant. 4. This most agreeable to the late Directory, established by Authority. It requires the communicants, to come and partake at, or about the Table, pag. 51. They may partake about it, yet at a distance from it; but they partake best at it, when close about it, and when they partake both about it and at it, than both phrases are observed. In the thanksgiving directed this is to be acknowledged as a mercy, that by Christ we have liberty to eat and drink at his Table, pag. 53. The Minister being at the Table, is there not only to communicate himself, but there to break the bread, and give it to the Communicants; Take ye, eat ye, pag. 54. No direction to go up and down to speak, and give to each individual and particular person, remote from the Table. 5. This participating of people at the Table, is most agreeable to grounds of reason and religion, as 1. This whole Eucharistical service, Mensa haec ipsa anima nostrae vis est, nervi mentis fiducia vinculum, fundamentum, spes, salus, lux, vita nostra, Chry, Ho. 24. 1 Cor. 10 the Scripture figuratively calls, the Table of the Lord, 1 Cor. 10.21. Therefore the whole service is most meet to be transacted at the Table of the Lord. 2. The gesture that is thought to be most fitting is a Table-gesture; Now if at the Lords Supper it is most fit to use a Table-gesture, than it is most meet the gesture should be used at the Table. 3. This is a Symbolical feast or banquet, now how do men eat and drink at a feast? not scattered about the house, some in one corner, some in another: but they come close together, at and about a Table. 4. This social sitting at the Table of the Lord, doth best and most aptly represent our mutual fellowship and coheirship with Christ, and one with another; hereby is more lively laid fo●th, the close union and communion that is betwixt Christians, whereof the Lords Supper is to be a pledge and symbol. 5. This makes way for the more mutual comfort of all that communicate one in another, while they are thus it the Table together. As our sight of the Elements at this Supper is meet, so our sight of the communicants may be good and of good use. Indeed if bade be by, it may occasion grief, but if we see such with us as we accounted gracious and good, O than to sit near them, and behold their presence, their countenance, their carriage is very quickening and comforting, and this is much better done by sitting together at a Table, than scattered about in several seats. O than from all this take encouragement to come and partake at the Table of the Lord, O let our zeal for God, and love to Christ move us with delight to meet the Lord at his Table; O how much the wrath and rage of malicious adversaries have moved them against God's people, for coming to the Lords Table, yea against the very Table, because of God's people coming thereunto. Augustine reports, Aug. ad Bo●. Ep. 5. that in a Church in Africa, the Sacrament of the Supper being administering, some of the Donatists came in, and drove the people from the Table, wounded the minister, and broke the boards of the Table in pieces. The like, or worse we read of Julian, Cent. Magd. cent. 4. bap. 3. Theod. lib. 3. cap, 11, & 12. uncle to Julian the Apostate; he coming into a Church at Antiochia, pissed against the Lord's Table in contempt, smote Euzoias' the Minister, who sought to hinder him: but memorable was God's justice upon him, for miserable was his end, his bowels rotting, his excrements came, not forth by the accustomed passages of nature, but through his mouth, and so he died. The Papists doubting upon their sacrificing Altars, how have they vomited up their scoffs and scorns at our Communion Tables. Let but this the more heighten our desires, the more inflame our affections to be cheerful partakers at the table of the Lord; yet so as not to be satisfied to be ourselves alone at the Table of the Lord, unless we may have there also the Lord of the Table. While the King sitteth at the Table, the spikenard smells, Cant. 1.12. Thus much of the first circumstance, that concern the Lords Supper to be received, which is the place: I proceed to the second circumstance, which is the time. The time that refers to the receiving of the Lords Supper, whereof we are to take notice, is twofold. 1. The time for the day, ho woft it is to be received. 2. The time of the day wherein it is to be received. Calv. Instit. lib. 4. cap. 7. For the first part of the time, if it be enquired, how often the Lords S●pper is to be received? I answer. Comparatively, often is easy to imagine, positively, how often is hard to determine. We may say the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is often to be received. 1. In compare of the Sacrament of Baptism, which we receive once in an age, never to be repeated more. Baptism is the breeding the Lords Supper, the feeding Sacrament: when we are once bred, we must be often fed. 2. In compare of the Passeover of old, which was received once a year, and no more, Ex. 13.10. the Lords Supper which as it succeeds, so it exceeds in eminency and frequency. 3. In compare of the culpable customs of some of old, who only desired the Lords Supper, when they supposed the approaches of death, Chr. ad Eph, Hom, 3. or only upon some great solemn feast-daie: This course chrysostom closely and cuttingly reproves some Christians for in his time: and indeed the Lords Supper is more often to be received than so by the Disciples of Christ. But to come up more directly to the thing itself, all comparings laid aside, and absolutely conclude: That in the Churches of Christ the Lord's Supper is often to be celebrated and received, whereupon consider, 1. The grounds and reasons of it, yet 2. The bounds and limits to it. The reasons whereby your often receiving is grounded, are 1. Externall, 2. Internal. The reasons external that lie without us, why we aught often time's to receive the Supper of the Lord. 1. The precept of Christ: This do as often as you eat this bread and drink of this cup. For as often as you shall eat this bread and drink of this cup, ye show the Lords death till he come, 1 Cor. 11.25, 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implies a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: as often as ye do it, therefore do it often. 2. The practice of the Apostles and primitive Christians, who did as may seem receive the Lords Supper once a week, every first day: The Lord's day, Act. 20.7. In Ecclesia Milan. ipse Ambrose refer● de ordine Eucharistia, Omni hebdo●●d● efferendum est: etiam si non quotidie, etc. Am. 1 Tim. cap. 1. And upon the first day of the week, when the Disciples came together to break bread, etc. That is, to partake of the Lords Supper, as Calvin upon the text clears it. And as this Ordinance is most meet for weak Christians to frequent, so in the young and weak beginnings of the Church it was an Ordinance very frequent: hence it is meet yet among us to be often. 2. The reasons internal that lie within us, why we aught often time's to celebrated and receive this Supper of the Lord. 1. The prevalencses of our lusts. 2. The imbecilities of our graces. How often may we find the one too strong, and the other alas too weak? our dross is heavy, and our gold is light: Amel●k prevails, and Israel in us is beaten down, Truth is, our own inward maladies and infirmities, require such means and medicines to be often received and applied. We give a sick servant, Sapè d●●●● agr●t● serum quod non s●mel dam●● filio sano. that often which we give not to a well son once; our sick and sad estate, our drooping and dying condition often needs this quickening cordial, yet consider, 2. The limits whereby our often receiving is bounded. Those are either 1. Moore general. Or 2. Moore particular. Generally thus, It is sure we are ofttimes to partake at the Table of the Lord, and the Lords Supper aught often to be administered. 1. Yet not so often as sometimes it hath been. 2. Yet not so often as otherwise it might be. De mensa dominica quae alicubi certis dierum inte r●allis praeparatur sumitur quibusdam ad exitium, Au, in joan, Tra. 26 1. The Lords Supper in some times formerly, have been so frequent, that it hath been done every day. Anciently, in the Fathers we find, that it was a custom in some Churches, for the people publicly to meet every day, and to have the word preached, and this Sacrament administered to them. Vide Aug. Tom, 2, Ep 118 & lib, Eccle, argmatum, chrysostom did oftentimes preach daily to the people; hence in his homilies you may frequently meet with his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, yesterday, this and this I taught you. And it is evident by Augustine and Jerome, that in their times, in some Congregations, the same people received the holy communion every day, so in Cyprians time. We say, let the Lords Supper be often, yet not so often as in some times it hath been; nor 2. so often as were it not for some respects it might be. The people of God, Quoad jus, may have always a right to receive, and yet Quoad factum, not at all times to exercise the act of receiving, but intervals and intermissions must be. And a● some times, there may be some things that may occasion longer interruptions in these Supper-administrations, than at other times. But I shall look upon things as they pass in the ordinary line of time. The particulars than that do restrain and limit our actual partaking at the Table of the Lord, that it is not so frequent as otherways it might, now follow. 1. Our own personal indisposedness to this holy communion: Our fields are not always in case to receive seed, they must have their constant course of preparing; and sometimes the husbandman sees it meet to let his fields lie fallow for a while, that afterwards, when they are sown, they may bring forth the fuller crops, and so truly our hearts are not always in case for a Sacrament, they must have time for preparing, and it may be that great husbandman lets his servants a while lie as it were fallow from this ordinance, that after, when they do partake, they may find the greater comfort. 2. The unpreparedness of other persons we are to approach to this Table with; the Sacrament is to be a communion of the Church together, therefore it requires for those we are to communicate with, some time for their preparation; suppose this or that particular Christian, should be kept in such a holy frame, as to be ever fit for this precious ordinance, yet it may be otherwise with others, who yet are fellow members, and so ordinarily it is, and thereupon a stand. Soldiers in an Army, when they are to manage a fight; though some particulars are prepared to the battle, yet that is not enough, there must be a competent number at lest in readiness, it being a work that must be carried on together, so here. 2 Chron. 30. You ●eade, how ready bent was good Hezekiah to the business of the Passeover, yea and some of his Princes, vers. 1, 2. yet because there were of the Priests and peop e that were not prepared as they aught they could not keep it when they thought, as vers. 3. 1 Cor. 11.33. as the Apostle requires Christians, When they come together to eat the Lords Supper, to tarry one for another, so truly before they come to celebrated this Supper, it is requisite to tarry one for another, and this asks time. 3. Time is needful, not only for all to prepare for the receiving of the Lords Supper, but for all to improve the Lords Supper after it is received, time after to digest it, and draw out the strength of it. There are subsequent duties when the Sacrament is received, that are not instantly dispatched: There is a secret virtue in the Sacrament that is not presently perceived, There is Worth, Warmth, and Strength, that is not suddenly discovered, and that which is found is fit to be laid forth, to the glory of God, and praise of Jesus Christ. Elias, when God hath fed him, he must walk in the strength of that food, 1 King. 19.8. Prov. 9.5, 6. Come, saith wisdom, eat of my bread, and drink of the wine I have mingled; and what than? Why, Forsake the foolish and live, and go in the way of understanding, hereupon this cannot be so frequent. 4. If frequency in this ordinance be extraordinary, we are apt to dash upon a double rock. As 1. To much to advance the external work of it. And 2. Too much to abase the internal worth of it. 1. When the ordinance is very frequent, we are apt to adore the bore work done, and how have some erred in this very thing? coming often to this holy communion, because they thought their often receiving would satisfy for their often sinning; this good work often performed, should make amendss for evil works often reiterated. Hieron. 1 Cor, 10. Jerom hath a good caveat upon this, Let no man presume, that God, for receiving the spiritual meat, or drinking the spiritual cup (ex opere operato) will pardon him if he offend: It seems some were apt to think so: Origen. in Matth. tract. 25. And Origin before him saith thus, The often using of the communion, is not such righteousness of itself, but the setting forth of righteousness, it is the spiritual part, which is righteousness itself, etc. And again the same Author saith, That the thing santified by the word and prayer, Origen. in Ma●. cap. 15. of his own nature sanctifieth not any, how often soever he useth it; for than might he be sanctified, who eats unworthily at the Table of the Lord. O how prove have people been to think, if this work were but often done, it cured all that was ill done, and so rested. 2. We are subject, when the Sacrament is often celebrated, to abate in our accounts of it, and affections to it; upon long delays, our desires to it have increased, whenas by frequent receipts, our esteems of it have diminished. The sun in the firmament is a glorious creature, yet because we see it commonly, we admire it not. Manna at first to the Israelites was a rare thing, but when it was common every day, they soon loathed it: This ordinance is very excellent, let us so use it as we may still prise it, and though we cannot always have it present in fact, yet let us always make it present by faith. 2. For the time of the day wherein the Lords Supper is to be received. The exact time of the day wherein this ordinance aught to be administered and received, I will not undertake to determine: So fare as I shall discuss of time in this respect, shall be to consider, 1. The time of the day wherein it was first instituted. 2. The time of the day wherein it was after exercised. 3. The time of the day wherein it is now accustomed. The time of the day wherein the Lords Supper was first of all instituted, Lombard. lib. 4. dist. 8. Aug. ep. 118. cap. 6. was the evening, that is the later part of the day, as Matth. 26.20. Mark. 14.17. Now when the evening was come, etc. If any inquire, why Christ instituted this his last Supper in the evening of the day. I answer, 1. Because it could not be done sooner. 2. Because it could not be delayed longer. Not sooner, because the Passeover must be abolished, before this Supper be established, or else there should be two Sacraments of the same use at the same time, now it must be the evening before a period could be put to the Passeover. 1. In that the Passeover was not to be abrogated but at the time when it was to be celebrated, and that was not until the evening, Exod. 12.6. The whole assembly of the congregation of Israel shall kill it in the evening, and eat unleaven bread at the even, verse. 18. 2. In that the Passeover was not to be abolished till Christ the true Paschal Lamb was near to be sacrificed. When the time came that that was to be fulfilled in the substance which was represented in the shadow, than, and not before, was the shadow to vanish: and this evening that hour was at hand, for tha● night was Christ betrayed into the hands of his enemies, and so begun his sad sufferings. Thus you see whereupon Christ could not institute his Supper sooner than this evening when he did it. 2. Consider he could not delay it any longer than that evening. 1. Because this evening the Passeover being abrogated, the Supper must than (as its successor) be immediately instituted, that there might be no interval or empty space when the Church and people of God were without such a Sacrament. 2. Because the night following Christ was taken away from his disciples, and delivered into the hands of his adversaries, that so the evening before he must do this with his disciples or never; and it was needful for them that Christ should than leave them such a remembrance of his presence, token of his love, testimony of his care, seal of his covenant, and such a cordial to preserve their spirits in all their approaching perplexities. To conclude this than, when Christ's passion so nearly approached, this Sacrament being a representation of his passion, was to be appointed. Thus you have the time of the day wherein the Lords Supper was at the first instituted with the causes thereof. 2. Observe the time of the day wherein it was afterwards practised. For the time of the day afterwards, I find that the primitive Christians did not keep constant punctually to the same time, but sometime they celebrated the Lords Supper in the former part of the day, and sometimes in the later; sometimes upon days they were sooner, and sometimes later: sometime they took the morning, and sometimes the evening, and some days both: and there were three things that occasioned the set time to be so uncertain. 1. The manner of Churches. 2. The malice of tyrants. 3. The multitude of communicants. The order and custom of Churches in several places and ages made this circumstance so various. In many of the African Churches, as Augustine reports, in his time the Christians were want to spend the whole day, in fasting, praying, preaching and singing of Psalms, and than at night, supping together, they celebrated after all the Sacrament, in imitation of Christ, and so departed. Ideo canati communica●…ur● Apostoli ●…uia necesse ●…ras pascha typicum prius consummari & sic ad veri ●as●hae Sacramenta transiri: nunc autem in honorem tanti Sacramenti placuis magistris Ecclesiae prius nos spiritualibus epulis refici ac postea terren●. Beda. Yet this same Author tells us, that else where in honour of the Sacrament as so high and holy a mystery, the Christians were want to be at it more early, and to make it a leading ordinance: and that no meat might enter their mouths before this food in the Sacrament, they would not delay it so long in the day. And about the year 680. after Christ, it was concluded in the fixth ecumenical counsel, being the third Council held at Constantinople, in the time of Constantine the Emperor, That night-Sacraments celebrated after other ordinary suppers were eaten, should after that generally cease in the Churches. 2. The malice of tyrants constrained the Christians to altar, as their place, so their time, for this service; and to do it, as where, so when they could with most secrecy and safety. Tertullian, who lived about the year 180. or 200. after Christ, saith, That in his time, Plinius sub Traiano scripsit solitos stat● die Christianos aute lucem carmenque Christo communi voce dicere: postea se Sacramento obstringere non in scelus aliquod, etc. Cent. Magd. cen. 2. cap. 6. by reason of the rage of persecuting tyrants, the Christians would sometimes be together before day break in the morning, to celebrated these sacred mysteries. So in the time of Trajan that bloody Emperor, who was about the year 100 after Christ (under whom was the third of those 10. Persecutions) that was also the course of the Christians, to meet in the morning before day light, and than to sing a Psalm, and after to celebrated the Supper of the Lord. 3. The multitude of communicants have made this ordinance to be acted at several times upon the same day. In quibusd●m locu tibi maior & friquenitor est p●●●ltas Dei bis affertur & mane & ad vesperam, alijs autem locu ad finem tantum di●i mos est offerri. Aug. Ep. 1.8. ad ja. Gregor. in Evang. ho●. ●. Augustine saith, that in some places whereas the resort of the people is greater upon certain days, this oblation is twice made, first in the morning, and after towards night: but in other places, whereas the people is not so great, the same is only before night. Upon the same ground, Gregory tells, how he ministered the holy communion at three sundry times upon one and the same day. Thus you see the time of the day wherein this Supper of the Lord hath been anciently solemnised, how divers and different it hath been, and the causes thereof. 3. Observe the time of the day wherein it is now accustomed. The custom, you know, among us in these times, for the celebration of the Lords Supper, is to keep to the former part of the day, and to decline the later; to make it rather a morning, than an evening service, the conveniency of which is well warranted upon these grounds. 1. To manifest our high esteem of this ordinance, that when the joyful day is come, we cannot but make all meet haste to it, such is our high account of it. 2. To show our earnest desire to it, and to Christ in it, when the day is for it, we long to be at it; when desires are earnest, endeavours are early, Psal. 63.1. O God my God, early will I seek thee, my soul thirsts for thee. 3 To express our ardent love to Christ: The two Maries, such was the strength of their affection to Christ, that early in the morning, they come to the sepulchre where Christ was laid, Mark. 16.2. Love will bring us out as soon in a Sacrament day as may be to meet Christ. 4. To discover our courage for Christ, when we do not as Nicodemus, delay and come to Christ by night, but early and openly in the day; to show we are not ashamed nor afraid in open view to own Christ. 5. To declare our care, first to serve the Lord Christ, and than ourselves: It is said of some, Rom. 16.18. They serve not the Lord Jesus, but their own bellies; they prefer the filling of their bellies before the service of Christ. We let better appear from us in this very business, in that we see that Christ be served before our bellies be filled, and that we mind our souls before our bodies, and the meat that endures, before that which perisheth, Joh. 6.27. Not that I think it unlawful to eat any thing before we receive the Lords Supper, but sure when our bodies are fed with a full meal, our souls may be found more unfit for holy services. 6. For this service in the day of its discharge, we take the former part, because it is the fresher part, when we are more dexterous and ready, more vigorous and lively, more active and able to high and holy employments: ordinarily when night comes, and after supper, we are more meet for bodily rest in the bed, than for any soul service at the board. 7. And lastly, Such are our innumerable iniquities, frequent failings, and manifold miscarriages even in all holy ordinances, that our last work in the best day had need be repentance. If our prayer in the morning be, Lord, Give us this day our daily bread, our prayer in the evening had need be, Lord, Forgive us this day our daily sins. But to enlarge the thing in hand not further, you see what time it is wherein we celebrated the Lords Supper, and how meet it is to have and hold that time, to wit, the former part of the day. If any shall object, Our Saviour did this in the evening, Object. why not we likewise? I answer, Because though he did so himself, Answ. yet he did not command all or any after to do so: He commanded the action, Do it; Zanch. de Redemp. l. 1. de cults Dei exte, p. 488. but did not command the season when we should do it. Zanchy excellently well states and determines this, to whom I refer. Augustine hath this expression to the case in hand. If Christ, saith he, Nam si hoc Christus monuisset ut ad finem dici & post cibos alios, acciperetur credo quod eum morem nemo varrasset. Aug in E●. 118. ad jan. had commanded that the Sacrament should ever be received at the end of the day, and after other meats, I believe no man would have changed that order. Christ administered this his last Supper at night, or in the evening, but there being no mystery in it, nor mandate for it, that individual act is not obligatory upon us. Besides, this was grounded upon such reasons, as to him were urgent and necessary, but are not so to us: We have neither the occasion of Christ's approaching departure to require it, nor his leaving it as a present pledge of his love to challenge it, nor the concurring of his passion to call for it, nor the necessity of the precedent Passeover to urge it, that we should celebrated this Supper in the evening as Christ himself did. Christ did this in the evening, after the Passeover, to signify the abolishing, both of the Passeover and the evening, and so to leave the time free for his Church and people afterwards, to dispo●e as meet occasions should require. If any shall say; we continued the name, therefore we should continued the time: The name of Supper, therefore the time of Supper. I answer, 1. We call it by the name of Supper, because Christ ordained it at his last Supper. 2 We call it ordinarily by other names also, as Sacrament, Communion, etc. 3. This ordinance may even now be called a Supper, because though we receive it not in the evening of the day, yet in the evening of the world. And so you have the circumstances of place and time, as they relate to the Lords Supper, examined. FINIS. AN ALPHABETICAL TABLE. A. ADmonition, by whom to be given. page 241. Affirmative commands, how they bind. p. 402. Afflictions, how to make them good. p. 481. Affections of the soul of two sorts. p 455. Ambrose withstood Theodosius. p. 221. Apostate, who. p. 113. Apostles and disciples differenced. p. 10. Auricular confession, what. p. 337. Augustine's prayers, what in youth. p. 303. Augustine, how converted. p. 176. B. Baptism and the Lords Supper differenced. p. 164. Baptism what therein comprised. p. 146. Baptism, how by many abused. p. 147. Baptism, why to infants administered. p. 150. Bar of God twofold. p. 445. Blasphemy, what and how committed. p. 74. Blood of Christ how excellent. p. 423. Bread, what it imports. p. 422. Branches of two sorts. p. 154. Burden twofold. p. 139. Burden of Christ, what it is. p. 138. C. Caligula, how he entertained his guests. p. 72. Catechism, what and why it is. p. 344. Christians of two sorts. p. 10. Children how holy, how filthy. p. 152. Communion with Christ, what. p. 46. Comforts from Christ, how. p. 51. Coming to Christ, what and how. p. 139. Confession in Scripture, threefold. p. 335. Conquests by combats obtained p. 52. Consent of private Christians, what. p. 291. Covenant sealed, when. p. 53. Covenant old and new differenced. p. 104. Covetous persons, who. p. 69. Crucifying Christ afresh, when. p. 93. Custom corrupting the Sacrament 2. ways. p. 225. D. Death of Christ, in it two things. p 431. Death of Christ not for all. p. 133. Death of Christ contains a double act. p. 136. Deceitfulness of sin, how great. p. 25. Despairers of God's grace recovered. p. 167. Desires in carnal men discovered. p. 252. Defiling the Sacrament worse than delaying it. p. 403 Dissensions among Christians, how bad. p. 489. Discerning of Christ, what. p. 39 Disciple, what it signifies. p. 9 Discipline in the Church to be desired. p. 310. Discipline, what it contains. p. 218. Division of the Sacrament how made. p. 95. E. Eating of Christ, what it is. p. 42. Elders in the Church two sorts. p. 270. Examining a man's self, what. p. 22. Examining by others, why. p. 329. Excommunication, when to be used. p. 219. Excommunication, how formerly abused. p. 233. Eyeing of Christ, always good. p. 494. F. Faith taken in the word two ways. p. 161. Faith its exercise in two things. p. 457. Faith necessary at the Lords Table. p. 36. Few fit for the Table of the Lord. p. 59 federal holiness, what it is and doth. p. 163. Firmus a Manichaean, how converted. p. 177. Frequent receiving, what need. p. 400. Fruitfulness in good works, how good. p. 15. G. Gentiles estate, twofold. p. 154. Giving ourselves to God, why. p. 392. God's giving of Christ, 4. ways. p. 433. God reserves to himself 3. things. p. 343. Gospel more excellent than the law. p. 104. Government in the Church, what. p. 292. Governors of the Church, who. p. 265. Graces at the Lords Table, what are exercised, and how increased. p. 31, 50. Grief to God's Saints how caused. p 94. Grosthead, how he thought discipline would come in. p. 230. H. Hearts of men, how judged. p. 210. Heretics, who so called. p. 86. heavenliness of mind, how meet. p. 35. Holiness applied to infants, twofold. p. 163. Holiness required of men, twofold. p. 393. Humbled, why requisite. p. 382. Humility, how rare. p. 35. Hunger, spiritual, how good. p. 430. Hypocrisy, how fine a thread. p. 113. Hypocrites, how discovered. p. 71. I. Ignorance, twofold. p. 76. Ignorant persons, and persons nescient differenced. p. 75. Impenitent persons how described. p. 61. Impatient persons, how discerned. p. 65. Infirmities in Saints, and impieties in sinners distinguished. p. 261. Interest in Christ's death, twofold. p. 137. Infants, though no actual faith, are to be baptised. p. 450. Judas, many worse than he. p. 118. Justice, wherein it lies. p. 27. Judging a man's self, how requisite. p. 23. Judge, what required to make one complete. p. 24. K. Keys of the Church, what they be. p. 239. Keys of the Church, who to use them. p. 240. Knowledge requisite to right-receiving. p. 77. Knowledge requisite to self-judging. p. 24. Knowledge of others, how attained. p 207. Knowledge, the devil hath much of it himself, yet hates it in others. p 80. L. Language of men twofold. p. 74. Lift of grace and glory, how the same. p. 56. Light, if true, produces heat th●● is good. p. 81. Love to Christ, and love to sin, how opposite. p. 12. Love to Christ in a disciple greater than the fear of hell. p. 12. Love to Christ's members, how great. p. 13. Luther encouraging Melancthon. p. 325. M. Magistrate, what to do in the Church. p. 289. Man's threefold estate opened. p. 346. Manna, spiritual, who eat thereof. p. 110. Meals three provided of God. p. 127. Ministers of two sorts. p. 227. Moderation in Church censures, how meet. p. 288. Murder of a man's self, how great a sin. p. 96. N. Nabuchadnezzar, what he was while he fed with beasts. p. 278. Nurse's care, wherein it consists. p. 289. O. Oath, the word warrants twofold. p 377. Obedience under the Gospel, twofold. p. 467. Olivetrees of two sorts. p. 154. Opposers of God's word, how bad. p. 168. Opposition against Church-censures how great a sin. p. 347. Opposition of good is most at first. p. 326. Orders according to the will of God, how good. p. 269. P. Parables, what they are like. p. 125. Parents of two sorts. p. 150. Passeover of the Jews for a double use p 102. Passeover of the Jews, short of the Lords Supper. p. 107. Perverters of God's truth, how bad. p. 169. Perseverance in Christ's words, how good. p. 15. Powers in the Church, wherefore. p. 267. Power of God, twofold. p. 305. Prayer, how requisite before the Lor●s Supper received. p. 445. Private persons to inform Church officers of offences in the Church. p. 293. Pride in duties well done, how prove. p, 446. Promises of two sorts. p 159. Promises of God considered two ways. p. 430. Profession and confession differenced. p 335. R. Reformation, in what now expected. p. 233. Reformers, wherein formerly defective. p. 324. Religion, all its acts binds to unity. p. 487. Relapsers, how they may be recovered. p. 168. Remission of sins, how sweet a mercy. p. 48. Remembering of Christ, how just a duty. p. 37. Repentance public, when required. p. 373. Reprobation, how great a secret. p. 113. Repentance, a work all our life time. p. 435. Resting in good duties, how bad. p. 485. Right of believers to the Lords Supper, twofold. p. 429. S. Sacrament and sacrifice different in what. p. 483. Sacrament, what the word imports. p 173. Scandal, what it is. p. 84. Seducers, who they are. p. 169. Self-love, the prejudice of it. p. 26. Self-confidence, the evil thereof. p. 29. Separation unwarrantable. p. 390. Signs outward in the Lord's Supper, two, though but one in Baptism, why. p. 190. Sins known only to God, must yet in some cases be confessed to men. p. 376. Suffering for Christ, how to know when called thereunto. p. 482. Sufferings of Christ, of two sorts. p. 482. Sufferings of Christ differing from ours, wherein. p. 479. Supper-meal, the last meal. p. 128. T. Taking hold on Christ in his Supper, the sole work of a Believer. p 460. Thankfulness to Go●, threefold. p. 494. Thought evil at the Sacrament are ve●y great evils, how cured. p. 452. Thoughts, how to be ordered in Sacrament time. p. 446 Treasons against Christ, many worse now than that of Judas. p. 120. U. Vbeleevers unmeet receivers. p. 62. Uncharitable persons, who, and how unfit for the Table of the Lord. p. 64. in heart, how bad. p. 68 Unicorn, the virtue of his horn. p. 350. Union with Christ twofold. p. 47. Union with Christ, how made. p. 46. Union the ground of communion. p. 48. Unworthiness towards the Sacrament twofold. p. 407. W. Way twofold. p. 401. World twofold. p. 133. Word of God, a threefold effect. p. 175. Word and Sacrament differenced. p. 195. Word of God aught always to accompany the Sacrament. p. 194. Worthiness, twofold. p. 369. Wrath of God provoked by abusing the Sacrament. p. 91. Y. Yoke of Christ, what it is. p. 139. Z. Zeal for the Church of God, how good. p. 289. Some Scriptures occasionally explained. Genesis. Chap. Verse. Pag. 2. 2. 491 6. 11. 273 14. 14. 329 14 18. 401 17. 7. 152 Exodus. Chap. Verse. Pag. 12. 3. 10● Numbers. Chap. Verse. Pag. 9 7. 108 Deuteronomy. Chap. Verse. Pag. 6. 7. 330 1 Samuel. Chap. Verse. Pag. 3. 13. 245 2 Chronicles. Chap. Verse. Pag. 29. 30. 382 30. 15. 389 Psalm. Chap. Verse. Pag. 42. 3. 253 61. 8. 187 101. 3. 296 147. 9 360 Proverbs. Chap. Verse. Pag. 19 2. 81 29. 24. 294 Isaiah. Chap. Verse. Pag. 46. 8. 23 49. 23. 289 Lamentations. Chap. Verse. Pag. 3. 51. 195 Ezekiel. Chap. Verse. Pag. 20. 37. 249 Hosea. Chap. Verse. Pag. 7. 6. 6● Matthew. Chap. Verse. Pag. 3. 11. 188 5. 14. 265 7. 1. 21● 7. 6. 28 7. 16. 20● 11. 28. 137 16. 18. 239 18. 6. 3●● 18. 16. 241 20. 25. 205 22. 1●. 380 26. 29. 114 28. 19 7 Luke. Chap. Verse. Pag. 12. 3●. 5● ●4. 18. 125 ●5. 8. 232 ●5. 17. 23. 18. 8. 3● 22. 21. 116 22. 31. 22 john. Chap. Verse. Pag. ●. ●. 188 6. 44. 140 12. 5, 6. 119 13. 30. 117 15. 8. 15. Acts. Chap. Verse. Pag. 2. 42. 121 2. 38. 122 5. 31. 49 19 9 390 Romans. Chap. Verse. Pag. 7. 9 24 11. 16. 152 12. 9 287 14. 1●. 84 1 Corinthians. Chap. Verse. Pag. 5. 6. 268 6. 2. 292 7. 14. 160 1●. 21. 276 11. 22. 488 11. 28. 98 11. 30. 99 14. 19 345 2 Corinthians. Chap. Verse. Pag. 5. 15. 132 6. 17. 391 13. 5. 19 Galathians. Chap. Verse. Pag. ●. 6. 345 Ephesians. Chap. Ve●s. Pag. 1. 10. 247 4. 11. 187 5. 11 297 5. 16 436 Philippians. Chap. Verse. Pag. 2. 11. 336 2. 8. 479 3. 8. 4●1 Collossians. Chap. Verse. Pag. 1. 2. 480 1. Thessalonians. Chap. Verse. Pag. 5. 23. 393 2 Thessalonians. Chap. Verse. Pag. 3. 6. 214. 1 Timothy. Chap. Verse. Pag. 2. 4. 12● 4. 8. 159 5. 17. 270 2 Timothy. Chap. Verse. Pag. 2. 15. 250 3. 16. 175 4. 2. 185 Titus. Chap. Verse. Pag. 3. 10. 243 Hebrews. Chap. Verse. Pag. 4. 13. 208 6. ●9. 33 13. ●0. 101 13. 17. 327 james: Chap. Verse. Pag. 1. 14. 452 5. 16. 450 2 Peter: Chap. Verse. Pag. 2. 20. 90 jude. Chap. Verse. Pag. ● 21. 219 FINIS.