134, 4, for timorously read temerously.
137, 4, for Nebuchadnezzar read Nabuchodonosor.
138, 3, after felt insert no.
160, 19, for Joshua's read Josue's.
185, 11, dele in a while.
222, 4, to be very good indeed: so the old edition; but it should
evidently be, to be very God indeed.
257, 23, for take upon read take upon him.
443, 34, for held read hold.
ABEL, in what sense he is said to have offered a more excellent sacrifice than Cain, 27, 8; the first martyr, 29. Advocate, Christ our, 384, 5. Affections in man, diversity of, 502. Affliction and trouble cometh from God, 95; sent for the punishment of our sins, 97; less than our sins, 100; sent by God of a loving and fatherly mind towards us, 103; God for Christ's sake, of mercy, love, and favour, doth correct and punish us, 105; Christ in what he suffered hath blessed and sanctified affliction, 106; God sendeth it for our good, 110; seeketh our reformation, 111; proves us with afflictions, 116; afflictions further us to the knowledge of God and ourselves, and to wisdom, 119; further us to the knowledge of our sins and to repentance for them, 121; and to the exercising and in- creasing of our faith, 123; give occasion to pray unto God, and to praise him, 127; further us in vir- tue and godliness, 129; help and further us toward the fear and love of God, 134; teach men patience, meekness, and lowliness, 136; teach men pity, compassion, and patience toward other, 138; trouble and afflic- tion maketh men hard and strong, 139; teacheth men to despise the world, 140; help to much quietness and commodity in the world, 142; a furtherance to eternal life, 145; effect of on the unfaithful, 147; how it may be overcome, 153; support in adversity, 156; duty of faith, hope, and confidence toward God in adversity, 164; of prayer in ad- versity, 166; of repentance and
amendment of life in adversity, 168; examples of patience in adversity out of scripture, 169; other examples, 174. Agony of our Saviour, considerations from, 256, &c.; proof from, that he did not suffer by compulsion, but will- ingly, 257; intended to declare unto us the weakness and feebleness that our flesh receiveth at the sight of adver- sity, ib.; because he would take upon him a true man, who felt our adver- sity in his own flesh, and so could have pity on us, ib.; that he might teach us, to whom our weakness ought to resort for comfort and help in trou- ble, ib.; an evidence that he is man, 260; to prove to us that when he sends to us affliction, it is not always in anger, 262; but he sendeth us his own help and comfort, ib.; that we might derive comfort in trouble, when we consider that our heavenly Father bringeth his own Son into such trouble for our sakes, 262.
Altar, one, what it signifieth, 45. Apostles, preached salvation by Christ, 77; declared by preaching of the word and ministration of the sacra- ments, ib.
Aread, explained, 277.
Aristotle, opinion of, in what true blessedness consists, 175, 6. Ark, the, a type of Christ, 32. Ascension of Christ, considerations on, 380, &c.; he ascended, not after his Godhead, but after his manhood, 382.
Assyria, kingdom of, 34. Augustine, quoted, 128, 141, 199, 203; says that the wicked do not spiritually eat the flesh of Christ and drink his blood, 427; states the difference be-
tween the sacrament and the thing itself, ib.; referred to, 445 n.; speaks of the Lord's supper as a sacrifice, and in what sense, 451n.; referred to, 456n.; declareth that the sacra- ments do take their effect of the word of the Lord, 459, 60.
his death, 318, 19; what we may learn from the conduct of the women, who brought spices for the burial of our Saviour, 320, 1.
Babylon, kingdom of, 34; captivity at, a figure of the captivity of sin, 400; deliverance from, what signified by,
Baptism, instituted by Christ, and en- joined on his Apostles, 78; Christians planted in the church by baptism, 370; through baptism we receive Christ, 410; we receive Christ, and have forgiveness of our sins through the grace and gift of Christ, ib.; the water in baptism cannot cleanse the soul from sin, 411; not instituted by Christ in vain, ib.; not neglected by the faithful, ib.; in baptism we professed and bound ourselves to fight under the standard of Christ, 495; the badges and signs of baptism tes- tify that we are sworn unto him never to forsake him, ib. See SA-
Belief, nature and condition of true
belief, 344; true believers partakers of everlasting life, 249; keep God's commandments, ib.
Bernard, quoted, 120, 165, 181. Bread and wine anciently offered in the Lord's supper, 451; not agreeable to the institution of Christ, ib. Bull, Bishop, on the opinions of the Docetæ, referred to, 21 n. Burial of Christ, reflections on, 316 21; the description of by the Evange- lists, necessary for the assurance of our belief in his death and resurrec- tion, 317; his burial must needs be honourable, foretold by Isaiah, ib.; we must learn with Christ to die from the world, and to be buried in
Caii Fragmenta, referred to, with re- gard to the death of Peter, 362 n. Casaubon adv. Baronium, quoted with
regard to the meaning of τὸ τέλειον, as applied to the Eucharist, 203. Ceremonies, outward of the Jews, sa- craments of heavenly things, 445 ; why God ordained them, 447; no ground for the abuses introduced by the Romanists into the Lord's sup- per, 461; not all ceremonies to be disapproved, which serve to honesty and public order, whereby the more reverence is gained to the sacrament, ib.
Checkmate, to set at, explained, 50n. Christ, the seed of the woman, explained, 21; all true Israelites trusted in Christ, 50; all holy prophets point unto Christ, 59; all God's elect saved by, 70; the only salvation of all the world, 72; temptation of in the wil- derness, 73; Christ's doctrine, special points of, 74; the patient suffering of, 75; the fruit of Christ's death, ib. 220; his power saveth all, 77; held nothing back from his Apostles, ib.; our example, 201; the true paschal lamb, 211; the bread of life, which came down from heaven, 212; we must learn humbleness from the example of, 213; foreknowledge of Christ exemplified in his predic- tion of the treachery of Judas, 214; we must learn patience from the ex- ample of, 219; meekness, ib.; Christ, the only way, 221; divinity of, proved by his doctrine and miracles, 222; testified by the scriptures of the Old and New Testament, ib.; by his own declaration, that we must believe on him, ib.; because he was before Abra-
ham, ib.; because he hath all power in heaven and earth, ib.; from the declaration of Thomas, My Lord and my God, ib.; because he created all things, ib.; because he came in the flesh, ib.; because he took on him the seed of Abraham, 223; because he was in the bosom of the Father, ib.; because he came down from hea- ven, ib.; because he is declared by St John to be God, ib.; and the true God and eternal life, ib.; comfort from the ascension of, 229; with the faithful in adversity, 230; our great high-priest, 247; the way to God, 248; proved to be God from his re- surrection, 346, 348, 406; why it behoved Christ to die and to rise again, 368, 9; sitteth at the right hand of God, King and Lord of all things, our faithful Advocate and Mediator, 384, 5; sendeth his Spirit to his church, 385; that Christ is the Saviour of the world, is the sum of the christian faith, 408; proved from his ascension up to heaven, and send- ing the Holy Spirit, 407, 8; all things should give way to the glory of, 494.
Christian living, rules of, 506; we must judge well of Scripture, not doubting the promises of God, ib.; we must with a good courage enter into the way of salvation 507; two only ways, of salvation and perdition, ib.; we must despise whatever lead- eth from the way of Christ, 508; Christ must be the end and mark of our living, 509; we must ascend from things visible to things invisi- ble, 510; we must follow Christ in his saints, ib.; we must not go back from the truth, 513; in Christ is found true nobility, pleasure, strength, praise, and wisdom, ib.; we must be climbing up unto godliness, 515; we may not despair in God, 516; we must ever keep watch, 517; we must neither be faint-hearted nor presump- tuous, 518; we must of temptation
take occasion of virtue, ib.; we must compare the bitterness of the fight with the pain that followeth sin and the sweetness of the victory, 519; we must exercise ourselves in the cross of Christ, 520; we must consider the misery of sin and the dignity of man, 521; we must consider the goodness of God and the malice of the devil, ib.; we must consider the end of faith, present tranquillity and quiet- ness of mind, and everlasting salva- tion in heaven, 522; also of sin, perpetual grief and disquietness of soul in this life, and everlasting death in hell, ib.
Christian man, opinions meet for, 514. Chrysostom, quoted, 356n.; speaks of
the Lord's supper as a sacrifice, and in what sense, 451 n.
Church, division of members by Au- gustine, 202-6; tried by affliction, 128; four marks of, 412-20. Cicero quoted, 177.
Clemens Alexandrinus quoted, 21., 203 n.
Consolation, grounds of, in our spiri- tual trials, 496, 7. Creation, the, 14. Cyprian referred to, 456n.
David, a prophet, 53; his faith in Christ, ib.
Death, in us the punishment of sin, in
Christ, obedience and love, 230. Death of Christ, considerations on, 308 -10; concluded and determined in the counsel of God, 403; yet the Jews not less guilty in putting him to death, 404.
Desert or dizzard explained, 4, 284. Denmark, account of the reformation of Church in, 424; order in for the administration of the Lord's supper, 470-8; mode of consecration of elements, 476; received kneeling, ib.; order for ministration of baptism in,
Faith, christian, antiquity of, 4, 14; foundation of, 18; older than the Jewish faith, 35. Faith defined, the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things which do not appear, 5; the scrip- ture hath imputed unto it our justifi- cation before God, ib.; not without other virtues following, but without any other work or deed justifying, 6; of Adam, 25; of Noah, 32; of Abra- ham, 34, 5; of Isaac and Jacob, 36; of Moses, 38; necessary for the re- ception of the sacraments, 80; sup- port of in adversity, 102; confirmed and increased in adversity, 125; power of in adversity, 173; strength- ened in affliction, 317; nature of true faith explained, 344, 5. Fall of man, 17.
Fathers, the, looked beyond the sacri-
Inheritance, the eternal, to be attained through the cross and trouble, 340. Irenæus referred to, 21 n.
Isaiah, testimony of Jerome concern- ing, 66.
Jerome says that Isaiah is not only a prophet, but an evangelist, 66. Joel, prophecy of, contained in chap. ii. 28-32, explained, 399, &c. John the Baptist foretold, 63; mis-
sion and preaching of, 74.
Joshua, a type of Christ, 50; in the destruction of the heathen nations acted by the command of God, 51.
Keys (Matt. xvi.), meaning of, 373, 4.
Lamb, passover, a type of Christ, 39,
Law of Moses leadeth unto Christ, 37;
giving of the law, 39; the deliverance out of Egypt a type of the redemp- tion by Christ, ib.; that contained in the Ten Commandments required of the fathers before the law, 40; the law, why given, 43; given to further the promise, ib.; laws cere- monial, 47; judicial, ib. Laws given to Noah, 33. Life of man a warfare, 495. Love, evidence of faith, 234; the com- mandment of Christ, 236; the be-
« EdellinenJatka » |