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A43727 Apokalypsis apokalypseos, or, The revelation revealed being a practical exposition on the revelation of St. John : whereunto is annexed a small essay, entituled Quinto-Monarchiæ, cum Quarto Omologia, or, A friendly complyance between Christ's monarchy, and the magistrates / by William Hicks ... Hicks, William, 1621-1660. 1659 (1659) Wing H1928; ESTC R20296 349,308 358

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one stroke whereas we generally grant that the Law which is moral natural is both divine spiritual our duty and perpetual there is no relaxation to the least Iota of it Secondly We grant the Judicial Law of Moses to be very useful in many particulars for the use and imitation of the church under the Gospel but for the ceremonial part of that Law it is quite dead unto us and is part of that hand-writing of Ordinances which is nailed unto Christ's cross and to give a restauration and resurrection unto it either in its self or in allusions drawn from it pressed home upon the conscience is to add Circumcision unto the Gospel and in effect to lay a yoke upon the necks of the disciples which we nor our fathers were ever able to bear and so by consequence to make Christ of none effect For if the Ceremonial Law and the Judaical Judicial Law as particularly relating to that Nation be void and non-obliging unto christians under the Gospel as all sound Protestants confess and is this day made good and avowed by their general practise for what sort of christians do strictly bind themselves up to the Judicials of Moses but do pick and chuse as they please For as I said but now many good things are in them both useful and imitable for Christian Commonweals to adhere to but to make them of absolute necessity as cogent upon the conscience I know no sound church or teachers does so undertake to become its Advocate and if any should be so heterodox I am resolved and should give it as advice to others to hold fast that liberty wherein Christ hath made us free And if the Judicial Law together with all its Ceremonials as all sound Divines grant and confess and practise accordingly be null and void and non-constringent unto christians then how unequal and unjust it is to make it a foundation or corner stone to build any Gospel ordinance thereon For the Basis being unsound and sandy the structure cannot hold but must needs fall to the ground together and all such conclusions as are extracted from such unsound premises are rather exotique then concentrique with the Word of truth For what have we to do with Legal Types and Shaddows which are long since putrified in their graves And we may say of them as Mary said to Christ concerning her brother Lazarus Lord by this it stinketh We have the Anti-type Christ himself the true substance of all Judaical Types and Shaddows who is the sole Lord of his house and Head of his church who of common elements of Water Bread and Wine by vertue of his Institution hath made them unto us Spiritual water of Regeneration and Spiritual symbols of his Flesh and Blood which are mystically and Sacramentally communicated to every worthy receiver and this Lord as a faithful Legislator hath declared his will about those Ordinances about the manner of the administrations together with the subjects thereof and though some assert that the truth hereabout lies deep and of difficult discerning and I believe it true as unto them and those by reason of the great dust they themselves raise about it as the Fox in the Fable that went to sweep the house with his tail who in stead of cleansing the house made it more filthy by the dust he raised about it but for my part I conceive these two great Gospel ordinances to be plain and clear to plain and simple hearted christians in all the necessary circumstantials thereof as about the manner of their administrations the qualification of the subjects c. for these Ordinances were not instituted alone for philosophical christians but were also subjected to the cognizance and for the edification of all sorts of christians that were not Academicks and therefore their significancy obvious unto all in all such particulars that makes but a reasonable enquiry thereunto and therefore I should judge such as Sophisters and vain Janglers as go about to darken the truth of those two great Gospel lights or Sacraments by analogical arguments levied from the Judicials or Ceremonials of Moses to support them withal or to evidence their truth either in themselves or in any circumstantials thereof whereas they are sufficiently supported and virtuated by a clear light in themselves to wit their own genuine Institutions And here rightly may be appplyed that of the Poet Ne te quesiveris extra And for him that is otherwise minded Cre dat Judeus Apella Non ego But to return to M. Morice from whose answer I have somwhat digressed I shall take leave to present him with few arguments out of that learned M. Baxter being my self very conscious to be Impar congressus Achilli In his book for Infant Baptism against M. Bedford p. 299. this argument of his offers it self If both in the Institution and every example of Baptism through all the Bible the first grace be prerequisite as a condition then the Ordinance was not instituted for the confirming of that first grace but in the Institution and every example of Baptism through all the Bible the first grace is prerequisite as a condition Therefore the Ordinance was not instituted to confer it By the first Grace it is his own words I still mean that Grace which consisteth in a real change of the soul whether habitual or actual or if you will call it seminal or radical you may By prerequisite as a condition I mean either in the party or another for him The force of the consequence is evident in that otherwise Baptism should be instituted to give men that which is pre-required in them and so which they have already as to all them that are capable of it The Antecedent is undeniable as might be manifested by a recital of the particular Texts could we stay so long upon it John required a profession of repentance in those he baptized Jesus first made them Disciples and then by his Apostles baptized them John 4.1 The solemn Institution of it as a standing Ordinance to the Church which tells us fully the end is in Matth. 28.19 20. Go and Disciple me all Nations Baptizing them c Now for the aged a Disciple and a Believer are all one Mark 16.16 He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved Acts 2.38 Repent and be baptized every one c. 41. They that gladly received the Word were baptized Acts 8.12 13. The Samaritans believed and were baptized both men and women Simon himself believed and was baptized Acts 8.36 37. If thou believest with all thy heart thou mayest be baptized And he answered I believe c. Acts 9. Paul believed upon Ananias instruction and then was baptized Acts 10.47 48. and 16.15.33 and 18.8 and 19.4 5 c. Thus far M. Baxter in this place And to see his clearness herein is admirable and what advantage a learned man hath when he hath Truth on his side Which argument is able though by him managed there to another end