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A36102 A discourse of the Holy Spirit his workings and impressions on the souls of men : with large additionals. Sherlock, R. (Richard), 1612-1689. 1656 (1656) Wing D1605; ESTC R203556 193,794 256

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people must we not see with our own eyes but only with those of the Church Shall we pin our faith upon any mens sleeves What need we the authority of men when we have Gods own authority for our direction and men are but men i. e. frail and liable to error so that all they affirm is not to be taken for Gospel In answer whereunto consider Answ 1. That there is a great deal of difference betwixt an implicite faith and blinde obedience to the dictates of the Church and a submission to the publique judgement thereof The first deprives the people of their reason and judgement the second renders them more meek humble submissive and obedient and thereby more capable to receive the impression of the knowledge of celestial mysteries 2. That we assert not the ancient and learned Fathers of the Church ut dominos sed ut duces sidei Nihil carum rerum scire quae antè nascereris facta sunt hoc est semper esse puerum Cic. Not as Lords over our faith but as guides in the true belief And he that knows nothing of the Religion of the Fathers for his guidance and direction is most likely still to continue a childe in his religion Nor 3. are we to receive for Oracle all that the ancient reverend Fathers of the Church did affirm being very few amongst them Quicquid omnes vel plures uno eodemque sensu manifeste frequenter perseveranter velut quodam sibi consentiente concilio accipiendo tenendo tradendo firmaverint id pro indubitato certo ratcque habeatur Quicquid vero quamvis ille doctus san●tus quamvis Episcopus praeter omnes aut etiam contra omnes senserit id inter proprias privatas opiniunculas à communis publicae generalis sententiae authoritate secretum sit Vinc. Lyr. but had their particular errors and mistakes and in many particulars also 't is confessed they did contradict each other 'T is not therefore the affirmations and private opinions of particular persons we must look upon as the Doctrine of true Religion and true meaning of the Scriptures but the general and universal consent of all for that all should erre and fall from the truth is contrary to what our Lord hath promised who will undoubtedly be as good as his word Mat. 16.18 Vpon this rock I will build my Church and the gates of Hell shall never prevail against it and Mat. 28.20 I am with you alway even to the end of the world In a word in the interpretation of Scriptures and for the confirmation of holy truths thence deduced the authority of the ancient Fathers and Doctors of the Church is to be consulted and known for these reasons 1. Because they are certain and undeniable witnesses of what the Church and the people of Christ did in their respective times believe and hold for orthodox Doctrine If the same doctrine St. Augustine taught in Africk was also taught by St. Chrysostome in Greece by St. Ambrose in Italy by St. Hierome in Palestine and so in other places by holy and reverend Bishops and Pastors of the Church then this undoubtedly was the doctrine of the Church and thus were the holy Scriptures understood in those ages of the Church Ita intellexit Ambrosius ita Cyprianus c. Thus Ambrose thus Cyprian understood such or such a place of Scripture this had some weight in St. August time and St. Aug. opinion and there is no reason but that it should be of the same force still amongst us 'T is no way probable but that persons so eminent in learning and in piety so frequent in holy prayers and meditations in fastings and wailings so indefatigable in their studies and labours in the Word and Doctrine and who laid down their lives and fortunes for the doctrine they preached should more truly understand the Scriptures and the truth of Christian Religion then we who if there be any thing of Modesty and Humility in our hearts must confesse our selves far inferiour to them in the said gifts and graces of the holy Spirit Aug. Vsque adeo promiscuit imis summa longus dies c. Hath time so confounded all things is light so changed into darkness and darkness become light ut videant Pelagius c. that Haeretiques now are the only seers Et caeci sunt Hilarius Cyprianus Ambrosius And the learned pious Fathers of the Church become blinde The words are too much appliable to the Heretiques of the times 3. The judgement of the Fathers being so far remote from these times wherein we live must needs be impartial as to the controversies amongst us touching the interpretation of any texts of Scripture or doctrines therein delivered as being altogether disinterested and knowing nothing of our disputes and contestations thereabouts Aug. contra Julian Pelag Nullas nobiscum vel vobiscum amicitias attenderunt c. They were neither in friendship nor in community with us or with them who in this age are of a contrary opinion to us they were neither angry with us nor them neither did they pity either of us but what they found professed in the Church they faith fully preserved what they learned they taught and what they received from their fathers they delivered unto us their children and undoubtedly Survey of the pretended discipline as a learned man of our Church observes they that contemn the learned Fathers that went before them do but open a gap to their own discredit making way thereby to be contemned themselves by all those that shall come after 4. We cannot but reasonably imagine that those holy and learned persons who lived nearer the Apostles times should proportionably know better the Apostles meaning in their writings and the doctrine they preached then any of us who live so many hundred years since Iren. l. 3. ch 4. Therefore saith Irenaeus who was the Disciple of Polycarpus the Disciple of St. John Where any question ariseth and the holy Scripture as 't is too common is so perverted Vinc. Ler. as to be made speak for both sides whither shall we have recourse for satisfaction but to the ancient Churches of Christ in which the Apostles converst from thence to hear what the truth is viz. Quid Apostoli quid primi fideles quid eorum successores c. what the Apostles what their Disciples and successors what the primitive Saints and Martyrs Councels and Fathers have received taught and delivered unto others For what came the word of God our from you or came it unto you only 1 Cor. 14.36 Since the Word of God comes not first to us but by and from the Church it is delivered it followes that the sense and meaning of Gods word must not spring from our own heads but to be by and from the Church delivered together with the word The learned Doctor Whittaker in his disputes against the authority of the Church Whit. de sac Q. 3. con 1. c.
to those times to that age of the Church and to some particular persons and are not at all appliable to the Church and people of Christ in these times or to any persons amongst us Thirdly examine diligently the phrase and manner of speech whether it be plain or Metaphorical literal or allegorical a true history or a parable only For many things are spoken in the Word by way of type figure allegory parable and the like which if we should apply in the plain and literal sense would prove strange monstrous lies and contradictions which God forbid any man should be so blasphemous as to impose on the Spirit of truth and wisdome Fourthly examine diligently what agreement every text of Scripture hath with other and receive not easily and slightly the seeming sense of any text without comparing the same with its parallel texts For many things seem to be positively asserted in some places of the Word of God which yet are directly contradicted in others one place therefore is so to be compared with and interpreted by another that the one do not obscure or any way cloud the truth of the other Fifthly examine whether that which we conceive to be the sense of this or that Scripture be agreeable to those Articles of Christian faith contained in the Apostles Creed that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or form of sound words in faith we must 2 Tim. 2.13 Jude v. 3. hold fast that model of faith once given to the Saints for which we must contend and consequently receive no private sense or interpretation of Scripture that is contrary thereunto 2 Pet. 1.20 remembring that no Scripture is of any private interpretation 1 Cor. 14.32 but that even the Spirits of the Prophets themselves are subject to the Prophets Sixtly examine what we conceive to be the sense of the Spirit in the Word by the rule of that law written by the singer of God in two Tables of stone as a lasting square according to which to regulate all our actions and consequently all our conceptions and opinions from whence our actions flow The rule of obedience or that all perfect rule of Charity Rom. 13 1● which is the fulfilling of the Law is an infallible rule of trial of the spirits whether they be of God or no Hereby saith the Apostle we are sure we know God if we keep his Commandements he that saith I know God and keepeth not his Commandements is a lyar and the truth is not in him 1 Joh. 2.34 1 Joh. 2.34 It is not the Spirit of truth but the spirit of error if it oppose or deny or any way impede and hinder our obedience to the Laws of God For saith the same Apostle again He that keepeth his Commandements dwelleth in him 2 Joh. 3.24 and he in him and hereby we know that he abideth in us even by that Spirit which he hath given us even by the spirit of obedience to the Commandements of God So that even from hence 't is clear that both to have the Spirit abiding in us and the way to know we have him also and not a false counterfeit lying spirit is if thereby we be mov'd and enabled to keep Gods Commandements This is the very rule our Saviour himself prescribes to examine his own doctrine thereby Joh. 7.17 Joh. 7.17 If any man will do his will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self And this is the first general rule of tryal of the Spirits even the Word of God A second rule according to which to try the spirits whether they be of God or no is by the fruits of the Spirit and 't is the rule our Lord himself hath given us to know them by Mat. 7.15 Mat. 7.15 Beware of false Prophets which come to you in sheeps cloathing but inwardly they are ravening wolves Beware of false Prophets for many such are gone out into the world who in respect of their exteriour dress and outward appearance so plausible are their pretences so spiritual are their expresions so much of the language of the Spirit and Scripture phrases flow from them that you would take them for the true sheep of Christ and undoubtedly to belong to his fold and yet for all this inwardly really and truly they are wolves in sheeps cloathing limbs of Satan deceiving and devouring the souls of the simple But by their fruits you shal know them which is confirmed by an apt similitude Mat. 7.16 vers 16. Do men gather grapes of thornes or figs of thistles q. d. No man can be so foolish as to expect this but every tree whether it be good or whether it be bad bringeth forth fruit suitable to its good or bad nature So every good tree bringeth forth good fruit and a corrupt tree bringeth forth evill fruit nor is it possible it should be otherwise A good tree cannot bring forth bad fruit neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit even so false Prophets cannot bring forth the fruit of good true wholsome sound doctrines and religious manners So Menander 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 No man being good in himself produceth evil actions on the other side saith Antoninus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. He that will not have a wicked man to commit wickedness is like unto him that will not have a fig-tree to bring forth figs 'T is then an infallible tryal of the spirits whether they be of God or no by the fruits they bring forth The fruit of the Spirit viz. which is of God Gal. 5.22 23. is love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance The first of these fruits and the fairest too even of largest extent and most lasting which this tree of life brings forth is Love even the love of God above all and of our neighbour as our selves This therefore must needs be an infallible touch-stone to try the spirit of truth from the spirit of error for the spirit of truth is the very spirit of love and that first in respect of himself being that essential love and love-knot of the Father and the Son And secondly in respect of us being that sacred vinculum that invisible chain which unites us unto God by faith which worketh by love Gal. 5 6. and which unites one to another by charity peace amity the inseparable fruits of a true faith So that the Spirit of God is vinculum unitatis both in respect of his person and office and that 3 waies First he is the bond of unity betwixt God and God Secondly betwixt God and man and Thirdly betwixt man and man therefore call'd the unity of the Spirit Eph. 4.3 The devil on the other side Ephes 4.3 is of a quite contrary nature as being the author fautor and fomentor of all division He divides and separates man from God by sinfulness and error and man from man by envie malice hatred strife
1. Cor. 1.24 Joh. 14 6. Joh. 1.5 and the sun of Righteousness Mal. 4.2 The storehouse of wisdome and knowledge Col. 1.19 The only mean of discovering unto us the knowledge of God without whom it is impossible to know God For no man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him Joh. 1.18 Wherefore is he termed the Word of God and the Wisdome of the Father the Way the Truth and the Life but by these and many more expressions besides these to signifie unto us that the knowledge of God and of his holy will is so fully by Christ revealed that here we must now six and not expect any further Revelations or new Lights to be discovered He looks beyond the Moon that looks for Revelations beyond Christ and what already stands upon record to be revealed by him There is no need to be curious after knowledge N●bis ●uri●sitate opus ●●n est p●st Christ●● Jesum nec inqu●sitione p●st ●●angeli●●n Cum ●●●d●●●● nil desider amus ult●a●●de●● Hee n. prius ●●dmus non esse quod ul●ra ●redere de●●amus Tert. de prae advers Haer. c. 8. since the Revelation of Jesus Christ saith Tertul. nor is there need of further search after Truth since we have found the Gospel where we beleeve in Christ we desire not to beleeve any thing beyond this belief for this we believe first of Christ and his Gospel that beyond this there is nothing ought to be believed 9. The Apostles of Christ had the honour after him to receive by immediate Revelation not any new Gospel but the right understanding firm remembrance and powerful publication of the Gospel of Christ All whose epistles and writings are as so many Commentaries and illustrations of the Gospel as the Prophets of old were of the Law And as Moses and the Prophets compleat the old so Christ and his Apostles compleat the canon of the new Testament which was ever received in all ages by the Church of Christ Qu●d prople●ae praec●●az●ve●unt p●rs●●●a Christus Apostoli tradiderūn a quibus ●eel●sia accipiens per universu● mundum sela bene cust●d● as tradidit filiis Iren. l. 5. advers Haer. as the Rule of Faith and summary of divine Revelation So Irenaeus What the Prophets foretold Christ hath perfected and his Apostles have delivered from whom the Church through the whole world dispersed receiving the same hath delivered it to her sons the true Members of the Church Catholick all which must undoubtedly believe and professe with the rest of the family we are built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Jesus Christ himself being the head corner stone Eph. 2.20 And here it cannot be either impertinent or unprofitable to observe in what respects sometimes Christ and sometimes his Apostles are said to be the foundation we are built upon 1. Christ is called the Foundation 1 Cor. 3.11 Primarily as he is the fountain of all Revealed Truths originally they flow from him for no man hath seen the Father but the Son Joh. 1.18 and he to whom the Son hath revealed him The prophets and Apostles are the soundation too Secondarily from and under Christ as his Stewards 1 Cor. 4.1 Ambassadors 2 Cor. 5.20 Workmen together with but under Christ 2 Cor. 6.1 2. Christ is the Foundation as upon whose doctrine and example life and death the faith of the whole Church is setled and their salvation fixed for there is no other name under heaven in whom there is salvation but the name of Jesus Act. 4.12 The Prophets and Apostles are the foundation ministerially as they are the Administrators of this faith and salvation which is in Christ the Prophets more obscurely the Apostles more clearly delivering it unto us Christ is as 't were the acceptable year of the Lord Clem. Rec. l. 4. having his twelve Apostles as the twelve moneths which compleat and fill up the year Christ is Alpha and Omega the beginning and end of all divine Revelation the end of the Law the beginning of the Gospel the Supplement of the Prophets and the whole Tenor of the Apostles preaching even the corner stone in whom both Law and Gospel Prophets and Apostles meet or the centre in whom they are conjoyned And in this center we must fix our faith having found Christ as by his Prophets and Apostles he hath revealed himself unto us Joh. 14.6 we must seek no further He is the way the truth and the life Let us not seek any new waies or new Truths lest being misled by the Spirit of Error we wander in the by-waies of death and ruine Tert. de virg v●land The canon or Rule of our faith saith Tertullian is one alone immovable and not possible to be better framed anew And what Rule this is he sheweth by rehearsing the Articles of the Christian Faith and Irenaeus before his time Pren. advers Haeres l. 1 2. 3. The Church though scattered through the whole world unto the uttermost borders of the earth hath received from the Apostles and their Disciples what to believe The parts of which belief he also writeth the same in substance with Tertullian and thereupon infers This Faith the Church spread far and wide preserveth as if one house did contain them Similiter n. fides nostra Revelationi Apostolis Prophetis factae qui canenicos libros scripserunt non a. revelationi si qua suit alits doctoribus factae Aquin. 1 p. sum q. 2. Art 8. ad s●cund These things it equally embraceth as though it had one common soul one heart and no more It publisheth teacheth and delivereth these things with uniform consent as if God had given it but one only tongue wherewith to speak He which amongst the Guides of the Church is best able to speak uttereth no more then this and lesse then this the most simple doth not utter i.e. when they make profession of their Faith And to conclude this second General Our Faith saith the Schoolman depends and is grounded upon that divine Revelation which those Prophets and Apostles received which wrote the canonical books of holy Scripture and not upon any other Revelation if ever there were any such received by any other learned or holy persons whatsoever Non n. novis Revelationibus nunc regitur c. The Chuch is not now guided by any Revelations but persists and perseveres in those things which the Prophets and Apostles have revealed and delivered unto us who were the Ministers of the word revealed CHAP. VIII Of the necessity of learning as to the understanding of Gods revealed will in his word AS God hath graciously pleas'd in his holy Word to reveal himself unto us The 2. General Deut. 17.19 1 Tim. 4.13 Rev. 1.3 2 Tim. 2.15 1 Tim. 5.17 so he hath commanded us to read study and labour in this word that the light of divine Revelation therein may
1. His written Word 2. Those several means and helps forementioned both divine and humane outward and inward for the right understanding of his Word by the blessing of God and the secret influence of his holy Spirit upon our studies and meditations therein laies himself open to manifold temptations and dangerous seductions of the spirit of error and delusion and as much as in him lies subverts the very foundation of the holy Christian Faith for hereupon these destructive inconveniencies must needs ensue 1. The canon of holy Scripture is transgrest and dissolv'd by the superaddition of new Revelations and the authority of Gods Word is made null and void that must passe for a dead letter when the fictitious dreams and delusions of every idle enthusiastical brain under the mask of Revelations shall be mistaken and miscalled too The quickning Spirit And he that sets up any thing of Religion to the dishonour of holy Scriptures Opta● l. 3. 1. saith the Father he doth adificium de ruina construere erect a building upon the ruines of Gods truth and such a building can be no better but an heap of errors and deceits For what will not he dare to affirm and hold who holds any thing besides or above or but equal to the Word of God for the Rule of Faith Hereupon the Resurrection hath been denied and the last judgement and the necessity of all holy just and good works the necessary consequences of these points of our faith for he that believes not the Resurrection and last judgement Quid boni aut veri what holy Truth will he care to believe or what good action will he make conscience to practise 2. He opposes himself to the doctrine of the universal Church of Christ for 1600 years together who with one unanimous and common consent have received the holy Scriptures as the very canon of Faith without addition or diminution without ever hoping or waiting for any new Revelations to be superadded thereunto and very good reason sure if that dismal curse wherewith the canon of holy Scripture is concluded have any influence upon the mindes of men Rev. 22.18.19 If any man adde unto these things God shall adde unto him the plagues that are written in this book c. 3. And more particularly he makes void all those commandements of God to search the Scriptures to hear read meditate and study and delight our selves in the Lawes of God For all immediate Revelation of Gods will presupposes the knowledge of the truth without any search study c. The contempt or neglect of which duty hath sad and heavie judgements threatned thereunto as Jer. 9.13 c. And the Lord saith Because they have forsaken my Law which I set before them And have walked after the imagination of their own heart I will seed them with wormwood and give them water of gall to drink I will scatter them among the heathen c. with manifold texts to the same purpose both in the old and new Testament as Prov. 13.13 28.9 Psal 81.11 12. Zach. 7.12.13 Joh. 5.45 46. 12.48 4. He makes void and unnecessary the sacred function of the Priesthood or Ministery which God hath in all ages ordained and setled in his Church as to mediate with God for the people so to instruct the people from God And this sacred office God hath both confirmed by miracles and by testimony of his blessings ordinary and extraordinary and guarded the same by many direful threatnings denounced and many heavie judgements inflicted upon such as have or shal sacrilegiously violate infringe or usurp this office or neglect refuse or contemn to hear the word of God in the mouthes of his Prophets and faithful Ministers See amongst many other places Jer. 5.12 c. Because the people belied the Lord and said It is not he when he spake by his Prophet And because they said moreover The Prophets shall become ●inde and the word is not in them Therefore thus saith the Lord Because ye speak this word I will make my words in thy mouth fire and this people wood and it shall devour them And to the same purpose Jer. 6.10 11 12. Mat. 10.14 15. Luk. 10.11 12. 5. All pretence to immediate Revelation lords it over the faith of our Christian brethren For an immediate Revelation commands an immediate belief and blinde obedience without any further fearch or trial at all contrary to those expresse commands 1 Joh. 4.1 Beleeve not every spirit but try the spirits 1 Thess 5.21 Prove all things hold fast that which is good or agreeable to the word of God but reject that which is not so and hold for accursed the publishers and promoters thereof Gal. 1.8 Though we or an Angel from heaven should preach unto you another Gospel besides what ye have received let him be accursed 6. The faith of the Enthusiast if it may be called a faith and not rather an illusion of his fancy is not built upon the same grounds with the faith of Christs Church which is the pillar and ground of truth the Church is built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Jesus Christ himself being the head corner stone Eph. 2.20 i. e. what the Prophets of the Old Testament and the Apostles of the New have revealed to be the doctrine of salvation in Christ is the foundation which the faith of all true Christians is built upon But the Enthusiasts faith is not built upon old but upon new Revelations not upon what is revealed already through the mediation of the Prophets and Apostles and communicated by their successors but upon what shall be immediately revealed from heaven and this groundless ground of faith is opposed to that which is the true ground of faith indeed and made of equal authority therewith so that upon this ground every private mans sayings and affirmations are of as great authority and as much to be regarded as the divinely inspired sayings of the Prophets and Apostles and this must needs be so were there any truth in mens p●etended Revelations for undoubtedly we owe as much faith reverence and obedience to every Revelation from heaven how mean soever the person be that receives it as we do to any part of Gods Word already revealed though by the greatest Patriarch or Prophet that ever lived upon earth 7. All dependence upon new Revelations laies a secret stain of dishonour upon God and this in two respects 1. That God notwithstanding his several methods of divine Revelation by the Patriarchs and Prophets of old by his own Son Jesus Christ and his Apostles in these last daies should yet be defective in making known to his people the waies of his service and of their own salvation 2. All pretence to new lights and Revelations makes God the Father of Lights with whom is no variablenesse or shadow of change to vary and change his minde as oft as the fickle and deceitful mindes of men do alter Nay thus God
Church opposes the judgement of the Catholick or universal Church in point of holy faith this necessarily makes one ingredient in the sin of Heresie for so he or they do not stand upon the rock whereupon holy faith is grounded nor rest on that pillar which upholds the Truth This saith Irenaeus is the way of life meaning the way of the Church and all the rest are theeves and robbers Whosoever he be that will obstinately persist in his own erroneous opinion Haec est vitae introitus omnes a. reliliqui fures sunt latrones Si quis tam obstinatè in suo errore pe●sistat ut universam Christi ecclesiam audire nolit talis juxta Christi mandatum pro ethnico publicano nobis habendus est Irenaeus and refuse to hear the Church let him be unto thee according to the command of Christ as a Heathen or Publican As in the natural body he is accounted a monster rather then a perfect man who hath any exuberant member that is disproportionate and not agreeable with the rest of the members of the body so in the mystical body of Christ he is an Heretique Sicut mensura est unius cujusque partis ita totius corporis quod omnibus suis partibus constat Aug. no orthodox Christian whose particular faith is exuberant and agrees not with the whole body of the Church according to that undeniable axiome Turpis est pars omnis toti non congrua That part is disorderly and sinful which agrees not with the whole whereof it is a part As there is but one faith Ephes 4.5 which is therefore called The unity of the faith vers 13. and though there be several articles or parts of holy Truth which constitute this one body of faith August yet saith the Father Veritas est veritati congrua one truth bears such a proportion with another as is agreeable to the whole so that the whole body of the true faith is like it self in all the parts or particular points thereof even so there is but one body Eph. 4.4 i. e. one Church professing this one faith Vna fides non numero sed genete qua similis in omnibus and though there be many members of this one body yet each true member is so proportionate to the whole as that all makes up but one orderly mystical body of Christ which ought to be as without spot or stain of sin so without the exuberant disorder of error 'T is the end and office of the Ministery to bring all Christians to this pitch of perfection even to be all incorporate as members of one mystical body of Christ by the unanimous acknowledgement of one faith Ephes 4.11 c. He gave some Apostles for the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministry for the edifying of the body of Christ till we all come into the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ that we henceforth be no more children tossed to and fro and carried about with every winde of doctrine by the sleight of men and cunning craftiness whereby they lie in wait to deceive but speaking the truth in love may grow up into him in all things from whom the whole body fitly joyned together and compacted by that which every joynt supplyeth according to the effectual working in the measure of every part maketh increase of the body to the edifying of it self in love 4. The 4. ingredient of Heresie is to hold and maintain an error in faith with frowardness and opposition to lawful determinations For though all Christians cannot perhaps in their judgements submit to all lawful determinations of controversies in Religion yet however these are thereby obliged to a passive obedience to possesse their souls in patience not to oppose the authority and disturb the peace of the Church Remembring 1. That the unity peace and authority of the Church in general is more to be valued then any particular mans satisfaction And 2. That the publique resolution of the Church is to be preferred before any private mans perswasion to the contrary That opinion of S. Cyprians concerning Rebaptization was in him but an error because the Church had not determined any thing for or against it but after the Church had defin'd it and adjudged Rebaptization unlawful Euseb eccl hist lib. 7. c. 2. 't was in all persons that maintained it not an error only but an Heresie To sum up all in few words A man becomes guilty of Heresie 1. By disbeleeving any fundamental Article of Faith or necessary part of saving Truth in that sense as it was evermore received by the universal Church of Christ 2. By beleeving any superstitious Errors or Additions which do vertually and by necessary and evident consequence subvert any article of holy faith or overthrow a fundamental Truth 3. By beleeving and maintaining these or lesser errors then these with perversenesse and obstinacy after sufficient conviction 4. By beleeving and obstinately opposing private opinions in points of faith against the publique lawful Determinations of the Church to the contrary CHAP. IV. Of Schisme the nature and kindes thereof 1. SChism is so called from the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to divide or rent the word is used 1 Cor. 1.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That there be no Schisms or divisions amongst you And because Schism and contention are inseparable twins what therefore in this verse are called Schisms in the next vers 11. are cal'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contentions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That there are contentions amongst you And the better to conceive what is meant by these schisms and contentions 't is exemplified vers 12. One saith I am of Paul another I am of Apollo another I am of Cephas and another will not depend upon any acknowledging neither Paul nor any mortal man to be his Tutor and instructer and he saith I am of Christ Thus the immaculate body of Christ is divided into parties and sects the partakers and followers of which several sects are therefore called Sectarists and Separatists viz. Such as cleave not to the whole body but follow some one part that is broken off and divided from the whole 2. Heresie and Schism in the mystical body of Christ do differ as an inward sicknesse and outward wound in the natural body of man but yet so that there are several internal aswel as external parts and branches of Schism for by how many waies and means communion is maintain'd amongst Christians by so many waies it may be broken and dissolv'd And every breach of communion is a Schism 3. Now the Communion to be maintained amongst Christians is either Internal External The internal communion hath several branches viz. 1. To beleeve and assent to all those saving truths revealed to us by Christ and his Apostles and in all ages of the
such members as are dead by sinfulness or cut off from the body by Schism 5. He cannot be free from the guilt of Schism who doth not heartily desire and fervently pray for the peace of the Church even for the peace 1. of all Christendome in general for the happy knitting together of the broken parts and divided members of this too much disagreeing body and for the peace and prosperity 2. of that particular Church whereof each one is member as Psal 122.6 7 Pray for the peace of Hierusalem They shall prosper that love thee peace be within thy wals and prosperity c. The same Christian duty is commanded also 1 Tim. 2.1 2 3 4 5. As to the parts of external communion 1. 'T is a branch of Schism to reject the ancient Christian Creeds which are no other but those consonant agreeing joynt bodies of the holy Christian faith whereby as by so many ligaments and sinews all Christians are conjoyned as members of the same mystical body being all of one accord and of one minde Phil. 2.2 For it is unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God or the unanimous sincere profession of one and the same Christian Faith whereby we grow up together as one perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ Eph. 4.13 2. To forsake the publique assemblies of our Christian brethren in the publique worship of God is another branch of external Schism and contrary to the rule of the author to the Heb. 10.25 Where he forbids this as he enjoynes the former and that because the one does commonly follow upon the other 1. Therefore he enjoynes vers 23. Let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering And 2. that which would follow upon the transgression of this command not forsaking the assembling of your selves together as the custome of some is vers 25. 'T was the custome of some for fear of persecution and reproach to forsake the publique assemblies of Christians Gloss interlin in loc and of others saith the Glosse upon presumption of their own piety and perfection to separate themselves from the rest of their brethren whom they rashly judged to be sinners and such imperfect defective persons as were unworthy of their society to forsake the assembling of our selves together for either of these causes contracts the guilt of Schism In the latter respect the Novatians separating themselves from the Church of Christ Euseb eccl hist l. 6. c. 33. cal'd themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Puritans saith the ecclesiastical historian 3. And this kinde of Schism consists of two parts 1. To refuse to joyn in the participation of the same Sacraments 2. In the use of the same Liturgies or publick forms of divine worship As to the 1. There is but one baptism Eph. 4.5 or one Sacrament whereby we are engraffed into the body of Christs Church which whosoever refuses or re-admits both the Catabaptist and the Anabaptist makes a breach in the mystical body of Christ So but one Sacrament of our nourishment and growth in grace even that of the holy body and bloud of Christ in communion whereof we being many are one bread and one body for we are all partakers of of that one bread 1 Cor. 10.16 17. Even saith the Father As many grains are incorporate in one bread and many members in one body so the faithful members of Christs Church make up but one bread and body by participation of Christs blessed body and bloud under the sacramental representation of bread and wine Aug. He that contemns or neglects then the use of this Sacrament doth for his part separate and divide himself from the body of Christ wherewith every prudent good Christian desires to be joyned that he may grow into him in all things which is the head even Christ Eph. 4.15 And Sacraments mongst many other holy ends of their institution hath this for one that they are marks of distinctions saith judicious Hooker to separate Gods own people from strangers Hook eccl pol. lib. 5. sect 57. 4. To decline the use and to refuse to joyn in the Church Liturgies or publique forms of divine service such Liturgies being both agreeable to the word of God and to the doctrine and constant practise of the Church in all ages if it be not in it self a branch of Schism 't is the cause and cursed parent thereof For as no form of prayer is the mother of confusion so several forms by persons of the same Church are the means and in-lets of division for whilest one likes this mans way of praying and another likes another mans way one saith I am of Paul and another I am of Apollo c. Therefore to prevent all division in the Church and to keep out all corruptions both in faith and manners and to avoid all ignorant insignificant improper and extravagant waies of expressing our mindes unto God in prayer As also that we might communicate in each others prayers and reap the benefit of each others fervency and devotion of soul in prayer these were the great and weighty reasons wherefore ever a set and standing form of publique prayers hath been prescribed and used in the Church of Christ And when we do consider and remember 1. That God himself under the Law commanded set forms of prayer to be used Numb 6.23 Deut. 20.3 26.3 5. 2. That Moses thanksgiving for that admirable victory given the Israelites against Pharaoh not only stands upon record for a precedent or pattern for the framing of prayers which might be repeated often but also grew afterwards to be a part of the Jewish Liturgy 3. That all the Psalmes are so many set forms of prayer and praise that were used in the Temple 2 Chron. 29.30 although they never had again the same occasions which brought them forth at the first 4. That under the Gospel not only John Baptist first but afterwards Christ himself taught his Disciples a set form of prayer with a positive command when ever they prayed to say Our Father c. Luk. 11.1 2. 5. That Christ himself used a set form in his agony Mat. 26 39. not altering his expressions as if God were pleased with variety of phrases a custome which only serves to tickle the itching ears of men and win popular applause but he went again and prayed saying the same words vers 44. And also upon the crosse he used a set form not of his own framing but used long before in the Church Mat. 27.46 6. That this was the way of the primitive Church as appears form the Liturgies of S. James the Apostle of S. Basil S. Chrysostome c. Hook eccl pol. l. 5. sect 25. And 7. if we consider with the judicious Hooker The irksome deformities whereby through endless and senseless effusions of indigested prayers the worthiest part of Christian duty to God is unsufferably disgraced whilest men are herein subject
to no certain order but pray both what and how they list All these things being seriously considered we must needs say with the same learned author That no doubt from God it hath proceeded and by us it must be acknowledged as a work of his singular care and providence That the Church evermore held a prescript form of Common-Prayer although not in all things every where the same yet for the most part retaining the same Analogie So that if the Liturgies of all ancient Churches throughout the world be compared amongst themselves it may be easily perceived they had all one original mould and that the publique prayers of the people of God in Churches throughly setled did never use to be voluntary dictates proceeding from any mans extemporal wit but such known publique forms wherein all might joyn together in the worship of God according to the Apostles command Rom. 15.6 That ye may with one minde and one mouth glorifie God even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Calvin himself who was furnished with as great gifts for the powring forth of his soul in prayer Dr. Ferns Case as any of those persons that now plead so much for the liberty of their expressions in publique prayer is yet said to have often wished that all the Churches had one and the same publique worship or Liturgie and that upon these reasons The holding of unity in the Church and the excluding of novelty faction and the boasting of gifts 5. To deny obedience to our lawful ecclesiastical superiors whether it be the Church universal or particular essential or representative or whether it be some single superior and this either of divine or of lawful humane institution 't is generally acknowledged by the Fathers to be a branch of Schism S. Cyprian * Filiusimpius qui contemptis episcopis Dei sacerdotibus derelictis constituere dudet aliud Altare Cyp. de unit eccl Hi sunt conatus schismaticerum ut sibi placeant Vt praepositum superb● tumore contemnant Id. ep 65. Vnum scire debes si quis cum episcopo non sit in ecclesia non esse Id. ep 69. Hier. defines a Schismatique To be such a wicked son as contemns the Bishops and forsakes the Priests of the Lord presumptuously during to set up another Altar And again These are the waies of Schismatiques to please themselves and with proud disdain to contemn their Rulers And again This you ought to know Whosoever is not with the Bishop is not in the Church And S. Hierome saith it was the judgement of the whole Christian world totius orbis decreto are the words That for avoiding of Schisms and Heresie it was necessary there should be one Bishop in every Diocesse S. Augustine admonisheth his Christian brethren Nolite mihi resistere Aug. ad frat senn de obed quia omnis potestas à Deo est you are not to oppose or resist me who am your Bishop For all powers are of God whether of Church or Common-wealth and whosoever resisteth the power resisteth the ordinance of God c. Rom. 13. When Samuel the Prophet was rejected of the Jewes from that rule and government he exercised over them the Lord said unto him They have not rejected thee but they have rejected me that I should not reign over them 1 Sam. 8.7 The same thing said our Lord to his Apostles Luk. 10.16 He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth Therefore said S. Bern. Hern. de praec disp tract c. 12. Obedientia quae majoribus praebetur Deo exhibetur The obedience we give unto our superiors is exhibited to God himself and so of disobedience also Therefore we read Deut. 17.12 The man that will do presumptuously and will not hearken unto the Priest or unto the Judge even that man shall die Cavete engo sacerdotes ne aliquis vestrum audeat insurgere contra praepositum As the father goes on in the forementioned place Take heed ye that are Priests Aug. ibid. how you rise up against him that hath the Rule over you For saith he all Ecclesiastical governors are planted in the Church for our good and for the Churches unity whereof our Lord would have us to be very careful lest like sheep without a shepheard we be divided from the unity of the faith by divers errors But to come nearer home Doctor Moulin the son of P. Moulin wrote a book to vindicate the French reformed Churches from being the pattern to any Scottish or English Presbyterians to reject their Bishops where he gives us also the severe censures of Zanchy and Calvin themselves against those that deny obedience to their lawful Bishops Testor me Deo saith Zanchy I protest before God and in my conscience that I hold them no better then Schismatiques that account it a part of reformation in the Church to have no Bishops And saith Calvin They are worthy of any execration that will not submit themselves to that Hierarchy which submitteth it self unto the Lord These censures he cites out of the Tracts de reformat Eccl. Beza himself the great patron of Presbyterian Eldership yet confesseth it to be necessary Bez. cont Sar. Vt Presbyterio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 esset permaneret that one be Prelate over the Presbytery and this not pro tempore but to continue and allowes S. Hierom's Reason why it should be so in Romedium Schismatis for the avoiding of Schism Against these two branches of Schism the holy Ignatius in his Epistle to the Magnesians gives them this twofold counsel and advice As Christ saith he did nothing without his Father being all one with his Father Ignat. epist ad Magn. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so neither must you do any thing without your Bishop 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but assemble together and have but one prayer common to you all A fifth branch of Schism followes upon these two last Festa ecclesiae recte colunt quise filios ecclesiae esse cognoscunt Aug. de Tem. ser 253. which is to reject and profane those publique times of Gods service whether festival or fasting observed by the Church of Christ in all ages concerning which I shall only remember the words of S. Aug. They do rightly observe the festivals of the Church who acknowledge themselves to be faithful and loyal sons of the Church and not Schismatiques CHAP. IV. That Heresie and Schism are the mutual causes each of other AS Heresie and Schism like abortive twins are in many particulars coincident and cleave together like Jacob and Esau the one holding fast by the heel of the other so they are mutually the productive causes and cursed parents each of other For 1. Heretical errors in points of faith do easily produce a Schism and cause a separation amongst Christians in the use of the same Sacraments and of the same publique worship at the same time and place For difference in opinions breeds difference in affections and
and presumptuously affirmed 'T is ever the custome of Heretiques to alledge holy Scriptures in a wrested and perverted sense making those sacred writings like a nose of wax turning and writhing them to this and to that and to every sense that best agrees with their own vain imaginations Aliter Photius aliter Novatianus c. One Heretique understands it this way and another diversly from him and a third distinct from both and all put another sense upon the words of God then ever his holy Spirit intended therein Pro voluntatis sue sensu Hilar. Vinc. Lir. adversus Har. c. 1. Hil de trinitate l. 2. The sense of their own minde and spirit not of Gods Spirit they put upon the Scriptures which occasion'd that complaint plaint of S. Hierome 'T is only the Art of understanding Scriptures which all persons challenge to themselves So●a scripturarum a●s est quam sibi passim omn●s vendicant Hanc gariula avus hanc delirus senex hanc so phista verbesus hanc universi presumunt lacerant docent ante quam discant Hier. ad P●l l. 1. c. 6. This the pratling old wise and the doting old man and the wrangler full of words this all men presume unto and upon presumption of their interest therein they tear and wrest and abuse it at their pleasure presuming to teach the doctrine thereof before they have half learned it As in the natural creation of children too many are the issue of lust and wantonness nor is it considered when they are begotten how they shall be kept even so 't is in the spiritual brood of Heresies pride covetousness and ignorance begets them before the authors know how to maintain them but as children when they are once gotten must be kept though they pinch upon their neighbours so this heretical crew rather then the opinions which are the issue of their pride and vanity should die they will steal the sincere milk of the word to nourish them or in language of another strain rather then they will submit their vain imaginations to the truth and true meaning of Gods word the truth of that must submit to their imaginations And this Videtis id vos ag●re ut omnis scripturarum de medio auferatur authoritas suus cuique animus author sit quid in quaque scriptura probet quid improbet id est non ut authoritati subjiciatur s●ripturarum ad fidem sed ut sibi scripturas ipse subjiciat non ut illi ideo placeat aliquid quia hoc in sublimi authoritate scriptum legitur sed ideo recte scriptum videatur quia hoc illi plac●●t Aug. cont Faust saith the Father is the way to rob the Scripture of its authority whilest every mans own imagination must tell him what it allowes and what it disallowes this is not to be subject to the authority of the Scriptures but to make the Scriptures subject to our imaginations so that therefore this or that is not acceptable unto them because 't is written in the word of God but therefore 't is well said or written there because 't is acceptable unto them The great danger they incur who put another sense upon the holy Scriptures then Gods holy Spirit ever intended therein is represented to us by the strange fire which that rebellious crew under the conduct of Corah Dathan and Abiram offered up unto the Lord there came out a fire from the Lord and devoured the presumptuous sacrificers Numb 16.18 35. So those unlearned and unstable souls which wrest the Scriptures do it to their own destruction 2 Pet. 3.16 As a remedy to prevent so great mischief the ancient Fathers thought it meet to provide saith the reverend Andrewes that they who took upon them to interpret the Scriptures Lat. con● secundum s●ss 11. should put in sureties that the sense they gave of them should be no other then what the Church in former times acknowledged So Vinc. Lirin also By reason of the manifold windings and turnings of the Scriptures Propter tantos tam varii erroris anfractus necesse est ut propheti●ae Apostolicae interpretationis l●nea secundum ecclesiastici catholici sensus normam dirig atu● Vine Lir. advers Haer. c. 2. for the maintenance of several errors 't is necessary to direct the line of prophetical and Apostolical interpretation according to the rule of an Ecclesiastical sense and meanings for Quis unquam Haereses c. saith the same Author Who ever brought in an Haeresie but first he disagreed from the consent of antiquity and of the ancient Catholique Church Et in laqueum sit verbum Dei saith Estius the holy Word of God becomes a snare and a stumbling block to all those who contemning the authority of the Church presume to impose their own private sense upon it And he that obtrudes his private sense of Scripture upon his hearers not only lords it over their faith but over the faith of the universal Church of Christ Estius in Rom. 11.9 nay he makes null and void the authority of holy Scriptures for Scripture is no more Scripture if not rightly interpreted 7. Another general cause of erroneous opinions in Religion is Hypocrisie when men are cold and lukewarm and too negligent in the practise which is the life of Christianity when they receive not the love of the Truth so as readily to obey and practise it then it is just with God to give them up to strong delusions Nay hereby men lay themselves open to the delusions of Heretiques because the excellency of holy Christian truths are not cannot be known but by the practise and experience thereof therefore said our Saviour If ye do his will ye shall know of my doctrine whether it be of God or no Joh. 7.17 So that undoubtedly what ever piety or purity Heretiques may pretend unto yet generally 't is but a meer formal outside a show and shadow of truth but no substantial solid piety or charity having a form of godliness but denying the power 2 Tim. 3.5 For to such who by obedience practise and experience do know and believe the excellency of Truth it is not possible to be seduced and drawn aside therefrom Qu imdiu bona ep●ra sa● imus ipsum lumen ju stitiae ante oculos nosties adaperit veritatem Chrys in Mat. 7. Hom. 19. therefore our Lord cals all false Prophets Woolves in sheeps cloathing Mat. 7.15 that is Nominis Christiani extrinseous superficies meer nominal outside Christians no men so seemingly austere and strict and yet all is but empty appearance of holiness no men assume to themselves more holy titles the Saints the Elect the People of God If they be simple and illiterate persons then they apply to themselves God hath chosen the simple 1 Cor. 1.27 and those that confute them in discourse do it by carnal Reason and the wisdome of the flesh if they be subtil and acute in argumentation and put
A DISCOURSE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT His Workings and Impressions ON THE SOVLS of MEN. With large Additionals 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rectum est Index sui obliqui London Printed by E. Cotes for R. Royston at the Angel in Ivie-Lane 1656. To the truly vertuous The Lady Rebecca Bindlosse Madam THis following Discourse of the Holy Ghost his impressions and workings on the soul of man was first intended only for private satisfaction to your Ladiships pious desires That being well grounded in the Orthodox Doctrine and having a right understanding of the true Spirit of God it might be as an impregnable bulwark against so many suggestions and temptations of the false and deceitful spirit For the minde of man being either devoid of the Spirit of Grace and Holinesse or else of a right understanding of the things of Gods Spirit who is the Fountain both of Grace and Truth is too apt and prone to close with the suggestions of the evil spirit who is the author and promoter of sinfulnesse and error Never Age produc't so many spiritual Monsters as this wherein we live And I think few parts of England be so much infected with them as these Northern parts be They were very impudent and daring when they adventured to tempt your vertuous minde and by inticing words to allure your good opinion of them as full well knowing if they could but have effected thus much to have made you not an enemy to their proceedings though you did not close with them it would have given much lustre and credit to their erroneous Sect But God be praised that you are better grounded then to be proselyted by such Ignoramo's better resolved then to be taken with such shallow delusions which a good Christian with half an eye unprejudic'd may easily see through It is your goodnesse for Bonum quo melius eo communius to desire the publique communication of this short Discourse of the Spirit as a Doctrine both seasonable in respect of the many spreading infectious Errors so much prevailing amongst us and also necessary as an antidote against that contagion which issuing out of the mouth of Hell presumes most impudently and impiously to hide its venome under the name and title of the Holy Spirit I could wish the Doctrine were for this end more fully and satisfactorily cleared to the mindes of men by the Pen of some more Judicious Writer This mean Tract the Author in all humility acknowledges to be guilty of many defects and impertinencies and himself one of the meanest of the faithful and obedient sons of the Church The small acceptance it shall finde in the world will be derived from your white Name and Vertue in which Sanctuary it may escape the black-mouth'd Detractions of the Censorious and rest secure of the good acceptance if not benefit of others May you be every day more happy in the increase of all Christian vertues growing up in the knowledge of God and persevering in the constant Profession of his holy Truth and conscientious practise of the same till you arrive at the Haven of true Happinesse This Madam shall be the constant endevour and is the daily prayer Of your most faithful and affectionate Servant in Christ R. Sherlock ERRATA'S Pag. Lin. Read 1 9 what 7 9 substance 21 20 pastionis 58 9 conservation 74 5 a voice   9 the winde   10 His wil into their hearts 88 2 15 ch 91 17 to be offered 95 13 unlawful 96 17 to become 98 31 world 101 3 when 102 25 reciteth 104 5 our 106 4 unlearned   8 learning   14 who were honoured 107 5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 124 14 watchings 124 35 enmity 127 18 acts 128 11 conscious 145 8 Maximilla 148 5 no need of teaching 156 11 these 158 3 to 171 9 I   8 Levit. 173 22 not necessary 179 19 thus 193 1 to be contentious   30 sick 201 32 Photinus 212 13 by our   18 our 213 5 even 225 34 these 231 15 from 234 18 your The Introduction and general Heads of the ensuing Discourse NO Age hath ever brought forth more pretenders to the Spirit of God then this wherein we live And amongst this Generation there be many so ignorant that they know not what they mean by that Spirit whereunto they so much pretend but blindfolded suffer themselves to be led by they know not whom and with the hoodwinckt Samaritans they worship they know not whom Joh. 4.32 Whose ignorance accompanied with excessive pride of heart which makes their ignorance the greater that through pride they will not know or acknowledge it upon this ground the Devill hath sown his crop and reapt his Harvest even the cursed tares of many and strong delusions for that subtil Serpent full well knows how both easily and powerfully to insinuate his Lyes and Errors into mindes unsetled and not grounded in the knowledge of the Truth So that most truly is that complaint of the Lord by his Prophet Hosea verified of this people Hos 4.6 Hos 4.6 My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge even for lack of what they so much boast of That grand Enemy the Prince of Lyes hath taken them in the very Net themselves have made even in the snare of self-conceited knowledge and holiness whilest supposing themselves wise they became fools Rom. 1.22 And pretending to the Spirit of God whom they rightly know not they are intrapt by the Spirit of Error and miserably seduced to the ruine of their souls Hence it is chiefly though not only hence through ignorance intermixt with pride that the Devill hath made so great a harvest of tares overgrowing and choaking the pure wheat of Truth Mat. 13.25 No Age of the Church having ever been so fruitful in Heresies and Errors whilest the ever blessed Name of the Spirit of God is abused by persons most impudently pretending to him that yet remain ignorant of him for had they known this Lord of life it had not been possible the spirit of Delusion could have prevailed so far with them as to infix so many Lyes Impostures and Blasphemies upon his score as therefore Saint Paul directed the Athenians to the knowledge of the true God Act. 17.23 whom they ignorantly worshipped and so their pious intentions through ignorance degenerated into grosse Idolatries so it cannot but be an office both seasonable and charitable as also of great benefit and present necessity plainly to set down and deliver the true Orthodoxal Doctrine of the Holy Ghost his Impressions and Workings on the souls of man that so men may have a right understanding of this ever Blessed Person of the the God-head so much mistaken and his Sacred Name to the high offence of his Majesty so much profaned by impudent and false pretences The Doctrine of the Holy Ghost in respect both of his Person and Office is by the Nicene Creed thus clearly and fully set down I beleeve in the Holy Ghost
dares take upon him to raise forces to impose taxes to levie contributions to punish offenders or the like but such only who are designed thereunto and have commission for it And yet in the matters of God in the dispensation of his holy mysteries every man will be a Priest and a Prophet as if it were pardonable only to be disorderly in Religion or as if God would accept a lawless liberty in those things wherein the frailty of man is most apt and too likely to miscarry and wherein also the miscarriage is most fatal and ruinous to the soul for ever In Religion it is true that all have a common interest and so they have in the Lawes also and by the same reason that the one by the same the other also may be dispensed by all men promiscuously without order without distinction which must necessarily end in confusion 'T is true that under the Gospel all true believers are Priests unto the Lord and have spiritual sacrifices to offer 1. Pet. 2.5 9. But it is one thing for a man to be a Priest to himself another thing to be so to the whole Church Revel 1.6 Rom. 12.1 It is one thing to offer up our selves a living sacrifice acceptable unto God another thing to represent the Congregation unto God All ordinary and private devotions may and are to be done by private persons but the solemn ritual and publick Worship of God must be left to the publick Minister There is no good man but wisheth with Moses I would all the Lords people were Prophets and that the Lord would put his Spirit upon them Numb 11.29 Numb 11.29 But it is one thing to be qualified as the Prophets of the Lord another thing sacrilegiously to invade their Office Being qualified they may do the Office of Prophets privately to themselves and their family both by prayers for and with them and also by teaching and instructing them But in Gods house and in the presence of the whole Congregation to dispense the sacred mysteries of Salvation is only peculiar to the Stewards of his house nor may others presume to intermeddle therewithall Ac primo quidam a statu ante legem a statu sub lege à statu sub gratia semperenim reperio certa hominum genera fuisse à deo ad hoc officium delecta non autem licuisse cuiquam se obtrudere Zanch in 4. Praec Card. Polus l. 1. ad H. 8. If we search into the state and condition of the Church from the beginning of the world to this very instant of time we shall finde That both before the Law under the Law and under the Gospel also there were ever a certain select chosen sort of men saith the learned Zanchy design'd for the office of the Priesthood and that it was not lawfull for every one that list to thrust himself into the execution of this sacred function The first priest we read of that is so called is Melchisedech of whom the holy Scriptures affirm that he was without father without mother c. Heb. 7.3 His original being unknown by reason of his antiquity And so saith a learned man of the Priesthood The antiquity of this great calling is so great that it cannot be found out nor can we finde its off-spring but with the first rising and being of a Church upon the face of the earth No man taketh this honour to himself but he that is called of God as was Aaron Heb. 5.4 who was called of God but consecrated by Moses agitatus à Deo consecrationis principe saith Dionysius Exod. 28.1 2. God was the principal Author and Moses the Minister of his Consecration Heb. 5.5 so likewise Christ did not glorifie himself to become High Priest but be was personally chosen and sent or in his own language sealed of the Father Joh. 6.27 and sent into the world that is ordained to be Priest and Prophet of the world The Apostles of Christ received their Commission from him Mat. 28.19 Go ye therefore and teach all Nations Mat. 28.19 baptizing c. And that we might understand that they had by virtue of this Commission power to Commissionate others to be their successors in all succeeding Generations of the Church it followes And lo I am with you untill the end of the world with you your selves until you have fulfilled your course and served your own Generation and with you in your successors untill the end of the world and more plainly in those other words of their Commission Joh. 20.21 Joh. 20.21 22 23. 22 23. As my Father hath sent me so send I you and when he had said this he breathed on them and saith unto them Receive ye the Holy Ghost whose soever sins ye remit they are remitted unto them and whose soever sins ye retain they are retained which spiritual power and spiritual gifts communicated to the Apostles was not sure to expire with them except ye will also say all Ecclesiasticall Discipline and Government ended with the Apostles and that all scandals and offences heresies and errors sins and vices are left remediless and without cure or at least without a Physitian to prescribe administer and apply to wounded Consciences and sin-sick souls their proper salve and medicine As my Father hath sent me so send I you and as I have sent you Act. 14.23 Titus 1.5 so you are to send others and this we read they did They ordained Elders in all Churches and gave Commission to whom they ordained to Ordain others The Ordination was theirs but the power was from above and so the Apostles themselves acknowledged in the very first instance of Ordination when they chose Matthias in the room of Judas They prayed saying Thou Lord shew whether of these two thou hast chosen Act 2.24 Act. 2.24 God chooses and man ordains God cals the person to the Office and man instals him therein The power is Originally from God as the Fountain but conveyed through the Ministry of man as the Conduit All power is given unto me Mat. 28.18 19. both in Heaven and in Earth Go ye therefore c. But because there is no man how sacrilegiously soever he invaded the Ministerial Office but will pretend a call and a power from God thereunto and he that is most bold and forward to publish his follies in this kinde is also apt to mistake his boldness for a call from God he may fancy a call from above when it is only a noise in his own head or a deceitful eccho of his own heart therefore we must know this call from God to so high and honourable an Office as to be ordained for men in things pertaining to God is either extraordinary o● ordinary the first beginning of a lasting necessity is extraordinary and 't is made ordinary in succession and by the lasting continuation of a fixed and determinate Ministry as Adam at the first was extraordinarily formed
qualifications To instance in some particulars First It is a truth by the Spirit of God both foretold promised and performed That the actings and impressions of Gods Spirit upon the mindes of men are both more strong and frequent as also more general and common under the Gospel then they were under the Law That the gift of the Ministry it self is dilated being not limited to the single Tribe of Levi but all men of what quality soever have a title thereunto meaning Genera singulorum not singula generum that is men of all sorts and kindes not all of all kindes but hereupon to make void pull down and level with the undistinguisht multitude the high and solemn order and offices of the Priest-hood instituted by God himself both under the Law and under the Gospel for a people to snatch the Divine Oracles from the lips of the Priest and presume to teach their Teachers to invade the chair of Moses and offer incense with unhallowed censors for private persons to assume the publique administration of Ministerial Offices without a lawful Call and due Ordination thereunto though they may be otherwise qualified with knowledge and piety These are false glosses imposed upon the former truths by the Spirit of lies Tares fowed by the Enemy of mankinde amidst the purer wheat And that 1. To the high dishonour of God and profanation of all that is religious and sacred 2. To involve the Church of Christ and bury it in the rubbish of confusion and disorder 3. To take away those bounds and limits distinguishing Priest from people which all Nations Jewes and Gentiles all Ages of the Church both Ancient and Modern have kept firm and inviolable 4. To pull down heavy judgements upon the heads of all such sacrilegious Usurpers and Invaders of Divine Rites 2 Sam. 6 6 7. 2 Chron. 26. 16 c. 2. It is an impression of Gods Spirit upon the soul of man to wait and depend upon God for spiritual wisdome knowledge Prov. 3.5 c. and not to lean to our own understanding or trust too much to our own wit judgement reading learning Prov. 2.6 or the like as knowing full well That the Lord gives wisdome and from him cometh knowledge and understanding But hereupon either to despise or neglect those waies and means and helps which God in his merciful providence hath afforded us for to attain wisdome c. as the study of Tongues and Languages Arts and Sciences the reading and distinctly weighing the Discourses of the learned and to depend upon immediate Revelation and Infusion of such gifts from Heaven as if they should drop upon our barren hearts as did the Manna in the Wildernesse upon the Tents of Israel out of the clouds and by miracle this is a false gloss which the spirit of delusion puts upon the former truth thereby to inveigle us 1. To tempt the good Spirit of God 2. To be exposed and laid open to seducing spirits 3. To enshrine Lady Ignorance again as the Mother of Devotion which all men know but who are blinded with ignorance to be the Dam of superstitions errors and confusions 3. Rightly to beleeve in the Son of God as the mean of our justification here and ground of our hope of salvation hereafter this is an impression of Gods Spirit on the soul of man and in respect hereof we are said to have the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 2 Cor. 4.13 We having the same spirit of faith according as it is written I beleeved therefore have I spoken faith as it is doctrinal being a spiritual gift and reckoned amongst them 1 Cor. 12.9 And as it is practical 1 Cor. 12.9 being a grace or fruit of the Spirit and reckoned amongst them also Gal. 5.22 Gal. 5. 22. But now to mingle and divide and as it were to cut asunder this true Evangelical Faith as it stands full and intire in all its integral parts both of doctrine and practice so as to be vainly pust up with a conceit of being ingraffed into Christ and thereby to be justified here and sure of heaven hereafter whether we live according to the rule of Faith and in obedience unto the Gospel of Christ or no to define and measure our Faith not by the sacred acts thereof commanded which is called the righteousnesse of Faith but by our own too too credulous fancies and apprehensions Rom 10.6 as if it were no more to be in Christ but presumptuously to pretend unto it and impudently without just ground to believe it This surely cannot be that true Evangelical Faith whereunto so many promises are annext but a false glosse which the spirit of Error hath put thereupon thereby 1. To puffe up the hearts of too too credulous men with spiritual pride and presumption and make them swell with the empty conceit and airy fancy of their own happy and eminent state and condition when there is no such matter And 2. To inveigle men to neglect the use and practice of Christian graces those fruits of the Spirit which are as it is already said the very life and soul of Christianity and consequently the way to heaven if ever we mean to arrive there 4. It is an impression of Gods Spirit on the soul of man To be zealous for the Lord of Hosts that is to be exceedingly fervent and forward 1 King 19 1● earnest and desirous by all possible waies and means to advance the religious worship and service of God but to be so factions and forward so fiery and furious as by any illegal extravagant and disorderly means to advance the truth it self much lesse to set up any private opinions in relation to Gods Service which have not been semper ubique ab omnibus Vincen●● the three rules of Catholick Doctrine and Worship to be generally and for the most part of the Primitive times at least of all persons at all times and in all places received and not now and then here and there by hereticks and schismaticks only introduc'd I say to be zealous for such pieces of Religion Doctrine and Worship and that per fas nefásque through just or unjust means by right or by wrong to endevour the advancement thereof this is not true zeal but a false gloss which the Devil puts thereupon even through the violence of this distempered heat 1. To divide separate and break men into sects factions and parties that they might so elash together to the ruine of each other And 2. To inveigle men into conspiracies seditions and rebellions against their Governors The like may be observed of zeal for the conversion of a sinner and bringing souls into the obedience of Christ the more zealous and active diligent and industrious any man is herein with the more fire of Gods Spirit no question he is endued But withall observe that to be active and zealous to seduce and deceive to inveigle and draw men aside into false and
2. Du●l adv●●s Staplet as it is by some Romanists preferred before the authority of holy Scriptures doth yet acknowledge these four offices in the Church in order to the Scriptures 1. That the Church is the Register and conserver of the Scriptures 2. The Judge both to discern and define what Scriptures are Canonical and what Apocryphal 3. To be the promulgator or publisher of them to all its members the people of God where ever dispersed over the face of the earth And 4. To be the interpreter and expounder of them and in these respects to contemn or neglect the Ministry and Testimony of the Church is the way to erre from the faith saith he to rush into certain destruction And in these cases I may very well adde the words of our Lord He that will not hear the Church let him be unto thee as a Heathen or a Publican Mat. 18.17 CHAP. XII Three inferences hence appliable to the general subject of the whole discourse ANd now if we lay all these together The knowledge of Tongues and Languages of History and Antiquity of Arts and Sciences as Rhetorick Logick natural and moral Philosophy of the Analogie of the true Faith and of the Doctrine of the Church Councels and Fathers all which do appear necessary to the right understanding of holy Scriptures we may very well hence infer 1. That the work of the Ministry in the interpretation of the Scriptures is not so slight and easie a business as too many persons now a daies make of it And they who can so easily run from the plough to the pulpit and from the meanest trades and employments of the world to intermeddle with the most sublime and celestial mysteries of godliness who pretending to the Spirit and yet have not these gifts of the Spirit and to divine Revelation being altogether devoid and destitute of the means thereof do thereby become vain in their imaginations liable to strong delusions giving heed to seducing spirits and doctrines of Devils and that for want of learning which they do therefore despise only because they want it they do pervert and wrest the Scriptures to their destruction 1 Tim. 4.1 And 2. That 't is not immediate Revelation we must depend upon for the right understanding of holy Scriptures since these several parts of what is called humane learning hath appeared necessary thereunto for otherwise 't was in vain that 1. The Apostles of Christ which at the first were illiterate should be extraordinarily and miraculously endued with the gifts of learning 2. That such persons should be called both ordinarily and extraordinarily to the Prophetical office as were eminent for learning and knowledge not immediately infused but by their studies and industry and Gods blessing thereupon acquired 3. That it were also in vain we should be commanded to hear read study mediate seek search and dive for knowledge 4. That in vain also hath God of his great mercy afforded us the writings directions and instructions of holy and learned men in all ages 'T is an undeniable truth that Deus natura nihil faciunt frustra There are no arts of the divine Providence useless and unprofitable But as God of his great mercy is never wanting to give what is needful so of his great wisdome he is never lavish in giving more then is needfull Vnumquodque propter operationem suam God hath made all things for their uses every book and every writing of the learned orthodox and holy and every tongue and every science in every such book is for the manifestation of some truth and the profit of some soul That I am sure is the end of Gods Spirit thereby what ever may be the end of mans For the manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withall 1 Cor. 12.7 3. And thirdly we may very well hence infer also that 't is an over bold rash and saucy presumption in any persons of what quality or breeding soever to assume the office of Priesthood and start up preachers of the Gospel being not first well studied and endowed with the several qualifications of learning and knowledge requisite thereunto Adde hereunto the dignity of those precious jewels committed to their charge viz. The immortal souls of men which are of so great value before God as neither gold silver nor any corruptible thing could redeem them but the bloud of Christ the eternal Son of God 1. Pet. 1.18 as a lamb without blemish now that which cost our Redeemer so dear and is designed either to eternal happiness or eternal misery according as 't is more or lesse wisely and carefully ordered requires surely such a guide and pastor as is not only wise learned and discreet but also vigilant careful and conscientious Under the Law how unwilling was Moses to be sent on the Lords message though he was a learned man Exod. 3. and so was Jeremy also I am a childe and cannot speak Jer. 1.6 And many others cautious of their own weaknesse and of the great abilities required to the execution of so great a function have more safely declined then arrogantly assumed the same Greg. de cura past l. 2. c. 7. Hinc quique praecipites colligant c. from hence all forward novices may observe how great a guilt of sinful presumption they contract who set up themselves to be teachers of others whilest they have yet need to be taught themselves since that yet holy men of God were afraid to undertake so weighty a calling even when God himself called and commanded them thereunto Under the Gospel Christ himself who is the word of God and the wisdome of the Father would not preach till he was 30. years old Vt vim saluberrimi timoris Greg. ibid. c. That he might infuse the vertue and efficacy of wholsome fear and caution into the hearts of the over forward since he who could not erre in his preachings would not yet preach the waies of perfection and felicity till he was of perfect age The Apostles of Christ notwithstanding that they were conversant with Christ all the while he continued preaching the Gospel upon earth daily heard his heavenly Doctrine as it distilled from his own mouth and saw the miracles he did for the confirmation thereof and though they were endued in some measure with the gifts and graces of the Spirit before his ascension For he breathed on them c. Luk. 24.45 He opened their understandings to understand the Scriptures yet all this was not thought sufficient to preach and open the mysteries of the Gospel to the world but they were forbidden to do it till they received additional gifts of learning and knowledge from above Luk. 24.49 Tarry you at Hierusalem till you be endued with power from on high Gloss ordin in Loc. Vt exemplum sequentibus daretur c. Giving example to all posterity that no weak and illiterate persons wanting the gifts of Tongues Arts c.
is made to speak things quite opposite and contrary to himself whilest the several conceits secret suggestions and whispers of mens hearts which are as numerous as the sand and contrarious as light and darkness are yet all under pretence of immediate Revelation fixed upon God who changeth not 8. It doth extremely much derogate and detract from the honour of holy Christian Religion to have no better ground and foundation then either the divinity of the Heathens of old or that of the Mahometans which of later times hath so far overspread and swallowed up so many Christian Kingdomes and flourishing Common-wealths in the world and both the one and the other of these not only derive their original but also their progresse successe and present continuance doth depend upon immediate Revelations which no good Christian surely doth doubt to be any other then Diabolical Delusions The Divinity of the Heathens was such as the Priests of their respective Temples and Oracles delivered to the people in their prophetick trances for celestial Responses and divine inspirations And the more subtil and sublime of the heathen Philosophers recommend unto us an Ecstatical contemplation even to the abolition of the understanding and Reason as the highest and most perfect way of divine knowledge Mahomet began with Raptures and extasies and supposed Revelations of Angels He therefore that shall seriously consider the monstrous Idolatries of the one and the horrid Blasphemies of the other will be careful surely how he trusts unto or depends upon immediate Revelations 9. This doctrine of immediate Revelation should it be granted is not safe for sober and peaceable-minded Christians to embrace or depend upon it but is fittest rather for such persons whose destructive plots and designs under the mask of Religion are to dethrone and murder Christian Princes ruine well establisht government and governors both Ecclesiastick and Civil massacre their Christian brethren rob ruine and destroy whatever opposes their designs and private perswasions in point of faith and manners how sacred and useful soever it be such mischiefs and barbarous cruelties when open force is wanting to effect may be and too often have been effected by pretended Revelations and men of ecstatical and seduced fancies who have though they have greatly merited thereby and done God good service by destroying the enemies of his Truth and abolishing Haeresie Superstition c. when as indeed they have made havock of a people more righteous then themselves destroy'd the truth and true worship of God open'd the way to disorder and confusion and this through perjury sacriledge murder rebellion and the breach of all the lawes of piety justice and charity 10. The neglect of the means of saving knowledge viz. learning divine and humane and to depend upon Revelation without the use of such means is the way to advance Lady Ignorance again as the mother of devotion to drown the world in Barbarism Espencaeus to reduce the Church of Christ to that sad condition wherin it was in the ninth age which was called The unlearned and the unhappy age of the Church wherein he that studied Philosophy and the Mathematicks was counted a Magician he that knew the Greek tongue was shrewdly suspected but if he understood Hebrew also he was no better then an Haeretique 'T is observed by the learned both Historians and Divines that all the ten bloudy persecutions of the Church by the Heathen Emperors did not so damage holy Christian Religion as did the subtil underminings of Julian the Apostate Euseb eccl hist l. 10. c. 32. Soz. l. 5. c. 5. Theod. l. 3. c. 7. who fought not against Christian Religion as did the rest of the persecuting Emperors with fire and faggot but by taking from them all offices of dignity and places of preferment all Ecclesiastical promotions and Church priviledges and more especially by putting down and forbidding all Schools of learning for the training up their youth in the knowledge of tongues and sciences that so the light of holy Religion might be lost in the dark of ignorance and decay of arts For Arts and Tongues are the handmaids to holy Religion these as 't were hold the candle whilest the sacred light of Truth is display'd for our direction in the waies of light and life everlasting 11. He tempts the good Spirit of God who expects to receive the knowledge of Truth by immediate Revelation and miracle which by ordinary common and known means is attainable Dominum tentare est novo miraculo velle p●rficere quod aliis rationibus sieri potest so the Devil tempted our Lord to seed himself with the bread of a miracle when Gods ordinary and common providence yeelded bread enough Mat. 4.3 and to cast him self down from the pinnacle of the Temple when the way to come down by steps was plain and easie without any such praecipitation That dependence upon immediate Revelation is unnecessary and consequently uselesse and unprofitable is manifest from what hath been already said from the sufficiency of Gods revealed Truth and is yet further manifest from the vain and bootlesse issue of all such dependence For what sacred Mysteries of holy Religion have been either made known or more plainly unfolded by immediate Revelation in these last daies since the time of Christ and his Apostles many Impostures and lies many Haeresies and errors many Schismes and divisions have fancied Revelations brought forth but that any sound soul-saving truth hath been of later times immediately revealed I could yet never hear or read of by any authentick witnesses and it is most just with God to give men up to the vanity of their minde and to the delusions of their own hearts who thus tempt his holy Spirit by leaving the known and beaten paths of Truth revealed to depend upon what is unnecessary useless and vain and not only so but also 12. Dependence upon immediate Revelations laies us open to the delusions of Satan 2 Cor. 11.14 who transforming himself into an angel of light insinuates his suggestions and diabolical doctrines under the shew and vizard of divine Revelations Many pious men have been deluded by this wile of the Devill and have faln into grosse errors Tert. de anima c. 9. Tertullian though he observed this and saw how grosly many of Montanus sect were cheated into foul mistakes and errors upon fancied Revelations yet notwithstanding so strongly doth the Devil work upon the fancy by the force of this inchantment that he himself was deceived also and became a Montanist being cousened hereunto especially by the pretended Revelations of a holy sister whom he much extols in his tract de Animâ whose pretended vision of the substance of a soul corporally exhibited to her view made him believe the soul to be corporeal and although for this opinion he was not condemned for haeresie neither yet was guilty of those more gross and blasphemous opinions of the Montanists which their fancied Revelations brought forth
yet because more zealously then discreetly he maintained private Revelations the Church of that age seeing the many mischiefs that ensued upon that doctrine severely censured him for it which made him desert the communion of the Catholick Church and set up a congregation of his own which were called from him Tertullianists and are reckoned by S. Aug. amongst his Catalogue of Haereticks A story not much unlike this of Tertullian Jos Acost de temp noviss l. 2. c. 11. is remembred by Doctor Casaubon out of Acosta who records of a learned Doctor of Divinity and a very great zealot who was cousened into strange and blasphemous opinions first by the pretended Revelations of an ordinary woman the story is at large set down in English by the said Doctor in his 3. ch of Enthusiasm with many other remarkable stories of deluded persons under pretence of Revelations Those two great pretenders to Revelation Prisca and Priscilla Montanus his minions were so long cousened with Satanical illusions which they took for divine Revelations that at the last it was revealed unto them that they should hang themselves that they might passe from the miseries of this life to the joyes of the other Euseb eccl hist lib. 5. c. 16. And Theodotus a Montanist had a vision that he should be taken up into heaven and beleeving the spirit of error he was lifted up on high and thence let fall down to the earth again and so miserably ended his life And many of Montanus sect which were great pretenders to Revelation and had withdrawn themselves from communion with the Catholick Church at several times ended their lives in an halter being thereinto incited by the Devil that inspired them who was the father of their Revelations There were another ancient sort of Haereticks in the Church cal'd Messalians and from their assiduity in prayers more then ordinary they were also called Euchites Their tenents were that every one brought into the world with him an evil spirit wherewith they were possest until by earnest prayer the evil spirit being driven away the good Spirit of God did take possession of their souls and after this they needed no more no Sacraments no Sermons no Scripture to make them perfect for they could see the holy Trinity visibly and foreted things to come and all by immediate Revelation But by this pretence to perfection and dependence upon Revelation most of them if not all Theod. Hist eccl prov'd to be relly possest by the Devil as is recorded by Theodoret in his Ecclesiastical History I might stuffe this chapter with multitudes of holy persons that have been cousened with illusive and lying Revelations Katharine a holy woman said it was revealed to her that the Virgin Mother of our Lord was conceived in sin And Briget as holy as she Joh. Franc Picus pretended a Revelation quite contrary to that of the other viz. that the holy Virgin was free from original sin venerable Bede remembers a vision saith Bellarm Bell. de purgat l. 2. c. 7. wherein it was shewed to a certain devout person That there was a fourth place besides Heaven Hell and purgatory not unlike the Elizian fields describ'd by the heathen Poets wherein lived those souls which suffered nothing being not as yet made fit for the beatifical vision and this saith the Cardinal is not improbable since like to this Revelation Dionysius Cart. Suarez Jes● to 4 in Thom. disp 46.4 Num. 9. and Greg. have many others but contrary hereunto saith Suarez another Jesuite Revelationes Bedae Carthusiani c. The Revelations of Bede and Carthusianus are not to be believ'd but in a metaphorical sense S. Augustine in his Confessions Aug. conf l. 10. acknowledges himself to have been mercifully delivered from the curiosity of visions and miracles For it is both a sin and a judgement to be curious in affecting and depending upon such extraordinary means of divine Revelation since the ordinary is not only sufficient but more certain and infallible which is affirmed by S. Peter preferring the Word of God before immediate Revelation by voice from heaven 2 Pet. 1.18 19. And this voice which came from heaven we heard But we have a more sure word of prophesie c. the meaning is that an immediate voice from heaven revealed Christ to be the son of God but the written word of God is a more sure and infallible way of revealing Christ and what 's the reason but that voices from heaven visions and immediate Revelations may be and often are counterfeited by the devil But the holy Scriptures rightly understood are a sure and infallible guide and an unerring rule of Truth as being the Dictates and inspirarations of the Spirit of Truth himself CHAP. XVI Several texts alledged against humane Learning and against the Ministery and for immediate Revelation explained THE tenor of the new covenant recorded Jer. 31.34 and remembred to be accomplisht Jer. 31.34 Heb. 8.10 11 12. Heb. 8.10 11 12. is the chief place alledged against the necessity of Learning or the teaching of man as containing the promise of an immediate teaching from God himself This is the covenant which I will make with the house of Israel after those daies saith the Lord I will put my Lawes into their minde and write them in their hearts And they shall not teach every man his neighbour and every man his brother saying Know the Lord for all shall know me from the least to the greatest for I will be merciful to their unrighteousness and their sins and iniquities will I remember no more In which Text consisting of three verses there is a threefold difference betwixt the old covenant and the new delivered 1. The old Law was written in Tables of stone but the new in the fleshly tables of mens hearts vers 10. I will put my Lawes into their mindes c. i.e. my Lawes under the new covenant shall be more agreeable to the mindes and more approve themselves to the Spirits of men to be the waies of perfection and felicity and consequently shall have a stronger influence upon their hearts then the Laws of the old covenant for that consisted of many beggerly elements many types and figures rites and ceremonies which considered in themselves had no such efficacy to work upon the soul to obey them as the Lawes of the Gospel have therefore the one are call'd carnal ordinances and the other spiritual 2. There was more need of frequent instructions and teachings of the people to keep them up to the observance of those carnal ordinances under the old Law then there is under the new because the doctrines of the Gospel are more plain clear and convincing so that persons of the meanest capacity may understand the knowledge of God which is the meaning of vers 11. They shall not teach every man his neighbour c. Not that there should be no teaching at all under the Gospel but that lesse teaching
Spirit upon all flesh And your sons and your daughters shall prophesie c. This text must be understood with several limitations otherwise many dangerous and false consequences will ensue and such as are contrary to what in other places of Scripture is affirmed I will pour out of my Spirit not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not my Spirit himself for no flesh not all flesh can contain the Spirit of God Ad dive sa dona respicit non ad minutionem substantiae Gloss ordin in Loc. who filleth all the world and containeth all things Wisd 1. But of my Spirit i. e. of his gifts and graces even as beams from the light as heat from the fire or a● streams from this fountain of Truth 2. I will pour out Denoting indeed the liberal donation of spiritual gifts under the Gospel but yet with restriction to certain times and certain persons for not at all times neither upon all persons is the Spirit of God plentifully poured out when the holy Ghost visibly and miraculously descended upon the Apostles there was a plentiful pouring out so that they were filled with the Spirit vers 4. The gift of Tongues the gift of Prophesie to understand and open all mysteries the gift of healing all diseases the gift of miracles c. these and many other gifts were at this time after such a plentiful manner poured forth that there were some reliques some drops of this full measure remaining in the Church for 400 years after Thus it was then and 't was then necessary because the first publication and planting of the Gospel required extraordinary and more ample gifts and abilities for the effecting thereof But we must not look to see those daies of such extraordinary effusions to return again which is intimated in that they are called the last daies in the text as being the last time we must expect any such miraculous and immediate effusions or Revelations till the last day of all even that great and notable day of the Lord come vers 20. Although therefore this prophesie may in some general respects be extended to all the people of God yet particularly and after an especiall manner 't was fulfilled in the persons of the Apostles themselves and by S. Peter 't is here applyed unto them vers 15 16. And undoubtedly 't is high presumption in any man or sect of men to apply to themselves what was peculiar and proper to the divinely inspired Apostles and their hopes must needs be vain who wait for extraordinary inspirations upon misapplied promises and prophesies long since accomplisht Vpon all flesh Which 1. is not to be understood of all men promiscuously but of all such men of all nations and conditions as give up their names to become my sons and daughters to be called by and to call upon the name of the Lord to the hope of salvation for so the prophesie concludes Whoseever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved and so S. Peter concludes his Sermon upon this prophesie Repent and be baptized vers 38. Not all flesh but such only as are capable of the effusions of the Spirit and this limitation cuts off all Turks Jews Infidels Heretiques and Hypecrites for no such flesh have the Spirit of truth and holiness powred on them but are led by the spirit of error and wickednesse 2. All flesh cannot be meant of all Gods people neither as to the gift of prophesie and full understanding of the mysteries of godliness For so all good Christians men and women whether be they young or old children or servants must turn Prophets And all flesh as the reverend Andrewes must be cut out into Tongues which is a monstrous thing to imagine For if all the body of Christ were a Tongue where were the ears c. If all were Preachers where were the Hearers Such were not an orderly Church but a Babylon of confusion where the one heard not another therefore though it be said all flesh 't is not said all your sons and daughters shall prophesie but some shall do it for all some sons and some servants too i. e. some Jewes and some Gentiles some of all nations God gave some Apostles some Prophets c. And these must be of the male not of the female sex they are prohibited 1 Cor. 14.34 Let your women keep silence in the Churches If you demand how is the Spirit then upon all flesh 'T is upon all holy and good Christians but not upon all to prophesie all Gods people have in some measure the Spirit of grace and truth but that does not authorise them presently to turn speakers and teachers of others But doth not the Apostle say ye may all prophesie one by one 1 Cor. 14.31 1 Cor. 14.31 Ye all that is as many as be prophets but to think that all are so the Apostle holds it very absurd demanding with indignation Are all Apostles are all Prophets 1 Cor. 12.29 not so surely the gift must first be had and then letters of Administration taken before the operation or work of Prophesie be lawfully performed 'T is further alledg'd to the same purpose 1 Cor. 12.7 To every man is given the manifestation of the Spirit to profit withall 1 Cor. 12.7 whence 't is infer'd that both liberty of prophesying for the profit of our brethren and immediate Revelations or manifestations of the Spirit to that end are given to every man Answ By every man is not meant every particular person but every man that hath those gifts mentioned in the next words viz. The gifts of wisdome knowledge faith tongues c. hath them for this end given that he may profit and edifie the Church and people of God thereby And they are called The manifestations of the Spirit 1. Because they flow from the Spirit either extraordinarily or immediately as in the firster and primitive times of the Church or ordinarily and in the use of means in all ages since 2. Because by the help of these gifts we are enabled to manifest and clear the truth and true meaning of the Spirit in the word Joh. 1.9 That was the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world Joh. 1.9 From whence 't is urged That every man hath a light within him displayed from Christ the true light of the world whereunto if he give heed he shall not need any outward illuminations or instructions from men for this is the work of Christ himself and himself hath sufficiently done it Answ 'T is with all reverence and thankfulness acknowledged that Christ is the fountain of every perfect illumination Non quianullus est hominum qui non illuminatur sed quia nisi ab ipso nullus illuminatur Aug. Si●ut nemo à seipso esse sic nemo à seipso sapiens esse potest Beda whether natural spiritual or eternal But yet the words are not so to be understood as if every man
who had introduced it into the Church Was not this the gain-saying of Corah who because he could not be high-priest himself he would have all priests equal and no one to lift himself above the congregation of the Lords Numb 16.3 Quosvis ad intellectum pravum intentio perversa non raperet nisi prius superbia inflaret dum enim prae caeteris sapientes arbitrantur sequi alios ad melius intellecta despiciunt atque ut apud vulgus scientiae nomen extorqueant student sum mopere ab aliis rectè intellecta destruere sua perversa roborare Greg. de cur past p. 3. adm 26. And can it be other but the same tumor of Pride and vain-glory that moves men to prefer their own private conceptions and extemporal effusions in prayer before the approved wise and commanded forms of the Church If you run through all the several parts of Heresie and kindes of Schism remembred if you take notice of all the Heresies that have been in the Church this humor of pride Andr. serm of imag Epist 165. observe it who will saith reverend Andrewes hath brought forth most part of the Heresies since the time of the Gospel Mater omnium haereticorum superbia est saith Aug. The mother of all heresie is pride and so they are described by 2 Pet. 2.10 To despise government Diversis locis sunt diversa haereses sed una mater sup●rbia omnes genuit sicut una mater nostra ecclesia catholica omnes Christianos fideles toto orbe diffusos Aug. de Temp. to be presumptuous and self-willed and not afraid to speak evill of dignities and to the same purpose Epist Jude vers 8. And so the Father again There are many Heresies in many places but they have all one common mother which is pride in opposing private perswasions to the publique resolutions and observances of the Church even as there are many faithful good Christians disperst over the face of the earth and these also have all but one common mother the Catholick Church to whom they duly render all obedience and submission 2. A second cause of Heresies and Schisms is covetousness which is directly asserted by the Apostle 1 Tim. 6.10 For the love of money is the root of all evill which while some have cov●ted after they have erred from the faith This was the cause of Balaams error in that he loved the wages of Righteousness The Novatians called themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 h. e. mundos Cathari mundiores se c●teris praedicant qui nomen suum si cognoscere vellent mundanos se p●tius quam mundos vocarent Isid orig l. 8. Est n. qui non amator esset pucuniae nisi per hoc putaret se excellentiorem esse et est qui non amaret excellere nisi putaret per hoc majores divitias habere Aug. the pure and the clean but saith Isidore Had they given themselves their proper character it should have been not mundos but mundanos not the Puritans but the worldlings Covetousness inseparably cleaving to all the members of that heretical crue as Pride was the parent of them Nor can we well imagine whether pride or covetousness reigned more in Montanus Arrius and Novatus when failing in their hopes of Ecclesiastical preferments they became the heads of the several Heresies called by their severall names Nor is it a bare and single convetousness but that which is the worst and most enormous kinde thereof that often breeds and alwaies possesses the spirits of Hereticks and Schismaticks viz. the great and crying sin of sacriledge even a sacrilegious and evil eye after the revenues of the Church sacriledge being one of the Devils most strong and alluring snares whereby he entraps men into Heresie and Schism It is a snare to the man who devoureth that which is holy Prov. 20.25 3. A third cause of Heresies and Schisms is Ignorance And such a kinde of ignorance as under the shew and appearance of knowledge possesseth the minde which makes all persons in an error so stiffe and perverse in the maintenance thereof their ignorance being not easily to be dispel'd by the light of Truth because in what they are most ignorant they conceit themselves most knowing Heretiques in this respect being not unlike persons that are drunken and yet think themselves sober and so become guilty of much wild and exotique demeanor the which not conceiving themselves to be drunk they fondly imagine to be bravely discreet and gallant so these professing themselves to be wise they become fools Rom. 1.21 being wedded to their own opinions how false soever whilest they think themselves wiser then those from whom they ought to receive directions in the waies of Truth Hence 1. ariseth that exorbitant custome of the Heretiques to detract and undervalue their superiors in the knowledge of things divine and boldly to presume to teach their teachers Greg. Nazian ora● at which presumption of a people Gregory Nazianzen being greatly offended useth these words in an oration to them Presume not ye that are sheep to make your selves guides of them that should guide you neither seek ye to overskip the fold which they about you have pitched It sufficeth for your part if you can well frame your selves to be ordered Take not upon your selves to judge nor to make them subject to your lawes who should be a law to you For God is not a God of sedition and confusion but of order and peace Hence 2. they presume to justifie themselves and despise others which none dare presume to do but such as do not truly know themselves Such is that generation who are pure in their own eyes they would never be so were they not ignorant of what followes But they are not washed from their filthiness Prov. 3.12 And hence come Schisms saith a learned man because men do say we are pure and we are holy we are they that sanctifie the impure and 't is our prayers that are effectual with God and for our sakes his blessings descend upon others And upon this ground they separate themselves into sects and parties each one saying of his own sect Ecce habes ecclesiam per totum mundum noli sequi falsos justificatores sed veros praeci pitatores Aug. in Joh. tract 1. Lo here is Christ and lo there Mat. 13. limiting him to a part being ignorant that he hath bought the whole and 02 taken possession also being the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but for the sins of the whole world 1 Joh. 2.2 Whereupon saith the Father Behold thou hast the Church diffused over the whole earth follow not therefore such who falsly justifie themselves and thereby too truly headlong themselves into the gulf of errors Hence 3. they presume to meddle with Mysteries above the sphear of their capacities The sincere milk of Gods word will not serve their turn but they will drink of the wine of celestiall
feared the fabrick of the Bath would fall upon them all that were there since Cerinthus the enemy of truth is in it Iren. ad●●rs Haer. l. 3. c. 3. And Polycarpus who was S. Johns disciple and heard these words from the Apostle meeting with Marcion another Heretique who saying unto him Cognosce nos acknowledge us for the true Disciples of Christ answered I know thee to be the first born of Satan So great fear saith Irenaeus had the Apostle and their Disciples of having any communication with persons that had depraved and corrupted the Truth according to Tit. 3.10 For. nulla ab iis tanta potest esse corruptio Id. l 4. c. 62. quanta est schismatis pernicies saith the same Father Athanasius Apparet Antichristos omnes esse quos constat à charitate atque ab unitate ecclesiae●ecessisse Opt. l. 1. and Epiphanius deny Heretiques nisi homonym●s to be called Christians and Optatus tels us that Schismatiques are the Antichrists spoken of by S. John 1 Joh. 2.18 for so they are described vers 19. They went out from us but they were not of us c. Which is the way of Schism and the description of Schismatiques and he instances in Novatian qui extra ecclesiam consistens inter Antichristos computetur The Samaritans who were Schismatiques from the Jewish Church Addendo autem civitatem Samaritano●um det●re omitti ubi erant schismatici ostendit schismaticos Gemilibus adaequari Cyp. Ep. 76. Id. ibid. the Jewes therefore had no conversation with them Joh. 4.9 And they are reckoned by our Saviour with the Gentiles Mat. 10.5 8. The sad condition of all Heretiques and Schismatiques lying under the guilt of grievous sin and being obnoxious thereby to the judgements of God is frequently also remembred by the Fathers How are they without all hope saith Cyprian and incur Gods heavy indignation to their own ruine who make a Schism the holy Scripture doth declare in the book of the Kings where the ten tribes making a breach and Schism in the Church and departing from Judah and Benjamin the Lord is said to be wroth with the whole seed of Israel And by the example of Corah Dathan and Abiram is manifested and proved saith the same Father in the same place that they are not only guilty of great sin Aug. ●p 164. but liable to grievous punishment who rashly joyn themselves with Schismatiques Illud scelus ad exemplum devitaudi God for the present so grievously punished the sin of Corah and his complices giving us thereby an example saith S. Aug. to avoid the same and shewing that when he spares to punish such persons in this life the greater punishment he reserves for them in the life to come which is affirmed 2 Pet. 2.9 For God will judge such persons saith Irenaeus who make Schisms and divisions minding more their own utility then the Churches unity Qui propter modicas quaslibet causas magnum gloriosum corpus Christi conscindunt who for every light cause and unnecessary scruples rend the great and glorious body of Christ Ir●n l. 4. c. 62. and as much as in them lies destroy the same speaking of peace and charity but making war and division straining at a gads and swallowing the camel Gods service is the way of mans salvation and that nation or kingdome which will not serve the Lord shall penish Isa 6.12 The ground and foundation of Gods service is faith for without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 Now the true holy and orthodox faith is but one Eph. 4.5 therefore termed the unity of faith vers 13. Now he that pleaseth not God by the mean of a true faith doth displease and fight against him by the opposition of a false faith according to our Saviours own rule Mat. 12.30 Ho that is not with me is against me and he that gathereth not with me scattereth abroad And undoubtedly he that is against Christ he that is his adversary makes himsel immediately liable to eternal condemnation which is effected by every one that holds not the unity of the true faith for he that b●leeveth not in me is condemned already Joh. 3.18 In a word as the true faith believed and obeyed is the way of life so a false faith embrac't and followed is the high way of death and ruine as the word of truth is the key of the kingdome of heaven so the word of untruth and error is the key that opens the gates of hell as the first is that true and sacred light which discovers and clears the way that leads to light and life everlasting so the latter is the ignis fatuus the false fire that misguides the wandring souls of men to the confines of that kingdome where dwelleth blackness of darkness of that kingdome where dwelleth blackness of darkness for evermore Of all seducers and maintainers of Heresies the Apostle S. Peter affirms that they bring upon themselves swift destruction that their judgement of a long time lingreth not and their damnation slumbreth not 2 Pet. 2. 1 2 3. CHAP. VIII Rules and directions for the avoiding of Errors in Religion THat we might be the better armed against the assaults of Heretiques and heretical opinions in Religion our Lord and Master hath not only foretold us that false teachers should in all ages of the Church arise and errors spring up with the truth Mat. 24.23 7.15 Mar. 13.21 Luk. 17.23 as tares amidst the wheat but also hath strictly charged us to beware of them not to follow after them nor believe them whose pretences shall be so plausible their outward appearances of holiness so specious and taking and their words and works by the secret and invisible assistance of Satan so extraordinary as that if it were possible they would deceive the very elect The Apostles of Christ treading in the same steps with their Lord and even in their own daies seeing his words fulfilled Gal. 1.7 1 Tim. 5.12 2 Tim. 3.6 7. 4.3 4. 2 Pet. 2.1 2 3. Jude 8. Eph. 4 14. Rom. 16.17 18. 1 Joh. 4.1 and false Prophets arising not only severely inveigh against them but also impose upon us the same strict care and caution not to be seduced by them or like children to be tossed to and fro and carryed about with every winde of doctrine by the sleight of men and cunning craftiness whereby they lie in wait to deceive To yeeld obedience to these several injunctions and to stand fast in the true faith rooted and built up therein against the assaults of false and deceitful workers these following directions will be useful 1. To be well and throughly instructed in the grounds and principles of holy Religion For as no firm and durable building can be raised without a good foundation laid so no man can be built up in the most holy faith and firmly setled in the truth except the foundation and ground-work be first well and surely
merciful to our sins for thy Names sake O be gracious to thine inheritance and let not thine enemies any longer devour and tear thy Church into erroneous sects and factions Remove not good Lord thy candlestick the light of thy truth from amongst us but let us ever enjoy the freedome of thy Gospel the food of thy Word and sweet refreshing of thy Sacraments with all the benefits of the communion of Saints So we that be thy people and the sheep of thy pasture will give thee thanks for ever and will shew forth thy praise to all generations And to this end vouchsafe holy Father to give us a right understanding and firm practical belief of all the points of holy Christian Doctrine with an humble conscientious obedience to all thy most holy Lawes inflame our hearts with the most sacred fire of Charity that we persevering in the love and service of thy sacred Majesty and in mutual love and brotherly kindness each to other thy mercy may in the end receive us from amidst the tumultuous waves of temptations to sins and errors in this life to the haven of eternal security and peaceful felicity in the life to come through Jesus Christ our Lord Amen THE END A Catalogue of some Books printed for Rich. Royston at the Angel in Ivie-lane London and some formerly Printed at OXFORD Books written by H. Hammond D. D. A Paraphrase and Annotations upon all the Books of the New Test by H. Hammond D. D. in fol. 2. The Practical Catechism with all other English Treatises of H. Hammond D. D. in two volumes in 4. 3. Dissertationes quatuor quibus Episcopatus Jura ex S. Scripturis primaeva Antiquitate adstruuntur contra sententiam D. Blondelli atiorum Authore Henrico Hammond in 4 4. A Letter of Resolution of six Queries in 12. 5. Of Schism A defence of the Church of England against the Exceptions of the Romanists in 12. 6. Of Fundamentals in a notion referring to practice by H. Hammond D. D. in 12. 7. Six books of late Controversie in defence of the Church of England in two volumes in 4. newly published The names of several Treatises and Sermons written by Jer. Taylor D. D. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Course of Sermons for all the Sundays in the year together with a Discourse of the Divine Institution Necessity and Separation of the Office Ministerial in sol 2. Episcopacy asserted in 4. 3. The History of the Life and Death of the Ever-blessed Jesus Christ 2. Edit in sol 4. The Liberty of Prophesying in 4. 5. An Apologie for authorised and Set-formes of Liturgie in 4. 6. A discourse of Baptism its institution efficacy upon all Beleevers in 4. 7. The Rule and Exercises of holy living in 12. 8. The Rule and Exercises of holy dying in 12. 9. A short Catechism for institution of young persons in the Christian Religion in 12. 10. A short institution of Grammar composed for young Scholars in 8. 11. The Real Presence and spiritual of CHRIST in the Blessed Sacrament proved against the Doctrine of Transubstantiation in 8. 12 The Golden Grove or A Manual of daily Prayers fitted to the daies of the week together with a short Method of Peace and Holiness 13. The D●ctrine and practise of repentance rescued from Popular Errors in a large 8. Newly published Certamen Religiosum or a Conference between the late King of Engl. and the late Lord Marquesse of Wo●cest concerning Religion at Ragland Castle together with a Vindication of the Protestant Cause by Chr. Cartwright in 4. The Psalter of David with Titles and Collects according to the matter of each Psalm by the Right honorable Chr. Hatton in 12. the fifth Edition with additionals Boanerges and Barnabas or Judgement and Mercy for wounded and afflicted souls in several Soliloquies by Francis Quarles in 12. The life of Faith in dead Times by Chr. Hudson Preacher at Putney in 12. The Guide unto true Blessednesse or a Body of the Doctrine of the Scriptures directing a man to the saving knowledg of God by Sam. Crook in 12. Six excellent Sermons upon several occasions preached by Edw. Willan Vicar of Hoxne in 40. The Dipper Dipp'd or the Anabaptist duck'd and plung'd over head and ears by Daniel Featly D. D. in 4. Hermes Theologus or a Divine Mercury new Descants upon old Records by Theoph. Wodnote in 12. Philosophical Elements concerning Government and civil Society by Thomas Hobbs of Malmsbury in 12. An Essay upon Statius or the five first Books of Pub. Papinius Statius his Thebais by Tho. Stephens Schoolmaster in Saint Edmundsbury in 8. Nomenclatura Brevis Anglo-Latino-Graeca inusum Scholae Westmonasteriensis per F. Gregory in 8. Etymologicum Parvum in usum Scholae publicae westmonasteriensis opera studio Francisci Gregorii in 8. Grammatices Graecae Enchiridion in usum Scholae Collegialis Wigorniae in 8. A discourse of Holy Love by Sir Geo. Strode Knight in 12. The Saints Honey-comb full of Divine Truths by R. Gove Preacher of Henton S. George in Somerset-shire in 8. The Communicants Guide directing the younger sort which have never yet received and the elder and ignorant sort which have hitherto received unworthily how they may receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper with comfort by R. Gove in 8. A Contemplation of Heaven with an Exercise of Love and a Descant on the Prayer in the Garden by a Catholick Gent. in 12. A Full Answer to a Declaration of the House of Commons concerning no more addresses to the King printed at Oxford 1648. in 4. The Royalists Defence printed at Oxford 1648. 4. Mercurius Rusticus or the Countreymans Complaint printed at Oxford 1648 in 8. A Relation of the Conference between W. Land Lord Archb. of Canterbury and Mr. F●sher the Jesuite by command of K James fol. Church Lands not to be sold 1647. in 8. The Countrey-mans Catechism or the Churches plea for Tithes by R. Boreman B D. in 4. The Regal Apologie printed at Oxford in 4. A Fair Warning to take heed of the Scottish Discipline by Bishop Bramhall in 4. Sacrosancta Regia Majestas in 4. printed at Oxford and written by the Archbishop of Tuwn The Christians Directory in 12. The Royal Slave a Play in 4 acted at Christ-Church in Oxford Devotion digested into several Discourses and Meditations upon the Lords most holy Prayer Together with additional Exercitations upon Baptism The Lords Supper Heresies Blasphemy The Creatures The souls pantings after God The Mercies of God The souls complaint of its absence from God by Peter Samwaies Fellow lately resident in Trinity Col. Camb. in 12. Of the Division between the English and Romish Church upon Reformation by H. Fern. D.D. in 12. the second Edition with many Additionals Directions for the profitable reading of the Scriptures by John White M. A. in 8. The Exemplary lives and Memorable Acts of the 9 most worthy women of the world 3 Jews 3 Gentiles 3 Christians by Tho. Heywood in 4. The Saints Legacies or a Collection of Promises out of the World of God in 12. Judicium Universitatis Oxoniensis de Solenni Lege Foedere Juramento Negativo c. in 8. Certain Sermons and Letters of Defence and Resolutions to some of the late Controversaries of our times by Jasper Mayn D. D. in 4. New Ja●ua Linguarum Reserata sive omnium Scientia●um Linguarum seminariu● Auctore Gl. Viro ● A. Comenio in 12. A Treatise concerning Divine Providence very seasonable for all ages by Tho. Morton Bishop of Duresme in 8. Observations upon Mr. Hobbs his Leviathan with some Observation upon Sir Walter Rawleigh's History of the World by Alex. Rosse in 12. Fifty Sermons preached by that learned reverend Divine Jo. Donne in fol. Wits Common wealth in 12. The Banquet of Jests new and old in 12. Balzac's Letters the fourth part in 8. Quarles Virgin Widow a Play 4. Solomon's Recantation in 4 by Francis Quarles Amesii antisynodalia in 12. Christs Commination against Scandalizers by John Tombes in 12. New Dr. Stuart's Answer to Fountains Letter in 4. A Tract of Fortifications with 22. Brasse outs in 4. Dr. Griffiths Sermon preached at S. Pauls in 4. Blessed Birth-day printed at Oxford in 8. A Discourse of the state Ecclesiastical in 4. An account of the Church Catholique where it was before the Reformation by Edw. B●ughen D. D. in 4. An Advertisement to the Jewry men of England touching Witches written by the Author of the Observations upon Mr. Hobbs Leviathan in 4. New Episcopacy and Presbytery considered by Hen. Fern. D. D. in 4. A Sermon preached at the Isle of Wight before his Majesty by H. Fern D. D. in 4. The Commoners Liberty or the English mans Birth-right in 4. An Expedient for composing Differences in Religion in 4. A Treatise of Self denial in 4. by a concealed Author The holy Life and death of the late Vicountesse Falkland in 12. Certain Considerations of present Concernment Touching the Reformed Church of England by H. Fern in 12. Englands Faithful Reprover and Monitor in 12. by John Allington Newly published The grand Conspiracy of the Members against the Mind of Jews against their King As it hath been delivered in four Sermons by John Allington B. D. in 12. White Salt or a sober Correction of a mad World by John Sherman B. D. a discontinuer in 12. The matching of the Magistrates Authority and the Christians true Liberty in matters of Religion by Will. Lyford B. D. and late Minister of Sherborn in Dors in 4. A compendious Discourse upon the Case as it it stands between the Church of England and those Congregations that have divided from it by Hen. Fern. D. D. New A correct Copy of some Notes concerning Gods Decrees especially of Reprobation by T. P. Preacher of Gods Word in Northamptonshire and published to prevent calumny in 4. New The History of the Church of Scotland by Joh. Spotswood Archbishop of St. Andrews in fol. New Phraseologia Anglo-Latina or English Proprieties rendred into proper Latine for the use and benefit of Grammar Scholars in 8. Dr. Cousins Devotions in 12. The persecuted Ministery b● William Langley late of St. Maries in the City of Liechfield Minister in 4.
quantum in ejus dilectione profecerimus God suffers us to be tempted tryed and proved by the lying wonders of false Peophets arising amongst us not that he himself may know what is in us to whom the hearts of all men are naked and bare but that we may thereby know our selves and our own proficiency and constancy to the principles of truth and integrity The very same reason is given by the Apostle for the necessity of heresies 1 Cor 11.19 1 Cor. 11.19 For there must be heresies among you Aug. de civ Dei lib. 18. that they which are approved among you may be known Quolibet errore caecentur c. With what error soever our enemies are blinded or with what wickedness soever they are deprav'd 't is for the proof trial and exercise of the graces of Gods Spirit within us Have they received power to afflict persecute imprison c. 'T is for the trial of our patience in suffering and charity in loving our enemies and praying for our persecutors as becomes the Disciples of Christ Mat. 5.44 Mat. 5.44 Do they only by fair words and cunning speeches distil their false and poysonous Doctrines 'T is for the trial of our wisdome in resisting Gal. 6.1 and beneficence in perswading and endevouring to restore them with the spirit of meeknesse proving whether God will give them repentance to the acknowledgement of the truth that they may escape the snare of the Devil of whom they are taken captive at his will 2 Tim. 2.25 26. 2 Tim. 2.25 26. Secondly Try the spirits whether they be of God or no Try them how but by the revelations of the Spirit which is of God who being the Spirit of truth must necessarily therefore in all his qualifications and impressions be consentaneous and agreeable to himself Aug. Veritas veritati congrua one truth ever holds proportion with another nay all truths are as it were the images and resemblances one of another they are all links of the same golden chain which affixt to the throne of heaven displayes ' its radiant lustre unto the mindes of men upon earth They are all but streams flowing from one and the same fountain the God of truth There is nothing then that we are to receive for truth but what is consonant and agrees with the Spirit of truth which ever blessed Spirit speaking in the Word hath thereby prescribed and given us a sure and infallible rule of truth What the Apostle cals a being filled with the Spirit Eph. 5.18 19. he also cals the dwelling of the word of Christ in us richly which any one that will compare the places may perceive whence it is easie to observe that the Apostle means no other by being filled with the Spirit then to be full of the Word of Christ or to be mighty in the Scriptures and the reason is because the holy Spirit is not only the great Dictator of the Scriptures unto us but also our guide in several respects as to the right understanding of them The first rule of trial then is the holy Word of God in general that 's the grand general rule that 's the great square or level according to which we are to try and examine the rectitude truth and integrity both of the doctrines and opinions of others without and also the impressions and workings of the Spirit within Gal. 1.8 Though we Gal. 1. ● or an Angel from Heaven should preach unto you another Gospel besides that you have received let him be accursed Though we preferring authority of the Gospel they had preached before their own authority the Preachers thereof nay before the authority of celestial spirits Though an Angel from Heaven c. He saw saith the Father Aug. that it might so come to passe that Satan transforming himself into an angel of light and working by his mediators and instruments those deceitful workers who transform themselves into the Apostles of Christ 2 Cor. 11 13 14. might so cousen and deceive them if they did not keep close to the Gospel received which is the true rule of faith therefore he saith another Gospel besides c. praeter any thing that is besides that holds not square and is not level to that rule Qui praetergreditur fid●i regulam non procedit in via sed recedit à via he that goes besides and not according to the rule of faith goes not forward in the way but backward from the way of truth so 1 Joh. 4.8 We are of God speaking of himself and the rest of his fellow Apostles He that knoweth God heareth us acquiescendo doctrinae nostrae cleaves to our doctrine and he that is not of God heareth us not Lyra. neither is obedient to our word And hereby know we the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error q. d. He that cleaves to our doctrine is guided by the Spirit of truth and he that doth not so by the spirit of error But the spirit of error will come with his scriptum est likewise as he did against our Lord himself Mat. 4. And all hereticks and schismaticks do generally alledge Scriptures and wrest the very sayings of the Spirit of truth against himself to insinuate thereby their lies and errors For as Tertullian observes of the writings of Ovid Virgil Homer both the matter of them hath been transferr'd unto other uses and the verses applyed to other matter Even so do hereticks deal with the holy writings of inspired men De Praeser adv Haer. cap. 39. Nec periclitor dicere c. I fear not to say that the Scriptures were so disposed by the wisdome of God that they might accidentaliter and by the by even administer matter to Heresies since I read that heresies must come and without the Scriptures they cannot come For 't is in the production of heresies as of natural things Corruptio unius est generatio alterius the corruption of truth is the generation of heresie all heretical opinions being generally grounded upon and flowing from the fountain of truth the Scripture not as they are in themselves rightly interpreted and understood but as they are wrested and perverted either in the words or in the sense either by additions or diminutions or by not considering them together but divided into parts and taken up by shreds and pieces for the avoiding whereof these following rules must be observed in the trial of spirits by the Scriptures First try and oxamine by the coherence whether that be the very intent and aim of the holy Ghost in the text for the which it is urg'd and alleged For the same words of the Spirit may be misapplyed both to other things and other persons then the Spirit ever meant or intended therein Secondly distinguish betwixt times ages persons when wherein and to whom this or that word was spoken For there are many things both said and recorded to be done in the Word which are only agreeable
fountain of purity deny his blessings upon our labours and turn our preaching into foolishness And herein the Enthusiasts of the age have found so great a flaw in the Ministery as that they absolutely decry the calling or if not so yet the best terms they can afford the most upright and conscientious amongst us is false Prophets and deceivers of the people But yet that the error of this opinion and sinfulness of the railing accusations though against some persons they have too much of truth may appear 't is necessary to take notice of these following considerations 1. That 't is the sins of the people that provokes God to give them ignorant and sinful shepheards And there shall be like people like Priests saith the Lord and I will punish them for their waies and reward them their doings Hos 4.9 and again The daies of visitation are come the daies of recompence are come Israel shal know it The Prophet is a fool the spiritual man is mad and what 's the reason for the multitude of thine iniquity and the great hatred Hos 9.7 Non est a pl●be aut vulgaribus hominibus arguendus aut accu●andus episcopus lices sit inordinatus quia pro meritis subdit●rum disponitur a Deo vita dectorum Evar. ep fratribus Aegypt And therefore saith Evaristus A Bishop and Pastor of souls is not to be reviled by the people though be disorderly because God disposeth of the lives of the Teachers according to the deserts and qualities of the hearers And so of Princes as well as of Priests wicked Princes God gives in his wrath Hos 13.11 viz. when he is angry with a people for their sins And even the errors of the best kings are ascribed to the sins of their subjects As Davids sin in numbring the people was caused by the anger of the Lord against Israel 2 Sam. 24.1 For the Kings heart is in the hand of the Lord and he turneth it whither soever he will Prov. 21.1 either for a blessing or curse upon their subjects Sic pro meritis plebis saepe pastores depravantur ecclesiae Anacleti epist tertia ut procliviùs corruant qui sequuntur 'T is even so with the Pastors of the Church who are deprav'd and diorderly in their lives because the people by their sins have deserv'd to have such leaders whose directions shall sooner tend to the ruine then to the health of their souls 2. 'T is the duty of all Christian people rather to cover and veil then to disclose and publish the enormities of their Pastors For they are their spiritual Fathers 1 Cor. 4.15 And the nakedness of Fathers must not be discovered by the children that the curse of Cham fall not upon them Gen. 9.22.25 If the Pastors neglect their duty towards God the people must not therefore neglect their duty to their Pastors but wisely distinguish betwixt their example and doctrine obeying the truths they deliver but avoiding the sinfull practises they follow which is positively commanded by our Lord Mat. 23.2 3. The Scribes and Pharises sit in Moses chair All therefore whatsoever they bid observe that observe and do but do not ye after their works for they say and do not Etiam si quisquam traditor subrepsisset c. saith Aug. Though some traytor or wicked person creep into the chair of Moses Aug. Epis 165. it should nothing hurt the Church or innocent Christians for whom Christ hath provided saying of evil prelats what they say do ye 3. The knowledge of the Truth may be obtained in the use of outward means and the ministerial office thereupon conferred upon such persons as want the internal qualification of true piety which is clear from the examples of Balaam who loved the wages of righteousness and yet had the gift of prophesie of Judas who was sent out by the Lord himself to preach the Gospel and yet had a Devil and Nicholas chosen by the Apostles one of the Deacons and yet was the father of the Nicholaitan Haeresie so much detested by God Rev. 2.6 Shall we therefore accuse and rail upon the Prophets of the Lord for the sin of Balaam or disparage the Apostles of Christ for the sin of Judas or impute to the rest of the holy Deacons the error of Nicholas or shall we not hear and obey the truth because it comes from the mouthes of some wicked as well as good Ministers It is rather our duty to admire the wisdome and magnifie the goodness of God who to give the greater testimony to the Truth and to make it more illustrious and evident is pleased to deliver it unto us by his Ministers of both sorts good and bad both by the holy and by the profane And 't is the Spirit of God undoubtedly that works in and by all persons that deliver the truth though not in all alike but in men of divers qualifications after a different manner in good men as ingredient and insident in bad men as urgent and impellent by good men more frequently and effectually he works the conversion of his people and by bad men sometimes also though more rarely that the working of his grace may appear in all and the glory thereof may to him as the supreme cause and not to his instruments be ascribed 4. That the gifts of Gods holy Spirit are not limited to those that receive his graces is further clear Mat. 7.22 23. Many will say to me in that day Lord Lord have not we prophesied in thy name Here were great gifts bestowed and that upon wicked and unsanctified persons for it followes immediately Then will I professe unto them I never knew you depart from me ye workers of iniquity so also 1 Cor. 13.2 Though I have the gift of prophesie and understand all mysteries and though I have all faith so as to remove mountains viz. of seeming impossibilities and have not charity I am nothing From whence two things are plainly and clearly observable 1. That the understanding of holy Scriptures and of the mysteries of godliness or prophetical and ministerial gifts may be obtained in the use of outward means without the internal sanctification of soul which consists in charity or love which is the fulfilling of the Law 2. But then secondly The gift of prophesie with all the wisdome and knowledge of holy things though they may be and often are useful for the edification of others yet are they altogether fruitless and ineffectual to the person that hath them if not animated by the grace of charity or obedience to the Lawes of God for so they are not much unlike a candle in a dark lanthorn which casteth its light abroad upon others leaving the person that holds it in darknesse CHAP. XV. The dangerous and destructive consequences of and depending upon immediate Revelation HEe that pretends unto or depends upon any further Revelations from heaven then God in his great mercy hath already afforded unto his Church and people viz.
Church maintained 1 Cor. 13.7 2. To be with all obedience prepared in heart to assent to the Dictates of the Church whether universal or particular that are agreeable to such revealed Truths Mat. 18.17 3. To judge charitably each of other accounting all such for our Christian brethren who profess this same Christian faith and are of this Christian minde and spirit Col. 2.16 4. To sympathize in each others affections which includes several particulars as 1. To sorrow for the sins and errors of others 2. To condole in the sufferings of others or to weep with them that weep Rom. 12.15 As also to congratulate the prosperities of others or to rejoyce with them that rejoyce which enjoynes also 3. To rejoyce as do the Angels of heaven at the conversion of a sinner or any misguided soul from the errors of his waies Luk. 15.7 5. To pray for the growth and perseverance of all holy and orthodox persons in faith and obedience and for the conversion of all profane schismatical and heretical persons and for the reunion of all such to the Church as are divided from it 1 Sam. 12.23 Psal 122.6 1 Tim. 2.1 6. To hold communion in our desires and affections with all such as are divided from us in perswasion and judgement and by all means to endevour an external communion with them according to our several powers and in our several places and offices Gal. 6.1 The external communion consists also of several branches As 1. In the oral confession of the same Creeds or Symbols of Christian Faith Rom. 10.9 10. 2 Tim. 1.13 2. In the participation of the same Sacraments 1 Cor. 10.16 3. In the admission of and submission unto the same Apostolical discipline and government Heb. 13.17 4. In the use of the same Liturgies or publique forms of external divine worship 1 Cor. 1.10 Rom. 15.6 4. Hence by the rule of contraries 't wil appear plainly who is a Schismatique or in what respects the guilt of Schism is contracted 1. He is guilty of Schism who withdrawes his assent from the doctrine of Christ and his Apostles either as 't is by the Church universal professed or else as 't is exprest by the doctrine and establisht by the Lawes of that particular Church whereof he is a member whilest this particular Church opposes not the doctrine of the Church Catholique for when any particular person shall in any point of faith oppose his private opinion against the publique judgement of the Church this is not only Schism in him but such a branch of Schism also as coincident with Heresie whereof before 2. He who shall limit the Church of Christ to his own particular sect or fraternity saying we are the Church we are the elect and people of God Recepimus pro misstones d● universalitate ecclesiae toto mundo diffusae si ergo angelus de coelo tibi has premissiones tenenti diceret Dimitte Christianitatem totius orbis tene partem Donati anathema esse deberet quia ted toto praecicidere in partem contrudere conaretur alienare à promissis Dei Aug. Epist 165. and all who joyn not in communion with us are cast-awaies and out of the State of salvation he is guilty of Schism in that he cuts off the main body of Christian people or rather cuts off himself and his own fraternity from the main body of Christs holy Catholick Church So the Donatists of old limited the Church of Christ to their own sect and the confines thereof to that part of Africk where they inhabited contrary to the promises of God who hath given unto Christ the heathen for his inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for his possession Psal 2.8 Gen. 22. In thee shall all the nations of the earth be blessed whereupon the Father infers since we have the promises of God concerning the universality of the Church to be diffused and spread over the face of the earth if therefore an Angel from heaven should say unto thee Forgo thy relation to the Catholick Church and be of this or that particular Church or sect which saith we and we only are the Church and people of God he ought to be accursed because he hath endevoured to cut thee off from the whole and to limit thee to a part and thereby by to alienate thee from the promises of God in Christ Jesus A third branch of Schi●m necessarily depends upon and flowes from the second And this is rashly to judge and uncharitably to condemn the Churches or societies of our Christian brethren so the Montanists perswaded their followers to speak evil of the universal Church where ever spread over the face of the earth and not only to deny thereunto all reverence and esteem Euseb eccl hist l. 5. c. 16. but also in no wise to joyn with them of this kinde of Schism are all such guilty who refuse to joyn with their Christian brothren in the publique service of God under pretence of separating from the wicked of the world who with the proud Pharisee in the Gospel presumptuously justifie themselves and their own Church and faction and unjustly condemn all others Luk. 18.9 who are so pure in their own eyes as to say to others Verè existimemus posse aliquid esse occultum in alio quo vebis superior sit etiam si bonum nostrum quo illo videmur superiores esse non sit occulium Aug. de verbis Apo. ser 21. Stand by thy self come not neer to me I am holier then thou Isa 65.5 little esteeming the exhortation of the Apostle Phil. 2.3 Let nothing be done through strife or vain glory but in lowliness of minde let each esteem other better then themselves For saith the Father hereupon There may be those secret and hidden vertues in others whereby they do excell thee though that whereby thou doest seem to excell others be not secret but apparent 4. To have no Christian sympathy or fellow feeling either of the sins or sufferings of our Christian brethren is a fourth branch of Schism For as in the natural body if one member suffer all the members suffer with it or one member be honoured all the members rejoyce 1 Cor. 12.26 And the reason is given vers 25. That there should be no Schism in the body but that the members should have the same care one for another So it is in the mystical body of Christ as it followes vers 27. Now ye are the body of Christ and members in particular That there be no Schism therefore 't is required that we have the same care one for another and according to the same Apostles injunction Gal. 6.2 Bear ye one anothers burdens and so fulfil the Law of Christ who hath borne the burden of our sins and so must we by his Law of charity bear one anothers burdens both of sins and sufferings or else we manifest our selves to be no true members of his mystical body but either